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Texans random thought of the day

Heard an interesting tidbit over the weekend that I thought I’d share with you guys. I was at a track and FB conference over the weekend and some former Texan employees were there. One of the HS coaches at the event was talking about one of his kids that ran a 10.3 100m but couldn’t catch the FB well at all. One of the former Texans told the HS coach to have his kid checked for depth perception issues. He said the we had a first round draft pick that had an issue with drops and had some key drops in big games. He said they had his eyes checked and that he had an issue with one of his eyes, they had the issue corrected, and the next season he was much better at catching the ball. Has to be Fuller. I was happy to hear this.
I like Fuller (I’m a big ND fan) and thought he was really effective with Watson last season. Hopefully the drops are a thing of the past. Now, if we can just keep him on the field.....
This is exactly why I posted about Watson's left upper eyelid ptosis (droop) with partial pupil coverage in the Injury Thread.........in that long-term partial coverage of the eye is commonly associated with problems with depth perception........a problem that would significantly affect a wide receiver and a quarterback alike. Watson's condition could be easily corrected with a relatively minor eyelid surgery. Ptosis is not the only condition resulting in depth perception deficiencies..........this can be caused by any condition which creates unequal quality of vision of the eyes or alignment between the two eyes.
 
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Obviously, but I would argue that the reverse is more important. XSF should have been premium talent, but busted the same as everyone else we've brought in. O'Brien has had 4+ years to build an offensive line, and outside of scheme dependent centers looking average - we don't really have a starter on the team*. Offensive line in the NFL vs college is wildly different and takes more coaching than any other position. XSF is 10 times as gifted as Eric Winson - one was coached, one wasn't. Heck I don't think Winston would've survived more than 3 years on most any other team, but reverse roles and XSF probably looks a lot like Brandon Brooks right now.

*With our influx of 6th man, I worry that we just signed reincarnations of Clark, Allan and Giacomini.

Amen, brother.
 
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...-all-options-in-attempt-to-replace-andre-hal/

Texans looking at all options in attempt to replace Andre Hal

Posted by Charean Williams on June 11, 2018, 4:37 PM EDT
gettyimages-631707812-e1528749407545.jpg

Getty Images

The Texans have begun formulating a plan to replace safety Andre Hal. Houston expected to have one of the top safety tandems in the NFL after signing Tyrann Mathieu to start opposite Hal this season.

But Hal, who started all 16 games at free safety last season, recently was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. He still is being evaluated at MD Anderson Cancer Center to determine his course of treatment.

While he vows to play again, Hal won’t start the season on the field with the Texans.

The Texans will have only five healthy safeties at their minicamp this week, with Mathieu, Justin Reid, Kurtis Drummond, Treston Decoud and Ibraheim Campbell getting reps there. Corey Moore continues to rehab an injury that will keep him out until training camp.

Kenny Vaccaro, Tre Boston and Eric Reid — the older brother of Texans’ rookie Justin — remain available on the free agent market.

The Texans also could consider playing cornerback Kareem Jackson (pictured) more at safety, according to John McClain of the Houston Chronicle. Houston has nine cornerbacks on its roster.

Jackson has played safety in practice and in games, with his versatility an asset for defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel.

The best-case scenario for the Texans would be for Justin Reid, a third-round pick out of Stanford, to win the starting job in training camp
 
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...-all-options-in-attempt-to-replace-andre-hal/

Texans looking at all options in attempt to replace Andre Hal

Posted by Charean Williams on June 11, 2018, 4:37 PM EDT
gettyimages-631707812-e1528749407545.jpg

Getty Images

The Texans have begun formulating a plan to replace safety Andre Hal. Houston expected to have one of the top safety tandems in the NFL after signing Tyrann Mathieu to start opposite Hal this season.

But Hal, who started all 16 games at free safety last season, recently was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. He still is being evaluated at MD Anderson Cancer Center to determine his course of treatment.

While he vows to play again, Hal won’t start the season on the field with the Texans.

