Showing posts with label Houston Texans. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Houston Texans. Show all posts

Sunday, December 25, 2016

Cincinnati Bengals" missed FG try gives Houston Texans the win, division title


Colts vs. Texans | NFL Week 6 Game Highlights

HOUSTON -- that the houston texans shifted from dread to jubilation in the split second it took Cincinnati Bengals kicker Randy Bullock to miss his last-second field goal attempt was a microcosm of their season -- one filled with ups, downs and white-knuckle finishes.

Bullock pushed a 43-yard try wide right as time expired, touching off a celebration as the Texans clinched their second consecutive AFC South title with a 12-10 win over the Bengals on Saturday night at NRG Stadium.

Bengals quarterback Andy Dalton engineered a 13-play, 60-yard drive to put Bullock in position to exact revenge against the team that selected him in the fifth round of the 2012 draft and subsequently released him.

Instead, Bullock missed and the Texans (9-6) claimed a postseason bid despite their minus-42 season point differential.

"It doesn"t always look pretty, but at the end of the day we"re 9-6," Texans coach Bill O"Brien said. "We"re 5-0 in the division and we beat a very tough Cincinnati team."

Texans quarterback Tom Savage, making his first career start, twice rallied Houston from behind, including a four-play, 75-yard drive that resulted in the game-winner. He sandwiched completions of 19 and 21 yards to Will Fuller and DeAndre Hopkins, respectively, around an 11-yard scramble for a first down before running back Alfred Blue darted 24 yards for a touchdown and the lead with 8:41 remaining.

Bengals defensive end Margus Hunt blocked the ensuing PAT, setting the stage for Bullock and the Bengals (5-9-1) to need a field goal to secure the victory. But Bullock failed to deliver as Cincinnati dropped to 2-5 since its bye week.

"That was exactly what I wanted," said Bullock, released by the Texans last season. "I did have the opportunity, I just didn"t take advantage of it. That hurts for me and this team. Obviously, we wanted to win here, so it was incredibly disappointing."

Savage finished 18-of-29 passing for 176 yards and was sacked four times. Dalton passed for 268 yards with a touchdown and an interception and was sacked thrice.

The Bengals were first to find the end zone when wide receiver Brandon LaFell, like Dalton a Houston native, turned a short slant pass on third down into an 86-yard catch-and-run for a touchdown and a 10-6 advantage with 10:45 left to play.

Texans defensive backs A.J. Bouye and Kareem Jackson collided behind the completion, allowing LaFell to build momentum as he crossed the field to beat the rest of the secondary to the far sideline, where raced untouched into the end zone.

That score represented a stunning turn of events, but the Texans were undaunted. Their defense allowed just 294 total yards and Savage found his rhythm in the second half once the Texans employed a no-huddle attack to spark their offense.

"I thought it was getting into a little rhythm," Savage said of the offense. "Completed some b***s. The first half I was just missing some people. Missing some reads here and there and that"s unacceptable."

From the start, the Texans were on their heels offensively, unable to protect Savage and therefore inept are generating any semblance of a scoring threat.

Savage was sacked three times in his first five dropbacks, including on consecutive snaps by Bengals defensive tackle Geno Atkins and defensive end Wallace Gilberry to open the second drive. Houston resorted to a run-heavy attack the remainder of the half, but the results were similar. The Texans mustered 34 yards by the break.

The Bengals weren"t exactly prolific offensively, managing 2.4 yards per play on their initial six drives before compiling a 14-play, 67-yard scoring drive late in the second quarter. That march ended with a 43-yard Bullock field goal at the buzzer, giving Cincinnati a 3-0 lead.

When Bullock faced a near-identical kick later, what has happened to Cincinnati for most of this star-crossed season manifested again.

"The way this season"s gone, when we"ve needed to make a play, we haven"t been able to do it," Dalton said. "It"s not one thing that"s caused it. It"s just the way things have gone this year. It"s kind of been how our season"s been, and it"s unfortunate it"s been that way."

NOTES: After spending the week preparing to return from a right hamstring injury suffered in Week 11, Bengals WR A.J. Green was pulled from a team meeting on Friday and told he will not play the remainder of the season. According to published reports, Green was disenchanted with the news and left Houston. He reportedly has a torn tendon that has not fully healed. ... Texans RB Lamar Miller was inactive with an ankle injury suffered last week against the Jaguars. He had played in 67 straight games and is 26 yards shy of matching his career best of 1,099 rushing yards set in 2014 with the Dolphins. ... Three Texans starters returned on defense: LB Whitney Mercilus (back), LB John Simon (chest) and CB Johnathan Joseph (ribs). Mercilus missed last week"s win over the Jaguars. Simon and Joseph were sidelined for four and two games, respectively.

Source: http://www.upi.com/Sports_News/NFL/2016/12/25/Cincinnati-Bengals-missed-FG-try-gives-Houston-Texans-the-win-division-title/2901482687064/

Continue Reading ..

