4 takeaways from Day 2 of Houston Texans training camp

The Houston Texans held their second training camp practice at Houston Methodist Training Center. Here are four takeaways.

The forging of the 2023 Houston Texans continues.

The first day of training camp was going to warrant optimism regardless of how the team actually performed. With the combination of football returning and the club looking to a fan favorite to take over as coach, the first day of camp was going to engender positivity on Kirby Drive.

As the Texans worked through their second day of camp at Houston Methodist Training Center, the work on the field created its own momentum. Any hype that transpired was purely due to basic football, not the elation after a long layoff.

Here are four takeaways from the second day of camp:

Johnathan Joseph among the Texans’ 2023 Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching and Nunn-Wooten Scouting fellows

Former CB Johnathan Joseph will be a part of Houston Texans’ eight fellows in the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching and Nunn-Wooten Scouting Fellowships.

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph is going to get a taste of coaching with his old team.

According to the Texans, the former two-time Pro Bowl cornerback will be a member of the team’s eight fellows who will take part in the Bill Walsh Diversity Coaching and Nunn-Wooten Scouting Fellowships for training camp.

During Joseph’s 16 seasons in the NFL with stints with the Cincinnati Bengals, Texans, Arizona Cardinals, and Tennessee Titans, the former 2006 first-round pick generated 782 combined tackles, 200 pass breakups, 32 interceptions, including seven returned for touchdowns, and eight forced fumbles across 211 career games.

Joseph will work with the defensive backs.

Michigan State defensive analyst T.J. Hollowell will work with the defensive line and linebackers.

Texas A&M assistant strength and conditioning coach Jerry Johnson will be a part of the team’s strength and conditioning.

Pleasant Grove High School (Alabama) head coach Darrell LeBeaux will focus on the running backs and tight ends.

Rice offensive analyst JaMarcus Nelson will work with receivers.

Texas Southern offensive line coach Manny Ramirez will be a part of the offensive line.

New Jersey Generals (USFL) quarterbacks coach Zerick Rollins will be a part of the special teams and offense.

Since 1987, the Bill Walsh NFL Diversity Coaching Fellowship is designed to be a vocational tool to increase the number of full-time minority coaches in the league. With all 32 NFL clubs participating each year, the program’s objective is to use NFL clubs’ offseason workout programs and minicamps to give talented coaches opportunities to observe, participate, gain experience, and ultimately gain a full-time NFL coaching position.

The Texans will also have Colorado director of recruiting Darrius Darden-Box take part in the team’s scouting. The Nunn-Wooten Scouting Fellowship will give Box a look into player personnel and the intricacies of college and pro scouting within an NFL team.

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Johnathan Joseph laments not winning Super Bowl with Texans

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph joined the “Texans Talk Podcast” and talked about the missed chance to win a Super Bowl in Houston.

Last Thursday on the Texans Wire’s Texans Talk Podcast, hosts Mark Lane and John Crumpler were able to sit down with two-time Pro Bowl cornerback Johnathan Joseph and discuss his tenure with the Houston Texans.

Joseph played a decade in Houston from 2011-2019 after being drafted in the first round by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2006 and is arguably the greatest corner in Texans history. He played a premier role atop the corner depth chart during the team’s first division championships and some of the best defenses of the past ten years.

As such, it was only appropriate to ask Joseph what his favorite memory was playing with the Texans. His answer, despite both team and individual success, spoke to just how talented he believed the defenses to be during his time

“Honestly winning the first playoff game and obviously winning the division. Just being on the team with guys like J.J. Watt, DeAndre Hopkins, [Jadeveon] Clowney, Brian Cushing, Kareem Jackson, Arian Foster, Andre Johnson. I don’t just want to start naming off guys because there’s too many. Antonio Smith, Connor Barwin, Wade Smith, Duane Brown, when I start naming those guys first thing, I get pissed about is how we had all those players and didn’t make it to a Super Bowl… My memory is just being with those guys and transforming how the Texans were viewed through the NFL

Joseph and his team of extremely talented defenders certainly did transform how the new franchise in Houston was viewed around the league. After winning the AFC South a grand total of zero times from their establishment in 2003 all the way up to 2010, the Texans captured six division titles during 2011 and brought Houston back to the NFL playoffs for the first time since the Houston Oilers in 1993.

