How do the Texans respond from losing WR Nico Collins?

Nico Collins will miss four games, but does that mean the Texans’ season is over?

The Houston Texans will be without their star receiver Nico Collins for at least four games.

The team also has 12 more games left on the schedule, including several challenging matchups in November.

Collins, who leads the NFL with 567 receiving yards through five games, won’t suit up until at least Nov. 10, when the Texans play host to the Detriot Lions.

The league’s top threat suffered a hamstring injury in the first quarter of Houston’s 23-20 win over the Buffalo Bills in Week 5 after catching a 67-yard touchdown pass from C.J. Stroud.

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On Monday, Texans coach DeMeco Ryans changed his stance from “day-to-day” to “week-to-week” after further evaluation. Instead of worrying if Collins can return, Houston will set a date on when those conversations can ramp up again.

“Nico has been the best receiver in the NFL this year. So, do you replace him? No, everybody just steps up and whatever role you’re asked to do, just step up and play your role the proper way,” Ryans said. “Nobody has to be Nico. There is one Nico; he’s done a great job of that. Now, whoever is next, when your number is called, make the plays that you are supposed to make.”

Yes, Collins’ loss stings. His 32 catches rank third among receivers. His six 20-plus yards explosive plays also rank first through September.

But the Texans have two things boding in their favor: schedule and personnel.

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From a receiver standpoint, Houston loses the top trio mantra and must embrace the dynamic duo stance with Stefon Diggs and Tank Dell. The Texans also have a reliable tight end in Dalton Schultz and depth with names like Robert Woods and John Metchie III.

Diggs, a four-time Pro Bowl target with the Buffalo Bills, currently ranks seventh in receptions (31) and finished Sunday’s game with 82 yards on six catches. He also took over the Week 3 loss to the Minnesota Vikings with nine catches for 92 yards.

Dell’s role will increase after having a quiet start to the season. He missed Week 4’s matchup with a chest injury, but the speedy threat has been kept out of the fast lane, averaging 34 yards per game.

Dell’s yet to surpass 65 yards in a game this season after posting three 100-yard outings as a rookie.

“We don’t lack depth at all,” Diggs said Sunday. “We’ve got a lot of guys that can play at a high level.”

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The schedule should keep Houston humble, but also ahead in the AFC South standings, espeically if running back Joe Mixon can return. The Texans take on three secondaries that rank bottom 10 in coverage, allowing at least 231.1 yards per game through the air.

The New York Jets, who recently fired head coach Robert Saleh, are the only team with a top-10 secondary on Houston’s schedule until the Tennessee Titans on Nov. 24.

No one wants to lose a talent like Collins, but it could be worse for the Texans. It will be if no one steps up, but Stroud has faith that the team will be fine without the NFL’s top receiver for the time being.

And yes, he too thinks that Collins plays second fiddle to no one.

Texans training camp: John Metchie shining bright on offense

John Metchie III might transform into one of the top options in the Texans’ passing attack for the 2024 season.

Two years ago, John Metchie III looked like an ideal complementary piece opposite Brandin Cooks and Nico Collins for the Houston Texans‘ passing game.

Fast-forward 24 months and the former second-round pick is now competing for a spot on the roster behind Collins, breakout rookie Tank Dell and Pro Bowler Stefon Diggs.

The expectation is for Collins, Dell and Diggs to start as part of the ‘five-headed monster’ in C.J. Stroud’s arsenal. After that, the final three receiver spots are up for grabs between seven potential options.

That number might be down to two since Metchie continues to turn heads in the early stages of training camp. One could argue he’s been the Texans’ most consistent pass-catcher through three practices.

“He’s been dealing with a lot,” Collins said Thursday. “He’s coming in every day and is working on himself, working on his body, the things he needs to improve on and it’s showing on the field.”

The former Alabama star mostly has been running with the second-team offense, but he rotates from time to time with the projected starters. On Saturday, he caught two balls during team drills, including a 50-yard touchdown pass from second-string quarterback Davis Mills.

The concept was simple: go deep and get open. Metchie, who totaled over 1,000 yards during his final season with the Crimson Tide, pulled a double move at the line of scrimmage and sprinted vertically past Mike Ford in coverage.

The offense celebrated, including Stroud, perhaps Metchie’s top supporter since the start of the offseason.

“[He’s] just another great guy that we have,” Stroud said earlier this offseason. “I’m just excited to see him just show his value that we all have known, and now he’s putting it on the field. He’s going to continue to go and he is going to be very pivotal and important to this football team for a lot of games to win.”

Metchie is essentially entering his second season of professional football. As a rookie, he was diagnosed with leukemia just before the start of training camp and missed the entire year while in treatment. Last season, he moved rotated in with Robert Woods and Noah Brown as the No. 3 option.

The Texans still envision a future with Metchie. Entering the off day, he looks to be in good standing, both on the field and in health.

“He’s in much better football shape,” Texans offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik said Saturday. “And that’s to be expected. What he went through — two years, he couldn’t do a football workout — and then he all of a sudden rolls on the field last year, and has to go roll? That’s really, really difficult. I think that’s credit to him as a person.”

Is Texans CB Derek Stingley set for All-Pro season in Year 3?

Derek Stingely Jr. is ready for a breakout season in 2024 as the Houston Texans’ No. 1 cornerback.

C.J. Stroud hopes to ensure every throw will be on point in 2024 while leading the Houston Texans past the AFC Divisional Round for the first time in league history. 

He’s going to have a great teacher in Derek Stingley Jr. on the opposing sidelines, guiding him on where not to pass against up-and-coming defenses.

Stingely, the former No. 3 pick out of LSU in 2022, looks poised not just to be Houston’s No. 1 cornerback but perhaps one of the league’s top cover-men in 2024. During Tuesday’s 11-on-11 drills at Organized Team Activities [OTAs], Stingley intercepted a pass intended for. Nico Collins and returned it for a massive gain. 

The Texans’ social media account didn’t post the pick, but multiple reporters on-site did mention their thoughts on the play. 

The 2024 season is vital for Stingley as the Texans continue to mull over their decision to pick up his fifth-year option. Talent has never been a concern, even during his three seasons with LSU. 

Injuries are, much like during his three years in Baton Rouge. The 6-foot-1 defensive back missed most of his junior season with a Linsfristic foot injury. Since being drafted, he’s missed 14 games due to lower-body concerns. 

When healthy, Stingley’s shown his ability to create chaos. Last season in 11 games, he totaled a team-high five interceptions and 13 pass breakups. He graded out as a top-five cornerback from Pro Football Focus in 2023 with an 85.3 trajectory in coverage. 

Stroud, who led the league in touchdown-to-interception ratio (23:5) and passing yards per game (274), called Stingley “the most talented dude on the roster” during an interview on The Pat McAfee Show last month. Perhaps that was to boost his confidence before a run to the postseason. 

That’s not the case leading into the final days of voluntary workouts. Stingley floats like a Muhaamud Ali-type butterfly but stings like an All-Pro bee ready to strike. 

Opposing quarterbacks and receiver tandems should be monitoring his play since Stingley will have a chance to leave his mark on Sundays and in six standalone matchups. The quarterback play will be challenging, but none more than the challenges of going up against Stroud in practice. 

Round 1 of OTAs when to Sting. It won’t be the last battle he’ll win, either.