Houston Chronicle Sunday

UH falls; Ags take thriller

Tech tops Coogs; A&M wins in OT

- By Aaron Wilson aaron.wilson@chron.com twitter.com/aaronwilso­n_nfl

FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — Spies, disguises, subterfuge and intricate strategies will define this chess match.

Although that might sound like it’s straight out of a James Bond movie, it’s all about the element of confusion the New England Patriots’ defense will try to create Sunday against Texans rookie quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson at Gillette Stadium.

Under coach Bill Belichick, the Patriots have never lost to a rookie quarterbac­k at home in eight matchups.

In their quest to maintain that streak, the Patriots will do everything they can to make Watson doubt what he’s seeing.

They’ll shift constantly before the snap to make it difficult for the 22-year-old to read their personnel and schemes.

They might designate one player as a spy to shadow Watson wherever he goes to try to counteract his mobility.

And there will be plenty of blitzing, line stunts and other gambits intended to transform a confident, poised young man into a hesitant, nervous wreck in his second NFL start.

Watson knows the Patriots will attempt to overwhelm him. He’s heard all about how smart the Patriots are, especially Belichick, defensive coordinato­r Matt Patricia, who has a degree in aeronautic­al engineerin­g from Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute, and veteran free safety Devin McCourty.

“Throw all types of things at me,” Watson said when asked what he anticipate­s the Patriots’ defense will do against him. “Different coverages, different schemes, different looks and not try to stay in a base look where we can kind of know what they’re doing. That’s every team, not just the Patriots, that I play against because I’m young.

“I’m new to the league. I’m a rookie. There’s a lot that I have to see and a lot that I have to experience. I’ll take it one snap at a time and take the opportunit­y as it comes and experience it.”

It’s an admirable, enlightene­d attitude for the first-round draft pick from Clemson. Watson will need it as the secondyoun­gest starting quarterbac­k to face Belichick as a head coach. In 1993, Belichick was coaching the Cleveland Browns when they played against then-21-year-old Patriots rookie quarterbac­k Drew Bledsoe.

It’s not as if no rookie quarterbac­k has defeated one of Belichick’s New England squads.

Belichick is 15-5 against rookie quarterbac­ks since taking over the Patriots. All five of those wins were on the road, though, and were earned by the New York Jets’ Mark Sanchez in 2009, the Browns’ Colt McCoy in 2010, the Seattle Seahawks’ Russell Wilson in 2012 and the Jets’ Geno Smith in 2013.

Going back to 1994, the Patriots have more home victories, including playoff games, than any other NFL team with 161.

“I would tell you that it’s hard for any quarterbac­k,” Texans coach Bill O’Brien said. “How many times have they lost at Gillette Stadium, to any quarterbac­k? It’s probably pretty good, so that would include not just rookie quarterbac­ks, but any quarterbac­k. Relative to that, I think that we’re preparing Deshaun. He’s working very, very hard.” Finding a good offensive balance

Watson is extremely athletic, and he’ll need his speed and elusivenes­s against a Patriots defense that includes linebacker Dont’a Hightower and cornerback­s Stephon Gilmore and Malcolm Butler.

“A very dangerous quarterbac­k,” Patricia said. “I think he’s a guy who gives them a different approach to the offense. He’s very calm, a real smooth guy. This guy is an experience­d guy from the standpoint of he has played in some big games before.

“His ability to move, and his speed and skill set to make tacklers miss and get out into open space, is definitely at a very high level that we’ve got to prepare for. I think the big thing is making sure that we all understand that once the guy does turn into a full-blown runner, we have to make sure that we do a really good job of hustling and getting everybody to the ball because he is difficult to tackle.”

Just ask the Bengals. They were unable to corral Watson in the open field as he broke off an electrifyi­ng 49-yard touchdown run during a 13-9 Texans win last week during his first NFL start.

Although Watson has completed 57.4 percent of his throws for 227 yards, one touchdown and one intercepti­on, he’s rushed for 83 yards on seven carries. He ran for a touchdown in the preseason against the Patriots, but was 3-of-10 passing for 102 yards against their backups.

“We certainly could see his poise and he’s been in a lot of big games, does a good job at the line of scrimmage,” Belichick said. “I thought Cincinnati gave him some tough looks and he handled those well. Very athletic, throws the ball well, accurate, can make all the throw.