The all-star caliber cast in Houston likely leaves a sour taste in the mouth of everyone involved that they were never able to advance to the AFC Championship Game or to football’s premier game in the Super Bowl. Unfortunate and untimely injuries to players like Matt Schaub and Deshaun Watson made that quite difficult.

Now, it’s up to a new era of Texans players and a new era of Houston cornerbacks to try to pilot the defense back to what it once was. Fans will have to see if first round draft pick Derek Stingley can elevate to the heights that Joseph achieved.

WATCH: Johnathan Joseph announces Texans’ drafting Baylor S Jalen Pitre

Former Pro Bowl cornerback Johnathan Joseph announced the Houston Texans’ selection of Baylor safety Jalen Pitre in Round 2 of the 2022 NFL draft.

Former Pro Bowl cornerback Johnathan Joseph announced the Houston Texans’ selection of former Baylor Bears safety Jalen Pitre Friday night during Round 2 of the 2022 NFL draft.

The Texans used their No. 37 overall selection to shore up their secondary with Pitre, who played his high school football in nearby Stafford, Texas, in the Greater Houston area.

The Texans used their first pick of the draft at No. 3 overall in Round 1 to take cornerback Derek Stingley from LSU. With the selection of Pitre, the Texans are infusing younger talent into their backend that should strengthen coach Lovie Smith’s Tampa 2 scheme in the future.

Johnathan Joseph to announce Texans’ Round 2 pick in 2022 NFL draft

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph will announce the team’s Round 2 selection on Day 2 of the 2022 NFL draft.

The Houston Texans are turning to Johnathan Joseph to get the job done.

The Texans are having the club’s all-time leader in interceptions (17) to announce the team’s Round 2 pick in the 2022 NFL draft.

Joseph will take the podium in Las Vegas and announce the Texans’ third total pick in the draft. Joseph won’t have to wait long as the Texans go No. 37 overall — five picks into the second round.

When Joseph left the Texans during the 2020 offseason ahead of free agency and the start of the new league year, the club lauded the Pro Bowler for his service to the team from 2011-19.

“Johnathan has been a consummate professional, team captain and one of the leaders of our defense for the past nine years,” the statement read from March 11, 2020. “It is rare for a player to sustain such a high level of play for over a decade and that says so much about him and his dedication to the game. He is an exceptional teammate, mentor, husband and father. His impact on and off the field makes him quite possibly the most celebrated free agent signing in franchise history.

“The entire Houston Texans organization thanks Johnathan for the contributions he made to our team and the Houston community. We wish him and his family all the best as he pursues free agency.”

Joseph has kept close ties to the Texans since retiring at the end of the 2020 season, which he spent with seven games with the Tennessee Titans and four others with the Arizona Cardinals. Joseph was also present at the introductory press conference for new coach Lovie Smith.

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Johnathan Joseph says playing time helped Texans QB Davis Mills grow

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph says that quarterback Davis Mills developed with the reps and playing time he saw in 2021.

The Houston Texans had to play rookie quarterback Davis Mills a little more than they would have liked in 2021 due to injuries to Tyrod Taylor.

However, the third-round pick from Stanford took advantage of his opportunities and developed throughout the season — so says former Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph, who joined Zach Brook on the “Upon Further Review” podcast.

“You started to see as the season went on he started to get a little more comfortable, understand the way the NFL works,” Joseph said. “I think that’s with anything: it takes a little time. Obviously every player, every situation is different. With him, he’s in a good situation. Obviously there will be a new coach coming in and hopefully he won’t have to learn a totally different scheme starting over at point A like a rookie again.”

