Why QB Davis Mills may have staying power with the Texans

The C.J. Stroud era may be getting started with the Houston Texans, but Davis Mills may have some traits that keep him around.

Even if the organization wants to make C.J. Stroud earn it, Clutch City sports fans are ready for a new Houston Texans starting quarterback.

As admirable at best as Davis Mills may have been from 2021-22, the team’s 4-13 and 3-13-1 finishes are largely associated with his 28 games under center. Texans fans are ready to move on.

However, having Stroud supplant Mills as the starting quarterback may not get rid of the former 2021 third-rounder entirely.

According to Lauren Gray from Pro Football Focus, Mills demonstrated a proficiency as a deep passer last season. On 76 such drop backs, Mills posted a 90.8 PFF grade, which is notable.

Mills generated the sixth-most deep passing yards with 855, and he was tied for the 12th-most deep passing touchdowns with six. The former Stanford product was also sixth in the league with a 46.8% deep completion percentage.

In terms of passer rating, Mills was 22nd in the NFL with 85.8, and he did lead with the most deep passing interceptions with seven.

So long as the Texans are able to field vertical speed in their receiving corps and provide adequate protection for Mills, the deep passing game could still be open. No doubt the franchise and fans want the future to be now, but should they have to return to Mills in any capacity, providing him with a deep passing game could be a key to success.

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Texans QB Davis Mills adjusting to third different offense of his career

Houston Texans quarterback Davis Mills is having to learn his third different offense since entering the NFL in 2021.

Springtime is a season of rebirth and new beginnings. In Houston, this is highlighted by the Texans deploying a different scheme under a new offensive coordinator.

Davis Mills is entering his third year in the NFL, and the Texans are on their third offensive coordinator in that span with Bobby Slowik, the former passing game coordinator for the San Francisco 49ers, where Houston hired DeMeco Ryans.

With changing being constant, there are some aspects Mills has adapted to.

“The only thing difficult is just picking up new plays and not having anything to fall back on from the year previous,” Mills said during organized team activities at Houston Methodist Training Center May 23. “A lot of different offenses across the league run similar concepts, but they’re just calling it different things. Some of it is getting rid of the old verbiage and picking up new terminology. A lot of the other stuff is learning from new coaches, the new guys we have in the room and finding ways to get better.”

What Mills has been able to do is take pieces from his time with Tim Kelly and Pep Hamilton and add it to his experiences to help become a well-rounded signal caller.

Said Mills: “I think that’s what makes people better players, better people is if they can learn from the good traits from the guys around them and then also be able to get rid of some of those things that won’t really mesh with the new stuff. I think I have learned a lot from different coordinators, different coaches over the years, and I’m excited to add all that stuff to my memory bank like I’ve talked in the past and just keep getting better.”

What Mills has over No. 2 overall pick C.J. Stroud is experience from those coordinators, which the former Stanford product will need if he hopes to win the starting job.

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Davis Mills’ starting QB remarks signal competitive culture with DeMeco Ryans

Davis Mills’ remarks about competing for the starting QB job signal a new culture has come to the Houston Texans with DeMeco Ryans.

“I’m competing for that starting job.”

On Tuesday afternoon, third-year quarterback Davis Mills had one of the biggest headliners of the day when he announced that he believed he could win the quarterback competition despite the presence of C.J. Stroud.

“Since I’ve been drafted in the NFL I’ve been in a competition,” Mills said. “I don’t think anything is going to change. It’s been great getting to know C.J. so far. He’s an extremely hard worker and it will be good to see how we go out there everyday and make each other better.”

The comments, of course, drew some ire both nationally and from the Houston Texans fanbase. How could a quarterback that just led the team to only three wins and was benched at multiple points believe that he could be the starter over the team’s first round pick?

Despite the relative shock value on the surface, it was commentary from Mills that should have been both expected and appreciated for anyone interested in watching the Battle Red in 2023. The competitive spirit from Mills not only signals the right attitude from a young player but also speaks to a healthy dynamic under first time head coach DeMeco Ryans.

To begin, what else could anyone expect Mills to say? This is a player who, just one year ago, was considered one of the more intriguing young quarterback prospects in the NFL. Many national pundits around the country thought his rookie campaign had been as impressive as Mac Jones and he’d outperformed the likes of his highly drafted peers such as Trevor Lawrence or Justin Fields.

This is a talented young player who isn’t unaware of his surroundings. For every draft comment that Stroud would be entering a better situation than the one present in 2022, Mills knows even better the difficult circumstances he was asked to navigate last season. Poor interior offensive line play, weak offensive skill position players, and an abysmal offensive coaching staff marred any opportunity for Mills to build off his strong rookie campaign.

