Watch: RB Joe Mixon scores first TD with Texans

Joe Mixon caps off his perfect debut for the Houston Texans with a game-changing touchdown against the Indianapolis Colts.

A new version of Houston Texans football has taken Lucas Oil Stadium by storm.

Joe Mixon continued his dominant debut for his new team with a 3-yard touchdown to give the Texans a two-score lead against the Indianapolis Colts. He’s already become the first running back in two years to rush for 100 yards in a single game midway through the fourth quarter.

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The 13-play, 70-yard drive reached its peak when C.J. Stroud found Nico Collins for 19 yards on third-and-14. Mixon, who’s averaged 5.3 yards per rush attempt, has been the backbone of the offense.

The Colts responded four plays later when Anthony Richardson connected with Ashton Dulin for a 54-yard touchdown.

It’s a fight to the finish between the two AFC South squads with bad blood after last season.

Watch: Texans rookie DB Calen Bullock records first career interception vs. Colts

Calen Bullock comes up big for the Houston Texans before halftime at Lucas Oil Stadium.

Calen Bullock was best known for his ball-hawking skills at USC.

He’s making the same plays at the next level for the Houston Texans’ defense.

Bullock recorded his first interception against Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson to halt a scoring drive before halftime. The Colts were driving inside Houston’s red zone after a Richardson 19-yard scramble.

Drafted 75th overall, Bullock has been a standout in practice and training camp. He made multiple interceptions against both C.J. Stroud and Davis Mills, plus improved as a tackler.

At USC, Bullock totaled nine interceptions and 17 pass breakups in three years.

The Texans enter halftime with a 12-7 lead. They will receive the ball to begin the second half.

Watch: Texans DL Mario Edwards Jr. records first sack of the regular season

Houston Texans signee Mario Edwards brought down Anthony Richardson to hand the ball back to the offense.

The Houston Texans‘ pass rush that received an overhaul in the offseason showed up on 3rd down to get the team off the field.

Defensive lineman Mario Edwards Jr. was the first of three Texans to get to Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson, forcing a punt. It’s the first sack of the season and already matches the one sack from last year’s two meetings with the Colts.

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Edwards, 30, arrived in Houston after a season with the Seattle Seahawks, appearing in 15 games with 21 tackles, five tackles for loss and two sacks.

Edwards saw an increase in playing time with the six-game suspension of fellow free agent signee Denico Autry. He’s a part of the rotation with Foley Fatukasi, Tim Settle Jr. and Khalil Davis.

Announcers set for Texans vs. Colts Week 1

Here’s who is on the call when the Houston Texans take on the Indianapolis Colts.

The Houston Texans will battle the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday, where the reigning AFC South champions look to set a standard in the division for the 2024 campaign.

The Texans Week 1 game will air on CBS at Noon CT. The television commentators for the game are Andrew Catalon (play-by-play), Tiki Barber, Jason McCourty (color analysts) and AJ Ross (reporter).

These two potential AFC contenders have bad blood after Houston marched into Lucas Oil Stadium in Week 18 last season to secure a 23-19 victory and its first division title in four years.

The Texans return C.J. Stroud, Will Anderson Jr., Nico Collins and countless talents from last year’s matchup as the headliners in Sunday’s contest. They’ll also have a healthy Tank Dell, who did not play in Week 18’s showdown after dealing with a broken leg.

Houston also loaded up in the offseason, acquiring proven veteran offensive talents like All-Pro receiver Stefon Diggs and Pro Bowl running back Joe Mixon via trades. During free agency, the Texans upgraded positions with the signings of edge rusher Danielle Hunter and linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair.

Diggs joins a receiver corps that includes Dell, Collins, John Metchie III and tight end Dalton Schultz. Hunter and Anderson could be the best pass-rushing duo to touch down in Houston since J.J. Watt and Whitney Mercilus in the mid-2010s.

Stroud, who last season became the fifth passer in league history to throw for over 4,000 yards as a rookie, will look to compete for MVP honors this fall. Should he win the award, he’d become the first sophomore gunslinger to win MVP since Lamar Jackson in 2019.

Film Room: Keys to defending Anthony Richardson & the Indianapolis Colts

On Sunday, DeMeco Ryans will have to scheme up a masterclass defensive performance to slow down Anthony Richardson and the Indianapolis Colts.

The NFL is officially back!

After an offseason that saw the Houston Texans elevate from a fun, new playoff team to what many consider a Super Bowl contender, the squad is ready to debut both their new talent and uniforms on Sunday against the Indianapolis Colts.

Back in January, Houston defeated Indianapolis on its way to both the AFC South title and the playoff win. During the offseason, the Colts remained quiet on the free agency front while the Texans went for the splash moves.

