
| Phillips, addition of Joseph leads turnaround of… | |
Now in the playoffs for the first time, Houston hopes its highly rated defense can lead the team to a victory Saturday against the Bengals, the team Joseph played for before joining the Texans. “It doesn’t get any better than this,” Joseph said about helping Houston to its first postseason game against his former team. He has communicated with 20 to 25 of his former teammates this week and is proud of what the Bengals have done this season. But he certainly won’t feel torn Saturday. “I’m a Texan now,” he said. Phillips has had a difficult few weeks after having kidney and gall bladder surgery Dec. 15. He missed two games, but rejoined the team last week and coached from the press box Sunday. He isn’t feeling great — he has a chair to sit in for parts of practice — but knew it was important to be with the team during this critical time. “It’s taken a lot out of me but I’m working my back, doing what the doctors say, ready to keep building up,” Phillips, who wasn’t available to the media Wednesday, said recently. Coach Gary Kubiak insisted the defense wasn’t any different with Phillips away, but acknowledged Wednesday that his return has given the unit a boost. “I know from a confidence standpoint for everybody it’s nice to have him back in the locker room last weekend and have his presence throughout the course of the week, so that’s been a good thing,” Kubiak said. “We’ve got to make sure Wade gets good and healthy and everything goes OK.” Linebacker Brian Cushing, who leads the team with 114 tackles, said Phillips’ importance to the team can’t be overstated. “He’s been huge,” Cushing said. “For what he’s done in turning this defense around has been unbelievable. So much credit goes to him, from scheme, to coaches he’s brought to just the personality of the team.” Joseph has helped Houston’s secondary go from allowing a league-worst 267.5 yards to just 189.7 this season — the third fewest in the NFL. “To come in and be embraced by the guys and make such an impact to be counted and looked upon as a leader here has been a tremendous experience for me altogether,” Joseph said. Houston has thrived in Phillips’ 3-4 defense even without 2006 top overall pick Mario Williams. The former defensive end was expected to star at outside linebacker in the new scheme, but had a season-ending injury during the fifth game. That left the Texans shuffling people around. They moved the other starting outside linebacker Connor Barwin to Williams’ spot and rookie Brooks Reed took Barwin’s slot. Reed filled the position ably and Barwin flourished this season, piling up a team-leading 11 1/2 sacks. Barwin, another converted defensive end, said Phillips is quiet and stoic, but has a unique way of motivating players. “Wade comes in with some gems,” Barwin said. “They might be short and quick but he’s wise.” Phillips, who has more postseason coaching experience than any member of the staff with 26 games, encouraged the team to focus this week in practice with one of his “gems” of which Barwin is so fond. “He walks out and says real mellow like he does: ‘Every single play is the playoffs now,’” Barwin said of Phillips. “So we knew every single play we do in practice is so important just because we’re in the playoffs now.” DeMeco Ryans also credits Phillips for what has happened this year. Of course, the linebacker has helped out in the change this season, starting each game in 2011 after missing 10 games last year with an Achilles injury. “The biggest key is that from the first day all the guys just bought into Wade’s system and how we were going to do things,” Ryans said. “Everyone in our room just wanted to excel and everyone wanted to be great in our defensive room.” Ryans knew around the midway point of the season that this group could be special. Kubiak saw it a few weeks sooner, when the defense stopped Pittsburgh and Ben Roethlisberger four times in the fourth quarter of a 17-10 win. “That was special against a great quarterback in Ben,” Kubiak said. “So you could see the confidence starting to grow right there and they’ve been very consistent all year long. As a matter of fact they’ve been darn good and hopefully they will continue to be, because we will need to play great defense to continue to move on.” Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Leave any suggestions in the comment box. Posted in 1, texans-news | Comments Off
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| Why the Cincinnati Bengals Should Be Hopeful About… | |
