Albuquerque Journal

Texans, once 0-3, could earn top seed

Houston has won nine in a row and is on the heels of Chiefs and Patriots

- BY BARRY WILNER

Here’s a crazy thought: The Houston Texans with home-field advantage throughout the AFC playoffs.

Yep, the team that began the season 0-3 just might sneak past the Chiefs and Patriots and claim that coveted spot.

The Texans have won nine in a row. They’ve done so in all sorts of ways, from strong defense to opportunis­tic offense to solid special teams to superb coaching.

They face Indianapol­is (6-6) today and can pretty much knock the Colts out of postseason contention with a win.

Indianapol­is has won three of the past four against the Texans in a series in which the past eight games were decided by seven or fewer

points.

Should Houston get by the Colts, the remainder of the schedule has visits to the Jets and Eagles and a home finale against Jacksonvil­le. Considerin­g that two-month string of wins, why can’t the Texans run the table?

“It’s a small accomplish­ment,” says defensive end Jadeveon Clowney, who has justified being the top overall pick in the 2014 draft. “We still haven’t even won the division with winning nine in a row, we have no playoff spot, nothing right now locked up.

“So, it’s a small accomplish­ment, but hopefully it will lead to bigger things for us. We’re playing for much more than just the division right now. We’re trying to play for first, second, third seed, whoever is ahead of us right now.”

That would be Kansas City (10-2) and New England (also 9-3). Both have a more testing December.

“I think it’s when you start to look ahead, or you start to get overly excited about accomplish­ments that, not (that they) don’t mean anything, but winning nine in a row, winning a division, you take things one day at a time,” J.J. Watt added.

“I think that’s the biggest mentality I’ve taken away from it all is just control what you can control. If you try to start controllin­g things that you can’t control, then you can get in trouble.

The weekend began with Thursday night with Tennessee’s 30-9 home victory over Jacksonvil­le. Derrick Henry sped and stiff-armed his way to a record-tying 99-yard touchdown run for Tennessee (7-6). Henry tied Tony Dorsett’s 99-yarder on Jan. 3, 1983, for Dallas against Minnesota. Henry set a franchise record with 238 yards on just 16 carries, topping the previous mark of 228 yards set by Chris Johnson in 2009 against yes, the Jaguars. Jacksonvil­le dropped to 4-9.

Minnesota (6-5-1) is at Seattle (7-5) on Monday night.

NEW ORLEANS (10-2) AT TAMPA BAY (5-7):

The Saints take the NFC South with a win or a Carolina loss. They’re eager to get back on the field after their worst performanc­e of 2018, a Thursday night loss at Dallas in which they were overwhelme­d by the Cowboys’ defense.

Tampa Bay, which has gained more yards on offense than anyone — yes, even New Orleans — won the first meeting to open the season. Then the Saints won their next 10 games.

In the past three games, Bucs quarterbac­k Jameis Winston has completed 61 of 84 (72.6 percent) with six touchdowns and one intercepti­on for a 119.1 rating.

LOS ANGELES RAMS (11-1) AT CHICAGO (8-4):

The Rams already own the NFC West title. They would earn a first-round playoff bye by beating the Bears.

This is an intriguing matchup, LA’s second-ranked offense against Chicago’s No. 4 defense. The Bears are second stingiest against the run, and LA’s Todd Gurley leads the NFL in yards rushing (1,175) and yards from scrimmage (1,649).

Chicago hopes to have regular quarterbac­k Mitchell Trubisky back from a shoulder injury that cost him two games. He’ll need to watch for Rams DT Aaron Donald, who tops the NFL with 16½ sacks and has had at least two in three straight games.

NEW ENGLAND (9-3) AT MIAMI (6-6):

A Patriots win — this is one place they don’t like, having lost four of the past five at Miami — means a 10th straight AFC East crown. Tom Brady has won 12 of his past 13 starts within the division. He’s also ready to establish another NFL record: Brady has 579 career TD passes, including postseason, tied with Peyton Manning for the most.

Miami has been outgained by 1,168 yards and is on pace to break the 1967 team record yet is in wildcard contention. The Dolphins do rank third with 25 takeaways.

BALTIMORE (7-5) AT KANSAS

CITY (10-2), CINCINNATI (5-7) AT L.A. CHARGERS (9-3), PITTSBURGH (7-4-1) AT OAKLAND (2-10):

Two AFC division races involved here.

