Texans’ offensive grades from 22-19 overtime win versus the Bills

The Houston Texans offense had some respectable grades in their 22-19 overtime win against the Buffalo Bills Saturday evening in the AFC wild-card.

The Houston Texans scraped out an incredible, if at times ugly, 22-19 overtime victory over the Buffalo Bills in the AFC wild-card Saturday at NRG Stadium.

Despite what was an atrocious first half, a number of second half changes and an inspired performance from Deshaun Watson led to 19 unanswered points after initially trailing 16-0 in the third quarter. With the anemic nature of the game, the grades are a touch challenging.

quarterback

instant-analysis-texans-deshaun-watsons-legend-grew-bills
Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports

After a measly first half with only 68 yards of offense, the quarterback exploded midway through the third quarter. Watson finished completing 80% of his passes, 20/25, for 247 yards and a touchdown. Additionally, Watson added 55 yards on the ground, 20 of which came on the Texans first score of the game when trailing by 16.

This was a classic example of why the Texans can never be counted out. Despite taking seven sacks and not finding a groove until late in the contest, the Texans were never out of the game. Upon getting in rhythm, Watson was able to make great reads, extend plays and carry the team to victory.

It also doesn’t hurt we saw a signature Texans moment from the signal caller.

Grade: A

Josh Allen will use Bills’ playoff loss to ‘fuel’ him

Allen says the loss to the Texans will only make the Bills hungrier.

Following the Bills 22-19 playoff loss to the Houston Texans quarterback Josh Allen faced the media after a game that simply got away.

“It’s a game we should’ve won, could’ve won,” Allen said. “It sucks. This is a team that fought the entire game. I appreciate how the guys battled today… it’s going to be a long offseason, but we’ll learn from it.”

After coming out firing on offense, in a drive that concluded with Josh Allen catching a touchdown pass from wide receiver John Brown, the Bills offense was held out of the endzone for the remainder of the game.

Thanks to a perfect performance from kicker Stephen Hauschka, the Bills took a 16-0 lead into halftime, but the defense was unable to shutdown the likes of Houston quarterback Deshaun Watston in the second half.

Allen said repeatedly after the game that the offense not converting it’s opportunities was on his shoulders.

“It’s a bitter taste taste… we have to find a way to get six instead of three when we get down there and that’s on me.”

While the Bills season ends in Houston, there is a lot that can be learned from a tough playoff loss like this one and applied to the future.

“I am going to take this into the offseason… let it fuel me and take it from there,” Allen said. “This will hurt and sting for a while, but we’ll move on.”

Part of the Bills success this season has been attributed to the culture head coach Sean McDermott and general manager Brandon Beane are building in Buffalo. That closeness is something Allen feels will help propel them forward.

“I love my teammates, I love the energy they brought today and how they battled… it’s gonna make us hungrier, it sucks that we lost today, but life goes on… I expect this to make us hungrier and come out next year ready to go.”

While it is perfectly normal to feel disappointed in a game that as Allen put it, the Bills could have won, it is also OK to feel optimistic about this team’s future.

With strong leadership in McDermott, close to $90 million in salary cap space for Brandon Beane and several young building blocks in Allen, Tre’Davious White and Tremaine Edmunds (just to name a few,) unlike the last time the Bills made the playoffs, the growth should continue right on into next season. No rebuild, or teardown needed.

While today is undoubtedly painful for Bills fans, it is another step in the process and if Josh Allen and his teammates do indeed use it as fuel, we might all look back on this game one day and point to it as a large part of what ultimately pushed this franchise over the edge.

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Mike Pereira questions penalty on Bills’ Cody Ford

Former NFL referee Mike Pereira questions penalty on Bills OL Cody Ford.

Mike Pereira, the NFL’s former supervisor of officials says a very questionable call against the Bills in their Wild-Card loss to the Texans was wrong, which was part of the reason Buffalo lost.

In overtime, the Bills were nearing field goal range when rookie tackle Cody Ford was flagged for a penalty on a four-yard run by Buffalo quarterback Josh Allen.