“We have to do a good job of containing him and do a good job of tackling him because he’s a tough guy to get down when he runs. He’s not running to slide. He’s running to gain yardage, so that will be a big challenge.” Watson learning on the job

What Watson hasn’t seen in his limited NFL experience is a ton of defensive looks that challenge his understand­ing of what coverage a team is in and how they’re attacking the line of scrimmage to harass him inside the pocket.

Essentiall­y, Watson doesn’t know what he doesn’t know.

“I think any time you’re going against a young quarterbac­k or you’re coaching up a young quarterbac­k, what you really have to emphasize with him is they’re going to hold looks for as long as they can, and at the snap of the ball is really when you have to identify what’s going on, what you’re seeing,” Texans quarterbac­ks coach Sean Ryan said. “So, it’s all about talking to him about, ‘Look, what they’re showing you pre-snap doesn’t actually mean what’s going to happen after the ball’s snapped.’ You have to be locked into that.

“It comes from film study and then it comes from within the game, seeing what the plan is as you go through the game and getting them up to speed on that in between series. Really, the snap of the ball identifica­tion is huge.”

Texans two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Johnathan Joseph has been on the other side of the equation against young quarterbac­ks. He’s expecting special plans against Watson to account for his speed and moves.

“You’ve got to prepare for his legs,” Joseph said. “I think everybody in the league, obviously, sees that now. I think they’ll stick to their game plan. Other than that, just put a spy or something on him. That’s what I would do if I was a D-coordinato­r.”

Watson has always been a quick study, and a strong believer in himself.

He was an instant hit as a ninth-grade starter in Gainesvill­e, Ga., and as a freshman at Clemson.

“I think that when we met him he carried himself very well,” O’Brien said. “When you come into a meeting at the combine with the general manager and the head coach and various other people in the meeting room, it’s a small hotel room. The prospect sits right in the middle of everybody. It’s a tough environmen­t and I thought he handled himself real well.

“I don’t think that confidence for him needs to grow. He’s very confident in his own ability, his own work ethic. Obviously, he doesn’t know what he doesn’t know and he’ll learn. He’ll see things for the first time every time he’s out there: different coverages, different blitzes, different skill sets of different players — and he’ll learn. He’s a very smart guy. He learns very quickly.” Improving on the passing game

The Texans have averaged 4.8 yards per passing attempt. They average 104 net passing yards per game.

To an extent, Watson has been limited by his personnel. Against the Bengals, his three top tight ends were out with concussion­s. He primarily targeted Pro Bowl wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins.

“Absolutely, we do not want to average under 5 yards per pass attempt,” O’Brien said. “We want to eventually try to get the ball down the field. Obviously, as we move on and he gets more experience, meaning Deshaun, I think that we’ll see more of that.”

It’s imperative that Watson protect the football. He nearly threw two intercepti­ons against the Bengals, but the errant throws were dropped. He had an intercepti­on against the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars nullified due to a penalty. He’s been sacked seven times in six quarters working behind an offensive line missing three-time Pro Bowl left tackle Duane Brown due to a contract dispute.

Rookie quarterbac­ks who have had more than one turnover against Belichick-coached teams have an 0-10 record.

What Watson has in terms of intangible dwarfs his modest statistics. He’ll lean heavily on his attitude Sunday as he tries to match wits with some of the top defensive minds in the game.

“Confidence is big, not just for me, but for every player,” Watson said. “If you have confidence, then you go out there knowing what you’re doing and you can do it at a fast level and at a high tempo. If you continue to do that and build that confidence, then your potential is very, very high.

“I usually don’t get nervous because football is football. This is what I love to do. It’s no different than playing Little League. More people watching, of course, guys are bigger and faster, smarter, but it’s still football.”

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 ?? Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle ?? Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson will make his second career NFL start, and it happens to come against Bill Belichick and his vaunted New England defense. Watson can expect to see a lot of different coverages and disguises thrown his way.
Brett Coomer / Houston Chronicle Texans quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson will make his second career NFL start, and it happens to come against Bill Belichick and his vaunted New England defense. Watson can expect to see a lot of different coverages and disguises thrown his way.

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