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Houston Texans entered free agency with a bunch of money, and offensive line needs. They sat on their dollars and watched as
Trent Brown, and Ja’Wuan James were given obscene and exorbitant amounts of dollars to go to Oakland and Denver. This was the right decision. I admired this decision. Overpaying for mediocre players is how teams stifle their performance and obliterate their cap space.
Yet, the Texans still need competition at the tackle position at a minimum. If a plug and play starter couldn’t be found for a contract that made sense, they’d have to search under rocks to find someone, anyone. Houston’s tackles were only Juli’en Davenport and
Seantrel Henderson a day ago.
Then yesterday went flying by. The Texans signed 29 year old Matt Kalil to a one-year contract. Kalil missed all of last season with a knee injury. The
Panthers signed him to a five-year $55 million contract after his rookie contract ended in Minnesota. There in Carolina, the Panthers were stuck doing the same things the Texans did last season with their cheap tackles, they were chipping and sliding and helping
Kalil and
Mike Remmers in pass protection to make up for Kalil’s weak hands, and
Remmers’s slow feet. This is exactly what you can’t do when you pay a tackle $11 million a year.
Kalil should be left tackle competition at a minimum. Kalil hasn’t been good since his rookie year, and at this point, isn’t even as good as ‘I know I’m starting at left tackle’ Juli’en Davenport. With Kalil, Davenport, and
Henderson on the roster, look for Houston to draft a tackle in the first or second round of the draft, and then watch these four tear each other apart for September playingtime.
https://www.battleredblog.com/2018/...ans-exercise-kevin-johnsons-fifth-year-option