Rather than commit exorbitant resources to bring in talent, general manager Chris Ballard is betting heavily that the natural development of young players and similar coaching efforts to a year prior can propel the team forward.

It’s not a sexy approach, but that doesn’t mean that second-year quarterback Anthony Richardson and offensive mastermind Shane Steichen won’t be a chess match of problems to prep against.

Richardson, the most athletic quarterback to ever test at the NFL Combine, torched Houston in a Week 2 victory last season, scoring two touchdowns in the first quarter before exiting with injury. Despite the loss of that talent, Steichen was able to assemble a patchwork offense around journeyman Gardner Minshew that kept the Colts in the playoff hunt through Week 18.

One of the league’s most unique physical talents at quarterback with undoubtedly one of the league’s best play designers and play callers – now in their sophomore season. That presents a unique challenge that DeMeco Ryans and his defense will face to kickstart the 2024 season.

What does the path to success look like? The film tells a compelling story.

First, Houston must find ways to stay disciplined against a unique ground game. The Texans ranked sixth in rushing yards per game in 2023 with 96.6 yards allowed, but that number soared against Steichen’s schemed run game with 176.5 yards allowed on average between two contests.

New defensive tackles Foley Fatukasi and Mario Edwards Jr., plus linebacker Azeez Al-Shaair, should help fortify the interior against Indianapolis interior trenches. Still, even if able to match physicality, the question becomes more about run discipline.

Steichen isn’t afraid to balance the line between modern and historic concepts to generate a run game. Take this play below, for example, against the Los Angeles Rams: There’s little window dressing, yet the defense is accustomed to seeing the handoff.

Combined with some pulling blockers, the Colts effectively run quarterback power for a first down.

Sometimes, however, it’s the opposite. Play designs can border on bland to oversaturated and elaborate.

In his 2023 debut, Steichen leaned into a formation that’s similar to the “Flexbone” or the triple option many readers have seen at high school-level games or military colleges. It’s an older offense that has gone out of vogue in new school concepts, but it still accomplishes the primary goal of creating an excellent run look.

The orbit motion from Josh Downs moves the linebackers in the wrong direction before he ultimately reverses and becomes a lead blocker for Richardson on the keeper.

Defending these concepts becomes challenging, not only due to the noise around the actual play but also because of how unique it is to the Colts.
Concepts like the ones below are an absolute must to defend Indianapolis but aren’t ones that Houston will see again this season. Even Lamar Jackson, the league’s poster boy of mobile passers, doesn’t run an offense the way Steichen plans to use Richardson. As such, it’s an odd position of a niche but a necessity entering the contest.

Looking back at the Los Angeles game, see how much detail Steichen can stuff around this simple quarterback-read option. A wide receiver comes motion that crosses the formation and a tight end crosses the formation to become the lead blocker should Richardson keep.

Life altogether becomes challenging for the linebackers. With Christian Harris out, expect Al-Shaair and Henry To’oTo’o to start this upcoming game. There’s a degree to defending the run that becomes a guessing game. If players pursue or fly downfield incorrectly, it’s a win for Indy’s offense.

That’s their second key to victory – force legitimate passing downs to eliminate Richardson’s mobility. Steichen, just as he does in the running game, will look to make life easier for Richardson through the air.

That likely comes in two specific ways.

The first will be creating quick passes in optimal receiver matchups, specifically the slot. Rookie wide receiver Adonai Mitchell from Texas will be positioned with either alignment or motion to run routes against Jalen Pitre or the linebackers, which should be an offensive advantage.

It will be an early test for Pitre in the nickel spot defending receivers, especially when the route can go any direction. It becomes even more challenging when integrated with his run-stopping responsibilities in the context of the “RPO.” Steichen and Richardson will have no problem borrowing the college game for easier gains.

Those slot routes not only create quick passing options for Richardson, but they also play an essential role in nullifying the pass rush.

Will Anderson and Danielle Hunter have a game-wrecking mentality on the exterior for Houston. It’s a strength that Indianapolis plans to take out of the game early. Having third-and-short or third-and-medium calls will allow quicker passing and route concepts where the Colts can roll the pocket and have Richardson on the move.

The Texans’ ability to force third-and-8-plus from Indinanpolis’ offense will put Richardson in a scenario where he’s forced to participate in grown-up NFL quarterbacking.

Richardson’s accuracy, albeit likely overblown by the public, is still a process from down to down and forcing progressions that take longer than 2 seconds buys time for Ryans’ defense to affect his process. The offense won’t be able to scheme the same quick passes and it will require the pocket to hold against the Texans’ front.