It was called a blindside block. Here’s the play via The Bills Wire’s Bradley Gelber:

Many Bills fans thought that call was wrong. Turns out, Pereira thinks so, too.

“I think the call is incorrect,” he said.

Here’s his full thoughts via his social media account on Twitter:

Many plays make a game and the Bills players themselves won’t dwell on this one. But this play set the Bills back and eventually, they lost field position, a kick attempt, and the game. What could have been?

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J.J. Watt praises star QB and ‘fire-starter’ Deshaun Watson after 22-19 OT win against the Bills

Defensive end J.J. Watt credits ‘fire-starter’ QB Deshaun Watson with the Houston Texans’ 22-19 overtmie win over the Buffalo Bills.

Houston Texans defensive star JJ. Watt may have taken a huge risk by coming back early from his pectoral tear recovery in order to play in this season’s playoffs, but it’s safe to say it was worth it.

Watt played a huge part in their 22-19 overtime victory over the Buffalo Bills, with his third quarter sack sparking a lackluster Texans team back into action. Quarterback Deshaun Watson subsequently went on to lead Bill O’Brien’s side to three consecutive scoring drives before winning the game for the home team with an incredible last gasp play in their second overtime drive.

“He’s unbelievable, you’re never out of a game when you have Deshaun Watson as your quarterback,” said Watt of his two-time Pro Bowl teammate. “The guy’s incredible, we knew all we needed was a spark. We were down 16 nothing and we didn’t believe we were out of the game, all we needed was a spark. And you add Deshaun Watson to a spark, and you’re going to have one hell of a fire.”

The three-time NFL Defensive Player of the Year was full of praise for the former Clemson star, admitting how stunned he was by Watson’s game-winning drive.

“The play he made at the end of the game, nobody makes that play, I mean the guy’s unbelievable,” admitted Watt. “I’m very lucky and thankful to have him as my quarterback, and that’s why you play the whole game.”

Watt finished the game not only with a win and another playoff game to look forward to, but a pec that remained in one piece.

The magicians Watt and Watson will now set their eyes on the divisional game where they will face either the Baltimore Ravens or the Kansas City Chiefs. Texans fans will have their fingers crossed for more jaw-dropping plays from Houston’s stars next week.

Instant analysis: J.J. Watt sparks Texans‘ 22-19 comeback over the Bills

Defensive end J.J. Watt sparked the Houston Texans’ comeback that led to a 22-19 overtime win against the Buffalo Bills in the AFC wild-card.

On Saturday afternoon, defensive J.J. Watt took the field for the Houston Texans for the first time since Oct. 27 when the defensive end tore his pectoral muscle when making a tackle for loss on Oakland Raiders running back Josh Jacobs in the 27-24 win.

The injury was initially believed to be a season-ending one for Watt as the timetable is usually 4-6 months, but he returned to the field in a little over two months, and he immediately made an impact for Houston as he led the huddle to hype up the team before the game even started.

The first half, however, was quiet for the 6-5 product out of Wisconsin as he failed to record a sack, and was really on the field for only third-down situations.

The Texans as a whole, were silent in the first half also, as they were held scoreless and to only 89 yards of total offense.

Halfway through the third quarter, however, Watt recorded a huge sack on third-and-8 that kept the Bills out of the end zone and also ignited the crowd at NRG Stadium.

Even though the Bills scored a field goal on the drive that extended their lead to 16-0, that play by Watt fueled the team and Watt himself. 

The former Badger was shown on the big screen of NRG screaming at the top of his lungs. The Texans followed up the Bills’ field goal with a touchdown drive, which was scored by quarterback Deshaun Watson.

In the second half, Watt was on the field for more plays, and he made his impact felt, too. Watt pressured quarterback Josh Allen on multiple plays, and was right in the middle of a Texans defense that recorded three second-half sacks.

