Can Pharaoh Brown have best season for a tight end in Texans history?

Pharaoh Brown expects to have a big season. What would he need to do to have the best season for a tight end in Houston Texans history?

Pharaoh Brown is banking on himself in 2022.

The 6-6, 258-pound tight end met with reporters during mandatory minicamp on June 14 and was unabashed about what he believed he could accomplish in his third season with the Houston Texans.

“I feel like I can accomplish a lot this year,” Brown said. “Really just taking it day by day, one-day focus for me. I’m comfortable. I’ve been meeting with the quarterbacks all year, so getting on the same page with them is really big. Just knowing where they want me to be, where I want to be. The game has just slowed down understanding all the fine line details. That’s going to help me be an All-Pro this year.”

Brown having an All-Pro season would be historic as he would be the first Texans tight end in team history to earn the honor. Not even Owen Daniels was able to achieve first-team All-Pro, even though he had two Pro Bowl seasons in 2008 and 2012.

What Daniels was able to do was have the best season for a tight end in 2008. The former 2006 fourth-round pick from Wisconsin caught 70 passes for 862 yards and two touchdowns. Daniels would catch more in 2012 with six, but the catches and receiving yards are still franchise single-season records.

Brown’s best season was when he caught 23 passes for 171 yards through his 15 games, 12 of which he started.

For Brown to approach Daniels’ numbers, he will need to play the season’s full complement of games as Daniels did in 2008 with 16. Brown gets the advantage of an extra game.

Daniels averaged 4.4 catches a game and had a 12.3 yards per reception in 2008. The best game of Brown’s career was in Week 1 when he caught four passes for 67 yards in a 37-21 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars at NRG Stadium. Brown will effectively need to repeat his career game every time he suits up for Houston in 2022. The catches would put him at 68, just two shy of Daniels’ 70, but the yardage would reach 1,139 and set a new franchise record for tight ends.

In addition to playing in a tight end friendly offense schemed by offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton, Brown has been working with the quarterbacks in the offseason to ensure he is on the same page.

“I think he’s looked extremely well this offseason,” quarterback Davis Mills said June 14. “He’s running some really good routes. Has a really good first step, has been really explosive this offseason. I’m looking forward to getting out on the field with him.”

If the Texans are able to get Brown to play at a high level, it would give them an effective tight end, which can only benefit Mills as he makes his case as Houston’s answer under center.

Can any future Texans receiver break Andre Johnson’s all-time receiving yards record?

Andre Johnson left the Houston Texans with 13,597 career receiving yards. Will anyone playing for the Texans ever surpass that mark?

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Andre Johnson left his mark on the Houston Texans with 13,597 career receiving yards. It is a mark that still stands almost six seasons after his last game with the AFC South club.

The record is one that may not be broken for a long time. The closest to setting a new standard was DeAndre Hopkins with 8,602 yards. However, those numbers are suspended as the three-time All-Pro receiver is now in the NFC West with the Arizona Cardinals.

Coming in at third place on the all-time receiving yards list is tight end Owen Daniels with 4,617. The closest active player is receiver Will Fuller with 2,231.

In order to break a record like Johnson’s, it takes durability and longevity. Aside from 2007 and 2011, two injury-plagued seasons for Johnson that limited him to nine and seven games respectively, the two-time All-Pro played at least 13 games a season from 2003-14.

The third element is production. Not only was Johnson playing in upwards of 13 games a year over 12 seasons, but he had seven seasons of at least 900 yards. Johnson also led the NFL in receiving yards twice in that span, eclipsing the 1,500-yard mark in each season.

The production also has to be independent of what is happening under center. Johnson played with everything from David Carr to Matt Schaub. It didn’t matter; Johnson still caught passes and made plays.

Hopkins missed a total of two games in his seven-season Texans tenure, both meaningless Week 17 games in 2017 and 2019. Furthermore, Hopkins only had two seasons with less than 1,000 yards receiving, yet he also had two years with at least 1,500 yards receiving. Like Johnson before him, Hopkins wasn’t working with starting quality quarterbacks until Deshaun Watson came along in 2017.

Even in today’s pass-oriented NFL, it will take close to a decade for a receiver to reach that mark. A good example would be Torry Holt. The seven-time Pro Bowler missed only three games his whole 11-season career, and he stacked eight straight seasons with at least 1,000 yards. It would take that degree of durability, longevity, and production for a Texans receiver to break Johnson’s record.

No wonder they made Johnson the inaugural member of the Texans Ring of Honor.

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