Morning Sun

Brotherly love: Watts embracing unique family reunion

- By Kristie Rieken andwill Graves

Growing up in Wisconsin, the sibling rivalry between the Watt brothers had no boundaries. Out front playing roller hockey. In the backyard playing football. Minibaseba­ll in the basement. Even the kitchen table at grandma’s was not immune.

As kids, J. J., T. J. and Derek would spend hours at their grandmothe­r’s house, sipping their “special drink” of Sprite and cranberry juice in sippy cups while playing gin rummy, where their great-grandmothe­r offered proof the family’s competitiv­e streak runs deep. Really deep.

“Great grandma, even when she was 100 years old, takes no prisoners,” said J. J., the star defensive end for the Houston Texans. “When that’s the attitude of your 100-, 101-year- old (great-) grandma, it kind of trickles down throughout the whole family.”

On Sunday, the Watt brothers will play a much higher stakes game when J. J.’s Texans look to avoid an 0- 3 start as they visit Derek and T. J.’s undefeated Steelers (2- 0). It will be just the second time since 1927 that three brothers will appear in the same NFL game.

“It’s incredible. It’s special,” said J. J., at 31 the oldest of the bunch. “It’s a testament to our

parents and everything that they did and all the people in our lives — our coaches, our trainers, everybodyw­ho helped us get here. It’s going to be very, very cool.”

If not exactly warm and fuzzy. J. J. is actually looking for a bit of payback against Derek after something the fullback did last season when he played for the Chargers in a loss to the Texans.

“I won the game so it doesn’t matter, but yeah, he tossed a chip in the ribs,” J. J. said. “That’s what he does. He’s a pesky little fullback. He sticks his elbow in your ribs as you’re pass rushing and then he goes on his way. We’ll seewhat happens on Sunday.”

Derek, the middle brother at 27, laughed at the memory and expects to have a run-in or two with big brother’s familiar No. 99.

“I think I got him pretty good and he tried to play a spin move with it,” said Derek, who signed a threeyear deal with the Steelers in March. “But I am sure if he finds an opportunit­y this game he will definitely try to get me back for it. But I don’t see him going out of his way, that’s for sure.”

That would simply be

against the Watt way. John and connie watt instilled in their sons at a young age the importance of selfless hard work. They shooed them out of the house in Pewaukee, Wisconsin — about a half-hour west of Milwaukee — and the three boys became the de facto sports commission­ers of the neighborho­od.

“We were trying to get as many people, as many kids in the community to come over our house and play as many sports as we possibly could,” said T. J., the baby of the bunch at 26.

Some things never change. The Watts spent a portion of their offseason co-hosting a game show

called “Ultimate Tag,” and are currently starring in a series of Subway commercial­s featuring mom and dad.

Yet even as their stars have risen — as tends to happen when you’re a threetime defensive Player of the Year like J. J., or a 2019 AllPro with a rapidly growing reputation as one of the best outside linebacker­s in the NFL in T. J. — their private lives remain relatively simple. Their group chats focus on Derek’s son Logan, J. J. complainin­g about the heat in Houston; and T. J. being well, T. J., but staying as quiet as possible.

Considerin­g how much his chatterbox older brothers talk, maybe it’s fitting T. J. is practicall­y a monk by comparison. Or maybe it’s just a byproduct of constantly having to prove yourself in a house stuffed with testostero­ne.

Was T. J. picked on? Of course. Did it bother him? No. Without it, he realizes he might not have ever made it to the NFL.

“For me it was super important in my developmen­t to play with J. J. and Derek to get beat up on a lot when I was younger,” he said. “But (it taught me to) just kind of be resilient and continue to grow and learn from my experience­s playing up with those guys.”

Their bond remains as strong as ever. During the lengthy shutdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic, they retreated to Wisconsin, where J. J.’s gym served as the hub of their offseason program. Whatever regimen they put together looks like it worked.

T. J. is coming off a 2 ½ sack performanc­e against Denver. Derek drilled Broncos punter Sam Martin in the end zone for a safety, and opened up a hole for running back James Conner to tear off a 59-yard sprint that sealed a 26-21 victory. While the Texans are winless, J. J. twice took down reigning NFL MVP Lamar Jackson last week against Baltimore.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt (99) stands on the field next to his brother San Diego Chargers fullback Derek Watt (34) after the Texans defeated the Los Angeles Chargers 27to 20in a 2019game in Carson, Calif.
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt (99) stands on the field next to his brother San Diego Chargers fullback Derek Watt (34) after the Texans defeated the Los Angeles Chargers 27to 20in a 2019game in Carson, Calif.
 ?? MICHAEL WYKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt (99) blocks a pass by Oakland Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) during the first half of a 2019game in Houston.
MICHAEL WYKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Houston Texans defensive end J.J. Watt (99) blocks a pass by Oakland Raiders quarterbac­k Derek Carr (4) during the first half of a 2019game in Houston.

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