Behind Enemy Lines: Previewing Week 4 with Bills Wire

The Houston Texans go to Buffalo for Week 4, and Bills Wire helps give a preview for what can be expected.

The Houston Texans know they have a big challenge on their hands in Week 4 when they go to Highmark Stadium to take on the Buffalo Bills.

Coach David Culley, who was the quarterbacks coach in Buffalo from 2017-18, was a part of the early transformation under Sean McDermott. Now, the transition is complete and the Bills are one of the top teams in the AFC.

“That’s a very good football team,” said Culley. “That’s a playoff caliber football team. They are very good in all phases. Offensively, defensively, and special teams, they have been very consistent. It’s a well- coached football team that’s got a lot of good football players on it.”

To get ready for Week 4, Nick Wojton, managing editor for the Bills Wire, stops by to help give a preview.

Texans RB Mark Ingram says their job is to let QB Davis Mills know ‘we have his back’

Houston Texans RB Mark Ingram says that he doesn’t need to do anything differently, but their job is to let QB Davis Mills know they have his back.

The Houston Texans have benefited from adding three-time Pro Bowl running back Mark Ingram to the locker room for his leadership.

With quarterback Tyrod Taylor on injured reserve with a strained hamstring, starting quarterback falls to third-round rookie Davis Mills. Through six quarters of play, the Texans have dropped two games and the offense looks stuck in 1987 with 247.5 yards of total offense generated in the past two weeks.

According to Ingram, he doesn’t need to expand his role as a vocal leader in order to help Mills, who will be making his second career start Sunday at Highmark Stadium against the 2-1 Buffalo Bills.

“I don’t do anything extra,” said Ingram. “I just stay the course. Obviously, we let him know that we have his back and that he doesn’t have to do too much, he doesn’t have to do all this on his own. And that he can lean on us because we have his back. It’s not all on him, it’s on all of us. We want to make his job easier.”

So far, the running game has done anything but make Mills’ job easier. In Week 2, the rushing attack churned 82 yards, and in Week 3, Houston collected only 42 yards on the ground.

To beat the Bills, the Texans will need the combination of takeaways and a ball control offense.

Said Ingram: “We want to preform to the best of our abilities, and we want to do our best so he can shine, and he can do his job. I don’t do anything out of the ordinary or anything extra. Just support him. Encourage him. Let him know we have his back.”

Mills has completed 27 passes on 46 attempts for 270 yards, two touchdowns, an interception, an 80.9 passer rating, and taken five sacks. The former Stanford quarterback also has a 5.9 yards per pass attempt.

Texans drop one spot in USA TODAY NFL power rankings

The Houston Texans fell one spot after sustaining a loss in Week 3. With a 1-2 record, where are the Texans now in the USA TODAY NFL power rankings?

The Houston Texans are working their way through quarterback issues as they give third-round rookie Davis Mills a shot after the hamstring injury to Tyrod Taylor.

Houston sustained a 24-9 loss on a short week to the Carolina Panthers on Thursday Night Football at NRG Stadium. In terms of the power rankings, that is going to cost them.

According to Nate Davis of USA TODAY, Houston dropped from No. 28 to No. 29 overall as the Texans are now working with a 1-2 record and second place in the AFC South.

29. Texans (28): No matter the quarterback, you have to admire WR Brandin Cooks’ constant production — his numbers currently spiking to 107 receiving yards per game despite Houston’s offensive issues.

Around the rest of the division, the Tennessee Titans are No. 12, up two spots from a week ago. Somehow the winless Indianapolis Colts got better after losing by two scores to the Titans, up from No. 26 to No. 25. The Jacksonville Jaguars, also winless, failed forward from No. 32 to No. 31.

If all it takes is losing close to a good team, maybe the Texans can improve in next week’s power rankings as the Buffalo Bills are a hard draw at 2-1 playing at Highmark Stadium. Coach David Culley knows his former boss, Sean McDermott, has a contender on his hands.

“That’s a very good football team,” said Culley. “That’s a playoff caliber football team. They are very good in all phases. Offensively, defensively, and special teams, they have been very consistent. It’s a well-coached football team that’s got a lot of good football players on it.”

Kickoff is slated for 12:00 p.m. Central Time.

Texans C Justin Britt testifies to WR Brandin Cooks being a ‘real underrated player’

Houston Texans center Justin Britt says that receiver Brandin Cooks is a “real underrated player” after seeing him since offseason workouts.

