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Training Camp Practice Updates - 2011

Should be a lot of stuff in here, apologies if this has been posted already...

Houston Texans Transcripts
Training Camp Practice #11 (Morning)
Saturday, August 6, 2011
(Transcribed by Brett Maikowski, Brittany McCray and Jeremy Joseph)

Head Coach Gary Kubiak
TE Owen Daniels
RB Arian Foster
S Glover Quin
DE Antonio Smith

Head Coach Gary Kubiak
(on how it felt to be out there with the fans)
"It helps practice. It helps a great deal because obviously training camp is a grind and to get everybody out here, I think gets the players' juices flowing. I thought that was our best practice of the year as a football team. Good, glad to see them all out here."

(on how far along the players who started camp on Thursday are) "I think they're still a little behind the other guys. Their bodies are probably hurting a little bit more right now as they catch up, but I think as we get at it tomorrow morning, I'll give them a big break. I think by the time we get going again next week, we ought to all be about on the same page."

(on if he's happy with the team's performance after a week) "No, I wish we were a lot further along, but I know the process. I know the time we missed, but with what time we've had, we've had some really good work. I think, defensively, the progression has been excellent. I think they've practiced very well. I think, offensively, we're behind right now. We're missing some guys. We don't have Andre (Johnson) at practice. Arian (Foster) doesn't practice. This game's not easy. You got to be out there for us to get better. We need to get those guys healthy and back on the field, but we will get better through the problems too because younger guys are stepping up making plays."

(on the status of WR Andre Johnson and RB Arian Foster) "I think Andre (Johnson) could practice tomorrow. We'll see. I think Arian's (Foster) definitely going to miss a few days. I think he'll be day-to-day, but he won't be back before we come back from our break after tomorrow."

(on when ILB Brian Cushing will be back practicing) "Cush (Brian Cushing), we have a goal for him; the middle of next week. We'll see if it holds. That's what we're pushing to."

(on if RB Derrick Ward is sick) "Derrick's (Ward) just gassed. Derrick's taken a lot carries and he's just gassed. I tell you what, our three running backs practiced an hour and a half by themselves. It was impressive. Really good."

(on if it's the numbers game being out in the heat during training camp) "I think that's kind of training camp. It kind of goes on, but the fact that Arian (Foster) hasn't been a part of practice the whole time, that's not unusual for one of your backs to get worn out. It's exciting because I watched (Steve) Slaton practice today. Steve's practicing well. (Chris) Ogbonnaya is really making a push to make this team and to me, (Ben) Tate, that's as good as Tate has practiced around here. Our guys need to know that and I told them hey, we've got problems, whoever lines up at running back for us is going to play good and they did that today."

(on if anyone stuck out to him today) "I would say it's a team deal this morning because we put them through a good one. We pushed them. We asked them to give their best at the end of practice. I liked the attention to detail. I just think it was a good overall practice."

(on if he thinks about being only nine days away from playing a game) "That's the scary part. Don't remind me of that. That's unusual. I think it's one of the toughest decisions we're going to have to make as compared to other years about this time next week is who's ready to go play. Do we have some guys that aren't ready to step on the field yet? That'll be a little different than it has been in years past."

(on if not knowing who will be ready to play is going to dictate how much the starters play) "It could. It also could be on an individual basis. It's a tough decision to make for us as coaches, but there's a lot more things to put into it than there have been in the past. We'll wait and see. I can let you guys know more at the end of next week."

TE Owen Daniels
(on re-signing with the Texans in March) "It's just because it's a business and you see guys change teams where you never thought they ever would. It's just the unknown. I always tried to say to myself, if I could stay here I would. The grass isn't always greener on the other side. I've learned that in terms of moving to a different city, playing for another team, another coach. There's a lot of changes, a lot of unknowns there. I'm really comfortable playing in this offense with this team. I want to see it through. I want to help us get to where this franchise has never gotten before. That will weigh heavily in my decision."

(on if being a showcase player in this offense would be automatic) "I've had a lot of opportunities to make plays in the past. Tight ends are a big part of this offense, whether we're running one tight end, two tight ends, three tight ends at times, very tight-end friendly. I saw no point in going somewhere else where it might not be featured as much. I fit in well here. I have a great relationship with the quarterback and saw no reason to leave."