Houston outscored Buffalo 22-6, which included 16 unanswered, after Watt’s sack. Something about that play gave Houston an adrenaline shot when it seemed like the team was on the verge of defeat.

Instead, the Texans now advance to the divisional round of the NFL playoffs where they will travel to either Kansas City or Baltimore pending the results of the Tennessee Titans versus the New England Patriots AFC wild-card on Saturday night

Despite all the injuries, one thing was made clear ⁠— Watt is still a huge piece to the Texans’ defense, and the longer he is on the field, the more he energizes the unit. It will be shocking if he is on a strong situational snap count like the first half against the Texans’ opponent next weekend.

Ex-Texans CB Kevin Johnson showed QB Deshaun Watson a tell on 34-yard pass to RB Taiwan Jones

Houston Texans QB Deshaun Watson says that Buffalo Bills CB Kevin Johnson showed him a tell on the 34-yard overtime pass to RB Taiwan Jones.

Buffalo Bills cornerback Kevin Johnson spent four seasons with the Houston Texans as he was their former 2015 first-round pick. Of course, he would have knowledge on his old team.

However, his old quarterback had knowledge on him, and it came into play on the 34-yard pass to running back Taiwan Jones that setup Ka’imi Fairbairn’s game-winning 28-yard field goal in overtime of the AFC wild-card Saturday evening at NRG Stadium.

“I knew it was blitz 0,” Watson told Lisa Salters of ESPN after the game. “I checked the play. Kevin Johnson was here last year, so he knew the signal, seen him bail, and I just told myself to stay up.”

Watson shed two would-be sacks from Bills defenders and scrambled out to his right where he found Jones, whose 34-yard reception was more to do with his yards after the catch than Watson’s air yards.

Nonetheless, they would not have been possible if the two-time Pro Bowl quarterback had not stayed upright.

“It’s do or die right now, and all the work I put in in the offseason, I just had to make a play,” said Watson.

According to the former 2017 first-round draft pick from Clemson, he left little cards in the lockers of his teammates prior to the playoff game. On each card it said, “Let’s be great today.”

Said Watson: “So, somebody had to be great today. Why not me?”

Watson finished completing 20-of-25 for 247 yards and a touchdown. He also rushed 14 times for 55 yards and a score.

Because of Watson’s efforts to be great against the Bills, the Texans are in the divisional round of the playoffs for the fourth time in franchise history. The results of the Tennessee Titans versus New England Patriots wild-card bout on Saturday night determine whether the Texans travel to Baltimore to face the Ravens or go to Kansas City to play the Chiefs.

Bills’ Lorenzo Alexander makes retirement official

Buffalo Bills LB Lorenzo Alexander retires.

The Bills’ Wild Card loss to the Houston Texans was linebacker Lorenzo Alexander’s last career game.

Alexander, 36, told reporters following the game that he’s hanging it up and retiring.

“Oh, I’m done. I’m done. I made the decision awhile ago, so I’m at peace with it,” Alexander said. “It’s more about choosing my family than not choosing football.

“It’s been a great ride. I have no regrets, I’ve loved every minute of it.”

Alexander played four years for the Bills and made a Pro Bowl on defense when he recorded 12.5 sacks. In his Bills career, Alexander played 64 games, recording 274 tackles, 24 sacks and three interceptions.

While done playing, Alexander did express a decision to still hang around the Bills organization like other former players do.

“I’ll still be around, I loved this community and Buffalo, so hopefully I can still do something like Kyle Williams is doing,” Alexander said.

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Instant analysis: Texans QB Deshaun Watson’s legend grew against the Bills

Houston Texans QB Deshaun Watson helped his legend grow against the Buffalo Bills in the AFC wild-card with a 22-19 overtime win.

Last year in Houston, Deshaun Watson’s postseason legend began as most do.

It was a paltry, ordinary showing where the protagonist was simply outmatched. The Texans sputtered their way to seven points and were thoroughly dominated by the AFC South rival Indianapolis Colts.

