Quick Impressions of an impressive Texans victory:
The defensive line won the game for the Texans, keeping up pressure on Andy Dalton all day.
Especially rookie J. J. Watt, who justified his first round status and then some. I don’t think I’ve seen a nervier line-of-scrimmage interception than Watt’s pick-six near the end of the first half. Not only did he get his hands up and grab a bullet, he did it with a defender’s arm between him and the ball, and then ran it in.
Watt in the first, Brooks Reed in the second, T. J. Yates in the fifth: Rick Smith had a very good 2011 draft.
Not to mention the genius of hiring Wade Phillips.
The genius of Gary Kubiak’s downhill running game became apparent when Arian Foster was running at will in the fourth quarter. Assuming he doesn’t get injured, we need to appreciate that Foster is not just a future Hall-of-Famer, but potentially one of the best running backs of all time.
The Bengals have a very solid team, but their defense was obviously both tired and demoralized in the fourth.
Speaking of future Hall-of-Famers, Andre Johnson took a half to shake off the rust, but then he was the Andre of old.
Johnson abused Pacman Jones on his touchdown, and Jones went on to prove that he still has trouble keeping his emotions in check.
Though Kubiak has had trouble with clock management in the past, he’s gotten more competent this year. Instead it was Marvin Lewis who unwisely burned timeouts on questionable challenges. And His play-calling with his team down 21 points was just sad. Throws up the middle, burning off precious time you don’t have? Why?
Can this team bet the Ravens? It will be a tall order.T.J. Yates is good, but he’s not Matt Schaub. But there’s a chance.
With a healthy Schaub and Mario Williams next year, the Texans should be serious Superbowl contenders.
Tags: Arian Foster, Cincinnati Bengals, football, Gary Kubiak, Houston Texans, NFL, NFL Draft, NFL Playoffs, T. J. Yates
This entry was posted on Saturday, January 7th, 2012 at 6:38 PM and is filed under football. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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