As the Texans broke the huddle with a clap in unison and hustled to the line of scrimmage for the first play Wednesday morning, the offensive line looked vastly different from a year ago.
During the NFL scouting combine, Texans coach DeMeco Ryans emphasized that there would be a reset of the line after a disappointing season last year.
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Now, the dramatic changes of the offseason are on full display. The Texans’ first offensive line configuration might as well be written in pencil, considering their plan to have a lot of competition to find the ideal combination to protect quarterback C.J. Stroud and open pathways for running back Joe Mixon.
The Texans’ first-string offensive line included left tackle Cam Robinson, signed to a one-year, $14.5 million contract in free agency, left guard Laken Tomlinson, a former Pro Bowl selection, former New England Patriots center Jake Andrews, former first-round draft pick Tytus Howard shifting to right guard and second-year right tackle Blake Fisher. Massive rookie Aireontae Ersery worked in at left tackle and right tackle.
“When it comes to finding our best group it will be a lot of mixing and matching guys,” Ryans said after the Texans’ first organized team activity held indoors due to bad weather. “Putting guys in different spots and seeing which five guys work well together. One thing about the line is that there is a lot of smart guys in that room and they can move around and play multiple spots, so that helps them.
“It’s just a matter of finding that five once we get to training camp and put pads on. Nobody is making the team right now in shorts and helmets.”
The second-team offense primarily included Ersery as the left tackle next to left guard Juice Scruggs, a former second-round pick who started at center and right guard last season, Jarrett Patterson, last season’s primary starting center, former Minnesota Vikings second-round pick Ed Ingram and Jaylon Thomas playing right guard and Austin Deculus, a Cy-Fair graduate, at right tackle.
Only Howard and Fisher were starters at the end of last season as the Texans allowed Stroud to be sacked 52 times during the regular season and 13 more times in the playoffs, including eight sacks and 14 quarterback hits in an AFC divisional round playoff loss to the Kansas City Chiefs.
The Texans traded five-time Pro Bowl left tackle Laremy Tunsil to the Washington Commanders in a move largely based on financial reasons, but he was also prone to false starts.
The Texans fired offensive coordinator Bobby Slowik and offensive line coach Chris Strausser, hiring former Los Angeles Rams tight ends coach and passing game coordinator Nick Caley as offensive coordinator and promoted assistant line coach Cole Popovich to offensive line coach and run game coordinator.
“One thing our line can benefit and they’re just working on really good low pads like working great pad level, hand placement, footwork,” Ryans said. “Those fundamental small details that allow you to be great as an offensive line, that’s what you can work here.”
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The Texans signed Tomlinson, former Pro Bowl tackle Trent Brown, a 6-foot-8, 380-pound veteran who’s rehabbing a knee injury and not practicing, traded for Ingram, acquired Andrews off waivers and drafted Ersery, a former Big Ten Conference Offensive Lineman of the Year from Minnesota, in the second round.
At 6-foot-6, 331 pounds with 5.01 speed in the 40-yard dash, Ersery is a towering figure who blends size and mobility. He still needs to work on lowering his pad level and polishing his technique. Ersery has a ton of potential, though.
“He is a large human being,” Texans Pro Bowl defensive end Will Anderson Jr. said. “I think he is going to be really good for us. I am happy he is here. Just seeing him today going against our guys, very athletic, can move, can bend, and I am excited to see what he does and going against him. Just like coach always says, iron sharpens iron.”
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Inside the Patriots’ meeting rooms and practice fields, Caley and Popovich interacted for years while gaining knowledge from legendary coach Bill Belichick and one of the top offensive line coaches in NFL history: Dante Scarneccia.
At the time, Caley was the Patriots’ tight ends coach working with All-Pro Rob Gronkowski. And Popovich was a rising coach who helped replace Scarneccia when he retired after more than three decades in New England.
Now, the two longtime friends are collaborating on an important task for the defending AFC South champion Texans.
The Texans want to solve pass protection problems that held back the offense last season. Stroud was sacked the second-most of any NFL passer overall, up from 38 sacks when he was named NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year two seasons ago.
How Caley and Popovich instrument a sounder plan to keep Stroud healthy and standing will go a long way toward upgrading an offense that dipped to 22nd in total offense and 19th in scoring last season for a Texans squad headlined by its aggressive defense led by Ryans.
“Cole as our offensive line coach to lead that room, just having one voice to lead it, I feel really strong about that,” Ryans said. “Cole helped a lot of our young players when it came to developing. He had a really great relationship with a lot of guys, and I think very highly of Cole and what he’s able to do.