Watson threw for a pedestrian 246 yards with an interception and a touchdown. The former 2017 first-round pick failed to generate the postseason magic he’d become notorious for at Clemson.

On Saturday, against the Buffalo Bills, that narrative appeared to be solidifying.

The franchise signal caller for Houston looked overwhelmed, sacked seven times while frequently holding onto the ball far too long and failing to identify an open receiver.

The Texans were down 16-0 at one point in the third quarter with only 68 yards from their franchise quarterback. The game appeared to be en route to another January disappointment as the first connection between Watson and All-Pro receiver DeAndre Hopkins was fumbled. It was another Bill O’Brien game plan that was simply over matched against a good wild-card team that would probably peter out the next week in the divisional playoffs.

However, this is where the story changed. Specifically, Watson changed the narrative, salvaging the Texans’ from the ‘post-season choker’ label they seemed all but destined for. No. 4 finished completing 80% of his passes, 20/25, for 247 yards and a touchdown. Additionally, Watson added 55 yards on the ground, 20 of which came on the Texans first score of the game when trailing by 16.

This was Watson at his absolute best on Saturday. The Texans seemingly cannot be counted out in any contest where he is available. In addition to some second half adjustments, Watson consistently extended plays, found the open man and ultimately did everything necessary to close the gap against a fundamentally-sound Buffalo Bills team.

Deandre Hopkins, with only one reception for five yards and a fumble, would explode for five catches and 85 yards. Running backs Carlos Hyde and Duke Johnson ran inspired. The spark was lit and the Texans scored 19 unanswered. Everything was in their favor.

Following a rather questionable quarterback sneak on fourth-and-1 with under two minutes that allowed Buffalo an additional drive and to the tie the game, the game went to overtime.

NFL overtime is where legends are made.

Following a quick Texans’ three-and-out to open the extra period, the next team to score would win. In response to this magnitude, the young quarterback showed poise many fans have simply come to expect. Watson calmly led a 9-play 73-yard drive.

Specifically, it was on second-and-6 on the Buffalo 44, where it appeared all but certain Buffalo had secured a drive-killing sack, that Watson wrote his legend.

He slipped two would-be sacks, scrambled to the right, and flipped the ball to unlikely candidate Taiwan Jones. The play went for 34 yards and all but ensured a Texans’ victory on the next play. The Houston Houdini stamped his mark.

This was a performance that reminded Texans’ fans that despite any defensive deficiency, qualms with O’Brien or any other problem in Houston: With Watson, they can win. It’s possible the slow start afforded by Buffalo, however, may not be available against the likes of Kansas City or Baltimore.

Will O’Brien be able to assemble such a game plan? Who knows?

However, today Houston should celebrate. Watson showed everyone why the front office considers him the franchise.

On to the divisional round with more story left to be written.

What was going on in 1995, the last time the Bills won a playoff game?

The Bills have not won a playoff game since Dec. 30, 1995 … still.

The poor Buffalo Bills and the Bills’ Mafia. A 16-0 lead in Saturday’s AFC Wild-Card game turned into a brutal, 22-19 overtime loss to the Houston Texans. The last Bills’ playoff victory came Dec. 30, 1995 against the Miami Dolphins. Ouch.

The President was …

Julian Finney/Getty Images

Bill Clinton was President of the United State on Dec. 30, 1995, the day the Bills defeated the Miami Dolphins in a Wild-Card game. Clinton’s VP was Al Gore.

Instant analysis: Bills squander two-touchdown lead in Wild-Card loss vs. Texans

Instead, a nightmare of a second-half ensued, and the Bills fell to the Texans 22-19 to officially concluded their 2019 season.

For the first half of the Buffalo Bills Wild Card game against the Houston Texans, it looked as if the history books would add the first playoff victory of the millennium for the team.

Instead, a nightmare of a second-half ensued, and the Bills fell to the Texans 22-19 to officially concluded their 2019 season.

