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Texans random thought of the day

So, a feel good story. Steelb is going to be hating on this guy and saying the father is who the Texans should have signed.

Glad to know I'm in your head.

Tell me can this guy KR/PR?

The way I see it the Texans WR crew already looks like this.

Hopkins/Fuller/Ellington/Coates/Miller/Coutee

There's not really room for another WR. Could there be a trade coming with a WR being traded to a team that has too many RB's? Who could that team be?
 
Glad to know I'm in your head.

Tell me can this guy KR/PR?

The way I see it the Texans WR crew already looks like this.

Hopkins/Fuller/Ellington/Coates/Miller/Coutee

There's not really room for another WR. Could there be a trade coming with a WR being traded to a team that has too many RB's? Who could that team be?
You don't think Sammie Watkins makes it? Word is he's playing ST and not doing too badly.
 
patrick‏Verified account@PatDStat 10h
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6. Kurtis Drummond had a solid preseason game and is a key special teams piece. He has had a strong camp for the #Texans He is in a pretty good competition for the final two safety spots with Drummond and Decoud.


5. ILB Kennan Gilchrist is getting his chance to put some work on the field. Tackling machine from the interior, will have to win a roster spot on special teams. Can strengthen an already strong group.

4.If Duke Ejiofor continues to develop the #Texans might have found a late round addition for the coming years. He is as advanced for a rookie as a rusher as I have seen since I started covering the team. Only Watt really sticks out as superior with pass rush moves as a rookie.

3. Stephen Anderson is on the outside looking in on the tight end group. He is going to need a strong push these final three preseason games.

2. Joe Webb is an interesting piece to the #Texans roster. He is working QB and special teams. Texans worked hard this off-season to add better personnel for special teams.

1. Quick thoughts on the #Texans. 1.Wide receiver position is going to be interesting. Outside of DeAndre Hopkins, Will Fuller and Keke Coutee, it is open competition. Texans have shown to keep from 5-6 WRs at anytime.
 

Aaron Wilson‏@AaronWilson_NFL

Texans worked out kickers Giorgio Tavecchio and Nick Rose today, according to sources. Was told both did well, but Tavecchio now under consideration to be signed

11:00 AM - 15 Aug 2018
If they do sign Tavecchio, wonder how that will affect the holder..........Tavecchio is a "lefty."

Looks like the Texans had 2nd thoughts about Tavecchio being "lefty." Rose is now set to sign instead.
 

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Pro Football Focus‏Verified account@PFF 6h6 hours ago

Dylan Cole was the NFL's top linebacker in the opening week of preseason.


DktQU8RXoAAUzHs.jpg:large
 
The Leadership Is in Place, the Roster Is Strong, and Expectations Are High in Houston

HOUSTON — Back in 2013, I ran into then-Dolphins assistant GM Brian Gaine on the Gillette Stadium field a few hours before Miami played New England. Gaine asked me, “What do you think of Bill O’Brien?”

It wasn’t a haphazard question. Gaine had been on a couple GM interviews, and was working to prepare himself for more. That meant researching potential head-coaching candidates he felt he’d pair well with. And that background work led right him to the former Patriots offensive coordinator, who was at Penn State at the time.

“What I appreciated about him was his leadership skills, his ability to communicate clearly with players. He won, he knew what success looked like … It was his feel and understanding of how to build a program,” Gaine says now. “You’d seen him create great game plans in the [AFC East] and at Penn State. He was well-respected amongst his peers but also a great person who had a great passion for the game.

“What he did at Penn State was phenomenal under the circumstances. And it was [because of] a global viewpoint he had on what a winning program should look like.”

It hasn’t exactly been a straight line from then to now. But here they are, a half-decade later, Gaine as a first-year GM with the coach he was most curious about—but didn’t even know—all those years ago.

We’ll get to your mail in a minute, but I thought a good place to start this week was with the Texans’ re-start after a tumultuous 2017 that saw Deshaun Watson flash enormous potential, then go down for the year (with J.J. Watt and Whitney Mercilus joining him on IR), franchise fixture Duane Brown traded, the locker room tested during the anthem controversy and the team’s football operation reconfigured. What’s left in the aftermath is one of the NFL’s most intriguing outfits going into ’18.