Houston Texans center Justin Britt has been around underrated players for his entire career.

Britt played the first 87 games of his career with the Seattle Seahawks, where it appeared quarterback Russell Wilson wouldn’t get his just due as an elite quarterback despite leading the NFC West club to two consecutive Super Bowl appearances — and a win — from 2013-14.

The same pattern is apparent in Houston where Britt signed in the offseason. The 6-6, 315-pound interior offensive lineman believes the Texans have an underrated player among their perimeter players on offense in wideout Brandin Cooks.

“I think Cooks is a real underrated player,” said Britt. “After seeing him during camp, the past couple weeks, he’s a really good wide receiver. He’s really fast, explosive, competitive and aggressive.”

Cooks isn’t the only player on the Texans’ offense that can make for explosive plays despite not being a household name across the rest of the AFC South.

“I think [tight end] Pharaoh (Brown) is a presence, that without him, we’d miss him for sure,” said Britt. “I think bringing [receiver] Danny (Amendola) in here was a big lift for us, and we can’t wait to get him back. [Receiver] Nico (Collins), he’s going to be a really good player. You can go on and on. [Receiver] Chris Conley. I just think this team, offensively, defensively, but being an offensive player, I think offensively we have a lot of guys who have seen a lot of ball, played a lot of ball and know what they’re best at.”

Despite the Texans’ underrated talent, they sit at 1-2, second place in the division behind the 2-1 Tennessee Titans.

“We’ve just got to find a way to play four quarters what we want, and just sustain it and keep it going,” Britt said.

Houston can find a way against the Buffalo Bills, their Week 4 opponent, who they face on the road at Highmark Stadium with a 12:00 p.m. Central Time kickoff on Sunday.

RB Mark Ingram signed with Texans because he knew ‘there was potential’

Houston Texans running back Mark Ingram says that he signed with the club in free agency because he knew they possessed potential.

Why would a three-time Pro Bowl running back, a former Heisman Trophy winner, and the son of a Super Bowl champion want to sign with a team that would be undergoing a rebuild in 2021?

According to running back Mark Ingram, that is not how he viewed the Houston Texans when he decided to ink an agreement to play for the team in March.

“They wanted me,” Ingram said. “They had interest in me, and I know some of the players that have been on this team. I know they were two years removed from being in the AFC Championship, up on the [Kansas City] Chiefs. I know there was potential.”

The potential the Texans may have had was readily lost on fans and the media after the situation with quarterback Deshaun Watson unraveled, whether it was his trade request or his involvement in a lawsuit wherein 22 women allege sexual assault. This was after the club traded three-time All-Pro wideout DeAndre Hopkins in the 2020 offseason and fizzled to 4-12 that regular season.

Ingram sees a potential on the Texans that only a player at ground level can appreciate.

“There have been some struggles and tough times, but I know there is good people in the organization, good people on the team,” said Ingram. “I know (Brandin) Cooks. Just being able to come here, being able to have the opportunity to play this game that I love; to have the opportunity to be able run the ball, be able to have the opportunity to put my best foot forward to help a team win games.

“So, that’s what I saw. They were interested in me. I was interested in being here. It just worked like that.”

Ingram will have another chance to help the Texans meet their potential Sunday at 12:00 p.m. Central Time when they take on the Buffalo Bills at Highmark Stadium.

NFL Week 4 announcers’ schedule

What announcers will be calling which games on Week 4 of the NFL season?

There is a full slate of games in Week 4 despite the Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ visit to the New England Patriots grabbing all the spotlight.

There are plenty of other nice matchups and the announcers’ schedule has the top teams at the best of them.

Thursday Night Football (8:20)

Jacksonville Jaguars at Cincinnati Bengals (NFL Network): Joe Buck, Troy Aikman, Erin Andrews, and Kristina Pink

1 p.m. ET Kickoff

Tennessee Titans at New York Jets (CBS): Greg Gumbel, Adam Archuleta, and AJ Ross

Kansas City Chiefs at Philadelphia Eagles (CBS): Ian Eagle, Charles Davis, and Evan Washburn

Carolina Panthers at Dallas Cowboys (FOX): Kevin Burkhardt, Greg Olsen, and Pam Oliver

New York Giants at New Orleans Saints (FOX): Kenny Albert, Jonathan Vilma, and Lindsay Czarniak