The Texans will have only five healthy safeties at their minicamp this week, with Mathieu, Justin Reid, Kurtis Drummond, Treston Decoud and Ibraheim Campbell getting reps there. Corey Moore continues to rehab an injury that will keep him out until training camp.

Kenny Vaccaro, Tre Boston and Eric Reid — the older brother of Texans’ rookie Justin — remain available on the free agent market.

The Texans also could consider playing cornerback Kareem Jackson (pictured) more at safety, according to John McClain of the Houston Chronicle. Houston has nine cornerbacks on its roster.

Jackson has played safety in practice and in games, with his versatility an asset for defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel.

The best-case scenario for the Texans would be for Justin Reid, a third-round pick out of Stanford, to win the starting job in training camp

I'd be fine with either Kenny Vaccaro or Eric Reid coming to the Texans. It would simply come down to the amount money they would want...but adding either player would be a coup for this defense b/c making the defensive backfield as tough or tougher than the front seven could yield a top NFL defense in the process.
 
I'd be fine with either Kenny Vaccaro or Eric Reid coming to the Texans. It would simply come down to the amount money they would want...but adding either player would be a coup for this defense b/c making the defensive backfield as tough or tougher than the front seven could yield a top NFL defense in the process.


Agreed
I'd be fine with either Kenny Vaccaro or Eric Reid coming to the Texans. It would simply come down to the amount money they would want...but adding either player would be a coup for this defense b/c making the defensive backfield as tough or tougher than the front seven could yield a top NFL defense in the process.

I think Ried would come at a very reasonable price. Dude is just trying to get on someone's team. Question is what does Bob McNair thinks. Will he shoot that notion down.
 
I’ll take either one. Think Boston better centerfielder while Reid better closer as hybrid LB/3rd safety. Both would help team and we have plenty of $ for the most undervalued position in FA this offseason.

With that said, I think I'd prefer to have Mathieu playing center field roaming around and having a hybrid in the box to play thumper. I think a healthy Honeybadger makes this defense astronomically better. It would be cool af to have the brothers playing together though. But you're right, both would be upgrades.
 
With that said, I think I'd prefer to have Mathieu playing center field roaming around and having a hybrid in the box to play thumper. I think a healthy Honeybadger makes this defense astronomically better. It would be cool af to have the brothers playing together though. But you're right, both would be upgrades.

In that case Reid would be the better pickup. Though the younger Reid can also fill either role as needed!
 
With that said, I think I'd prefer to have Mathieu playing center field roaming around and having a hybrid in the box to play thumper. I think a healthy Honeybadger makes this defense astronomically better. It would be cool af to have the brothers playing together though. But you're right, both would be upgrades.

I don't believe Mathieu's best fit is playing center field. In terms of being a surefire tackler as the last line of defense, yes. But in terms of how to best use him both in coverage and as a sudden decision maker, no, I think he's better suited closer to the football or in the intermediate part of the field one-on-one. A guy like Boston would compliment him perfectly with the young Reid playing/learning on the job in the meantime.
 
https://profootballtalk.nbcsports.c...-all-options-in-attempt-to-replace-andre-hal/

Texans looking at all options in attempt to replace Andre Hal

Posted by Charean Williams on June 11, 2018, 4:37 PM EDT
gettyimages-631707812-e1528749407545.jpg

Getty Images

The Texans have begun formulating a plan to replace safety Andre Hal. Houston expected to have one of the top safety tandems in the NFL after signing Tyrann Mathieu to start opposite Hal this season.

But Hal, who started all 16 games at free safety last season, recently was diagnosed with Hodgkin’s Lymphoma. He still is being evaluated at MD Anderson Cancer Center to determine his course of treatment.

While he vows to play again, Hal won’t start the season on the field with the Texans.

The Texans will have only five healthy safeties at their minicamp this week, with Mathieu, Justin Reid, Kurtis Drummond, Treston Decoud and Ibraheim Campbell getting reps there. Corey Moore continues to rehab an injury that will keep him out until training camp.