With the caveat that everyone’s undefeated on Aug. 13, the Texans are humming now. There’s a new weight room (or sports performance center, as they’re calling it), a new cafeteria (that’s the sports performance café), a new strength chief, a new nutritionist, a new team meeting room, redecorated walls reflecting players’ investment in the organization, and a reconfigured scouting system and staff.

But what’s really interesting here is how the existing foundation will fit into all that. Watson, Watt, Mercilus, DeAndre Hopkins, et al are mainstays, and O’Brien is now five years in. Gaine worked in the team’s personnel department from 2014-16, a three-year span during which Houston won a pair of division titles. That is to say, this one isn’t coming from the ground up.

Along with the talent in-house, O’Brien and Gaine knew there’d be a common belief system to build off of.

“Alignment’s big,” O’Brien says. “Brian having worked for coach [Bill] Parcells, and myself having worked for Coach [Bill] Belichick, there are a lot of differences obviously, but there’s also some things that we both believe in—the draft, what type of players we want, what type of culture we want. We’re both from the Northeast, we grew up in the business in a similar way.”

So what are they looking for? It’s straight out of the Belichick/Parcells playbook. Gaine worked to tighten height/weight/speed parameters for each position—Parcells used to say, “If you keep making exceptions, you’ll wind up with a team full of them”—and the two emphasized a personality profile they wanted in players. That applied, as O’Brien explained it to me, in the reworking of the offensive line. Gaine knew Seantrel Henderson from his year in Bufffalo, and his assessment matched what former Bills coach/O’Brien buddy Doug Marrone had said to O’Brien in the past. Both guys liked the center/guard versatility of Chiefs free agent Zach Fulton. And they were in agreement too, watching ex-Saint Senio Kelemete.

“We have our disagreements, which is healthy, “ O’Brien says. “But then we go and watch the film together and come to a conclusion, and I think that’s important. … Part of it’s our friendship—we’re very good friends, our families know each other, it’s easy. It’s very comfortable for me to go to his office, knock on the door and say, ‘Hey, let’s talk about this.’ And the same goes for him.”

The results are already apparent to the players, especially when it comes to the most obvious intangible trait that O’Brien and Gaine are looking for.

“You bring in a guy like Tyrann [Mathieu], that’s obviously a big move for us. You have a guy like Deshaun. I don’t think we’ve seen the extent of what it’s going to be, but you can start to see it,” Watt told me. “I think the No. 1 thing they want is guys who love football. That’s probably the biggest thing you can see, they want guys who want to be on the field, want to play the game, want to work in practice and get better. That’s how you’re going to win.”


Whether this will take the Texans to another level of success is yet to be seen. What’s already clear, though, is how the organization is moving forward in lockstep with a pretty defined model in mind. Gaine points to watching ex-Jets personnel chief Dick Haley and Parcells work in tandem as a young scout in the ’90s, and believes that is his ideal for the relationship: The personnel people getting players specifically for the coaches, rather than just throwing talent at them. And O’Brien saw Scott Pioli and Nick Caserio carrying out their roster building similarly for Belichick from 2007-11.

Their early moves have produced a team that’s bigger, longer and stronger based on, as Gaine puts it, “how we wanted our team to physically look,” with more athleticism at the skill spots. And again, while it’s hard to say where all of this goes, it’s easy to see how healthy this place has become. It’s not hard to see why, either.
 
Blind squirrel finds nut

He needed to find a few gems since he chose not to participate in FA.
Hey SteelB you spend mucho time on this Board criticising RS for bad personnel moves he made which he did on plenty of occasion but he also made
some smart ones like this. Thing is if you are always criticising Smith or make disparaging remarks when it's related to a good player transaction like we
all know Cole was, this makes you sound petty or worse bias.
 
Hey SteelB you spend mucho time on this Board criticising RS for bad personnel moves he made which he did on plenty of occasion but he also made
some smart ones like this. Thing is if you are always criticising Smith or make disparaging remarks when it's related to a good player transaction like we
all know Cole was, this makes you sound petty or worse bias.

