Texasn re-sign Pro Bowl long snapper Jon Weeks

The Houston Texans have re-signed Pro Bowl long snapper Jon Weeks.

When it works, why change?

According to Brooks Kubena of the Houston Chronicle, the Houston Texans are re-signing Pro Bowl long snapper Jon Weeks to a 13th season.

Weeks has played the most games in Texans history with 193. Houston signed the former Baylor Bear in 2010, and he has not missed a game since Sept. 12, 2010.

After his collegiate career, Weeks had a tryout with the Detroit Lions in 2008 during rookie minicamp. However, he was not signed to the team. The former Glendale (Ariz.) Mountain Ridge product remained out of football for the 2008 and 2009 seasons before getting another shot with the Texans ahead of their 2010 rookie minicamp.

In 2015, Weeks made the Pro Bowl after the Texans’ 9-7 season that resulted in the club’s third AFC South title.

Weeks turned 36 years old on Feb. 17, and has 26 combined tackles for his career with one fumble recovery.

Texans must re-sign LB Kamu Grugier-Hill

The Houston Texans need to find a way to keep their 2021 leading tackler in linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill.

If there was one free agent everyone agreed first-year general manager Nick Caserio had hit a homerun on at the midway point of the 2021 season, it was linebacker Kamu Grugier-Hill. The sixth-year linebacker found himself in the midst of a career renaissance with the Houston Texans after taking a one-year contract for $3.25M

Even after signing a host of veteran linebackers including Christian Kirksey, Kevin Pierre-Lewis, Neville Hewitt, and Joe Thomas, Grugier-Hill stood tall as the best signing of the group.

He suffered an injury during Week 13 against the Seattle Seahawks and was forced to miss the next two games but still ended the year with career highs in essentially every category. Grugier-Hill finished with 108 combined tackles, 71 solo tackles, two forced fumbles, 13 tackles for loss, and three sacks. The decision to bet on himself and join Houston after starting only one game in Miami the previous year paid massive dividends.

Even in the midst of terrible games, such as the 31-0 blowout loss to Indianapolis at home, Grugier-Hill was a bright spot. He set the franchise record for tackles in a game that day with 19.

Now, Grugier-Hill is set to enter the free agent market once again. Both he and the Houston front-office have spoken on their mutual interest in finding a long-term contract extension. Specifically, Grugier-Hill has spoken of the strong locker room culture and the community he felt in Houston.

However, at the end of the day, the NFL is a business. Grugier-Hill will be looking for the best deal on the market and there are multiple teams in the league that would give him a better opportunity to win next year. They probably have less publicized Bible studies, too.

In regard to Houston’s own impending free agents, none of them are important as bringing Grugier-Hill back. The team’s best coverage linebacker and overall best defensive player outside of Jonathan Greenard, the talent deficient Texans aren’t in a good position to lose a valuable starter.

The NFL franchise tag period opens today. However, it is unlikely Houston would opt to go that route. A franchise tag would pay Grugier-Hill $17 million, five times greater than his salary last year, and only secure the linebacker for one season. Therefore, if Smith wants to retain one of the few bright spots in his 4-3 defense, they will have to settle on a long-term deal.

The market will likely determine the value for Grugier-Hill. Pro Football Focus has De’Vondre Campbell, the highest rated free agent linebacker, projected at close to $9 million per year. With that in mind, it’s feasible that Houston could bring back No. 51 at close to $4-6 million per year on a two- or three-year contract with incentives based on his performance.

5 free agent tackles the Texans should consider

The Houston Texans may need to use free agency to address their tackle positions. Here are five free agents Houston should keep in mind.

The Houston Texans will need free agency and the draft to effectively complete their rebuild in the second year of general manager Nick Caserio.

Houston has some decisions to make at tackle. Tytus Howard, a former 2019 first-round pick, has shown versatility to play guard and tackle, feeling more comfortable with the later. The Texans still have left tackle Laremy Tunsil under contract, although he struggled to get back on the field after Week 5 with a thumb injury. Tunsil could also be effective trade bait with any tackle-hungry teams.

No matter whether the Texans keep Tunsil, draft Ikem Ekwonu, or elevate Charlie Heck to a starting role, here are five free agent tackles the Texans should consider signing when free agency starts.