(on if he likes being in camp this year working) "Yeah, man, it's way better than being by myself working with the trainer and sitting around and watching. That's no fun. That's not what football players like to do. As much as camp is a grind, it's something that is necessary to a point. I think you'll see a lot more; I'll be a lot more consistent in the beginning of this year than I was last year just in terms of how I am physically and being really able to get this work in during camp."

(if there's a mental aspect of camp he needs) "Mentally it's always good to knock the rust off and refresh myself with the offense. It's good for everybody. I was able to do that in meetings last year. That wasn't anything that I missed. It was more the get-in-football-shape, knocking-rust-off-of-the-football-fundamentals. I'm able to do that now and feeling really good."

RB Arian Foster
(on if he is in a precautionary mode with his hamstring injury)
"I think anytime you have a hamstring injury, you have to rest it. That's the only thing that can heal it. So that's what we're doing right now."

(on if he is worried about his hamstring injury) "No."

(on if he had a little too much energy or pent-up adrenaline when he injured his hamstring) "Probably. I probably was going a little bit too hard, feeling good being back on the first day, but that's part of life, so you have to roll with it."

(on his initial reaction when he realized he tweaked his hamstring) "I tweaked my hamstring."

(on head coach Gary Kubiak's comment that he has problems with his hamstring in the past) "Well, I popped my hamstring in the Senior Bowl and then I had tweaked in training camp my rookie year."

(on how long it took him to feel good the last time he tweaked his hamstring) "About a week."

(on if his last hamstring injury was on the same leg) "I can't even remember, actually. I think it might have been the other one."

(on if a hamstring injury is frightening for a running back) "No. Knee injuries are frightening. Hamstrings are part of the business."

(on what he can do to work his way back to health with his injury) "Rest. Lightly stretch it with a little bit of ice."

(on what he can gain from watching practice instead of participating) "You just get to sharpen your skills mentally. You get to see the plays before they're ran, so you see them. You just go over your assignment and get more detailed mentally."

(on if there is a part of him that wants to prove that his performance last year wasn't a fluke) "No. I'm not trying to prove anybody wrong. I'm trying to play the game of football. I can't go around trying to prove everybody right, or wrong."

(on if the media can expect to see 1,400- and 1,500-yard performances from him every year) "You can expect whatever you want. I'm just going to go play the game."

(on if he just goes out with the mindset to run to daylight) "Yeah. You can't worry about what people think. People are negative. People are dream-killers. You can't worry about what they think."

(on what he's seen from FB Lawrence Vickers since he joined the team) "Well, he's still learning the system and things like that but I'm more than confident he'll come along and be a valuable option for us."

(on his level of concern about his hamstring injury) "It's just a hamstring. It's a muscle, a soft-tissue injury that will heal, eventually."

(on how frustrating it is to pull his hamstring) "You want to be out here practicing with you teammates. It gets a little frustrating."

S Glover Quin
(on differences switching from cornerback to safety)
"Just reads, because as a corner you're pretty much playing your receiver. As a safety you have to play tight ends, you have to read run game, you have to read pass game, you have to cover bigger bodies. It is getting your eyes right and making your reads quicker."

(on what he talks to S Danieal Manning about) "We just talk about a lot of stuff. Just football and things we want to do, things we like to do, and just how we can get better and work with each other. We just have good dialogue with each other and make it work."

(how CB Kareem Jackson has looked so far) "Great. He looks more focused to me this year. He looks better. He's in shape. He looks ready to go."

(on if CB Johnathan Joseph has set a tone with the defensive backs) "I mean, I think we're all setting a tone with each other. We have a good group of guys and we're all competing with each other and we're all battling. We're just pushing each other and pumping each other up and we're having fun."

DE Antonio Smith
(on DE J.J. Watt) "He works hard, he's a dog. He's got some quickness, he's got some power, he plays with leverage, good hands and he's got some of the raw talents that you would need to be a great defensive lineman in this game."