Kenny Vaccaro, Tre Boston and Eric Reid — the older brother of Texans’ rookie Justin — remain available on the free agent market.

The Texans also could consider playing cornerback Kareem Jackson (pictured) more at safety, according to John McClain of the Houston Chronicle. Houston has nine cornerbacks on its roster.

Jackson has played safety in practice and in games, with his versatility an asset for defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel.

The best-case scenario for the Texans would be for Justin Reid, a third-round pick out of Stanford, to win the starting job in training camp

Why not look at that safety that payed with Kaepernick? Has he been signed? Do they play the same position?
 
I don't believe Mathieu's best fit is playing center field. In terms of being a surefire tackler as the last line of defense, yes. But in terms of how to best use him both in coverage and as a sudden decision maker, no, I think he's better suited closer to the football or in the intermediate part of the field one-on-one. A guy like Boston would compliment him perfectly with the young Reid playing/learning on the job in the meantime.

^^^^
This

A centerfielder type like Boston would be an upgrade over Hal.

Eric Reid is an in the box S with some coverage skills.

They certainly have the cap space to bring in whoever they want too. You can bet whoever they bring in will be on a short term/cheap deal. So I dont expect Boston/Reid to be Texans.
 
Swap what?

They can play either S position. That's not saying equally well but they can. Eric has been listed as a FS his whole career and yet has played a lot as what people would think is SS.

You can bet whoever they bring in will be on a short term/cheap deal. So I dont expect Boston/Reid to be Texans.

What makes you think there is a long term option for them out there? This is the time of year for prove it contracts for high end guys.
 
They can play either S position. That's not saying equally well but they can. Eric has been listed as a FS his whole career and yet has played a lot as what people would think is SS.



What makes you think there is a long term option for them out there? This is the time of year for prove it contracts for high end guys.

Boston is a great option. He had a really good yr last yr. I'm really surprised that he hasn't landed a contract. I agree with you and the time of yr it is.
 
I don't believe Mathieu's best fit is playing center field. In terms of being a surefire tackler as the last line of defense, yes. But in terms of how to best use him both in coverage and as a sudden decision maker, no, I think he's better suited closer to the football or in the intermediate part of the field one-on-one. A guy like Boston would compliment him perfectly with the young Reid playing/learning on the job in the meantime.

I agree, especially in Romeo's defense. I think we'd be stronger with Mathieu closer to the line of scrimmage in a relatively fluid role - ranging from covering tightend and slot receivers, to blitz reads on runningbacks that are more often given to linebackers. He brings a diversity and coaching/scheme freedom to nickel packages that I think would vastly outweigh his ability playing centerfield.

While not particularly great, Hal was showing flashes as a deep safety before Vrabel. With our injury history at CB that may call Mathieu into service, and Reid's ability to also play multiple roles, someone like Boston seems like a pretty natural fit. I've not really watched him much, is there a reason Boston hasn't been signed? I see lower leg injuries that put him on IR in 2016, but that's about it ... unless of course he's asking simply asking too much.
 
I agree, especially in Romeo's defense. I think we'd be stronger with Mathieu closer to the line of scrimmage in a relatively fluid role - ranging from covering tightend and slot receivers, to blitz reads on runningbacks that are more often given to linebackers. He brings a diversity and coaching/scheme freedom to nickel packages that I think would vastly outweigh his ability playing centerfield.

While not particularly great, Hal was showing flashes as a deep safety before Vrabel. With our injury history at CB that may call Mathieu into service, and Reid's ability to also play multiple roles, someone like Boston seems like a pretty natural fit. I've not really watched him much, is there a reason Boston hasn't been signed? I see lower leg injuries that put him on IR in 2016, but that's about it ... unless of course he's asking simply asking too much.

Maybe a clue here
 
I hope that's not the freaking reason.

True...the NFL has solved this ugly riddle. You want to protest during the National Anthem, stay in the locker room, you want to honor the National Anthem come to the sideline, stand, and face the flag. Simple! Now lets make some smart football moves.