All salary figures are according to Spotrac.

Giants’ Joe Schoen braces for ‘tough decisions’ on several players

New York Giants GM Joe Schoen is bracing himself to make several “tough decisions” in the coming days and weeks.

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New York Giants general manager Joe Schoen revealed early on that he intends to clear upwards of $40 million in salary cap this offseason. That means several key players will either be asked to take pay cuts or be released outright.

Those decisions won’t come easy, which Schoen admitted to the New York Post in an exclusive interview over the weekend.

“First off, we have to get underneath [the cap], we have to make some tough decisions here in the near future just to get in a place where we can sign draft picks and be below the cap,” Schoen said. “There’s a fine line, because you can’t purge.”

Schoen is warry of purging the roster for two reasons. One, the Giants are already thin at nearly all positions. Two, purging the roster would essentially mean wasting another season for quarterback Daniel Jones and running back Saquon Barkley.

“I don’t want to purge the roster, because we still want to find out what Daniel Jones can do, we want to find out what Saquon can do. We got some good pieces on defense,” Schoen said. “The fine balance, the fine line is cutting players that can really help you win but you also got to get under the salary cap, then you’re gonna have the draft picks.”

Among the biggest issues facing Schoen is not only getting the Giants under the cap, but ensuring that there’s enough money left over to sign their nine draft picks — which include two in the top 10. That’s expensive.

Adding to Schoen’s issues are several of the contracts he now has to navigate. Case in point: Wide receiver Kenny Golladay, who is on the books for $21.1 million in 2022. Cutting him would actually cost the Giants more (an addition $2.45 million in dead cap) than it would save.

“The players were paid those contracts they’re making because at some point they were performing to a certain level,” Schoen said. “Whether they were overvalued or maybe they got more than how they’re performing or not, that’s where you’re gonna have to free up money.”

In cases like Golladay’s, that may mean exploring the trade market. For others like cornerback James Bradberry, it may mean making a really tough call and thinning out another position.

“What I would like to do is not be in the situation where you do the big signing bonuses and you kick the can down the road,” Schoen said. “That’s not ideal for me. I like to do smaller signing bonuses and then roster bonuses in latter years, it gives you more flexibility.”

The Giants won’t be able to skate by on just simple restructures, however. Based on Over the Cap projections, they can only gain roughly $20 million in cap space that way, meaning other moves must be made.

“Then when we start to plan who are the players that we may have to look out for pay cuts or cut to get under the cap, we’re making educated decisions based on all the information we have,” Schoen added. “I think it’s important we take our time and do that the right way.”

That time will soon run out. The “legal tampering” window opens on March 14 with the new league year and free agency ushered in on March 16 at 4:00 p.m. ET. All of Schoen’s work and final decisions must be made by then.

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Texans 2022 offseason: Important dates from the NFL Scouting Combine to the draft

Here are important dates for the Houston Texans as the 2022 NFL offseason is underway.

The NFL season is never over; it is a year-long sport. It is just sometimes during the fall they play games.

For the Houston Texans, talent evaluation and acquisition never stops, especially as the second year of the Nick Caserio era is underway at NRG Stadium. Coach Lovie Smith joins the fray to help the Texans get over the hump and avoid another double-digit losing season as Houston seeks to complete the rebuild in 2022.

As the Texans move through the offseason, here are important dates between now and the NFL draft for fans to keep an eye on as Week 1 seems an eternity away.

Colts RB Marlon Mack is a low risk gamble the Texans

If the Houston Texans are looking for a running back with little risk, the Indianapolis Colts’ Marlon Mack has to be an option in free agency.

The Houston Texans need help running the football.

It is no secret that the ground game was far and away the team’s biggest deficiency during the Tim Kelly era. The addition of David Johnson in 2020 nor the departure of former coach Bill O’Brien was able to generate any traction.

The Texans finished dead last in the NFL with 1,422 rushing yards in 2021, only 83.6 yards per game. Rex Burkhead, a late add to the roster in August, was the team’s leading rusher with 122 carries for 427 yards. There was not a single back on the roster that averaged over 3.5 yards per carry. Burkhead, Johnson, Phillip Lindsay, Royce Freeman — it didn’t matter. Houston had no rushing game.

