Texarkana Gazette

Texans look for 1st win of season after O’Brien’s firing

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HOUSTON — The Bill O’Brien era is over in Houston, and now it’s up to Romeo Crennel to help the Texans try to turn around this dreadful season.

O’Brien was fired as coach and general manager on Monday after the Texans dropped to 0-4 for the first time since 2008 with a loss to the Vikings last weekend. Team owner Cal McNair then made Crennel the team’s interim coach for the rest of this season.

Crennel has been an assistant for O’Brien since 2014 and has coached both the Browns and the Chiefs in an NFL and college career spanning 50 years. He isn’t promising a miraculous change today when the Texans host the Jaguars (1-3), but he does have some expectatio­ns for his team.

“I hope our attitude and energy is different, and then I hope that our performanc­e is different,” he said.

Along with improving their mindset, Crennel believes the biggest problem for the Texans this season has been inconsiste­ncy, something he’s focused on improving this week.

“There are times that we do what we’re supposed to do, and we look good,” Crennel said. “Then when we try to make a play, we get guys trying to do too much, then that opens up seams. Then we look bad.”

“My goal is to try to get us to look good on a more consistent basis,” he said. “Then I think that will give us a chance to be in the game and have a chance to win.”

Star defensive end J.J. Watt wouldn’t address reports that he got into a verbal altercatio­n with O’Brien in practice two weeks ago. But he did say that he thought a team with Deshaun Watson at quarterbac­k needed a change after the 0-4 start.

“I appreciate and respect what we had,” Watt said. “We won four division titles in six years with Bill … but obviously this year we’re 0-4 and stuff wasn’t working. When you have the talent that we have, specifical­ly at the quarterbac­k position in this league, you can’t be 0-4.”

He then raved about the “positive air” Crennel brings to work every day.

“You can’t really help but smile when you’re having a conversati­on with RAC,” Watt said. “I’m looking forward to seeing what he can do and what he brings to our team. It should be fun.”

At 73, Crennel will be the oldest coach in NFL history when the Texans take the field on Sunday, passing Hall of Famer George Halas, who was 72 in his last game with Bears in 1967. Crennel chuckled when told of that fact, but said he really hasn’t given his place in history much thought with everything else on his plate this week.

“I’m just a football coach and I enjoy coaching and that’s why I’m still coaching,” he said. “So, I’m just going to try to make this team better and try to win a football game.”

Jaguars coach Doug Marrone doesn’t expect any big changes to the Texans under Crennel with Houston offensive coordinato­r Tim Kelly and defensive coordinato­r Anthony Weaver still in place. But he believes the winless Texans will have a chip on their shoulders in the wake of O’Brien’s firing.

“People start looking and saying: ‘Hey, we have to step up our game,’” he said. “So usually you get the best effort from a team.”

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