(on the things he's teaching DE J.J. Watt) "Technique stuff, little cheat stuff that you can do to help your game out. That has been about the extent of my teaching, the things I have picked up through the years that I can give to him."

(on if DE J.J. Watt has been receiving the rookie treatment) "Not as much; a little bit. He can carry a couple of pads but I don't see him with no pads right now, so he's slacking."
 
So, in the Training Camp Pictures, did I see Brandon Harris coming TWICE on CB blitzes and getting to the QB before the ball was out?
 
BigRon
@BigRon281
And @JJWatt with nearly the second T/O on a batdown of Schaub and near INT of his own.

More pass deflections this year, jj watts or kjax?

JJ watts batting down passes will be huge for us this year IMO. That is a skill that he is very good at.

I expect him to catch at least one int, and cause three more.
 
More pass deflections this year, jj watts or kjax?

JJ watts batting down passes will be huge for us this year IMO. That is a skill that he is very good at.

I expect him to catch at least one int, and cause three more.

JJ has size 11 hands , he shouls swap with Jacoby .
 
Both Steph (TexansChick) and AJ mentioned BigRon in tweets earlier today, and recommended following him.
I'll take that as a good endorsement that BigRon is a quality source of info.

Ron is solid guy but I wouldn't agree with his assessment of Kareem Jackson from what I saw. Too early.
 
Is there any merit to the rumor of Foster reporting to camp overweight and out of shape? Apparently my dad heard it on 610 but i've seen nothing to back that. And that's also apparently according to McLame so i think i've answered my own question.

I didn't see that or hear that. When he was going, he looked good on Friday.

McClain wasn't there on Friday. He was in Canton.
 
More pass deflections this year, jj watts or kjax?

JJ watts batting down passes will be huge for us this year IMO. That is a skill that he is very good at.

I expect him to catch at least one int, and cause three more.

Batted down a pass on Friday too. Lots of effort. Working on staying off the ground but more often than not, doing good things, getting in the backfield.
 
Training camp Day 6: Texans fans pack training facility
Alan Burge, Houston Texans Examiner


Training camp Day 6 for the Texans was Day 1 for fans attending the first open practice of the season at Methodist Training Center.

Gates opened a half-hour earlier than the advertised 7:00 a.m., because - as I was told - the Reliant Park people didn't want a long line of Texans fans on one side of Kirby mixing it up with Gov. Rick Perry non-fans who assembled on the stadium side of the street to protest Perry's prayer event.

One important note for fans attending training camp practice. Unlike past years, they are scanning the barcode on your ticket so if you made multiple copies of the same ticket or forwarded your pdf to someone else to print out, there's a chance it might not work.

The major disappointment of the day was the new bleacher configuration on the sideline. The Texans moved the VIP/sponsor tents from the south endzone area of the field to the prime mid-field sideline, pushing the fans to the redzones at each end.

The VIP/sponsor tent stretches from around the 35 yard line on the north end to around the 20 yard line on the south end. The bleachers are split into two sections, one at each end of the VIP tent.

The south sideline bleachers are smaller than those on the north sideline - so there's more seating in the north section. A major issue is that if you're seated in the south bleachers, the VIP tent obstructs the view of half the field. If you're in the north bleachers you have to slide down to about the 25 yard line to be able to see the entire field.

You could hear the fans in the south end letting out a sarcastic cheer when the team finally made their way to that end halfway through practice. Otherwise they could only guess what was going on down on the north end.

So basically your choices now, if you're a fan and not one of the beautiful people and members of "Houston Society" as the sign says at the entrance of the VIP tent, are redzone bleachers - in some cases with obstructed views, or stand 10 deep in the endzone in Africa heat.

I'm not sure who was in charge of that re-arrangement but they get a fail from me.