If the team is going to aid the development of second year quarterback Davis Mills and remove the entire offensive burden from the passing game, this is an area that must be improved upon in 2022. New offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton will likely provide some welcome changes from a Kelly run scheme that couldn’t have been any worse at generating running lanes. Additionally, Houston is expected to make investments towards their interior offensive line that should pay immediate dividends.

None of that, of course, matters without some new candidates running the football.

With limited cap space and more pressing needs across the roster, it is in the best interest of the Texans to invest in cheap veteran options in addition to potentially drafting a rookie. The free agent market boasts fantasy-friendly names like Melvin Gordon and Leonard Fournette in addition to a host of younger backs who never quite thrived the way they were projected too.

At the intersection of less expensive and seeking opportunity, a familiar face is available for the Texans: former Indianapolis Colt Marlon Mack.

Mack was a fourth-round draft pick from the University of South Florida in 2017 and ran for 908 and 1,091 yards during his second and third years with the Colts. He averaged 4.4 and 4.7 yards per carry during those campaigns with 18 total touchdowns.

Despite his success, Indianapolis still traded up early into the second round of the 2020 draft to select Jonathan Taylor. The rest is history.

An ugly Achilles tear during the first game of the 2020 season threw off Mack’s fourth year in the league and he wasn’t able to find his way back into the rotation after signing a one-year deal last summer. Mack was a healthy scratch in 11 of Indianapolis’ 17 games during Taylor’s historic 2021 campaign.

Kevin Hickey, editor of the Colts Wire, was optimistic that this was largely due to circumstance rather than any indictment on Macks’ talent level after the injury.

“We got a solid look at him (Mack) during the preseason and while he may not be *as* explosive, he still looked like a running back who can produce at a similar efficiency as he did early on in his career with the Colts. He was a healthy scratch for the majority of the season, mostly due to the historic season of Jonathan Taylor and the fact that Mack doesn’t contribute on special teams, which is a key requirement for the RB3 on the Colts roster.”

It was well documented that Mack was seeking a trade during the 2021 season, but Indianapolis wasn’t able to find him one. It left the running back essentially paid to take a season off and stay prepared incase Taylor was injured due to his inability to contribute on special teams. Now, Mack is set to enter the market and will be looking for rosters with opportunity.

In Houston, Mack would immediately be the best downhill runner on the roster and offer a between-the-tackles. He would fit into nearly any scheme that Hamilton may dream up and offer a kind of runner that Houston hasn’t had in years. As an additional rotational piece, his assistance in the run game could go a long way towards helping Davis Mills.

Mack may not be the kind of workhorse back that many are clamoring for, it may best to look towards the draft or other options for that. However, at his likely contract price of less than $2 million on the season, he is the type of player that would immediately make the roster better and could help contribute towards winning.

For Mack, Houston represents a backfield where his talent could give him the potential volume to reproduce at a level more similar to his 2018 and 2019 campaigns in Indianapolis. A strong campaign with the Texans would set him up well to seek the first large payday of his career.

It would be fun to take a page from the Tennessee Titans’ playbook and recruit a player from a cross-division rival. Houston will need all the juice they can muster to compete with an extremely talented roster in Indianapolis and having an inspired Mack on the roster would certainly help.

Should the Texans seek a Patriots reunion with CB Stephon Gilmore?

The Houston Texans need help at cornerback, and GM Nick Caserio would have the best insight as to whether Stephon Gilmore could help.

The Houston Texans could use cornerback help heading into 2022.

The Texans currently have Grayland Arnold, Jimmy Moreland, Tavierre Thomas, Terrance Mitchell, and Lonnie Johnson under contract. Although Thomas may have been the Texans’ best cornerback by the end of the season, it is dubious as to whether he can carry that momentum in 2022.

One player with a track record of helping at the cornerback spot is Stephon Gilmore, who will be a free agent in 2022. The former New England Patriot started the season on the physically unable to perform list before being traded to the Carolina Panthers on Oct. 6. The former 2019 NFL Defensive Player of the Year had 16 tackles, a tackle for loss, two interceptions, and two pass breakups in eight games, three of which he started.