Even if the Texans go with a new coach who brings in his own offensive system, Joseph believes Mills can flourish.

“I think just being in those games and having game like situation do him big time just getting ahead of that learning curve going into next year,” said Joseph.

Mills completed 263 passes on 394 attempts for 2,664 yards, 16 touchdowns, 10 interceptions, took 31 sacks, and compiled an 88.8 passer rating through 13 games, 11 of which he started, leading Houston to a 2-9 mark in such games.

General manager Nick Caserio told reporters on Jan. 14 that Mills’ positive gains in his first year are encouraging, but have to continue throughout 2022.

“That doesn’t really mean anything,” Caserio said. “We felt Davis was a good player when we drafted him and some of the things that you saw from him this season were confirmation of that. He’s got a long way to go as well and he’d be the first to tell you that.”

What Mills’ play in 2021 did was at least solve the quarterback problem for 2022, which allows Houston to use their No. 3 overall pick for other roster needs.

Texans legend Johnathan Joseph shares advice on rebuilding for the future

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph has some ideas on how the team can weather the storm of a rebuild.

HOUSTON — When the Houston Texans took on the Seattle Seahawks on Sunday, the Week 14 interconference match was a Homecoming game at NRG Stadium to celebrate several franchise legends. Johnathan Joseph, who played for the Texans for eight consecutive seasons (2011-2019), was one of several legends in attendance and served as Houston’s Homefield Advantage Captain.

The last time Joseph suited up for the Texans, Houston sustained a 51-31 loss to the Kansas City Chiefs during the Divisional Round of the 2019 playoffs. Nearly 24 months later, the state of the franchise has experienced a complete 180 from Joseph’s final act as a Texan.

And following Houston’s 33-13 loss to the Seahawks, it is going to take some time before the Texans will be able to replicate the similar success Joseph experienced with the team.

“They have to base a foundation and build from there,” Joseph said. “When I was here, we did a lot of winning. It’s because they spent a lot of time building it up and making the right decisions. It’s about putting pieces together and building off it.”

“It’s a funny feeling walking down the hallways with the way things have changed. But it’s a special day for me to be back.”

Joseph was a vital part of the Texans’ success during the 2010s. In 133 games played while recording 118 pass deflections and 32 interceptions, Joseph helped the Texans sustain one of the NFL’s most fierce defensive teams — en route to capturing half a dozen division titles.

In an attempt to bring some hope amidst the Texans’ 2-11 season, Joseph illustrated that a rebuild does not indicate that a team will remain in football purgatory.

The two-time Pro Bowl cornerback recalled his final season with the Cincinnati Bengals in 2010. The Bengals went 4-12 during the season. And similar to the Texans, their roster underwent a significant overhaul that offseason — which included starting quarterback Carson Palmer forcing his way to the then-Oakland Raiders.

The following year, the Bengals returned to the post-season with a 9-7 record, where they lost 31-10 to the Texans during the Wild Card round — Joseph’s fondest moment in Houston.

In addition to the team’s management putting the right pieces together, the development of the Texans’ younger players is correspondingly influential.

“You have to take it week-by-week and try not to be so critical of yourself,” he said. “If you can, go out and get a mentor. Someone who can slow the game down. The game has not change. But it is about guys being confident in their abilities.”

Former Texans CB Johnathan Joseph tackling cancer with the NFL’s Crucial Catch campaign

Former Houston Texans CB Jonathan Joseph has taken the initiative to promote the NFL’s Crucial Catch campaign to help prevent cancer.

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph may not pick off passes in the NFL anymore, but he still seeks the big interception.

The two-time Pro Bowler has teamed up with the NFL and the American Cancer Society to promote the Crucial Catch: Intercept Cancer campaign.

