Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Self-destructin­g, move by move

Team dealing with its unhappy QB after releasing its star Watt

- By Kristie Rieken

J.J. Watt is gone from the Houston Texans, and Deshaun Watson wants out, too.

The Texans have been making plenty of headlines this offseason. Not one has been good.

Watt was released on Friday, ending the tenure of the face of the franchise, and things could get even worse in Houston with a possible standoff looming with the star quarterbac­k. Watson has requested a trade. New general manager Nick Caserio has said they have “zero interest” in trading him, and coach David Culley said he expects him to be the team’s quarterbac­k next season.

The story line is a familiar one in Houston, where the Rockets recently dealt with a similarly stormy situation involving superstar James Harden. Rumors swirled all offseason that Harden wanted to leave, but the Rockets didn’t deal him before the season began. That led to a miserable Harden stuck on a team that limped to a 3-6 record. His time in Houston was punctuated by a postgame rant after a blowout loss to the Lakers when he berated the Rockets, saying, “We’re just not good enough.”

He was shipped to Brooklyn the next day, but not before being banned from practice and drawing the ire of his teammates for his attitude and comments.

Could the Texans be headed for the same fate with Watson? If he doesn’t want to be on the team would refusing to trade him make anything better?

Watson, who signed a four-year, $156 million contract last year, has been unhappy with the direction of the team for some time. Sports Illustrate­d reported weeks ago that Watson was upset the Texans didn’t initially request to interview Kansas City offensive coordinato­r Eric Bieniemy for their coaching vacancy. They eventually did interview Bieniemy before hiring Culley.

Some have put the blame for the current state of the Texans on owner Cal Mcnair, who has run the team since the death of his father Bob Mcnair in November 2018. Although there’s plenty of blame to

go around on this mess of a team, former coach and general manager Bill O’brien, who was fired after an 0-4 start, deserves his fair share of criticism for decisions he made while in charge.

The worst of those moves came last March when he traded receiver Deandre Hopkins to Arizona for running back David Johnson and a second- and fourth-round draft pick.

There are also questions about the rise of Jack Easterby, the executive vice president of football operations and a former chaplain for the Patriots with no personnel experience who gained power in the wake of O’brien’s dismissal.

Houston could have tried to trade Watt instead of releasing him, likely receiving at least one draft pick in return.

 ?? Kamil Krzaczynsk­i / Associated Press ?? Houston Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson has made it clear that he wants out after being unhappy with the direction of the team for some time.
Kamil Krzaczynsk­i / Associated Press Houston Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson has made it clear that he wants out after being unhappy with the direction of the team for some time.

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