Monday, October 17, 2016

DeMeco Ryans suing Houston Texans, NFL | AL.com


Bears vs. Texans (Week 1) | Game Highlights | NFL

Former linebacker DeMeco Ryans is suing the Houston Texans and the NFL over a torn Achilles tendon suffered during a game at Houston"s NRG Stadium on Nov. 2, 2014.

NBC Sports reported the lawsuit, which was filed Friday, names the Harris County Convention Sports Corp. and stadium-management company SMG, in addition to the Texans and NFL,as the defendants.

At the time, NRG Stadium used square panels of grass grown on metal trays to form its playing surface a set-up that was widely criticized. New England Patriots coach Bill Belichick called the stadium"s playing surface "terrible."

The stadium ditched the tray systemafter the first home game of the 2015 system, when former No. 1 draft choice Jadeveon Clowney of the Texans suffered a knee injury on the field. NRG Stadium now features a field-turf surface.

In 2012, former Houston punter Brett Hartmann suedSMG and Harris County Convention Sports Corp. over a career-ending ACL injury suffered on the field. The Texans and the NFL were not named in Hartmann"s lawsuit.

Ryans was playing for the Philadelphia Eagles at the time of the injury and missed the remaining eight games of the 2014 season. He returned to play 14 games for the Eagles in 2015. Philadelphia released Ryanson Feb. 24. He was not picked up by another team.

FOR MORE OF AL.COM"S COMPREHENSIVE COVERAGE OF THE NFL, GO TO OURNFL PAGE

Since behind selected out of Alabamain the second round of the 2006 NFL Draft by Houston, Ryans has played 10 pro seasons. He won the 2006 NFL Defensive Rookie of the Year Award with the Texans. He earned Pro Bowl recognition in 2007 and 2009.

In 2010, Ryans ruptured an Achilles tendon in the sixth game of the season while playing on Houston"s home field.

After the 2012 season, the Texans traded Ryans and a third-round pick to the Eagles for a third-round pick and a fourth-round pick.

The former Jess Lanier prep standout has played in 140 NFL games, with 139 starts. He intercepted seven passes, recovered 10 fumbles, recorded 13.5 sacks and made 970 tackles.

Source: http://www.al.com/sports/index.ssf/2016/10/demeco_ryans_suing_houston_tex.html

Continue Reading ..

Monday, August 29, 2016

Juggernaut Index, No. 12: The Houston Texans


Every Brock Osweiler Throw from Week 2 | 2016 NFL Preseason Highlights
Houston is the rare division champ that neededto make massive changes. Fantasy-wise, things are looking up. (Photo by Thearon W. Henderson/Getty Images)

The Juggernaut Index is our annual ranking and review of NFL teams for fantasy purposes repeat: FANTASY PURPOSES. Here we concern ourselves with a franchises likely contributions to the fantasy player pool. We are not concerned with projected wins and losses. Instead, were focused on yards and points. As always, were beginning with the leagues least useful teams, working our way toward the elite fantasy juggernauts.

[Join a Yahoo Fantasy Football league for free and make 2016 your season!]

As a general rule, year-to-year continuity is a big deal in the NFL. Its not reasonable to expect a team to execute flawlessly in September if it underwent a massive overhaul in March. Without overstating pro footballs complexity, hopefully we can all agree that repetition, rapport and scheme familiarity are not small things. Building a great real-life team is somewhat more complicated than assembling a great fantasy roster.

Which brings us to the 2016 Houston Texans. This teams first-string offense in opening week will feature a new quarterback, new running back, two new offensive linemen and at least one new receiver. Thats a whole lotta new. Its possible that Bill OBriens squad will be an unstoppable machine from the seasons first snap, but we shouldnt panic if it isnt.

If theres one thing we can say with certainty about the Texans offense, its that change was needed. Last year, Houston led the NFL in pace while ranking at the bottom of the league in yards per play (4.9). It was a hurry-up-and-punt system, basically. (Shane Lechler would have been a monster in PPP leagues, if such a format existed. He punted 95 times, the second-highest total in the league.) The Texans completed only 57.8 percent of their pass attempts in 2015, and the teams running game averaged just 3.7 yards per carry. Horrendous rates, obviously.