“I think him having a prior relationship with Nick as well, and them being able to work together and them to hit the ground running instantly, I think that also lead to my decision, and I know we’ll be better for it.”
Texans promote Cole Popovich to run game coordinator/offensive line coach
‘A special coach,’ Texans hire Nick Caley as new offensive coordinator
The Texans surrendered 54 sacks as a team last season. It was a rough deal all-around for Stroud as he was under heavy duress for the majority of the season as his interceptions increased from five picks to a dozen and his yardage and accuracy decreased.
With the exception of Tunsil, there were continuity, performance and health issues throughout various parts of the season with the offensive line as well as tight end Dalton Schultz allowing three sacks to the Chiefs in the playoff defeat.
“I think it all starts up front obviously and it’s really all 11,” Caley said. “We all have to be in sync and I think protections starts with communication, trust and cohesiveness up front and really having clear rules in the protection system. We’re going to be going through that process.
“Obviously, I have a history with Cole dating back to my time in New England when he was our offensive line coach and I coached the tight ends. So, I have a really good working relationship and level of trust with Cole. He is a very good football coach and I’m excited to go through this process with him.”
Popovich is heading into his third season with the Texans. A former Fresno State starting offensive lineman, Popovich broke into the NFL as a coaching assistant in 2016 before being promoted to assistant running backs coach working with Sony Michel then being named co-offensive line coach when Scarneccia retired.
Popovich left the Patriots in the offseason for personal family reasons related to mandatory NFL Covid-19 vaccine regulations and coached high school football in Franklin, Massachusetts. He was then hired at Troy University as their head offensive line coach before joining the Texans and winning two consecutive AFC South division titles as part of Ryans’ first two seasons in Houston.
Both Popovich and Caley are big believers in Scarneccia, who was known for his hard-nosed, fix-it, get-it-right approach protecting star quarterback Tom Brady.
“Sure, Dante Scarnecchia. I was with Dave DeGuglielmo in 2015, very good coach,” Popovich said. “Dante Scarnecchia, longtime New England coach, influenced a lot of what I’ve obviously learned up front in the protection systems. Then been a part of other ways of doing it too. But yeah, in terms of my, informative stages, it would be my early years in New England, obviously with those two.”
One of the reasons why the Texans had so many issues was a lack of clear communication and scheme plans for blitzes and stunts. That was particularly glaring in a road loss to the Green Bay Packers. Against the Tennessee Titans, the line was overwhelmed by the powerful charge of interior defensive linemen Jeffery Simmons and T’Vondre Sweat during a regular-season upset loss at NRG Stadium. The Baltimore Ravens’ speed off the edge and stunts gave the Texans a lot of issues during an embarrassing 31-2 loss on Christmas.
Cohesiveness was in short supply for the Texans. And Caley is determined to change that, immediately.
“With the offensive line, the quarterback, obviously the halfback, you got to be able to see the game through the same set of eyes,” Caley said. “You got to be going in the same direction, and you got to be tied together. That’s starts with communication.
“It starts with protecting inside out and establishing a pocket, the depth of the pocket, the width of the pocket, and that extends, obviously, in the tight ends, receivers, when you’re chipping and stuff like that. But, it does, it really starts inside out, and it starts seeing it through the same lens. We all have to be coordinated in that.”
#Texans coach DeMeco Ryans on it being 'tough' to trade Laremy Tunsil adds there was nothing 'toxic' in OL room last season @KPRC2 pic.twitter.com/ixgMqTD9CL
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Among the factors in Strausser’s dismissal, besides him leaning toward retiring from coaching over the past few years, was an unwillingness to listen to input from players and staff, according to league sources.
“Having one voice with Cole Popovich, Cole is a good offensive line coach,” Ryans said. “The thing for me is having an offensive coordinator and offensive line coach in Cole and Caley, they’ve worked together before. They’ve spent a lot of time together.
“The flow of information, it sped up drastically. We’re not trying to see how we’re going to do things. We know how we’re going to do it, and now our players will get that communication clearly and direct and now our guys can go out and execute exactly what we’re coaching.”
C.J. Stroud limited, Joe Mixon, Dameon Pierce not practicing
When team drills started, Texans star quarterback C.J. Stroud was watching backup Davis Mills run the offense.
Stroud appears to be fine, especially after warming up thoroughly and doing resistance band work before practice started. Overall, though, he was a limited participant in the voluntary practice.