Sign, FS- Boston and RB- Peterson before the off-season progresses much further. Even though these guys are veterans, they're both unemployed at the moment and would be better served getting as early a jump as possible on a new system.
 
At 5'8" 186 lbs and with his history of injuries I'd try to keep Mathieu as clean as possible; that's why I would not have him in the box all that often. Covering RBs I'd be cool with and even slot guys but the moment he's matched up with a super sized TE it's over. We'd be looking at a Bob Sanders type situation and that's not something that would help us at all. Yeah we gotta play to his strengths but we also have to limit the damage he inflicts upon himself.
 
Unless he gets claimed before us, I fully expect him to already be on a plane heading to H-Town.

If his accuracy is as bad as reports are saying it is, he'll be on his way out just as fast lol but we gotta keep shaking the tree until we find a viable QB2.
 
At 5'8" 186 lbs and with his history of injuries I'd try to keep Mathieu as clean as possible; that's why I would not have him in the box all that often. Covering RBs I'd be cool with and even slot guys but the moment he's matched up with a super sized TE it's over. We'd be looking at a Bob Sanders type situation and that's not something that would help us at all. Yeah we gotta play to his strengths but we also have to limit the damage he inflicts upon himself.

Unless I'm remembering incorrectly, Bob Sanders played an Earl Thomas type role - deep 1 with aggressive crash in run support - quite dangerous for a smaller free safety when there's so much momentum and open space. That's more of Reid's territory. Obviously Mathieu wouldn't match squarely against Gronk, but he would be tasked with harassing and playing various zone reads against those oversized tightends.

And if we're going to bubble wrap an NFL safety, don't bother putting him on the field ... WTF. Pay me 7mil to pick daisies and make a few 'last man' tackles.
 
OTA Observations(since no thread for OTAs):

2. Deshaun Watson didn’t wear a brace or anything on his knee at the workout. He moved the same way he did last year before his season-ending ACL surgery and did plenty of dynamic drilling having to use his mobility. O’Brien joked after he didn’t notice Watson wasn’t wearing anything on his knee.

3. Watson missed almost no throws. Minicamp possesses a pass-heavy setup so there was plenty of work for Watson. Some of the drills saw Waston hold the ball a little long but when he made his decision the passes were among the best Texans fans have seen. He had one miss in a simulated 7-on-7 drive that saw the offense complete a touchdown pass to end a seven play drive. The ability to quickly get the ball out will be key as Watson learns more about defenses and sees new schemes as his second year in the league rolls on.

4. DeAndre Hopkins is effortless in almost every movement on the football field. He eliminated Kevin Johnson with ease in one practice rep securing a bullet from Watson. Johnson would get some very physical payback later in the practice on Hopkins.

5. Keke Coutee wears number 16 which is one of the most unique numbers for a pass catcher in recent memory. Also unique to him is his ability to create separation against NFL talent. There were only a handful of drills where he faced press coverage and even then he got into his route. When there wasn’t press coverage, he was open. Quarterback Stephen Morris missed Coutee on what would have been a huge play in a team simulation drill. Coutee against new cornerback Aaron Colvin was a joy to watch.

6. Braxton Miller looks more like a wide receiver than ever before. He had an amazing over the shoulder catch from Watson that looked like the two have practiced it for years. He won his share of matchups with corners and safeties in the drills.

7. Rookie tight ends Jordan Thomas and Jordan Akins each has some nice plays. It became apparent Akins can be a size mismatch against corners and safeties in a lot of situations. Thomas, who spent time as a wide receiver at Mississippi State, is fluid on the field and runs well for his size. Linebackers had issues against him.

