USA TODAY Sports Weekly

Five reasons not to mess with Texans in ’24

- Nate Davis

BALTIMORE – When it comes to highwater marks in the NFL, no franchise has a lower one than the Houston Texans. Yet despite a 34-10 loss to the top-seeded Baltimore Ravens in last weekend’s playoff divisional round, they matched it anew.

But don’t be surprised if they’re scaling new heights a year from now.

“Proud of them for getting to this moment. This is not a moral victory of just being here – this is not what we set out to do. But this team accomplish­ed a lot this year,” said head coach DeMeco Ryans, who led the Texans to the AFC South title in his first year on the job.

“I’m proud of them, for just the entire year. This wasn’t our moment right now, this wasn’t our time right now.”

But 2024 might be. Preseason expectatio­ns were next to nil for an organizati­on that hadn’t reached postseason since 2019, had won 11 games total over the previous three seasons and was still, in many ways, picking up the pieces from the franchiser­ocking fiasco created by former quarterbac­k Deshaun Watson.

But with Ryans, a Pro Bowl linebacker for the Texans when he was a player, setting the tone, and rookie C.J. Stroud filling the void Watson left, Houston managed to win its division and a playoff round before falling short of its first berth in the AFC championsh­ip game. The Texans, now 0-5 in divisional games, will also remain one of four teams that have never played in the Super Bowl.

For now.

“Any time you’ve got a quarterbac­k and a head coach who set the culture, I think the sky’s the limit,” veteran safety DeAndre Houston-Carson told USA TODAY Sports.

However several limitation­s were present in the divisional round. Houston managed only 213 yards of offense and was especially inept on the ground (38 yards). The Texans’ only touchdown came on a 67-yard punt return from Steven Sims. They committed 11 penalties, many of the pre-snap variety, for 70 yards. Dead-eye kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn had a rare misfire on a 47-yard field-goal attempt before halftime. And while the defense limited the damage done by Ravens All-Pro quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson in a 10-10 first half, he ran for two touchdowns and passed for another after intermissi­on.

“It’s tough to get embarrasse­d like that,” said Stroud.

“I’m upset right now, but I’m really just blessed looking back on this year, this opportunit­y we had today to play in front of millions of people.”

And just about everyone in his locker room believes there will be many more chances.

“I think DeMeco set a high, high level of expectatio­ns,” Stroud continued. “All in all, we won a lot of games. So I think that set a great foundation.

“I’m gonna continue to work my tail off next year to make the city of Houston proud.”

Added Ryans: “Great job this year with the guys for getting to the divisional round. And now let’s see how we can build off of that and be better next year.”

Here are five reasons why NFL teams should be wary of messing with the Texans in 2024:

C.J. Stroud

The second overall pick of the 2023 draft, he and Ryans formed the first rookie quarterbac­k-coach duo to win a division championsh­ip. Stroud showed off sublime ability to throw the ball, leading the NFL with 273.9 passing yards per game and likely would have set several rookie records had he not missed two games with a concussion. And given how he helped revive a flailing organizati­on and elevated what previously projected as an ordinary group of receivers, this offense should only get better with experience and more talent infusion.

DeMeco Ryans

Houston’s fifth head coach since the start of the 2020 season, expect him to be here awhile. Savvy and seemingly unflappable, Ryans seemed to imbue those qualities into this team as it won three of four to close the regular season and snatch the division crown from the Jacksonvil­le Jaguars. Continuity can go a long way in the NFL, and the program Ryans is forging appears built to last – and likely to attract other quality players to Houston.

Salary cap

Per OverTheCap, Houston is projected to have $71.4 million to sign free agents this year. That could mean keeping pending free agents like tight end Dalton Schultz and running back Devin Singletary. The Texans could look to upgrade at safety, offensive line and maybe obtain another receiver Nico Collins.

Roster core

alongside emergent

Beyond Stroud and Collins, rookie pass rusher Will Anderson Jr., defensive end Jonathan Greenard, cornerback Derek Stingley Jr., middle linebacker Blake Cashman and left tackle Laremy Tunsil comprise a promising foundation tied through all of the key spots. Now, Ryans and GM Nick Caserio can continue fleshing out the lineup and building depth without necessaril­y having to chase need at premium spots.

AFC South

It looks like a tougher division than it did five months ago given the Indianapol­is Colts (without rookie QB Anthony Richardson) and Jags barely missed the postseason. Yet it might still be the weakest in the AFC, especially with the Tennessee Titans apparently set for a bona fide rebuild. No cakewalk by any stretch, but at least the Texans don’t have to deal with Patrick Mahomes’ Kansas City Chiefs, Josh Allen’s Buffalo Bills or the AFC North murderers’ row on a regular basis.

 ?? ?? Houston Texans quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud drops back to pass against the Baltimore Ravens during the divisional round. MITCH STRINGER/ USA TODAY SPORTS
Houston Texans quarterbac­k C.J. Stroud drops back to pass against the Baltimore Ravens during the divisional round. MITCH STRINGER/ USA TODAY SPORTS

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