This year, Brock Osweiler takes over at quarterback after signing a mega-deal with Houston in free agency (four years, $72 million). He appeared in eight games for the Broncos last season, his play was uneven, and he posted a passer-rating of 86.4. Its not at all clear that Osweiler is the sort of QB who can guide a team deep into the postseason. But hey, hes also not Brian Hoyer, so thats exciting. Osweiler has uncommon size (6-foot-7) and plenty of arm strength, but his accuracy isnt special and his processing speed may not be the greatest. Still, he directed a few big wins for Denver last year notably against New England and Cincinnati and h**l have plenty of firepower at his disposal in Houston. It wouldnt be a shock if he emerged as a stream-worthy QB for fantasy purposes, but he doesnt belong in the draft discussion for leagues of typical size. Ive snagged Osweiler as a late flier in super-flex formats simply because he gets to throw to this guy

DeAndre Hopkins cannot be covered. Nope. (Photo by Ronald C. Modra/Sports Imagery/Getty Images)

DeAndre Hopkins has seen a parade of poor quarterbacks since entering the league Schaub, Keenum, Yates, Mallet, Weeden, Hoyer so I refuse to believe he cant thrive with Osweiler. Hes coming off a season in which he caught 111 b***s for 1521 yards and 11 scores, drawing a ridiculous 192 targets. Nuk gave us 11 games with at least 80 receiving yards last year, and only once was he held to fewer than five catches. He has freakish hands and perhaps the best body control in the league. Hes fantastic, is what Im saying a no-doubt No. 1 receiver. Draft him in the first round with confidence.

Beyond Hopkins, however, Houstons receiving corps is loaded with question marks. First-round rookie Will Fuller is a burner with 4.32 speed, and it appears h**l start opposite Hopkins. Theres no questioning his vertical ability, but his hands are a legit concern. Fullers collegiate career was filled with big plays and ugly drops, and its worth noting that he was owned (and later trashed) by Clemson corner Mackensie Alexander. Its not as if Fuller is going to run every route in the playbook, but h**l serve as an immediate home-run threat. Id prefer to own him in a best-ball format than in a league with standard settings, but its clear he deserves attention in deeper player pools.

Braxton Miller, another rookie, appears to be ticketed for slot duties. Hes caught seven b***s for 68 yards in exhibition play thus far, running with the starters. Miller only spent one season at receiver at Ohio State, but hes apparently a quick study. Like Fuller, he should have a place on your cheat sheet in deep-ish leagues. Millers preseason highlights are high quality, and you might recall that he specialized in the spin-move-of-death at OSU.

At the moment, Jaelen Strong and Cecil Shorts are simply names on the depth chart, players with little chance to be featured. No need to draft either receiver. The Texans havent given us a useful fantasy tight end since the prime years of Owen Daniels, but the team may have found something in UDFA Stephen Anderson. At 6-foot-2 and 230 pounds, hes either an undersized TE or a slightly over-sized WR. Either way, they seem to like him in Houston. Theres no pressing need to draft him, of course, but file away the name.

The Texans ranked fifth in the NFL in total rush attempts last season (472) and No. 29 in yards per carry (3.7), which is well, thats misery. As a fan, theres almost nothing worse than a bad running team with a deep commitment to the run. But new acquisition Lamar Miller is taking over the featured role in Houstons backfield, chasing Alfred Blue to the sideline. Miller is simply an enormous upgrade for this team. He managed to finish as a top-10 fantasy back in each of the past two seasons, despite receiving a curiously modest workload (only 241 touches in 2015). All signs point to Miller feasting in the year ahead; his touches should increase by 70 or more, assuming good health. Its easy to see a path to a top-three positional finish for Miller, and he shouldnt fall outside the top 15 picks in a typical draft.

I havent yet reached a Brad Evans level of enthusiasm with Miller check the ranks for details but I do understand the infatuation. Brads stance on Miller does not crack the list of his 100 most insane fantasy opinions.

Houstons defense is led by one of the NFLs most relentless corporate pitchmen pass-rushers, J.J. Watt, a hurricane of a human being. Watt is recovering from surgery to repair a herniated disk, placing his September availability in doubt. He played through hand, groin, disk and abdominal injuries last season and still managed to produce 17.5 sacks and 76 tackles, so Im not going to give a pessimistic spin on his outlook for 2016. Hes not a normal dude. The Texans D has talent at all levels and the teams division schedule is loaded with turnovers, so this is a group to target in our game. They open against Jay Cutler & Co., so well rank em as a recommended play in Week 1, regardless of Watts status.

2015 Offensive Stats & RanksPoints per game 21.2 (22)Pass YPG 239.6 (18)Rush YPG 108.2 (15)Yards per play 4.9 (32)Plays per game 69.9 (1)

Previous Juggernaut Index entries: 32) Cleveland, 31) San Francisco, 30) Philadelphia, 29) Baltimore, 28) Tennessee, 27) Los Angeles, 26) Miami, 25) Detroit, 24) Chicago, 23) San Diego, 22) Minnesota, 21) Tampa Bay, 20) Atlanta, 19) Washington, 18) Buffalo, 17) Kansas City, 16) Oakland, 15) NY Giants, 14) Indianapolis, 13) Jacksonville, 12) Houston

Source: http://sports.yahoo.com/news/juggernaut-index-no-12-the-houston-texans-222539713.html

Continue Reading ..