Mills is too old to be asked to play the role of an older veteran like Case Keenum. His best place and role on the roster is to learn alongside and push Stroud as much as he’s physically and mentally capable. This is a player who was as equally heralded as Stroud leaving the high school ranks, never played alongside the level of support found at a program like Ohio State and has now gathered two years of NFL experience.

Why can’t he win the starting job? He already has the opportunity to show off with first team reps early this summer.

Houston is a team that just spent over $40 million in free agency acquiring multiple new starters for the 2023 season. They’re manned by a front office and general manager Nick Caserio that traded away their future 2024 first round pick and signaled that the organization is done sacrificing the present for the future.

This is not a team that will sacrifice their upcoming year for the sake of development for Stroud. Mills is learning a new system alongside Stroud and, despite any outcome, this is a great situation for the team. Two young players are learning the offense together and should push each other to improve during practice.

If the two are remotely close or Stroud has an edge, the team can make an obvious choice to start their second overall pick. If Stroud struggles to adjust from the spread concepts present at Ohio State, they won’t be forced to play him early and Mills won’t feel caught off guard if he’s asked to take a bigger role than some may have projected.

More than anything, these comments are healthy not only for Mills but for the culture that Coach Ryans preached he wanted to install in Houston during his arrival.

Players on the roster, both young and old, are well aware that very little is promised to them. When returning players like Mills believe they have an opportunity to win their position battle, you create a culture where everyone on the roster is working harder to win their spot. This is the type of environment that allowed San Francisco players like Charles Omenihu and Talanoa Hufanga to become far more than their projections in the preseason.

For a young team, little is more valuable than every young player believing they have an opportunity to contribute and to win. Even if those odds are seemingly improbable.

Mills is unlikely to open as the starter for the Texans. However, his desire to do so speaks well towards the caliber of competitor and towards the overall culture that the Texans are looking to establish early during the 2023 campaign.

Fans will have to watch and see how this relationship benefits their future franchise quarterback. In the meantime, it could also mean some far more intriguing preseason games as Ryans builds towards his coaching debut.

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Texans QB Davis Mills says coach DeMeco Ryans ‘knows how to take care of his guys’

Houston Texans quarterback Davis Mills says that rookie coach DeMeco Ryans has shown quickly the ability to take care of his players.

To understand an individual, it is said to walk a mile in their shoes.

For DeMeco Ryans, his time as a player can’t be measured in miles, but games played. With a 140 career games in the NFL, the former two-time Pro Bowl linebacker has a bevy of experience, which has helped him relate to players since entering coaching as a defensive quality control coach in 2017 with the San Francisco 49ers.

Houston Texans quarterback Davis Mills is not alone in his respect for new coach DeMeco Ryans, and the prominent factor is his past life as a player from 2006-15.

“I think it goes for me and other guys in the locker room, everybody has a ton of respect for him because he’s been in our shoes especially, played for Houston,” Mills told reporters after organized team activities on May 23. “He knows what it’s like to go through a training camp practice in this heat.”

What has endeared Ryans to the Texans is also his understanding of how to manage the players.

“He knows how to take care of his guys,” said Mills. “He knows what needs to be done to put in the work and win games and that’s kind of spread around the locker room.”

Ryans’ enthusiasm has also spread around Houston as fans are excited to see the Texans complete the rebuild and win more than four games for the first time since 2019. Even though the Texans are dealing with a first-year coach, the expectation is fortunes are only going to improve.

“We feel the fire that comes from him and it’s been good,” said Mills. “Guys have a lot of respect and we’re excited to play for him.”

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Texans QB Davis Mills says 2022 season was ‘big learning experience’

Houston Texans quarterback Davis Mills started 15 games in 2022, which referred to as a “big learning experience.”

The past is prologue.

The Houston Texans went 3-13-1 in 2022 with Davis Mills as the starting quarterback for 15 of those games. Seeing quarterback as a position of need, the Texans addressed it with C.J. Stroud, their No. 2 overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft.

Houston would not have had a shot at Stroud without the Texans’ atrocious record in 2022.

For Mills, who has his sights set on being Houston’s Opening Day starter at the Baltimore Ravens Sept. 10, the last-place finish for the Texans was a “big learning experience.”

The former 2021 third-rounder met with reporters after organized team activities on May 23 to talk about using the moribund campaign to improve the team with new coach DeMeco Ryans.