The game started impressively for Buffalo. The Bills scored on the opening drive of the game. Offensive coordinator Brian Daboll started with a smart arsenal of plays to get the offense rolling along. Wide receiver Isaiah McKenzie moved in motion on the initial plays of the drive. Ultimately, this design worked well, as the culminating play represented something similar to the Philly Special. In this case, John Brown took the pitch and found a wide-open quarterback in Josh Allen on the sideline to put the Bills up by a touchdown. Buffalo added two Stephen Hauschka field goals in the second quarter as well.

More impressively, the defense was in Deshaun Watson’s face. Trent Murphy and Jerry Hughes registered two sacks each in the first half. The Texans only gained 81 yards in the half. Watson was 6-of-8 passing for only 39 yards in the air. All-Pro wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins was held without a catch for the first half.

Buffalo’s defense continued their dominance into the second half. Both teams traded punts on their initial possessions of the half. Then, All-Pro cornerback Tre’Davious White forced a Hopkins fumble. The Bills added another field goal to give the team a 16-point lead.

Then, all hell broke loose for Buffalo. Settling for field goals caught up to the Bills, as the offense was largely stagnant for the remainder of the half.
Meanwhile, the Texans offense found their mojo, putting pressure on the Bills by having Watson rush more often and move the pocket. This, in conjunction with the Bills’ lack of meaningful offensive possession, puts pressure on the defense. Houston took advantage of their opportunities.
For the remainder of the half, Watson completed all eight of his passes for 111 yards, bring the team to a 19-16 lead over the Bills.

Watson scored on a 20-yard rush with four-and-a-half minutes remaining in the third quarter. The quarterback also successfully picked up the two-point conversion.

Allen fumbled on the Bills’ subsequent drive. However, the Texans could only muster a field goal from the possession, pulling Houston within five points.

However, this was when Watson and Hopkins found their grove. White, even with tight coverage, was unable to keep his All-Pro counterpart off the board for the entire game. Carlos Hyde scored the Texans next possession completing a five-yard touchdown rush. Hopkins scored on the two-point conversion, giving Houston their first lead of the day with 4:37 remaining in regulation.

Buffalo finally put together a decent drive, moving the ball efficiently in return. The Bills marched into Texans territory on six plays, stalling at the Texans 25-yard line. The following two plays after the two-minute warning were complete chaos for the Bills. Allen was sacked for a 14-yard loss, in addition to an intentional grounding penalty. The next play, Allen went in reverse once again, losing 19 yards on fourth down.

At this point, despair set in. Yet, the Bills defense, just as they have done all season, gave Buffalo another chance. The unit halted the Texans on four straight plays, giving Buffalo’s offense the ball with just over a minute remaining in the game.

The Bills drove down for a game-tying field goal. Stephen Hauschka made a 47-yard field goal to send the game to overtime.

Buffalo’s defense kept the game within striking distance, and the offense did just enough to send the game to overtime. Both teams matched each other in the extra session. The Texans and Bills both were forced to punt on their first possessions. Buffalo’s first possession pushed the ball into the fringe of Hauschka’s range, but a personal foul for a blindside block by Cody Ford took the team out of range.

The Bills continued to pressure Watson. However, the play of the game occurred when the Bills brought a massive amount of pressure, only to see Watson spin away from the apparent sack of Siran Neal and Matt Milano, only to find Taiwan Jones wide open for a 34-yard reception. This set up a 28-yard field goal for Ka’imi Fairburn, who sealed the deal for the Texans, sending the home team into the second round of the playoffs.

There will be many questions about Buffalo’s loss, especially among the coaching staff. The Bills took their foot off the gas and became much more conservative with a two-score lead. The Texans chipped away at the lead, and their final offensive play was one in which the Bills failed to execute the fundamental basics of tackling.

Mistakes doomed the Bills in the second half, ultimately ending their season with the many questions.

Buffalo will go into the offseason on the backs of their first 10-win season in two decades. However, this should have been their first playoff victory in 24 years. Instead, it goes down as just another loss for the Bills, their fifth consecutive in playoff defeat in franchise history.

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