Cleveland Browns at Minnesota Vikings (CBS): Kevin Harlan, Trent Green, and Melanie Collins

Detroit Lions at Chicago Bears (FOX): Gus Johnson, Aqib Talib, and Megan Olivi

Houston Texans at Buffalo Bills (CBS): Beth Mowins and Tiki Barber

Indianapolis Colts at Miami Dolphins (CBS): Spero Dedes and Jay Feely

Washington Football Team at Atlanta Falcons (FOX): Kevin Kugler, Mark Sanchez, and Laura Okmin

4:05 p.m. ET Window

Seattle Seahawks at San Francisco 49ers (FOX): Adam Amin, Mark Schlereth, and Shannon Spake

Arizona Cardinals at Los Angeles Rams (FOX): Chris Myers, Daryl Johnston, and Jen Hale

4:25 p.m. ET Kickoff

Pittsburgh Steelers at Green Bay Packers (CBS): Jim Nantz, Tony Romo, and Tracy Wolfson

Baltimore Ravens at Denver Broncos (CBS): Andrew Catalon, James Lofton, and Sherree Burruss

Sunday Night Football (8:20 p.m.)

Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New England Patriots (NBC): Al Michaels, Cris Collinsworth, and Michele Tafoya

Monday Night Football (8:20 p.m.)

Las Vegas Raiders at Los Angeles Chargers (ESPN, ABC): Steve Levy, Brian Griese, Louis Riddick, and Lisa Salters

 

 

Texans fall two places in Week 4 Touchdown Wire NFL power rankings

The Houston Texans fell two spots in the latest Touchdown Wire NFL power rankings for Week 4.

When you lose, it affects your place in the power rankings.

The Houston Texans weren’t able to keep pace with the Carolina Panthers on Thursday Night Football to kickoff Week 3 at NRG Stadium. The visiting side was in control the entire game en route to a 24-9 victory in Houston.

The Texans were starting a rookie quarterback in Davis Mills, and may have been too protective with their play-calling.

According to Nick Wojton from the Touchdown Wire, the Texans dropped from No. 27 in the power rankings to No. 29 overall.

All in all, Davis Mills didn’t look that terrible in his first-career start. He had a nice connection with Brandin Cooks. Too bad his team established zero complementary rushing attack for him. The Panthers might be the surprise of the NFL as well. We won’t beat up Houston too bad for this loss, but it wasn’t pretty.

Around the rest of the AFC South, the Tennessee Titans moved up one place by beating a winless team, going from No. 13 to No. 12. The Indianapolis Colts slid from No. 22 to No. 23 overall. The Jaguars were no change from a week ago, remaining at No. 31 overall.

Houston can get back on track against the Buffalo Bills Sunday at 12:00 p.m. Central Time at Highmark Stadium. The 2-1 Bills look sharp and will be a formidable adversary for the 1-2 Texans.

Fantasy Football Market Report: Week 4

Which direction are some of your fantasy players trending?

It’s never too early to be a step ahead of the rest of the owners in your fantasy football leagues. We’re heading into Week 4, which is the penultimate week before fantasy teams start crumbling and having their bench strength tested.

Thanks to an 18-week, 17-game schedule, bye weeks start in Week 6 and extend all the way to Week 14 – a record nine weeks with anywhere between two and six teams sidelined.

While some fantasy owners made a point to keep an eye on the bye weeks on the night of their auction or draft — in most cases, that was a month and a half ago. A lot of has changed on rosters since.

The NFL is going to get rid of 10 teams for a week in Weeks 6 and 7 – the Falcons, Saints, 49ers and Jets in Week 6 and Bills, Cowboys, Chargers, Vikings, Steelers and Jaguars in Week 7. It’s an annual grind, but one not all owners in a fantasy league are aware of at this point.

You have two tasks as you head into Week 4, accomplished by quietly tipping away from the herd unnoticed. First is make sure you haven’t morphed into a roster that can get killed during a week or two of bye week season. Wins are hard enough to come by. You don’t give them away.

Second is to look at other teams that have owners who are too heavily invested in the 10 teams that are opening up the bye week period. Now is the time to see if you can swing a deal to “help them out” of their predicament.

A lot of times better positioning yourself comes with advanced scouting. Nobody else is talking about bye weeks now. By the time Week 4 is over, it’s going to be all the chatter heading into Week 5, because once Week 6 comes, there won’t be a week without byes until the weekend before Christmas.