For Jospeh, his involvement is personal. When the future South Carolina Gamecock was in middle school, his father, John Joseph, was diagnosed with lung cancer. The elder Joseph battled with the disease after working at a cotton mill for 30-plus years and also being a smoker, which the two-time Pro Bowler says his father stopped 10 to 20 years prior to his diagnosis.

The American Cancer Society’s Community Health Advocates implementing Nationwide Grants for Empowerment and Equity (CHANGE) program “has been big,” Joseph says.

“It will help people who are impacted by poverty and disadvantages,” Joseph said. “So, I think having those programs in place, they’ll be able to jump start get everything where it was pre-COVID-19. I think they have been doing a fantastic job staying on the ball about that.”

According to Joseph, there has been a reduction in cancer screenings and followup visits of up to 94% since March 2020.

Joseph’s father died in 2014, but the victory can still be had for millions of Americans if they take their screenings and prevention solemnly.

“If there’s anything wrong with your body, you should normally get it checked out and screened just to get it checked,” Joseph said. “I think that’s a big step also because we tend to overlook things and say, ‘I’ll be all right.'”

The CHANGE program has impacted over 900,000 people with life-saving resources and has put a focus on the unequal burden of cancer in underserved communities.

At NRG Stadium, the Texans will celebrate the Crucial Catch initiative. For more information on the Crucial Catch, visit NFL.com/causes/crucial-catch/.

CB Johnathan Joseph announces retirement from NFL after 15 seasons

Joseph spent a month with the Arizona Cardinals in 2020.

15-year NFL cornerback Johnathan Joseph has decided to call it a career. On his Twitter account, he announced his retirement from the NFL.

Joseph spent his final season in the league with the Arizona Cardinals in 2020, although it did not end well.

Cut by the Tennessee Titans, he signed with Arizona In November. He played in four games and collected three tackles and a pass breakup. He suffered a neck injury and was placed on injured reserve in December.

He was a two-time Pro Bowler — in 2011 and 2012, when Cardinals defensive coordinator Vance Joseph was his position coach.

He was drafted in the first round by the Cincinnati Bengals in 2006.

After five seasons with the Bengals, he spent the next nine seasons with the Houston Texans. In 2020, he signed a contract with Tennessee and played seven games before he was cut and signed with Arizona.

He finished his career with 32 interceptions, seven of which he returned for touchdowns. He broke up 82 passes and had 787 tackles.

His time in Arizona was short, but we wish him well in the next stage of his life.

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Former Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph officially announces retirement on Twitter

Former Houston Texans cornerback Johnathan Joseph announced he is retiring after 15 seasons in the NFL.

Johnathan Joseph is calling it a career.

The two-time Pro Bowl cornerback announced on his Twitter page that he is officially retiring from the NFL. Joseph posted numerous tweets with pictures thanking different people that helped him throughout his 15-year career.

On his Houston Texans pictures, he thanked his family.

“To my wife Delaina thank you for being supportive, understanding, and a great mom,” Joseph wrote. “My kids thank you and love you. My mom and sister thank you for believing in me and being my #1 fans. To my family and friends thanks for being supportive, caring, and the backbone to my success.”

Joseph left the Texans at the end of the 2019 season as the franchise’s all-time leader in interceptions with 17. Joseph also holds the franchise’s top spot for pass breakups (118), interception return yards (410), and pick-sixes (four).

Joseph also left Houston while ranking tied for third in games played (133) and fifth in total tackles (482).

“The entire Houston Texans organization thanks Johnathan for the contributions he made to our team and the Houston community,” a statement from the Texans read after announcing they wouldn’t re-sign him on March 11, 2020.

The Cincinnati Bengals drafted Joseph in the first-round of the 2006 NFL draft from South Carolina. After leaving the Bengals in 2010, Joseph signed a free agent contract with the Texans, where he earned his first two Pro Bowl selections in his first couple years with the AFC South club.

Joseph spent his final season split between the Tennessee Titans, with whom he played seven games, and the Arizona Cardinals, where he played the last four games of his career.