According to Tyler Sullivan from CBS Sports, Gilmore is ranked as the ninth-best free agent defender.

A contract dispute between Gilmore and the Patriots contributed to the star cornerback starting last season on the PUP list and was eventually traded to the Carolina Panther in the middle of the season. He ended up playing in nine games (eight starts) and recorded two interceptions during his stint in Carolina. That clunky 2021 campaign and the fact that he missed the back half of the 2020 season due to a quad injury has lowered the 31-year-old’s stock a bit, but he’s also not far off from winning the NFL’s Defensive Player of the Year honor, either. Given his talent and experience playing deep into the playoffs (Super Bowl LIII champion), he’d be the perfect addition for a Super Bowl-caliber team looking for an added boost to its secondary.

The one man inside NRG Stadium who would know best what Gilmore could contribute to the Texans would be general manager Nick Caserio, who spent time with the Patriots in various roles from 2001-20. Gilmore was instrumental in helping New England win Super Bowl LIII at the end of the 2018 season, and also tallied two All-Pros and three Pro Bowls while with the Patriots.

Gilmore will be 32 years old in the 2022 season. Last year, according to Spotrac, Gilmore cost the Panthers $6.1 million.

The case for the Texans signing QB Marcus Mariota in free agency

Marcus Mariota represents the best veteran backup quarterback who can push Davis Mills but also help the Houston Texans offense in a limited role.

Talking about Davis Mills as the Houston Texans’ future is the Bayou City equivalent to taking a whiffle bat to a hornets nest, or streaking at the Westminster dog show in Milk Bone underwear.

In baseball, the Astros fanbase has never been more unified than their rally cry to resign All-Star shortstop Carlos Correa. For those invested in the Rockets, there has been moderate controversy over potential trades of Eric Gordon or Christian Wood but everyone generally understands the team is going through the growing pains of a rebuild in the NBA.

Mills, the Texans’  2021 third-round selection and starter of their last five games, represents an entirely different beast. Mills comes off a promising rookie campaign that came amongst a bad offense and very few wins. He completed 67% of his passes for 2,664 yards and 16 touchdowns over the course of 11 starts. His development from his first start against the Carolina Panthers to the season finale against the Tennessee Titans was evident to everyone.

The question becomes: how does Mills project to the future?

Some believe they have seen enough to move on. Between Mills’ limited physical talent on the ground, occasional poor showings during the season, and low draft capital investment they believe there’s little reason to take much stock into his potential as the future of the franchise.

Others are convinced Mills is the franchise. He flashed phenomenal ball placement and kept the team competitive at the end of the season despite horrific game plans from offensive coordinator Tim Kelly all without a run game or many receiving weapons.

Somewhere in the middle, as it so often is, the truth can be found. In a porous 2022 quarterback class at the top of the NFL draft, it is indeed in Houston’s best interest to give Mills a chance in 2022. A full off-season to work with new offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton and an improved team around him on offense should only help the second-year player take the necessary steps forward if he’s to become the Texans’ franchise quarterback. However, he can’t be the only serviceable quarterback on the roster. This isn’t Tom Brady or Justin Herbert.

Houston has a responsibility to bring in a veteran quarterback that can compete with Mills. Someone who, on one end, may win the job outright in camp and disappoint any narrative regarding Mills as the franchise or, alternatively, may simply serve as a mentor to the young quarterback.

A quarterback like Jameis Winston, who’s spent the past two years in New Orleans, represents the former example of a player who would likely best Mills in a camp competition. There’s a connection there with new coach Lovie Smith, who drafted Jameis No. 1 overall in 2015. On the opposite end, an older veteran such as Joe Flacco or Ryan Fitzpatrick would be asked to serve entirely in a mentor role.

The consensus around Mills with a weak incoming rookie class has largely settled on the veteran quarterback solution. How hard to push a player with unknown potential is where the question gets harder. There is one option for Houston that represents a happy medium. A veteran quarterback that Mills should absolutely beat but still represents a high end back-up that would have versatility outside the traditional starter role.

Enter Las Vegas Raiders and former Tennessee Titans signal call Marcus Mariota.