Do your homework while others are oblivious.

Here is the Week 4 Fantasy Football Market Report:

Fantasy Football Risers

WR Ja’Marr Chase, Cincinnati Bengals

Chase was a controversial franchise pick when OT Penei Sewell was on the board to be a decade-long anchor for Chase’s former college QB, Joe Burrow. However, through three games, he is making it impossible not to start him in fantasy lineups. He isn’t running the route trees of Tyler Boyd or Tee Higgins but is averaging 20 yards per receptions and has four touchdown catches – including on passes of 34, 42 and 50 yards. He is kind of a one-trick pony, but it’s a great trick. He can only get better as more routes are designed to make him the first option instead of the streaking deep threat. If you don’t have him, make a trade to get him. If you have him, the return offers may be crazy.

Kirk Cousins, QB, Minnesota Vikings

I’ve never been a fan of Cousins. He has tended to choke on the biggest stages at critical times of games and seasons. Every year, it’s difficult to endorse him as a full-time fantasy starter, but he has become a more polished field general. This season, he has thrown for 918 yards with eight touchdowns and a passer rating of 118.3. If you want a consistent option, Cousins is your guy. He has gone 17 straight games with a passer rating of 90.0 or above – only one player in NFL history under the passer rating standard has done that. That would be Peyton Manning (23). Name every great QB in the history of the game and, aside from Peyton, nobody other than Cousins can make that claim.

WR Brandin Cooks, Houston Texans

The Texans are a hot mess, but they are forcing the ball to Cooks – their only viable offensive weapon. Everyone has suffered without Deshaun Watson in Houston’s offense. Cooks dominating the team’s target share (35.6 percent) is on par with that of Green Bay Packers WR Davante Adams (35.8) over the first three weeks of the season. The Texans have thrown 90 passes – 32 to Cooks. They have completed 58 – 23 of them to Cooks. Nobody has more than nine targets or six receptions. It’s difficult to endorse anyone from the Texans. Given these numbers, some defenses may make it a mission to bracket him, but his value at the moment is as high as it may ever be.

QB Sam Darnold, Carolina Panthers

I will be the first to admit that I’ve never been a “Darnold guy.” I thought he was overhyped coming into the draft and the Jets’ willingness to cut bait with him lent to that argument. However, in his first three games in Carolina, he has accounted for two touchdowns in each outing (three passing and three rushing), topping 300 passing yards twice and reaching 279 in the other. While he’s not getting a hearty endorsement, with bye week season coming up, it’s nice to have a replacement – even if just for a week – who has shown consistency in scoring points.

WR Cooper Kupp, Los Angeles Rams

Typically we don’t put players who are obvious weekly fantasy starters, unless they’re playing so light’s out for your team, someone might come to you with a crazy trade offer to include him. Kupp is having that kind of start with Matthew Stafford. Through three games, Kupp has been targeted 33 times, caught 25 passes for 367 yards and scored five touchdowns. Robert Woods, on the other hand, has numbers of 19-11-124-1 through three games. Kupp has three more receptions than the next two Rams combined and has almost 100 more receiving yards than the next two teammates combined. It’s hard to imagine many fantasy owners with Kupp aren’t 3-0, because this is rarely seen dominance, especially with a new quarterback.

Fantasy Football Fallers

New England Patriots tight ends

Through three games, if a fantasy receiver had 20 catches for 184 yards and no touchdowns, he would be no great shakes. Unfortunately, those are the combined numbers of Hunter Henry and Jonnu Smith (10-109-0 for Henry, 10-74-0 for Smith). Then there is the matter of their contracts (three years, $37.4 million for Henry, four years, $50 million for Smith). You kind of get the idea the front office thought Cam Newton was going to the be the QB when free agency opened. While both were likely brought onto fantasy rosters to be regular starters, they’re killing owners who have them.

WR Stefon Diggs, Buffalo Bills

Diggs was the league leader in targets, receptions and yards in the league last year. This season, he has 19 receptions for 191 yards – never hitting 70 in any game – and one touchdown. He’s second on the team in receptions, third in receiving yards, and third in touchdowns on his own team, much less the league. With Josh Allen at the wheel, the big days will come along. But, for now, if fantasy owners have options, it won’t take long before they start looking elsewhere, if they have viable options and Diggs has an unfavorable matchup.