Random observations from the football side of things:
TJ Yates (#13), Jeff Maehl (#15) and Lestar Jean (#18) were among the first on the field today
and lots more
http://www.examiner.com/houston-tex...camp-day-6-texans-fans-pack-training-facility
 
Just some notes from things I saw this morning in practice. Remember, it's just one practice and one guy's opinion:

1st team defense (No Cush):

SOLB: Barwin
LDE: Watts
NT: Cody
RDE: Smith
SILB: Sharpton
WILB: Ryans
WOLB: Mario
LCB: Kareem
RCB: Joseph
SS: Quin
FS: Manning

2nd team defense

SOLB: Nading
LDE: Lewis
NT: Mitchell
RDE: Jamison
SILB: Ozougwu
WILB: Adibi
WOLB: Reed
LCB: McCain
RCB: Allen
SS: Demps
FS: Nolan

D-Line - Got pushed around quite a bit in the run game, but got good penetration on pass rush. Mixed bag, I guess. Watt deflected a pass early. Bulman and Jamison looked pretty good at times. Both are a little undersized, but may be good fits in Wade's upfield scheme.

LB - Mario ran himself out of a lot of run plays. Does he have the instincts to play the position? That's going to be the key. The ILBs got pushed around as a group, though Cheta looks like a load when he reads the play correctly. But, he got beat twice in coverage. Reed looks smaller than the other OLBs.

DB - Not a bad day from Jackson, really. Nothing spectacular, good or bad. Joseph looked a little rusty, but has very good recovery speed. Love how Harris breaks on the ball. McManis looked solid, as well.
Didn't notice the safeties much, except they were late supporting the run. That may be by design.

QBs - Schaub was Schaub. Holding the ball too long at times, but mainly making accurate passes. Read a corner blitz perfectly and hit the open man. I'm much more comfortable with Leinart than Orlovsky as the backup. Leinart isn't going to win the game for you, but he's a good manager. Yates looks to have a strong arm and good feet. But, he's as lost as you would expect a guy with a week's worth of practices.

RBs - Ward took a few snaps, nothing special. Slaton looked quick. Chris O. looked like a very solid slasher. But, the star was definitely Ben Tate. It's not an overstatement to say he was the dominant force on the field. No one was really interested in tackling Ben. Tate also made a nice over the shoulder catch. It was his day. Casey looked solid as a blocker, but more technical than punishing. Vickers looked a little lost in the passing game.

WRs - Nothing special. Townsel looked quick coming out of his breaks and got open against Joseph late in the practice. Toliver found a seam in the zone and picked up a nice gain in the 2 minute drill. Looks the part of a WCO receiver.

TEs - Daniels and Dreessen seemed to get open at will. They just know this offense, and I expect to see more 2 TE formations this season. Maybe the most overlooked aspect of this team?

OL - Sprang some big holes, but missed some blitz pickups, as well. Going against a 3-4 defense is going to help this line in the long run. Caldwell running 1st team over Brisiel? Something to look for tomorrow.

Overall, kind a weird practice. Have you ever been to a practice where no one scores a TD? Didn't see one today. A lot of instruction and not a lot of big plays. Of course, without AJ, Arian, and Cush, there was not a lot of star power. Still, it was football and I was glad to be there. :)
 
Rep to Lucky for the recap.

I liked how you mentioned our offense might benefit from having to face a 3-4 look in practices. Nice job.
 
I liked how you mentioned our offense might benefit from having to face a 3-4 look in practices.
I think facing the same 4-3 look every camp was a detriment to the offense. It should help them going against a Phillips coached defense, rather than the Richard Smith defense they saw the previous 5 camps. And while Frank Bush tweaked Smith's 4-3, it was still Smith's defense.
 
I think facing the same 4-3 look every camp was a detriment to the offense. It should help them going against a Phillips coached defense, rather than the Richard Smith defense they saw the previous 5 camps. And while Frank Bush tweaked Smith's 4-3, it was still Smith's defense.

I had hopes that Frank Bush was going to diversify the Richard Smith 4-3 defense, but it never came. And our offense was practicing against a crappy 4-3 defense.

More QUALITY competition for both sides should, in theory, help both sides to sharpen their skill sets. Hell, just Joseph and Manning ALONE should make the QB and WRs step up their game.

I think we all wondered if Wade was going to truly have to perform with what we had on the roster last year, or if the free agency route would be used more than what we anticipated.

I am taking flak right now, for supposedly becoming a Sunshine Club member, but I have to call 'em like I see 'em...and what I see is that Wade Phillips is not being given crap to work with. He's got the tools he needs to build the defense he can build, and for that I have to say that I am the most excited about Texans football since I had been when Kubiak was here his first year.