Nope just going by over a decade of wasted time.

So I'm just saying the same thing I said back in 2010, actually the 2009 offseason. Ricky would ever/wasn't the man to bring this city a championship.

I mean you can look at the Browns and find quality UDFA pickups Crowell or draft picks Thomas. Every team has them. It's the whole body of work that should be judged, not just the lucky guys like Foster/Cole that he hit on.
 
He found several "nuts".
Gotta give credit where credit is due.

To be fair, he found an average number of nuts. Very few of those from the mid rounds. Our depth has always been a concern and is the stated reason that #80 asked for a trade after going 12-4.

Lack of depth has been consistent between two coaching regimes with RS as the common denominator. I wish him well if he decides to come back to football...with another team.
 
To be fair, he found an average number of nuts. Very few of those from the mid rounds. Our depth has always been a concern and is the stated reason that #80 asked for a trade after going 12-4.

Lack of depth has been consistent between two coaching regimes with RS as the common denominator. I wish him well if he decides to come back to football...with another team.

He would have been a good GM if he would have hit in those mid rounds.

And gotten a QB. How many years and no solution at QB? That’s what did him in.

The DW pick was too little too late even when DW wins us a Super Bowl this year.
 
Like I said in the earlier post

Blind squirrel finds nut.

Even the Browns have done this as I pointed out in my other post.
I can understand that many will not think too highly of him, but he was a country mile from being the worst gm in this league and not nearly as bad as those people would have us believe - in fact, many respected pundits see him in the top 5-10.
 
I can understand that many will not think too highly of him, but he was a country mile from being the worst gm in this league and not nearly as bad as those people would have us believe - in fact, many respected pundits see him in the top 5-10.

If not good enough is the barometer then you're right Ricky was in that number of GM's.

I automatically would discount a pundit who put Ricky in the top 5-10 GM's. One things for sure Ricky tenure was wasted time because he was never going to bring a championship to this city.
 
If not good enough is the barometer then you're right Ricky was in that number of GM's.

I automatically would discount a pundit who put Ricky in the top 5-10 GM's. One things for sure Ricky tenure was wasted time because he was never going to bring a championship to this city.
Would say a GM, any and all GMs are failures if their team is unable to win a SB ?
 
Would say a GM, any and all GMs are failures if their team is unable to win a SB ?

Depends on what you consider good GM is. Ricky made McNair alot of $$$$. If your goal is to win a SB and you dont then yes, you've failed.
 
Aaron Wilson‏@AaronWilson_NFL 3h3 hours ago

Former Texans OT Derek Newton filed a grievance for $500,000 roster bonus he was due on April 1 if he passed a team physical. Team cut him on April 12 with failed physical designation. Grievance is pending, only counts $200,000 against their salary cap, per NFLPA records

Just give the man his money and separate on good terms.
 
Not just a playmaker: Honey Badger also seizes leadership role
7:00 AM CT
Sarah BarshopESPN Staff Writer

HOUSTON -- Tyrann Mathieu has been with the Houston Texans for five months, and he's already turned himself into a team leader.

Even though Mathieu joined a squad with stars such as J.J. Watt, DeAndre Hopkins and Deshaun Watson, it didn't take long for his teammates to take notice of the talented safety who provides leadership on and off the field.

"He's leading guys, pointing guys in the right direction and leading by example," veteran cornerback Johnathan Joseph said of Mathieu taking charge on the field. "His game speaks for itself. He brings guys around him because he has a lot of confidence in his abilities, and I think that rubs off on other guys.

Tyrann Mathieu (32) has made an early impression on his new Houston teammates. Said receiver DeAndre Hopkins: "He's the quietest and chillest guy outside of the football field, but once he's on the field, he's the Honey Badger." Scott Winters/Icon Sportswire
"I think that's the type of guy you need back in the back end on this team."

Several people around the organization describe Mathieu as a "natural leader," noting a commanding presence that emerged the minute he signed with Houston in March. And it's clear that despite the trouble he got into at LSU with his dismissal from the program and 2012 arrest, his ability to guide others has been a staple of his entire football career.

