HOUSTON – Texans starting running back Woody Marks returned to practice after missing one game with a lingering ankle injury.
Marks was replaced against the Las Vegas Raiders by Jawhar Jordan and Nick Chubb. Now, the Texans’ backfield has more options with Marks’ return for a Saturday game against the Los Angeles Chargers.
Recommended Videos
Texans Pro Bowl linebacker and team captain Azeez Al-Shaair returned to practice from knee and ankle injuries after missing the Raiders game.
Several players didn’t practice Tuesday. That included injured offensive tackles Aireontae Ersery and Trent Brown, linebacker Jake Hansen (chest), cornerback Kamari Lassiter (foot), cornerback Derek Stingley Jr. (oblique), defensive tackle Sheldon Rankins (knee) and defensive end Denico Autry (knee). The primary question marks, though, for Saturday are Ersery and Brown. Stingley and Lassiter, Rankins, and Autry are all expected to play against the Chargers.
Ersery broke his hand against the Raiders, per NFL sources, and may need surgery with a potential scenario of inserting metal hardware to aid the healing process and attempting to play with a protective club on his hand. Ersery is currently expected to return this season.
Brown injured his left knee against Las Vegas and is regarded as day to day, per a league source.
The Texans’ offense was forced to engineer a line shuffle Sunday during a narrow win over the Raiders.
The versatility and experience of Tytus Howard paid off as he stepped in at right tackle as Jarrett Patterson plugged in for him at left guard. The Texans managed to close out the Raiders with a 23-21 victory at NRG Stadium, their seventh win in a row as they improved to 10-5 overall and remain seventh in the AFC playoff standings.
The Texans may use that alignment again Saturday against the Chargers.
“I’ve been preparing for that moment every week,” said Howard, a former first-round draft pick who has started at every position across the offensive line except for center. “Even though I’ve been playing guard, I’m always taking tackle reps because I know at any given moment, I gotta go back out there and I gotta be ready. So, that’s something I’m prepared to do if I had to go back to tackle. So, I’m ready.
“We’ve got guys that’s gonna step in like Jarrett and play some good football. Blake came in and played well for us, too. You’ve always gotta be ready in this league. You never know what’s gonna happen. I’ve been preparing my whole career, my whole life for moments like that in the game to step up and help the team.”
Tytus Howard to RT, Jarrett Patterson at LG, Trent Brown in blue tent ,limped off #Texans @KPRC2 pic.twitter.com/OblqNnEJXs
— Aaron Wilson (@AaronWilson_NFL) December 22, 2025
It was a choppy game overall for the offense.
They didn’t score a touchdown until the second half and leaned on kicker Ka’imi Fairbairn for three field goals from 55, 50 and 49 yards.
Texans quarterback C.J. Stroud got off to a slow start before rallying the offense in the fourth quarter with some solid drives. He was never sacked despite the presence of Raiders star defensive end Maxx Crosby, who had one quarterback hit. Stroud was hit four times overall.
The running game wasn’t good for the majority of the game except for a 30-yard run from Nick Chubb. Jawhar Jordan made some yards out of nothing with limited room to operate and finished with 53 yards on 15 carries with Woody Marks held out of the game due to a lingering ankle injury.
“We’ll look at the film and see overall how the offensive line did,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said. “I thought the protection was good. They sent a lot of pressure at us. I thought we picked the pressures up really well. For me, watching it from the sideline, the run game, we’ve got to get more movement, we’ve got to get a hat on a hat better. Too many guys in the backfield.”
The Texans rushed for 83 yards on 26 carries, a 3.2 average. There wasn’t a lot of traction gained in the trenches compared to the Raiders’ offense, which got 128 rushing yards from standout rookie running back Ashton Jeanty.
“The main thing is we couldn’t run the football,” Ryans said. “We didn’t control the line of scrimmage how we needed to control the line of scrimmage. They got a lot of negative tackles for loss, knocked us back a few times and we didn’t run the ball well.
“On the flipside of that, they were able to run the ball effectively and that was the difference in the game. If we control the line of scrimmage better, we can sustain drives a little bit better to be in better control of the game.”
Aaron Wilson is a Texans and NFL reporter for KPRC 2 and click2houston.com