It's that feeling of being given a new lease on life, and it's not a rationalized, self-medicated "I'm alright, you're alright!" type of feeling. It's a vibe of thinking that this defense shed a lot of dead weight and traded in a lot of parts for better and smarter pieces.

If Wade can do for the defense what Kubiak did for the offense, there's no reason this team can't become a lot better (in a hurry, too).
 
Just seen this on twitter. It's a link to Notes on what NFL Scout Jayson Braddock has seen over the past week at Houston Texans Training Camp http://bit.ly/qc6gUh

Good details for anyone who's hungry for any & all TC info

In this off-season Wade Phillips said that his 3-4 defense closely resembled a 4-3 defense and then later said that it has a 5-2 feel to it. I thought he was just playing coy and trying to throw opponents off the Texans path. That’s not the case. While the Texans have been known for one of the most vanilla defenses over the years, this will be a culture shock for fans and opponents alike. Phillips’ defense is a 3-4 base but at times becomes a 4-3 or a 5-2 as he said it would. I’ve seen alignments with Tim Bulman and Damione Lewis at defensive ends with Earl Mitchell at the nose. Mario Williams and Connor Barwin were up on the line with Brian Cushing and Ryans at the inside linebackers position. Then a switch that would have JJ Watt at defensive end with Tim Bulman and Antonio Smith at the nose with Mario playing with his hand down next to Bulman, while Barwin was lined up behind Watt next to Cushing and Ryans. There were so many different looks and alignments that it was amazing to watch.
Those alignments with Cushing participating must have been during the afternoon sessions. I thought Cushing wasn't due to go full speed until mid-next week...?

It is encouraging to see that Wade has that many flavors to his front alignment; that should drive opposing offenses nuts.
 
I am taking flak right now, for supposedly becoming a Sunshine Club member...
Look, everyone wants to be in the Sunshine Club. steelbtexan, houstonspartan, even Second Honeymoon. It's just that the Texans won't let us in. They keep doing stupid crap that we know won't work, then expect us to buy into it. I want to go into the season with a clear, unblemished outlook. But, it's tough when you look out on the field and see some of the same coaches and players that are responsible for so much suckitude.
 
I was out there but I will report tomorrow because I have been out all day. Besides that I mostly just sat there and looked at the back of heads which was difficult me and not fun. It was crowed and rather humid and I got some autographs in the line but people were jumping over me like a herd of sheep or cows to get to see the players as they were exiting the field after practice. Oy.
 
look, everyone wants to be in the sunshine club. Steelbtexan, houstonspartan, even second honeymoon. It's just that the texans won't let us in. They keep doing stupid crap that we know won't work, then expect us to buy into it. I want to go into the season with a clear, unblemished outlook. But, it's tough when you look out on the field and see some of the same coaches and players that are responsible for so much suckitude.

preach!!!
 
I saw a couple where McCain (#21) got in on a blitz;
Nice job on showing that series in a single post with the smaller images. You need to show 76Texan your technique. :)

Which reminds me of something I thought about at the practice: Why don't the Texans QBs wear red jerseys? I know they're on the "no touch" list. Are they just assuming the defenders will remember not to hit the QB? Or is it because they know the defense is "soft" and would never hit the QB? Is there another NFL team that doesn't put "no touch" practice jerseys on their QBs?
 
Which reminds me of something I thought about at the practice: Why don't the Texans QBs wear red jerseys? I know they're on the "no touch" list. Are they just assuming the defenders will remember not to hit the QB? Or is it because they know the defense is "soft" and would never hit the QB? [bold]Is there another NFL team that doesn't put "no touch" practice jerseys on their QB?[/bold]

apparently the jaguars with garrard...

http://espn.go.com/nfl/story/_/id/6...david-garrard-leaves-practice-apparently-hurt
 
NFL Scout Jayson Braddock from TC this morning
"#Texans JJ Watt is NFL ready as advertised. Brooks Reed is still struggling, bad. Earl Mitchell is most explosive MY on team."
 
Another tweet by @JaysonBraddock
"#Texans Lestar Jean goes up in endzone for great catch that was high & behind him."