Mariota was a Heisman Trophy winner at the University of Oregon before being selected No. 2 overall in the 2015 draft by the Titans. He started in Tennessee for four seasons before ultimately being supplanted by current Titans’ quarterback Ryan Tannehill at the midpoint of the 2019 campaign, one that saw Tennessee advance as far as the AFC Championship Game. Since then Mariota has served as the backup to Derek Carr in Las Vegas.

Mariota is a 62% career passer with an 89.5 passer rating Rating of 89.5 (Mills, for comparison, boasted an 88.2 last year despite the awful game in Buffalo) 77 touchdowns and 45 interceptions. In short: Mariota is a perfectly average NFL quarterback. Probably somewhere between the 28th and 40th best professional quarterback in the league.

He represents a challenger that Mills, on surface value, should be able to beat. Mills comes in with history with Hamilton and the confidence of the general manager who drafted him. If he can’t beat the likes of Mariota in a camp competition, it would serve as a clear signal to Smith and the rest of the organization that Mills is not a long-term answer at quarterback.

The youth and desire to be a starting quarterback that would represent a true challenge to Davis but with a track record that suggest Mills should more than be able to hold his own. That’s the sweet spot. Should Mariota win the job it’s also very possible he could take steps forward under Hamilton.

There’s no need for a veteran quarterback to “teach Mills to play the position.” Hamilton has a reputation for developing young quarterbacks and, if the Josh McCown rumors are true, there will be more than enough voices to help Mills in 2022. This is all in addition to two offensive assistants that have been hired, both former quarterbacks.

Another advantage to the Mariota signing? Versatility.

In Vegas, coach Jon Gruden used Mariota sparingly as a runner. He was brought in for short yardage situations and, when asked to play, made ample use of his legs. Mariota has 1,574 career rushing yards with 13 touchdowns and 101 first downs gained on the ground.

More than likely, Houston will struggle to run the ball again in 2022. The offensive line and running back group both have talent deficiencies that will be hard to fix in one offseason. A new scheme and new position coaches will help but it’s a facet of the game that will need support in any direction possible. The ability to insert Mariota in third-and-short or on the goal line creates an additional wrinkle for Hamilton to employ and forces defensive coordinators to account for it during their weekly game plan.

In short, Mariota is an experienced quarterback that could truly push Mills to compete without representing an impossible obstacle for him to overcome. His skills on the ground could serve as another weapon for the offense and, should anything happen to Mills over the season, Houston would still have high end backup quarterback play.

For a quarterback that’s looking for an opportunity to start, Houston may represent a great chance for someone like Mariota. Smith likely did plenty of homework on Mariota coming out of college and those in the building will certainly have opinions after watching him for five years in Tennessee.

Ultimately, it comes down to what Nick Caserio thinks is best for the football team.

Should the Texans target Jets S Marcus Maye in free agency?

The Houston Texans will need safety help in the offseason. Marcus Maye could be cheap free agent safety help who could yield favorable returns.

The Houston Texans will need to overhaul their roster in 2022 as they complete the rebuild under general manager Nick Caserio, who enters his second year with the AFC South club.

Although safety Justin Reid is a fan favorite and a locker room leader, he may not be back with the team that drafted him in Round 3 of the 2018 NFL draft. Houston also has A.J. Moore and Terrence Brooks set to hit free agency.

If the Texans want to take a similar approach to the 2021 offseason and go with low-cost free agents to shore up the backend, an AFC East defensive back could be a part of the solution.

According to Anthony Treash from Pro Football Focus, the New York Jets’ Marcus Maye is an underrated free agent in the 2022 cycle.

Maye is going to sign a one-year, prove-it deal in free agency after rupturing his Achilles in the midst of his 2021 campaign. The Jets safety’ role changed this past year (specifically, he played far more in the box), which played a part in a dip in PFF grade when on the field, but his multiple seasons of high grades at deep safety should spark draw interest from several teams. Since 2018, Maye owns the second-highest PFF grade at free safety — behind only Kevin Byard

Maye would be the perfect free agent to complement Notre Dame safety Kyle Hamilton, pending the Texans went in that direction with the No. 3 overall pick in the 2022 NFL draft. If Maye can go back to paying deep safety and allow Hamilton to play sundry roles in the backend, then the Texans could have a new duo that doesn’t allow big plays deep.