RB Jonathan Taylor, Indianapolis Colts

Taylor was an investment in most leagues to be RB1 and a cornerstone player. Granted, his first three games were against Seattle, the Rams and Tennessee – all playoff teams last year – but still, the numbers are pretty brutal. He hasn’t hit 65 rushing yards in a game, his number of carries has dropped in each contest (17-15-10), he has just eight receptions (six in Week 1 and two since), and he hasn’t scored a touchdown. For a Colts team that hasn’t won yet and has its season swirling like a toilet bowl, those forced to keep riding Taylor can’t wait for the Texans and Jags to show up.

TE Kyle Pitts, Atlanta Falcons

The fourth overall pick was expected to be an impact player right out of the gate. While he has flashed the ability to be a downfield threat, the reality is that he is fourth on the team in receptions – behind retread Cordarrelle Patterson for receptions, yards and touchdowns. In three games, he has caught just 11 passes for 139 yards and no TDs – with 35 or fewer yards in two of them. He’s going to be an immense talent, but, for now, he’s an anchor tied to a fantasy owner’s leg, and the Falcons don’t have the look of an offensive juggernaut anytime soon.

Tampa Bay Buccaneers running backs

Both Leonard Fournette and Ronald Jones were viewed not necessarily as starters, because they were slated to split time. But few could have expected how little they would have to split up. Fournette is the lead dog by default but has just 24 carries for 92 yards. Jones has just 15 carries for 52 yards. The only rushing touchdowns the Bucs have are from Tom Brady and Chris Godwin. Brady has thrown the ball almost six times as often as Fournette and Jones have run the ball. At this point, both are too poisonous to play, unless you’re forced into it.

Week 4 NFL power rankings contradict themselves when it comes to the Saints

Week 4 NFL power rankings contradict themselves when it comes to the Saints:

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NFL power rankings have never felt more useless than they seem to be right now. Sure, they’ve never really mattered — standings aren’t impacted by them, and most teams don’t have time to even give them a glance for bulletin board material. It’s just filler to pad out the time between games and newsworthy roster moves.

Still, it’s baffling to see the New Orleans Saints spoken of so highly only to drop in these rankings. CBS Sports’ Pete Prisco, for example, lauded the job Sean Payton has done coaching his team on the road for a month and beating Bill Belichick’s Patriots in New England this weekend — only to drop the Saints a spot, contradicting his own writeup. This is a common theme throughout the NFL media landscape. See for yourself:

Texans CB Tremon Smith shares insight into slowing down QB Josh Allen and the Bills

Houston Texans cornerback Tremon Smith has an idea on how the defense could slow down quarterback Josh Allen and the Buffalo Bills offense.

HOUSTON — The Houston Texans’ secondary has seen its share of struggles through the first three games of the season, and it’s going to be difficult to find their rhythm against Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen.

ESPN has Allen as an early favorite to win league MVP honors, as the 25-year-old quarterback has led the Bills to a 2-1 record, throwing for 807 yards and seven touchdowns.

First-year coach David Culley described Allen as a strong kid who has the total package. But defensive back Tremon Smith understands that slowing down the Bills will take more than focusing on Allen.

“He has a great arm,” Smith said during Monday’s post-practice press conference. “He can make pretty much any throw on the field. So, we have to be real sticky this week. Just looking forward to the matchups we got with Cole Beasley and Stefon Diggs and all of them.”

“They have a great quarterback-receiver duo. They’re real explosive. They are just really good on the offensive side in general.”

The Bills have averaged 39.0 points over the last two games, putting together the most explosive offense. With Allen leading the way, Buffalo has recorded an averaged of 397.5 total yards, with 504 coming in the passing game.

Allen has spread the ball around evenly amongst his receivers, as Emmanuel Sanders (194 yds), Cole Beasley (194 yds) and Diggs (191 yds) are all less than 10 yards away from surpassing 200 reception yards on the season.

Smith says the key to slowing down a high-powered offense similar to the Bills is knowing their defensive calls and assignments prior to the start of the play — but more importantly, trusting their teammates.

“We are going to stick to what we have been doing these past weeks and just getting better at what we’ve been doing,” he said. “We just know we beat ourselves with a couple of mistakes in critical times in the game. So, we are just going on each other and be where we are supposed to be and trust our teammates.”