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Rookie Deshaun Watson impresses Texans early

- Tom Pelissero @tompelisse­ro USA TODAY Sports TOM PELISSERO @TomPelisse­ro for breaking news and analysis in the NFL.

There are flashes, such as the pass Deshaun Watson threaded to tight end Evan Baylis in Tuesday’s minicamp practice, that can make people think the Houston Texans rookie quarterbac­k will be ready for NFL action sooner rather than later.

And even in Watson’s not-sopro-ready moments, Texans coach Bill O’Brien says, there’s been nothing about the firstround pick’s first six weeks here to suggest Watson wouldn’t be ready if needed in 2017.

“Absolutely not,” O’Brien told USA TODAY Sports on Tuesday. “No, he’s got a really good future.”

Tom Savage, a strong-armed pocket passer who has started two games in his first three NFL seasons, will go into training camp as Houston’s No. 1 quarterbac­k. Odds seem good Savage will be in the lineup for September’s opener, too, provided he avoids another untimely injury.

For all of his success in college, Watson was widely regarded by scouts as a guy who needed time to develop and transition from Clemson’s highpercen­tage spread offense. But in a potentiall­y pivotal season for a Texans franchise that has gone 9-7 in each of O’Brien’s three seasons — with the motley crew of Ryan Fitzpatric­k, Case Keenum, Ryan Mallett, Savage, T.J. Yates, Brandon Weeden and Brock Osweiler throwing passes — it’s fair to say the quarterbac­k they traded up 13 spots to get in April will loom large every minute Watson’s on the sideline.

“I just go out and compete. Whatever’s best for the team is best for the team,” Watson said. “I’m one of the team players, so I do my job, play my role and do it well.”

Nobody in the predraft process really questioned Watson’s makeup, intelligen­ce or leadership. He has a strong enough arm. He’s mobile. And he played big in big games, including the national championsh­ip matchups the past two years against Alabama.

Scouts poked holes in Watson (the third quarterbac­k drafted in 2017, at No. 12 overall, after North Carolina’s Mitchell Trubisky and Texas Tech’s Patrick Mahomes) based mostly on the way he threw the ball in a oneread, tempo type of scheme. Accuracy, forcing balls into coverage and field vision were among the questions. Watson finished his college career with 90 touchdown passes and 32 intercepti­ons.

“First of all, his accuracy I think is excellent,” O’Brien said. “I don’t know where that came from. I think sometimes there’s so much time between the end of the college season and the actual draft that people start just making things up. That’s just really my opinion. I mean, this kid can throw the ball. Throws a tight spiral. He’s very accurate.

“I think all young quarterbac­ks that are any good are risk takers, so they’re going to try to fire it in there into some tight windows and sometimes that doesn’t work out real well for you. That’s something that a young quarterbac­k has to learn pretty quickly. I think overall he’s made a lot of good decisions during the spring.”

That O’Brien says Watson has picked up the Texans’ complicate­d offense “better than any rookie I’ve been around” seems like a telling statement from a coach who has a track record of in-season QB changes (even if he sometimes had no choice). Houston has so many other pieces, including last year’s No. 1-ranked defense and loads of young talent at the skill spots. And that only amplifies scrutiny on the position they haven’t been able to get right, particular­ly with a respected, offensivem­inded coach in O’Brien entering the fourth season of a five-year contract.

Ideally, how would O’Brien like the quarterbac­k situation to play out — not just in camp, but throughout the season?

“I don’t know the answer to that. I really don’t,” he said. “Tom’s No. 1. He’s had a lot of experience in our system. When he’s gone in there recently, he’s played decently for us. He’s had a good spring. And I think the fact that Brandon Weeden and Deshaun have had good springs, too, that’s made Tom better and vice versa. I think it’s a very competitiv­e position.

“Tom will go into camp No. 1. And he knows he’s got to earn it every day. Deshaun, for being a rookie, has done a lot of good things. It’ll be interestin­g to see how it all plays out.”

 ?? TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS ?? “This kid can throw the ball. ... He’s very accurate,” Texans coach Bill O’Brien says of rookie Deshaun Watson, above.
TROY TAORMINA, USA TODAY SPORTS “This kid can throw the ball. ... He’s very accurate,” Texans coach Bill O’Brien says of rookie Deshaun Watson, above.
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