Mixon has been in a walking boot recently after suffering a minor injury while working out this offseason, per sources. The injury isn’t regarded as long-term, though.
Texans coach DeMeco Ryans, when asked about Stroud’s lack of involvement, downplayed the activity level and emphasized players’ routines will vary widely day to day.
“For all the guys you see here, there will be guys on different schedules, different routine, so you’ll see some guys out and some guys won’t be out,” Ryans said. “Some guys will be, some guys will be on different snap count, different pitch count, so there is nothing going on right now with any of our guys. Everyone is just on their own schedule.”
Several players didn’t practice due to various health reasons, including tight ends Dalton Schultz and Brevin Jordan (tore anterior cruciate ligament last season, but doing well in rehab), backup running back Dameon Pierce, linebacker Christian Harris, who watched the workout and missed the majority of last season due to calf and ankle injuries, wide receivers Braxton Berrios and linebacker Henry To’oTo’o and offensive tackle Trent Brown, who is recovering from a knee injury last season, wide receiver Tank Dell, who tore multiple knee ligaments last year against the Kansas City Chiefs and rookie quarterback Graham Mertz, who tore his ACL last season at Florida.
Pro Bowl defensive end Danielle Hunter didn’t attend the voluntary workout along with new veteran safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson, acquired in a trade this offseason from the Philadelphia Eagles and wide receiver Justin Watson, defensive tackles Sheldon Rankins and Foley Tatukasi,
“This is voluntary,” Ryans said. “It’s not about managing guys who aren’t here. It’s voluntary.”
Overall, attendance was high for the voluntary workout.
“When guys don’t have to be here, I think it’s very beneficial if guys are here because you can get good productive work done,” Ryans said. “Understanding the scheme, understanding the terminology, performing the techniques and executing everything about our offseason program sets you up to compete come training camp.”
Overall, Ryans was pleased with the attendance and the state of the team as they begin spring practices.
“I thought our guys did a really good job of handling the way that we came out today,” Ryans said. “I told our guys that this is a great first day and a great starting point and now it’s just about stacking days and getting better each day. I feel like we have the right guys with the right attitude, who will do that.”
Kamari Lassiter off to fast start
Kamari Lassiter excelled as a rookie, immediately earning a starting job opposite All-Pro cornerback Derek Stingley Jr.
He intercepted three passes and recorded 58 tackles, four for losses and 10 passes defensed. He allowed just a 43.8 completion percentage against him for 424 yards for the season and four touchdowns as one of the highest graded rookie defenders.
In tight single coverage against Pro Bowl wide receiver Nico Collins, Lassiter batted away a pair of passes thrown by Davis Mills.
Working in tandem with Stingley, safety Calen Bullock, Gardner-Johnson, when he’s practicing, and nickel Jalen Pitre, Lassiter is a vital part of one of the top secondaries in the NFL.
“It is fun watching them,” Pro Bowl defensive end Will Anderson Jr. said. “They love football, they are passionate about it. You hear Kamari slapping his helmet. You hear Calen running to him.
“That is what you need on a defense like this. We play an attack style defense, and we have two attackers in the backend that don’t mind getting their hands dirty.”
Jalen Pitre ahead of schedule
Days before signing his three-year, $42.6 million contract extension, Jalen Pitre provided an update on his health.
He thought he would have to miss some practice time due to his ongoing recovery from a torn pectoral muscle that ended his season last year and required surgery to repair the damage suffered on a tackle against the Tennessee Titans.
Pitre was a full participant, though, Wednesday and is ahead of schedule in his recovery.
“Jalen, that is my guy,” Texans linebacker and team captain Azeez Al-Shaair said. “Even when I was first in Tennessee, we played against the Texans and we just for some reason always clicked. After the game we were talking, we talked for 10 minutes, that was the first time I ever met him.
“So, when I got here, he was the first people to ever welcome me and introduce me. Ever since then he has been my guy. It is special. I am just so proud of the growth that he has had. Obviously, you get the contract, and you obviously feel like you earned that. He did. I would pay him even more money. He is a big part of what we do, and it is good to have him out there.”
Contract details
The recent one-year deal for veteran defensive tackle Foley Fatukasi is worth $3 million total.
That includes a $1 million signing bonus, $1.5 million total guaranteed, salary $1.5 million (with $500,000 guaranteed for skill, injury and salary cap), plus up to $500K in per-game active roster bonuses, $29,411 per game active, His salary-cap figure for 2025 is $2.823 million
Aaron Wilson is a Texans and NFL reporter for KPRC 2 and click2houston.com