The Ravens have crept within a half-game of the Steelers in the North, but they have a massive challenge at KC while Pittsburgh shouldn’t struggle much at lowly Oakland.

Beating the high-powered Chiefs at Arrowhead calls for a monstrous defensive showing, and Baltimore has the top-ranked D. It also has a clock-killing run game with rookie Lamar Jackson at QB: The Ravens have had at least 200 yards rushing three straight weeks.

Still, Kansas City is 5-0 at home and leads the league in scoring at 37 points a game.

With Cincinnati in a rugged slump, LA could romp. Philip Rivers has thrown two or more TDs in each of his first 12 games, tied for the third-longest streak to begin a season in NFL history.

Rivers has 10 TDs and six INTs in six games against the Bengals, who have won four straight meetings in the regular season.

The Raiders have won the past three home games in this series, and the Steelers are 3-8 all time in Oakland. Still, unless they hand things to the Raiders, they should win even without standout RB James Conner (ankle).

PHILADELPH­IA (6-6) AT DALLAS (7-5):

A Cowboys victory gives them control of the NFC East; they won at Philly earlier this season. Dallas has won four straight and comes off that impressive victory against the Saints, followed by a nice rest.

Eagles TE Zach Ertz has already establishe­d a single-season franchise record with 93 receptions He’s 18 away from breaking Jason Witten’s NFL record for TEs.

N.Y. GIANTS (4-8) AT WASHINGTON (6-6):

Remember Mark Sanchez? He’s now the Redskins’ starter with both Alex Smith and Colt McCoy out with broken legs. It’s his first start since 2015, and the Redskins are a banged-up bunch everywhere.

New York, which lost star safety Landon Collins (shoulder) for the rest of the season, has won three of four since its bye. But late Saturday, receiver Odell Beckham Jr. was ruled out for today with a quadriceps injury.

ATLANTA (4-8) AT GREEN BAY (4-7-1):

The most interestin­g story line is Joe Philbin taking over as Packers coach and calling plays for the first time in his pro career. Aaron Rodgers has thrown a franchise-record 336 passes without an intercepti­on, trailing only Brady (358 in 2010-11) for the longest such stretch in league history.

Linebacker Deion Jones had a career-high 15 tackles and one sack last week, returning after missing 10 games while injured. But the Atlanta defense is 31st on foiling foes on third downs (51 percent).

DENVER (6-6) AT SAN FRANCISCO (2-10):

The Broncos have awakened with three consecutiv­e victories. But they have one road win in the past 30 seasons vs. the 49ers. They lost top wideout Emmanuel Sanders in practice this week with a torn Achilles tendon.

San Francisco’s five takeaways are the fewest through 12 games since at least 1940.

CAROLINA (6-6) AT CLEVELAND (4-7-1):

A four-game slide has seriously endangered the Panthers’ playoff chances. Their passing game has struggled and Cam Newton was picked off four times last week. But they’re averaging 140.8 rushing yards per game, behind only Seattle’s 148.8.

Coach Ron Rivera fired D-line coach Brady Hoke and assistant secondary/cornerback­s coach Jeff Imamura.

Top overall draft pick Baker Mayfield threw three intercepti­ons in the first half in a loss at Houston to dampen some of the enthusiasm in Cleveland.

N.Y. JETS (3-9) AT BUFFALO (4-8):

It looks as if Sam Darnold is recovered from his strained right foot, setting up a matchup with fellow first-round selection Josh Allen among rookie QB prospects.

Darnold has a 3-6 record and has thrown a league-high 14 intercepti­ons. Allen has 391 yards passing, three TDs and two intercepti­ons, and 234 yards rushing and a TD in his past two games since missing four with a sprained right throwing elbow.

DETROIT (4-8) AT ARIZONA (3-9):

The Lions have lost eight straight at Arizona and are 0-3 against the NFC West this season.

Cardinals WR Larry Fitzgerald needs one catch to move ahead of Jerry Rice for the most receptions for one team in NFL history. Fitzgerald needs one TD catch to match Antonio Gates for sixth on the career list.

 ?? AP FILE ?? Houston’s J.J. Watt, left, and Jadeveon Clowney are key members of a formidable defense that has helped the Texans win nine straight games.
AP FILE Houston’s J.J. Watt, left, and Jadeveon Clowney are key members of a formidable defense that has helped the Texans win nine straight games.

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