When the Cincinnati Bengals travel into Reliant Stadium to take on the Houston Texans, they have more than a few reasons to be confident. I might even go as far as picking the Bengals to win this game. Much has been made about the Bengals inability to beat a good team —they’re a whopping 0-7 against those within the playoff field. While those numbers do raise some alarm, they’re not as bad as they look on the surface. With the exception of their Week 13 game in Pittsburgh, they haven’t lost a game by more than eight points. Additionally, they don’t have any “bad” losses —losing to teams they shouldn’t (Denver might be an exception, though it’s hard to make that argument when they’re in the playoffs). I’ll readily admit that you need to be able to take down better teams, but the Bengals clearly show where they fall on the quality spectrum. They’ve probably been one of the best teams to set your watch to. They win when they should and lose when they should. They lost to the Baltimore Ravens by seven and eight points, respectively. They lost to the Denver Broncos by two and the San Francisco 49ers by five. Their other game against Pittsburgh found them losing by only seven. Lastly, they lost to the Houston Texans by one. This is a team that can compete. The Texans, on the other hand, do have a few mind boggling losses. That being said, they also have some impressive wins —Pittsburgh and Atlanta specifically. However, they also carry losses to the Carolina Panthers and Indianapolis Colts. You can throw in the Oakland Raiders if you want as well. I’ll give a couple of those teams the benefit of being pretty decent, but they aren’t teams the Houston Texans should lose to. The Titans game gets a free pass because most of the starting Texans were on the bench. What’s more alarming for the Texans is their current three-game losing streak they’re riding into the playoffs —Carolina, Indy, and Tennessee. Being the Texans first ever trip to the playoffs, I’m sure the Bengals are going to run into a raucous crowd at Reliant Stadium. If Dalton and company can’t control that, it could get ugly. What makes this game difficult is that you have two rookie quarterbacks. T.J Yates hasn’t thrown a touchdown in two-plus games and following Yates’ injury against the Titans, we don’t know if that shoulder will affect his performance. When you look at the numbers of the two teams, they’re relatively even. The slight edge goes to the Texans in most categories, but that also factors in the gaudy offensive numbers they were putting up prior to Matt Schaub’s injury. As it stands now, I think the game is pretty even. Andy Dalton doesn’t give much more confidence. Despite Dalton having a stellar rookie season, you don’t often like the idea of rookie quarterbacks in the playoffs. In fact, the research I’ve found is that no rookie quarterback has ever won a Super Bowl. That’s an alarming trend for both Bengals and Texans fans. We don’t need to talk about the Super Bowl yet. Yates and Dalton both have things to take care of before we start thinking about that. While I think it’s a virtual toss up, I think I like Cincinnati. Bengals 20 Texans 17 Brian is a lifelong NFL fan, specifically of the Chicago Bears, having lived in Illinois his entire life and having followed the NFL throughout. Sources Bengals/Texans Preview Bengals Schedule Texans Schedule T.J Yates Stats Note: This article was written by a Yahoo! contributor. Sign up here to start publishing your own sports content. That’s all for today. |
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| Ready or not, Texans look to playoffs | |
by Associated Press
khou.com
Posted on January 2, 2012 at 9:56 PM
HOUSTON — Ready or not, the Houston Texans are less than a week away from the franchise’s first playoff game. The Texans (10-6) will ride a three-game losing streak into Saturday’s game against Cincinnati (9-7) at Reliant Stadium. Last week, Texans players talked about the importance of regaining momentum after consecutive losses. They lost to Tennessee 23-22 in Sunday’s finale when they botched a 2-point conversion at the end, then said after the game that their three-game skid was irrelevant. Coach Gary Kubiak said Monday that his players have “got to let it go,” pointing out that a winning streak would’ve also had no bearing on what may happen in the postseason. “You’ve got to let everything go,” he said, “and start over.” Kubiak thought the Texans played better Sunday than they had in losses to Carolina and Indianapolis. His team has dealt with major injuries almost every week this season, and he said that’s led to constant transition that’s affected the level of play. Add one more injury concern leading up to Saturday’s game: Rookie quarterback T.J. Yates, who started the last five games, bruised his left shoulder when he was sacked on his first snap against Tennessee. Kubiak expects Yates to start against Cincinnati, though he acknowledged Monday the fifth-round pick is “sore.” Yates was a revelation when he first took over the starting role in the wake of season-ending injuries to Matt Schaub (right foot) and Matt Leinart (broken left collarbone), guiding the Texans to narrow victories over Atlanta and the Bengals to clinch the division. In Cincinnati on Dec. 11, Yates engineered two long scoring drives in the fourth quarter, rallying Houston for a 20-19 win. Yates struggled in the next two games and played only one series Sunday, but Kubiak says he still has enough confidence to play him over veteran Jake Delhomme. “He’s very young and this is a big, big game,” Kubiak said. “But he’s the best guy for our team, and if he’s able to go and do the things we need him to do in practice, then we’ll turn him loose and let him go.” Delhomme, signed out of retirement in late November, relieved Yates on Sunday and completed 18 of 28 passes for 211 yards without an interception. The 36-year-old Delhomme was seeing his first action since December 