Truly, Houston’s ferocious pass rushers and Ryans’ scheming talents on coverages and stunts make their impact when Indianapolis has to hunt for chunk yardage.

The third and final key to the game circles back to Ryans – Houston cannot find themselves outcoached or allow their talent to be coached out of the game.

On paper, this is a matchup where stars like Anderson, Hunter, Al-Shaair, and cornerback Derek Stingley should give the Texans a firm advantage from a talent standpoint. They cannot allow Steichen to remove those pieces from the chessboard purely from a schematic standpoint.

Houston must force Indianapolis to win by forcing them to win individually against someone like Stingley in coverage or Anderson crashing down on the interior after a stunt. What does that effectively look like?

Ryans cannot hesitate to move Stingley around the field, as he did in the playoffs against Cleveland and Baltimore, if Indianapolis is willing to play around him. Allowing Steichen to consistently align Michael Pittman or

Mitchell across from rookie Kamari Lassiter, however promising he looks, would be a waste toward a budding All-Pro talent in the secondary.
On the defensive line, Ryans will have to be creative and ensure that his edge rushers don’t go to waste on chips and pocket movements.

Ryans and Steichen have a budding coaching rivalry from their times in San Francisco and Philadelphia, respectively. How these two prepare their players and can attack evolving weaknesses of each other likely dictates how this matchup fares.

It’s almost impossible to bet against Ryans after the last 12 months and there’s ample reason to believe they’re ready for the challenge that Steichen and Richardson present as a unit.

Fans will get their first look at how the hometown hero coach fares against the Colts’ dynamic offense at noon CT on Sunday.

Is DeMeco Ryans vs. Shane Steichen the NFL’s best young HC rivalry?

The Houston Texans open the season against the Indianapolis Colts, yet another duel for DeMeco Ryans’ defense and Shane Steichen’s offense.

The Houston Texans begin the regular season in the same place where last year’s ended: Lucas Oil Stadium, where they will take on the Indianapolis Colts on Sunday.

Both teams selected quarterbacks in the top five of the 2023 NFL Draft. Both saw surprising turnarounds under first-year head coaches that culminated in a winner-take-all AFC South title Week 18 matchup.

Houston won the contest, 23-19, sending itself to the postseason and Indianapolis into the offseason.

“New year, not worried about last year. Last year was last year. We’re fully focused on 2024 we’re a completely different team,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said Money. “They’re a different team as well. So for me, last year has nothing to do with this year going into their place.”

Ryans and Colts head coach Shane Steichen each received votes to be the NFL’s Coach of the Year, albeit Ryans’ with significantly more, 165 votes, than Steichen’s four.

The two coaches’ successful debut campaigns lead to heightened expectations in year two and perhaps the birth or continuation of the best young coaching rivalry in the sport.

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“Really respect him as a coach,” Ryans said. “For me, it’s we got to do the same. Just have our guys prepared, ready to go, ready for anything that they may throw at us.”

While the second-year coach prefers the attention stay on the players, Sunday’s matchup between Ryans and Steichen has been a frequent battle over the past three seasons.

Before arriving in Indianapolis, Steichen was the Philadelphia Eagles’ offensive coordinator. In both years, the Eagles ranked among the top 13 in points per game and the top eight in yards.

The Eagles reached the Super Bowl after beating the 49ers in the NFC Conference Championship. Ryans. who called plays for San Francisco’s defense, allowed Steichen’s offense to score the most points in regulation against his unit with 31.

During the regular season, the 49ers led the league in the fewest points per game at 16.3.

The year prior, Ryans won the matchup as the Eagles scored 11 points in a 17-11 Week 2 loss. Philadelphia’s 11 points were the second-fewest scored in a game that season.

“I don’t look at it as a history between me and Steichen. It’s about the players playing the game. Our players – Shane is a really good coach. He always has his guys prepared, ready to go,” Ryans said.

The two coaches, separated in age by 287 days, both entered the 2023 coaching cycle as two of the top options, ultimately ending in the same division.

Ryans and Steichen met for the first time as head coaches in Week 2, with the Colts racing out to a 14-0 lead behind a pair of Anthony Richardson rushing touchdowns.

The 2023 fourth overall pick sustained a concussion on the second score and left the game, but even as the Colts transitioned to backup Gardner Minshew, they continued to move the ball efficiently, leading to a 31-20 victory.

Steichen proved to be one of the best young offensive minds. Despite Richardson’s season ending in the coming weeks, Indianapolis scored the 10th-most points (396) and pushed the Texans for the division crown.

Not to be outdone, Ryans’ unit ranked in the top half of the league in most defensive categories.

“It’s not about me or Shane, it’s about the players who strap it up on the field,” Ryans said.