11. Julién Davenport has altered his body quite a bit. He looks a lot closer to what you would expect from a regular offensive lineman. He is listed with the same height and weight as veteran Seantrell Henderson. They both are listed at 6’7" and 320 pounds. Davenport doesn’t look far from Henderson or Kendall Laam. He said after the workout he feels like his body is getting to where he wants to be after a full year with the Texans. He mentioned "good weight" is a term he hears a lot and once he adds weight wants to convert it to muscle and drop his body fat percentage.

https://houston.sportsmap.com/cody-stoots-11-observations-from-day-1-texans-minicamp/
 
And if we're going to bubble wrap an NFL safety, don't bother putting him on the field ... WTF. Pay me 7mil to pick daisies and make a few 'last man' tackles.

There's a difference between bubble wrap and playing it smart with oft injured players; just like JJ and Clowney we should be smart with these guys.
 
There's a difference between bubble wrap and playing it smart with oft injured players; just like JJ and Clowney we should be smart with these guys.

Not really (assuming healthy to begin with). Best you can do is limit reps, but that's just trying to play the odds - only really useful when working someone back into game shape (defensive players don't get to wear skirts like quarterbacks). Watt and Clowney have 2 jobs - beat violent 300lb offensive linemen and hit whoever has the ball as hard as possible, there's no option to put them against 200lb guys with softball mitts. As for safety, you'd probably be better off shortening the field so that he's making tackles instead of open field hits.

And, what is 'playing it smart' for a mercenary?
 
No one is trying to line Mathieu up as a MLB. He's not playing through swarms of trash as a one-on-one slot defender or intermediate zone-read defender who would line up wide of the edge on the overwhelming majority of plays. Playing him as an Ed Reed-type center fielder is not what's in the defenses best interest other than as a last line of d tackler, because he's not a vertical defender.

These are examples of his best usage..


..with the last one being the concern with him being the last defender against a vertical passing attack with a dangerous wr.
 
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OTAs Day 2 Observations:

1. Aaron Colvin mentioned after practice that he plans to show off this year. He said he is past talking about his previous NFL stops and how he was viewed, and also said there is something burning inside him to show how good he can be. Colvin stated that some of the league may have slept on him, and he plans to play where the Texans need him, but the opportunity to play outside corner was attractive to him in picking the Texans. He played the slot corner position for the Jaguars last year with Jalen Ramsey and former Texans cornerback A.J. Bouye playing outside.

2. The line of the day came from Colvin. His response to what he was going to do until West Virginia was simple. "Grind my ass off."

3. Yesterday, rookie safety Justin Reid mentioned the veteran wide receivers help him get used to how NFL pass catchers will attack him. Today, Colvin said it doesn’t matter how old or experienced anyone is when it comes to the advice shared between defensive backs and wide receivers. He mentioned rookie Keke Coutee and All-Pro DeAndre Hopkins as resources for him to get better. The goal he mentioned is for everyone to help everyone get better.

4. Speaking of Keke Coutee, the veteran corner Colvin said he believes Coutee will be "special" for the Texans. He said the skill set the rookie pass catcher possesses isn’t easy to find, and his work in the short area of the field is something he can utilize in which some can’t. Coutee and backup quarterback Joe Webb hooked up for a play over the middle where the 5’11" Coutee showed off his 34-inch vertical snatching a ball out of the air.

5. The wide receiver position is very crowded. Braxton Miller had an extreme display of athleticism in one pass catching drill where he jumped, extended his arms fully, snagged the ball, and was still able to land both feet in bounds in the back of the end zone. Undrafted free agent Vyncint Smith from Limestone College shook loose on a couple of plays today including a huge play in a team drill.

7. Don’t be fooled by the praise for the offense above because the defense won the day in most of the drills. With mostly guys competing for roster spots or playing time getting the reps, the secondary and even a little of the pass rush had a solid day. Will Fuller and Johnathan Joseph squared off early in a drill that saw the veteran defensive back victorious. Also, Justin Reid absolutely mauled Jordan Akins with a jam near the line of scrimmage taking the tight end out of the play. It would have been a completely legal play on a Sunday.