2010, when he played for Cleveland. He’s one of only a handful of current Texans with playoff experience and the only one who’s already played in a postseason game at Reliant Stadium. Delhomme guided Carolina to its only Super Bowl in February 2004, when the Panthers played Tom Brady and the New England Patriots. Delhomme threw for 323 yards and three touchdown in the Panthers’ 32-29 loss. The Panthers had only one postseason victory in their history before that Super Bowl season, and Delhomme thinks inexperience could actually work to Houston’s advantage. “When you don’t know any better, to me, that’s a great thing,” Delhomme said. “If you play well during the season and prepare well, obviously you’re one of the better teams at the end of the year. So we just knew that if we just did what we did week in and week out, it would work.” The 2003 Panthers won their last three games, but they lost three in a row just before that, so Delhomme isn’t a big believer in needing momentum. “This is a young, hungry football team that works,” Delhomme said of the Texans. “I know I haven’t been here long, but last week on that practice field, just watching guys fly around you saw how important it is. This team is going to be ready and sometimes innocence is bliss.” Kubiak isn’t sure how much past experience helps in the playoffs, either, but he has plenty of it. He was an assistant coach on three Super Bowl teams, one in San Francisco and two in Denver. “All those things took place for me somewhere else, on a different team,” said Kubiak, Houston’s coach since 2006. “I’ve been growing as a head coach with this group I have, they’ve been growing with me as a team, so it’s our first opportunity together. That’s what’s most important.” Defensive coordinator Wade Phillips has participated in his share of playoff games, too. Phillips coached from the press box Sunday, just over two weeks after kidney and gall bladder surgery, and Kubiak says he’ll work from the booth again for the playoff game. “That’s a long road back from what he’s been through,” Kubiak said. “We’re just trying to make sure he gets his rest, and he’ll be ready to call the game on Saturday once again.”
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| MacPherson: Houston Texans become pride of Texas | |
What a difference a year makes. A season ago the Texans were the joke around the state. A loss This year, though, the Texans have to be the pride of Texas. Sure, they lost three consecutive games heading into this But the Texans have to like their chances in the franchise’s The Texans have what every good playoff team needs – a tough run Sounds easy right? Yates should have some added confidence, too. Remember, the Thanks to the great start, the Texans get the added boost that It’s hard to imagine Saturday’s game being any sort of cakewalk, The Cowboys’ performance only adds to the lure of the failures It’s hard to imagine a team can’t get up for a game as big as Then again, it happened to them before. See the 44-6 whooping That being said, the whole state should be behind the Texans as While the Texans could very well come out on bottom of a dog Regardless of what happens, at least the Texans aren’t the Keith MacPherson is the Sports Editor of The Courier. He can be
Not much else going on in the NFL world today. |
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| Texans ready to move on from 23-22 loss to Titans | |
The Houston Texans didn’t spend much time worrying about They had much more important concerns with the first playoff Matt Hasselbeck threw two touchdown passes and Houston botched a The Texans (10-6) will play Cincinnati (9-7) on Saturday in the “It’s going to be unbelievable,” said receiver Kevin Walter, a Tennessee (9-7) earned its first winning record since 2008 in When the Broncos lost to Kansas City, the Titans were knocked “I was proud of the guys for bouncing back the last two weeks Houston was locked into the No. 3 seed in the AFC playoffs “You would never go for 2 there in any other situation,” Kubiak Now the Texans will prepare for the biggest game in the team’s “It’s a different platform that we’ve never played at before,” Rookie starter T.J. Yates left the game after one series and was “Obviously, I didn’t want him to go back in the game,” Kubiak The 36-year-old Delhomme, signed Nov. 29 in the wake of Kubiak called for a 2-point conversion at the end. But after a The Texans certainly weren’t happy about losing, but won’t spend “We’re ripping off the rear-view mirror,” tight end Joel Chris Johnson ran for 61 yards, and Rob Bironas kicked three The Texans had other concerns after the loss. Yates was sacked on Houston’s first snap by Jurrell Casey and Tate finished that drive with a touchdown, but Yates came off Titans defensive end Dave Ball sacked Delhomme and knocked the Delhomme threw a 16-yard pass to Andre Johnson to get Houston Neil Rackers kicked a 52-yard field goal with 1:09 left in the The Texans rallied to tie it at 16-all, but Kubiak had most of Texans linebacker Jesse Nading recovered a fumble by Ahmard Hall Notes: Wide receiver Andre Johnson played about 20 snaps. Kubiak That’s all for today guys, i’ll be back to blog you tomorrow. |
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