“Obviously the record was what it was,” Mills said. “We wanted to win more games, and I think it led to some of the decisions that we ended up having to make as an organization this offseason.”

Even though Mills is fighting for his job and working with a third different offensive coordinator in as many seasons — Tim Kelly to Pep Hamilton to Bobby Slowik — the former Stanford product views each practice and meeting inside NRG Stadium as an opportunity to improve.

Said Mills: “I mean, it’s another day, another day to get better for me personally. I’m looking at it as another learning experience that’s going to add to my ability to go out there and play quarterback at a high level.”

No quarterback has started more games for Houston since 2021 than Mills with 26.

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Davis Mills plans to compete for Texans’ starting QB job

Davis Mills is not backing down so easily and plans to compete with C.J. Stroud for the Houston Texans’ starting quarterback job.

HOUSTON — As quarterback Davis Mills approached the podium for his press conference, his stoic demeanor and facial expression were one of a person who has seen all the signs of the Houston Texans moving in a different direction as far as the quarterback position but is not willing to give up his spot without a fight. 

The Texans selected Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud with the second overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft. Stroud is projected to be the franchise quarterback, but for now, he is a rookie learning how to call plays in an NFL huddle. 

Mills, 24, took first-team snaps during organized team activities on Tuesday as Stroud waited his turn to get reps with the second team, which included rookie wide receivers, Tank Dell and Xavier Hutchinson.

“I’m competing for that starting job,” Mills said. “Since I’ve been drafted in the NFL, I’ve been in a competition. I don’t think anything is going to change. It’s been great getting to know C.J. so far. He’s an extremely hard worker, and it will be good to see how we go out there every day and make each other better.

“Every year in this league, you feel more and more comfortable. Obviously, the hunger and the drive to become better is still there. It’s definitely a different feeling from when I was stepping in here as a rookie, not knowing anything to where I am now, having all that built-up experience from my starts over these past two years. I mean, it’s exciting. I’m blessed to have the opportunity to come in here and compete for another job. I’m ready for the year.”

 

Mills finished the 2022 campaign completing 61% of his passes for 3,118 yards. Still, his 17 touchdowns and 15 interceptions caused some concerns for general manager Nick Caserio who chose to select Stroud. Things got so bad last season at the quarterback position that by the end of the season, Mills found himself splitting time with backup Jeff Driskel.

The former Stanford quarterback knew that he had to change some things up in the offseason if he wanted to retain his starting position this season with Stroud on his heels.

“The big thing is trying to focus on myself,” said Mills about part of his offseason regiment. “Trying to get better every day. Trying to put a lot of work in. Some of my weaknesses from previous years, trying to make those my strengths now. The biggest thing is kind of putting my head down and getting better each day.”

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Texans QB C.J. Stroud appreciates working with Case Keenum, Davis Mills

Houston Texans rookie C.J. Stroud says that he appreciates the experience that quarterbacks Case Keenum and Davis Mills bring to the QB room.

The Houston Texans may have drafted C.J. Stroud to solve their quarterback woes, but it does not mean the No. 2 overall pick is taking his teammates for granted.

Houston still has third-year quarterback Davis Mills on the roster and also brought back Case Keenum for his third tour of duty. Even though the plan is for Stroud to beat the two journeymen signal callers outright and earn the starting job, the Ohio State product is not discounting their contributions to the team.

“It’s a blessing,” Stroud said after organized team activities on Tuesday. “It’s being something that I definitely knew that I needed it. Just that guidance and confidence that they’ve had.”

For Mills, the confidence comes after playing 28 games for the Texans since being selected as a third-rounder in 2021. The Stanford product started 26 games and compiled a 5-19-1 mark over the past two seasons.

Keenum has fluctuated between backup and starter throughout his career. The most notable season for Keenum was in 2017 when he started 14 games for the Minnesota Vikings, leading them to an NFC North title and a first-round bye. The former Houston Cougar pulled off the Minneapolis Miracle against the New Orleans Saints at U.S. Bank Stadium and had the Vikings in the NFC Championship Game.

Said Stroud: “They both played in the league as starters. They’ve been very helpful and have been very appreciative and very supportive of everything. We have constant communication on and off the field, so it’s been really great.”

A strong quarterback room led by quarterbacks coach Jerrod Johnson, also a former NFL quarterback, is what the Texans need as they get Stroud ready to assume the position.

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C.J. Stroud not speaking at Texans rookie minicamp is departure from predecessors

C.J. Stroud not speaking at Houston Texans rookie minicamp is departure from the way other rookie QBs have dealt with the minicamp.

