Texans G A.J. Cann explains role of experience in effective offensive line play

Cann told reporters that experience playing against top-tier defensive linemen can make all the difference in deploying effective blocks

Veteran offensive lineman A.J. Cann spoke to reporters on Tuesday at the Houston Texans’ post-practice press conference regarding the role experience plays in the ability of a front five to deploy effective blocks against opponents. His comments were revealing, and shed some light both on what the team’s offensive line has done right in 2022 and some of their shortcomings through eight games.

He told the media that the flow of the game from a lineman’s perspective can take some time to become second nature and that the Texans’ coaching staff has played a key role in helping the group become a cohesive unit.

“There’s going to be things that you see if you’ve been playing awhile,” Cann explained. “You’ll see a certain defense or linebacker doing this, you can figure out what’s coming, especially if you’ve got a coach like Hop [George Warhop] who’s been in the game awhile. He’s probably seen it all. If he hasn’t, I don’t know. I think he has. He can get us on the right track. He’s very detailed, and I’m pretty sure he’s going to be able to tell us everything that they have up front that they’re going to deliver. That’s the kind of coach he is.”

While Houston’s line may still be coming into its own at the halfway point of the season, the pieces are in place for the group to become a major asset in the Texans’ rebuild in 2023. They could lay the foundation for any potential franchise quarterback that the team might select in the draft to have success early in their career should the Texans choose to keep the unit intact during the offseason.

It is likely too soon to speculate on matters concerning next season, but for now, the line remains one of the more consistently competent parts of the Texans’ mostly-dysfunctional offense.

A.J. Cann discusses bond with Brandon Linder and Jawaan Taylor

A.J. Cann discussed his bond with both Brandon Linder and Jawaan Taylor on an episode of the “O-Zone Podcast.”

Guard A.J. Cann has seen a lot of iterations of the Jacksonville Jaguars. The third-longest tenured member of the Jaguars (behind fellow offensive linemen Brandon Linder and Tyler Shatley), the 2015 third-round pick has started 90 of the 91 games he’s appeared in throughout his career, and he’s had three head coaches and two general managers in that time.

So any quick change to the franchise’s culture would be easily recognized by Cann. He discussed the difference he’s felt during the first offseason under Urban Meyer on an episode of the “O-Zone Podcastwith Jaguars writer John Oehser.

“We know where he wants to go,” Cann said. “He wants to win and he wants to win now. As a team, we’re hungry. We hear a hungry head coach talking like that and working his butt off to give us everything he can to win and increase our value. That makes you want to go out there and give it all you have for a guy like that. He’s been everything and all of that since he has been here.”

Cann is a part of the position group expected to have the most continuity under the new regime. The offensive line is the most experienced unit on the team, and Cann plays between the most experienced member of the offensive line in Linder and the least experienced in Jawaan Taylor, a former second-round pick who the Jags believe has a lot of potential.

Cann discussed his relationship with both on Oehser’s podcast, saying that the group is often on the same page and communicates well due to the amount of time they’ve played together.

“Just knowing who you’re going to battle with, and knowing that person in and out,” Cann said. “I’ve been beside Brandon for a while. Sometimes when we see something, we’ll look at each other and it’s like, ‘You saw that? I saw it, too.’ I just know what he’s thinking about and I am able to think on the same page.

“It’s the same with Jawaan: He can make a point and I say, ‘I’m already watching it.’ That’s a cool thing. You can feel the presence of the group. We’ve got guys who have been there. We made some strides last year. We’re working to build on that.”

Cann remains one of the more consistent members of the Jacksonville offensive line, and it’s why he’s held down a starting job for so long. In 919 snaps in 2020, he allowed only two sacks, per Pro Football Focus. His play, along with the play of his cohorts, will be key in both the development of rookie quarterback Trevor Lawrence and building off the strides made in the run game last season.