9. The young tight ends, Jordan Thomas and Jordan Akins had the defense’s attention today. Akins nor Thomas seemed to get as free as they did yesterday. Thomas had a tough drop after a pass hit him in the hands and fell incomplete. Matt Lengel, a former Patriots and Browns tight end who the team claimed in April, had a great route and got free by a few steps on Kurtis Drummond for what would have been a score. Ryan Griffin looks to be in incredible shape and is faster than previous years.

11. Deshaun Watson and his knee are fine. Watson said in multiple ways that he feels good about his recovery from the ACL injury, and praised the staff and the plan put together for his rehab. With a year learning under his belt, Watson said he is "light years away" from where he was as a rookie quarterback in understanding the game. He said working on defenses is good, but knows you can only study so much before teams show you something new. He also said his plan to account for teams having film on him is to work "ten times harder."

https://t.co/kq0zqfJtIZ
 
Interesting piece that peels it down essentially to having the right QB.............doing everything to keep your QB healthy..........and the QB by his decisions being focused on the same. Any one failure in those three factors guarantees failure for the scheme and team.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Kyle Shanahan: Zone read can work, if you have the right QB and he stays healthy
June 14, 2018, 8:18 AM EDT

In 2012, when now-49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan was the offensive coordinator in Washington, Robert Griffin III had one of the best rookie seasons a quarterback has ever had. That same year, Colin Kaepernick led San Francisco to the Super Bowl, and the two of them appeared to be ushering in a new era for the way the quarterback position would be played.

It hasn’t worked out that way, and Shanahan was asked yesterday if the zone read offense has been figured out.

“No,” Shanahan answered. “There isn’t anything to figure out. It’s a very sound scheme.”

So why don’t we see as much of that style of football as we saw in 2012? Shanahan said the issue is it’s hard to find a quarterback who can run that offense — and hard to keep that quarterback healthy if you’re using him as both a runner and a passer.

“Is your quarterback good enough at running with the football to make them commit to stop it? And once they do, is he good enough to make the passes that he has to that they just opened up?” Shanahan said. “If he is, that’s a huge issue. It’s tough to find that guy. And if you don’t protect him right and you don’t do the right stuff it is tough to stay healthy.”

Shanahan said that in 2012, Washington’s offense was incredibly hard to stop, and Shanahan said it wasn’t so much the zone read as the threat of the zone read.

“People talk about that 2012 year but our running game was 70 percent outside zone. It was one-third zone read, but everyone was scared of it, so they played for it every play, which is why Alfred Morris [was second in the league in rushing],” Shanahan said. “It was because of the threat of zone read that allows you to do a ton of other stuff. It’s not your base offense but if you’re in pistol or shotgun you can run it every time.”

Shanahan still believes the threat of a quarterback running can keep defenses off balance.

“Defenses have been playing 11 against 10 for so long and now all of a sudden you have to play 11 against 11 and if you’re not it changes everything you do,” Shanahan said. “It’s not that they’ve caught up, you just need the right people, the right commitment, you have to stay healthy and you have to have a whole package together.”

Finding that whole package is not easy, but a team that finds the package could still win with that offense.
 
Interesting piece that peels it down essentially to having the right QB.............doing everything to keep your QB healthy..........and the QB by his decisions being focused on the same. Any one failure in those three factors guarantees failure for the scheme and team.

&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&&

Kyle Shanahan: Zone read can work, if you have the right QB and he stays healthy
June 14, 2018, 8:18 AM EDT

In 2012, when now-49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan was the offensive coordinator in Washington, Robert Griffin III had one of the best rookie seasons a quarterback has ever had. That same year, Colin Kaepernick led San Francisco to the Super Bowl, and the two of them appeared to be ushering in a new era for the way the quarterback position would be played.

It hasn’t worked out that way, and Shanahan was asked yesterday if the zone read offense has been figured out.

“No,” Shanahan answered. “There isn’t anything to figure out. It’s a very sound scheme.”

So why don’t we see as much of that style of football as we saw in 2012? Shanahan said the issue is it’s hard to find a quarterback who can run that offense — and hard to keep that quarterback healthy if you’re using him as both a runner and a passer.

