Why the Texans lose...
Someone has been writing that coaching hasn't been a problem in recent weeks, that the issue is a lack of talent. That someone has changed his mind.
There's no defense for what happened Sunday night. The Texans weren't ready to play, and that's a reflection of a poor job by the coaching staff.
David Carr fumbled a third-down snap on the opening drive. Dumb.
Andre Johnson commits a penalty to take his team out of field goal range. Dumb.
Phillip Buchanon either can't or won't tackle. Why hasn't he been released? Why haven't the people who acquired him been fired?
Why doesn't Derick Armstrong play more? The personnel department hasn't found many good players. Why are the coaches refusing to play one of the few?
Gary Walker angrily stalks the sidelines. Why was he mad? Did someone ask why he'd had just 1.5 sacks in three seasons? Pretty poor production for the huge signing bonus he got.
Chad Stanley can't hold a snap from center on a field-goal try late in the second quarter. Dumb.
No matter what you think of the play calling or the effort by WR Cory Bradford, that was a terrible throw by Carr at the end of the first half. Because the pass protection is so bad, the offense has been quickened to the point that nothing has time to develop.
They couldn't even get lined up deep in Kansas City territory in the second half and had to burn a timeout. Dumb.
Other than pass protection and play-calling, which was limited by the personnel, these issues are coaching issues. If you're going to make a case that head coach Dom Capers should be retained and only GM Charley Casserly fired, you're on your own.
And the knuckleheads get in a fight late in the game. Why didn't they show some fight in the first half? Dumb.
If Capers is told to clean out his office Monday morning, he'd get no argument from me. Casserly can stay long enough to have Thanksgiving Dinner in the cafeteria. Then he goes, too.
It's time to start over.
http://blogs.chron.com/sportsjustice/