BoB said the same thing. People give him a lot of crap, for granted reasons, but he was great at milking all the talent and success out of his offenses. Caley is from the same tree, with some tutelage from McVay. I am very positive on the hire.
BOB was terrible as a coordinator. He wanted so badly to be versatile and be able to attack from different styles/formations that his offense had no identity at all. They tried to do a little of everything and were average or below at all of it. Jack of all trades, master of none. Look at where his offenses ranked while he was here...they were never very good.Texan_Aggie said:
BoB said the same thing. People give him a lot of crap, for granted reasons, but he was great at milking all the talent and success out of his offenses. Caley is from the same tree, with some tutelage from McVay. I am very positive on the hire.
I don't think that is just a Houston thing though. Road games are tough to come by for everyone cold weather or not. But once you brought up the subject, I did want to take a look into some of that data too, which is surprisingly hard to come by. I did find a site that references all playoff games from 2011 to 2021 so I took a look at that data (https://thehuddle.com/2022/01/10/nfl-playoff-winners-home-vs-visitor-from-2011-to-2020 ), and in a 11 year set, it looks like having home advantage in the divisional round is absolutely critical in the playoffs, which does align to where we hit our wall.W said:
it's interesting looking at the playoff history of the Oilers and Texans
they both have the same problem:
terrible on the road -- especially at cold weather venues
in the Super Bowl era...the Oilers + Texans are 4-16 on the road in the playoffs
2 of the 4 road wins were at warm weather climates: 1978 at Miami and 1979 at San Diego
neither franchise has played a road playoff game in a domed or roofed stadium -- one of the downsides of being in the AFC
IrishAg said:I don't think that is just a Houston thing though. Road games are tough to come by for everyone cold weather or not. But once you brought up the subject, I did want to take a look into some of that data too, which is surprisingly hard to come by. I did find a site that references all playoff games from 2011 to 2021 so I took a look at that data (https://thehuddle.com/2022/01/10/nfl-playoff-winners-home-vs-visitor-from-2011-to-2020 ), and in a 11 year set, it looks like having home advantage in the divisional round is absolutely critical in the playoffs, which does align to where we hit our wall.W said:
it's interesting looking at the playoff history of the Oilers and Texans
they both have the same problem:
terrible on the road -- especially at cold weather venues
in the Super Bowl era...the Oilers + Texans are 4-16 on the road in the playoffs
2 of the 4 road wins were at warm weather climates: 1978 at Miami and 1979 at San Diego
neither franchise has played a road playoff game in a domed or roofed stadium -- one of the downsides of being in the AFC
Wild card
48 Games (added the extra wildcard games in 2020)
Home team record 26 - 22
Home team wins 54% of the time
Division Round
44 games
Home team record 32 - 12
Home team wins 73% of the time
Championship round
22 games
Home team record 15 - 7
Home team wins 68% of the time
That 73% win rate in the divisional round is a little staggering.
W said:
one tough thing with the AFC...
the traditional powers (of recent times)...Patriots, Bills, Chiefs, Broncos, Steelers, and Ravens...
all have outdoor stadiums...where it's going to be cold come the playoffs
I believe the Houston Oilers and Houston Texans are a combined 1-12 in the playoffs at those 6 venues
with the sole win (31-14) at New England in 1978
mAgnoliAg said:
Don't we owe Diggs $15 mil no matter what? If that's the case, then it makes complete sense to bring him back.
IrishAg said:mAgnoliAg said:
Don't we owe Diggs $15 mil no matter what? If that's the case, then it makes complete sense to bring him back.
I believe it's 15 million of dead money over the next 3 years or something like that. But it's not all at once, and as someone mentioned I don't he's going to take a discount on the contract.
Quote:
In seven of the last eight years, the Texans have made more on the rebates than they paid in rent, according to data from financial audits. That means the government essentially paid the team to play at NRG Stadium in those years. The lone exception was 2020."
Houston Texans are reportely interested in 49ers Deebo Samuel pic.twitter.com/oRdhHrdggN
— NFL Rumors (@nflrums) February 26, 2025
This quote is a bit misleading. A reporter asked DeMeco if he was interested in signing Deebo and his response was something like "We're always interested in signing good players, and Deebo is a good player."TyHolden said:Houston Texans are reportely interested in 49ers Deebo Samuel pic.twitter.com/oRdhHrdggN
— NFL Rumors (@nflrums) February 26, 2025
https://www.profootballrumors.com/2025/02/commanders-texans-aggressively-pursuing-deebo-samuel-tradeTexan_Aggie said:This quote is a bit misleading. A reporter asked DeMeco if he was interested in signing Deebo and his response was something like "We're always interested in signing good players, and Deebo is a good player."TyHolden said:Houston Texans are reportely interested in 49ers Deebo Samuel pic.twitter.com/oRdhHrdggN
— NFL Rumors (@nflrums) February 26, 2025
I didn't read it as they Texans are pursuing with any kind of vigor. Just that they are interest, just like they are interested in most free agent WRs.
B-Rabbit said:
Deebo to Washington.
Yea he'd be great, unfortunately we have bigger positions of need so safety is not going to be a target. I'm assuming we'll target the following positions in the first couple of rounds.IrishAg said:
Ok, I have my first player that I am beyond infatuated with now
https://www.nfl.com/prospects/nick-emmanwori/3200454d-4d08-3509-4f43-ab1aefccbd0f
Nick Emmanwori from South Carolina
6'3"
220
4.38 40
1.49 10 yard split
Freaking 43" vertical
11'6" broad jump