“Is your quarterback good enough at running with the football to make them commit to stop it? And once they do, is he good enough to make the passes that he has to that they just opened up?” Shanahan said. “If he is, that’s a huge issue. It’s tough to find that guy. And if you don’t protect him right and you don’t do the right stuff it is tough to stay healthy.”

Shanahan said that in 2012, Washington’s offense was incredibly hard to stop, and Shanahan said it wasn’t so much the zone read as the threat of the zone read.

“People talk about that 2012 year but our running game was 70 percent outside zone. It was one-third zone read, but everyone was scared of it, so they played for it every play, which is why Alfred Morris [was second in the league in rushing],” Shanahan said. “It was because of the threat of zone read that allows you to do a ton of other stuff. It’s not your base offense but if you’re in pistol or shotgun you can run it every time.”

Shanahan still believes the threat of a quarterback running can keep defenses off balance.

“Defenses have been playing 11 against 10 for so long and now all of a sudden you have to play 11 against 11 and if you’re not it changes everything you do,” Shanahan said. “It’s not that they’ve caught up, you just need the right people, the right commitment, you have to stay healthy and you have to have a whole package together.”

Finding that whole package is not easy, but a team that finds the package could still win with that offense.

I've often wondered why a team doesn't draft 3 Zone Read QB's and when one goes down you keep the same offense, that way you can make it thru the season.
 
https://www.houstontexans.com/news/official-texans-sign-benardrick-mckinney-to-contract-extension

OFFICIAL: Texans sign Benardrick McKinney to contract extension

The Houston Texans signed fourth-year ILB Benardrick McKinney to a contract extension. Terms of the contract were not disclosed.

“Bernardrick plays a key role in our defense and has been highly productive, but more importantly he is a core player who has developed into a team leader within our program,” said Texans General Manager Brian Gaine. “We are excited to have him a part of our long term future here at the Texans.”

Drafted by Houston with the 11th pick of the second round (43rd overall) in the 2015 NFL Draft out of Mississippi State, McKinney, 25, has compiled 282 total tackles (176 solo), 9.0 sacks, 25 tackles for loss, 21 quarterback hits, two forced fumbles and three passes defensed in 46 regular season games played (43 starts). He has also started all three playoff games since joining the Texans. McKinney (6-4, 260) logged a team-leading 95 total tackles (62 solo) along with 3.0 sacks, eight quarterback hits, a single-season career-high 10 tackles for loss, one forced fumble and one pass defensed while starting all 16 games in 2017. Among all players with 3.0-or-more sacks last season, McKinney finished sixth in the NFL in total tackles.

In Week 2 at Cincinnati, McKinney compiled six total tackles (four solo), including three tackles for loss and 2.0 sacks. He became just the fourth Texans linebacker and sixth player in team history to record six-or-more total tackles, three-or-more tackles for loss and 2.0-or-more sacks in a game. In Week 11 vs. Arizona, McKinney finished with a team-high nine total tackles (seven solo) and had two tackles for loss. It marked his sixth career game with multiple tackles for loss, including three in 2017. McKinney currently ranks 11th in Texans history in total career tackles and tied for ninth in career tackles for loss. In 2016, McKinney was the only player in the NFL and the second in Texans history with at least 100 total tackles and 5.0 sacks in a season (Jamie Sharper, 2002).
 
Per rotoworld:

Texans signed ILB Benardrick McKinney to a five-year, $50 million extension through 2023.

The deal includes $21 million guaranteed. The No. 43 overall pick of the 2015 draft, McKinney was headed into the final year of his rookie deal. McKinney has been a snap hog and run eraser in the middle of the Texans' defense. He tallied 95 tackles, three sacks and a forced fumble last season. He has also been durable, missing just two games in three years, and zero since his rookie season. McKinney could stand to offer more as a blitzer and cover man, something he hinted at with his effort to drop 10 pounds this offseason.


Source: John McClain on Twitter
Jun 14 - 8:25 PM
 
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