Texarkana Gazette

Texans, Colts try to build momentum

- By Michael Marot

INDIANAPOL­IS—Houston and Indianapol­is head into Sunday’s season finale facing the same plight.

With the playoffs out of reach and speculatio­n swirling about the job status of both coaches, they know changes are coming. They’re just not sure how deep they will cut.

So the Texans and Colts will spend the last day of this season trying to snap long losing streaks and

take a little momentum into a potentiall­y tumultuous offseason. And that, of course, means winning still matters.

“The main thing is you try to go finish strong and try to put great film out there, especially for the younger guys who want to continue playing, and especially for myself,” said 34-yearold running back Frank Gore, who can become a free agent in March. “I just want to win, I don’t care who it is.”

On paper, the stakes seem minuscule.

Indy (3-12) has lost six straight, the longest skid of coach Chuck Pagano’s six seasons, and is locked into a top-three draft choice. Seventeen players will finish this season on injured reserve, including Andrew Luck, who never played this season.

The season has been so challengin­g that many now believe a third consecutiv­e postseason absence will end Pagano’s tenure in Indy. But he has somehow managed to get Indy’s undermanne­d roster to play hard week after week, and there’s no reason to doubt they will against the Texans (4-11).

“It’s our last ride together,” Pagano said, perhaps previewing his own expectatio­ns about changes. “We’re going to enjoy and embrace every single second of it and get obsessed with completion. That’s what successful people do—they get obsessed with completion. We need to complete this season. No better way than to go out with a win.”

Houston hasn’t had it any easier.

The Texans have lost five in a row, eight of nine, and don’t even have a first-round draft pick in April. Houston sent its selection to Cleveland to take Deshaun Watson at No. 12 overall last spring. Watson is now recovering from a torn ACL in his right knee, and his injury coincided with Houston’s subsequent collapse.

Some are calling for the ouster of coach Bill O’Brien even though players, including Watson, believe O’Brien should get another chance.

“The last couple of weeks we haven’t done a good job of helping him (O’Brien) out,” quarterbac­k T.J. Yates said.

Will those lobbying efforts be enough to save Pagano or O’Brien with fan bases clamoring for meaningful wins?

Those decisions are likely to come Sunday night or Monday morning. But until then, the goal remains unchanged: win.

“They’re paying us to go out there and play hard and to coach well, and you’re getting handed a paycheck to go coach and play, so it’s your job,” O’Brien said. “It’s your duty to the National Football League, it’s your duty to your teammates, it’s your duty to the Houston Texans to go out there and play very hard. Our guys will do that.”

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