The New England Patriots, where Caserio worked from 2001-20, have been excellent at keeping tabs on their division’s underrated talent. If Caserio believes Maye can help, presuming his Achilles injury is adequately healing, Houston should take a chance on the safety.

Buccaneers TE O.J. Howard would be intriguing free agent target for Texans

The Houston Texans can add an interesting element at tight end with O.J. Howard, who is set to hit free agency.

The Houston Texans in a very familiar position this offseason where, yet again, the team needs to find another tight end. Brevin Jordan is coming off a promising rookie season but is the only tight end under contract as Jordan Akins and Pharaoh Brown are both set to enter free agency and very possibly leave Houston.

The position group has been a bit of a revolving door in Houston with numerous failed draft selections that come to mind, most recently 2019 third round selection Kahale Warring who caught a grand total of four catches over his Texans tenure. Akins was a 2018 third-round selection and, going further back, C.J. Fiedorowicz was a third-round selection in 2014. The Texans have had a really hard time finding a reliable tight end since the departure of Owen Daniels in 2013.

Brevin Jordan caught 20 catches for 178 yards and three touchdowns during his rookie campaign. The limited production came in spite of an incredibly anemic passing offense that frequently featured conservative game plans from former offensive coordinator Tim Kelly. His future is promising, but Houston has a responsibility to continue taking dart throws at the position if they are to help Davis Mills become the best quarterback he can.

Enter impending free agent, the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ O.J. Howard

Coming out of the University of Alabama at 6-6, 251 pounds, Howard was the unanimous No. 1 TE in the 2017 draft and selected 19th overall by the Buccaneers as an additional weapon to pair with Mike Evans for Jameis Winston.

Howard caught six and five touchdowns during his first two seasons while his targets increased from 39 to 48 to 53 from 2017 to 2019. Interestingly, of Howard’s 26 receptions as a rookie, 20 of those went for first downs. He was a talented young player who had chemistry with Winston and clearly showed an upward trend. All of this happening at a tight end position that often takes years for young players to master.

In March of 2020, Tom Brady left his illustrious career with the New England Patriots behind to write a new chapter in Tampa Bay. Everyone knows the story. This is where things unfortunately turned for the worse for Howard. Trade speculation began almost immediately.

Future Hall of Famer Rob Gronkowski exited retirement to join Brady and immediately inserted himself as No. 1 on the team’s depth chart. Brady, notorious for preferring veteran players as receivers, formed a quick connection with Cameron Brate as the team’s second tight end.

Suddenly, Howard was left out to dry behind Evans, Chris Godwin, Gronkowski, Brate and eventually Antonio Brown. There were too many mouths to feed in Tampa to make an impact and this problem was only furthered when Howard tore his Achilles in October of 2020. After missing the rest of the eventual Super Bowl winning campaign, Howard saw 21 targets for 14 receptions and one touchdown during the 2021 campaign. All were the lowest totals of his career.

Howard now prepares to enter 2022 as a free agent in what is a relatively deep, although not top heavy, free agent class that features names like Dalton Schultz, Zach Ertz, Mike Gesicki and David Njoku. His injury history and unproven production make a multi-year contract unlikely.

This is where Houston may be a perfect marriage.

The Texans represent an opportunity for ample playing time where Howard’s talent would immediately slot him into the No. 2 or potentially even the No. 1 tight end role depending on his performance at camp. Mills showed enough promise during his rookie season that it shouldn’t be viewed as a negative toward any free agent’s ability to produce numbers. Additionally, new offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton is well-regarded around the league.

Howard would be a great upgrade in Houston’s tight ends room and represents the sort of low-risk, high-reward player that are needed to accelerate rebuilds. The relatively cheap investment in free agency could also stop the Texans from using yet another high draft pick at the position and to address holes on the defensive side of the ball that will need to be addressed if Lovie Smith is to be successful.

General Manager Nick Caserio has a responsibility to surround Mills with as many weapons as possible entering the 2022 season while also addressing numerous other deficiencies on the roster. Howard would be a great fit without sacrificing any significant draft capital or salary.