Texans running back Alfred Blue, who played with Mathieu for two seasons at LSU, said the "Honey Badger" is the same player he knew when the pair first played together eight years ago.

"There isn't much of a difference," Blue said. "The same guy he is today, he was back then. The same things he does in the NFL, he did in college. For me, watching him be the same person all these years, it's just a compliment to him.
THE REST OF THE STORY
 
Houston Texans Training Camp: 5 Texans Under the Radar
Friday, August 17, 2018 http://www.stateofthetexans.com/blo...-camp-5-texans-under-the-radar/#disqus_thread


The Houston Texans are working to build their roster for the 2018 season and like every year, there are players who are not getting the attention given to the big stars of the team. With nearly three weeks of practices and one preseason game in the book, there are a few players who are flying under the radar.

Training camp is officially finished. Here are our five Texans under the radar.

Safety, Kurtis Drummond
In year three for Drummond, what he is doing from the safety position has become hard to ignore. With two interceptions in as many days against the San Francisco 49ers in practices and his feel for routes coming his way and ability to make plays, Drummond is making plays. More impressive is the impact he is making with those plays and for a defense that wants to produce more turnovers and prevent big plays, Drummond is producing in those specific areas. Add in Drummond’s special team work and he is setting himself up to land on the 53 once again.

Offensive Lineman, Chad Slade
The value of Chad Slade is important to the Texans and he is the only backup lineman who has the ability to play both offensive tackle and guard. Being in the offensive system for the past three seasons, he has cleaned up his game and held his own at both positions. Slade has an important stretch coming up to solidify his roster spot.

Wide Receiver, Vyncint Smith
The chances of Vyncint Smith making the active roster are a long shot but there is a spot for him on the practice squad at least. Smith is a sure-handed receiver and has made some impressive and sometimes acrobatic catches. Against the 49ers, Smith did not back down from the competition and he was one of the offensive players who was able to elevate his game and produce when needed, giving quarterbacks an open target.

Wide Receiver, Braxton Miller
There have been plenty ready to write off Braxton Miller but he is still growing as a receiver in the Texans offense. Miller is one of the few receiving options who knows all three receiver spots in the offense. Miller’s route running has gotten better plus he has shown a stronger ability to get open and create space to work. He is a possession receiver at this point of his career and has actually been a reliable target in the passing game. Along with some of his return ability, 2018 might not be the time to count out Braxton Miller.
THE REST OF THE STORY
 
Houston Texans Training Camp: 5 Texans Under the Radar
Friday, August 17, 2018


The Houston Texans are working to build their roster for the 2018 season and like every year, there are players who are not getting the attention given to the big stars of the team. With nearly three weeks of practices and one preseason game in the book, there are a few players who are flying under the radar.

Training camp is officially finished. Here are our five Texans under the radar.

Safety, Kurtis Drummond
In year three for Drummond, what he is doing from the safety position has become hard to ignore. With two interceptions in as many days against the San Francisco 49ers in practices and his feel for routes coming his way and ability to make plays, Drummond is making plays. More impressive is the impact he is making with those plays and for a defense that wants to produce more turnovers and prevent big plays, Drummond is producing in those specific areas. Add in Drummond’s special team work and he is setting himself up to land on the 53 once again.

Offensive Lineman, Chad Slade
The value of Chad Slade is important to the Texans and he is the only backup lineman who has the ability to play both offensive tackle and guard. Being in the offensive system for the past three seasons, he has cleaned up his game and held his own at both positions. Slade has an important stretch coming up to solidify his roster spot.

Wide Receiver, Vyncint Smith
The chances of Vyncint Smith making the active roster are a long shot but there is a spot for him on the practice squad at least. Smith is a sure-handed receiver and has made some impressive and sometimes acrobatic catches. Against the 49ers, Smith did not back down from the competition and he was one of the offensive players who was able to elevate his game and produce when needed, giving quarterbacks an open target.