Three other rookie quarterbacks are going to talk this weekend at their teams’ rookie minicamps.

Carolina Panthers quarterback Bryce Young will share his insights into his baby steps into the NFL. Anthony Richardson will speak about his experience joining the Indianapolis Colts. Even Will Levis will have some words even though the Tennessee Titans are probably going to keep Ryan Tannehill under center.

The Houston Texans and C.J. Stroud are different, and coach DeMeco Ryans told reporters that the team has, “other players that we drafted.”

“C.J. is not the only player that we drafted,” Ryans said with his disarming smile. “We’ve got multiple guys we drafted. We want to let you guys talk to all these guys, and C.J. will be able throughout the spring, later in the spring, also in training camp, so he will be available. Hold your horses, brother.”

It makes sense Stroud has a lot to deal with as the first-round quarterback with the expectations of the entire franchise upon him.

While the Texans may have their reasons for keeping Stroud shrouded, it represents a departure from the way the organization has operated while having a highly touted rookie quarterback.

In 2017, the Texans had another acclaimed field general in their midst. Houston traded with the Cleveland Browns to take the Clemson product No. 12 overall, and gave up some capital to take the two-time Davey O’Brien Award winner.

The Texans didn’t withhold the first-rounder from comment. Bill O’Brien wasn’t keeping him fresh for a presser sometime later in the spring.

The new face of the franchise spoke, and it was some of the typical fare one would expect.

“It’s going to take the hard work and the grind,” he said. “You can expect a lot of stuff and want to be great, want to be successful, especially early, but it’s a process. It’s not going to happen overnight. It’s going to take long nights, early mornings to be able to put in the work and to get what you need to get in to be successful on the field.”

But he spoke.

Whether a rookie talks or doesn’t during minicamp has no impact on games, but it does show that there is a recognizable change in how the organization operates.

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Houston Texans complete 2023 schedule: Times and dates announced

The Houston Texans’ complete 2023 schedule has been revealed. Check out the times and dates for all 17 games.

The Houston Texans’ complete 2023 schedule has been revealed.

The opponents were already known when the 2022 season ended, even while the Texans were on the plane ride back from Indianapolis following Week 18. However, the times and dates weren’t secured.

Houston now knows where and when they will play all 17 games for their 22nd season and the first of the DeMeco Ryans era.

All times are Central.

Week Date Opponent Time (CT) Network
1 Sept. 10 at Baltimore Ravens 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
2 Sept. 17 vs. Indianapolis Colts 12:00 p.m. FOX Tickets
3 Sept. 24 at Jacksonville Jaguars 12:00 p.m. FOX Tickets
4 Oct. 1 vs. Pittsburgh Steelers 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
5 Oct. 8 at Atlanta Falcons 12:00 p.m. FOX Tickets
6 Oct. 15 vs. New Orleans Saints 12:00 p.m. FOX
7 Oct. 22 BYE WEEK Tickets
8 Oct. 29 at Carolina Panthers 12:00 p.m. FOX Tickets
9 Nov. 5 vs. Tampa Bay Buccaneers 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
10 Nov. 12 at Cincinnati Bengals 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
11 Nov. 19 vs. Arizona Cardinals 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
12 Nov. 26 vs. Jacksonville Jaguars 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
13 Dec. 3 vs. Denver Broncos 3:05 p.m. CBS Tickets
14 Dec. 10 at New York Jets 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
15 Dec. 17 at Tennessee Titans 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
16 Dec. 24 vs. Cleveland Browns 12:00 p.m. CBS Tickets
17 Dec. 31 vs. Tennessee Titans 12:00 p.m. FOX Tickets
18 Jan. 6 or 7 at Indianapolis Colts TBD TBD Tickets

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4 reasons why Texans fans should appreciate QB Davis Mills

The Houston Texans have their presumptive franchise QB now, but Davis Mills deserves appreciation for taking snaps when the situation was hopeless.

The Houston Texans selected former Ohio State quarterback C.J. Stroud with the No. 2 overall pick in the 2023 NFL draft.

Space City’s nightmare is over. A field general with talent will usher in a new era for the Texans.

While the praise for Stroud is understandable, a little appreciation for one of the other Texans’ quarterbacks needs to be shown before turning the page entirely.

For the past two moribund seasons, Davis Mills has started 26 of Houston’s 34 games. While Mills has the most wins in that span (five), it is simply due to having more chances, not any elevation over the likes of Tyrod Taylor and Kyle Allen.

Here are four reasons why Texans fans should thank Mills before flying away to the Stroud era.