Wide Receiver, Braxton Miller
There have been plenty ready to write off Braxton Miller but he is still growing as a receiver in the Texans offense. Miller is one of the few receiving options who knows all three receiver spots in the offense. Miller’s route running has gotten better plus he has shown a stronger ability to get open and create space to work. He is a possession receiver at this point of his career and has actually been a reliable target in the passing game. Along with some of his return ability, 2018 might not be the time to count out Braxton Miller.
THE REST OF THE STORY

That's twice now I've read positive reviews on Drummond. I liked him as a UDFA, but seems to have taken some time to develop. Unfortunately I think I had written him off in my mind after last year's Pat's game, where I believe he failed to seal the game with a Brady INT (or was that corey moore?)

Let's hope he's finally turning the corner and can be a solid 4th safety for us, and this isn't just the typical camp, sunshine and rainbow stories..
 
Recognize any of these 49ers' coaches??...............Robert Saleh (defensive coordinator), Richard Hightower (special teams), John Benton (offensive line), Johnny Holland (outside linebackers), DeMeco Ryans (inside linebackers), Jeff Zgonina (defensive line), Mike McDaniel (run game specialist) and Ray Wright (strength and conditioning).
 
Recognize any of these 49ers' coaches??...............Robert Saleh (defensive coordinator), Richard Hightower (special teams), John Benton (offensive line), Johnny Holland (outside linebackers), DeMeco Ryans (inside linebackers), Jeff Zgonina (defensive line), Mike McDaniel (run game specialist) and Ray Wright (strength and conditioning).
dang--good catch! Will add a bit more to game for me.
 
Houston Texans to Host Free Agent Kayvon Webster this Coming Week
Saturday, August 18, 2018 http://www.stateofthetexans.com/blo...ayvon-webster-this-coming-week/#disqus_thread

The Houston Texans will be hosting free agent cornerback Kayvon Webster this coming week according to ESPNs Adam Schefter. Webster is entering his 5th season in the NFL after spending time with the Denver Broncos and the 2017 season with the Los Angeles Rams. Webster will also be traveling to meet with the Buffalo Bills and Detroit Lions.

Webster was drafted in the 3rd round by the Broncos in the 2013 NFL Draft. After spending four seasons with the Broncos, Webster appeared in 11 games (11 starts) with the Rams last season producing 38 total tackles, 7 pass deflections, and an interception.

This is little surprise the Texans are looking for cornerback help with the lack of consistency behind their top three options in Johnathan Joseph, Kevin Johnson, and Aaron Colvin. Johnson Bademosi is more of a special teams contributor while Dee Virgin and Josh Thornton have been an inconsistent majority of camp and preseason. Drafted rookie Jermain Kelly Jr. is yet to start practicing this preseason due to an undisclosed injury.
 
Houston Texans to Host Free Agent Kayvon Webster this Coming Week
Saturday, August 18, 2018

The Houston Texans will be hosting free agent cornerback Kayvon Webster this coming week according to ESPNs Adam Schefter. Webster is entering his 5th season in the NFL after spending time with the Denver Broncos and the 2017 season with the Los Angeles Rams. Webster will also be traveling to meet with the Buffalo Bills and Detroit Lions.

Webster was drafted in the 3rd round by the Broncos in the 2013 NFL Draft. After spending four seasons with the Broncos, Webster appeared in 11 games (11 starts) with the Rams last season producing 38 total tackles, 7 pass deflections, and an interception.

This is little surprise the Texans are looking for cornerback help with the lack of consistency behind their top three options in Johnathan Joseph, Kevin Johnson, and Aaron Colvin. Johnson Bademosi is more of a special teams contributor while Dee Virgin and Josh Thornton have been an inconsistent majority of camp and preseason. Drafted rookie Jermain Kelly Jr. is yet to start practicing this preseason due to an undisclosed injury.

Not thrilled with the recent injury history (shoulder and achilles surgery both since December).

Hope the Texans bring in Breshaud Breeland... though he has his own recent injury history.
 
Not thrilled with the recent injury history (shoulder and achilles surgery both since December).

Hope the Texans bring in Breshaud Breeland... though he has his own recent injury history.
I agree about Kayvon. To add detail to his injury history. He actually played all last season with a torn labrum and a torn rotator cuff, both which were repaired right after the season, along with the Achilles. I wouldn't touch him with a ten-foot pole.
 
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