In an earlier tweet Jean apparently makes a one handed catch over Keo.
Any chance Jean & TT both make the team? Both guys are 6'3" & 6'5". talk about big red zone targets.
 
Look, everyone wants to be in the Sunshine Club. steelbtexan, houstonspartan, even Second Honeymoon. It's just that the Texans won't let us in. They keep doing stupid crap that we know won't work, then expect us to buy into it. I want to go into the season with a clear, unblemished outlook. But, it's tough when you look out on the field and see some of the same coaches and players that are responsible for so much suckitude.

At some point, a person has to decide if he wants to stick with being cranky about the past and dwell in a swamp of misery...or, move forward and try to have some semblance of positive outlook.

Having a blind positive outlook is not my cup of tea.

Here's how I play back all that's happened since the first day of off-season:

1.) People within the first few weeks of knowing Kubiak was not going to be fired were on here saying "Oh well. It is what it is, we should move on and support him." Hell no.

2.) I raged against the machine when we found out Kubiak was still here. When Wade Phillips was hired, those people were begging us rebels to put down our muskets and powder horns and come back to our families. Hell no.

3.) When we drafted heavy on defense, well....it said something (to me, at least). Kubiak had his hands off the defense, and it was all Wade all weekend. With the exception of TJ Yates, IIRC.

4.)And when we picked up a combination of S and CB, and the two guys are GOOD at what they do, then and only then was I able to be convinced that it was safe to risk a trip to Happy Land again.

I do not make snap decisions and flip flop, as it has been proposed on here. It took a consistent, concerted effort by Bob McNair to prove to me that I can sit back and watch Texans football again without feeling like we weren't getting the best product we could get out there.

For all I know, the moves on paper won't do squat for us this year. The stink of mediocrity might have some lingering effects. However, I can't sit here and predict the end of the Texas world just because I have to defend a stance that is outdated and does not apply anymore. The hiring of a proven d-coord, a heavy draft on defense--ran by the new d-coord who knows what he's doing, the unceremonious cut of Amobi (our golden calf since Carr left), and the signing of truly competent and gifted secondary players renders a Pisser & Moaner outdated and archaic. At this point, anybody wishing to piss and moan is desiring to piss and moan for the sake of pissing and moaning.

I have my limits. I stuck to my guns as long as I felt it was warranted. It's time for me to just enjoy what we have and make my football talk about the x's and o's on the field and not the ideology of how McNair runs his team. Outside of canning Kubiak and starting over, this was about the best alternative to that plan. In my opinion.

But apparently, I can't do that. I've become a louse. A traitor to the cause. LOL. Oh well.
 
Today during camp at some point I'm assuming.

"@JaysonBraddock: When @Texandynasty asked Kubiak about who's pushing Kareem for his starting job, Gary responded "they all are". #Texans"
 
Today during camp at some point I'm assuming.

"@JaysonBraddock: When @Texandynasty asked Kubiak about who's pushing Kareem for his starting job, Gary responded "they all are". #Texans"

That would be the same response given to "Who is ahead of Kareem for the starting job?":kitten:
 
More notes from things I saw this morning (Sunday 8/7) in practice:

Andre sighting! Didn't take him long to burn Kareem on a go pattern. Andre being Andre.

No Tate to go with no Foster. Ward, Slaton and Chris O. sharing 1st, 2nd, and 3rd team duties.

Caldwell and Brisiel are alternating 1st team snaps at RG. I guess they can't decide. Brisiel's better at holding, IMO.

Jacoby looked good throughout practice, including a leaping grab of an underthrown Leinart post.

Dickerson also very solid, beating Jason Allen on a much better thrown post by Leinart.

In 7-on-7 redzone drills, Schaub was near perfect. Near, because Joseph almost came away with a pick when jumping a slant ahead of Jacoby. Also, Schaub was forced to run when DeMeco blanketed the intended target Slaton out of the backfield.

My main concern with Leinart is holding on to the ball too long. And his deep arm. And the fact that this is his first Texan camp. Just keep saying to yourself "He's not Orlovsky, he's not Orlovsky."

Yates really needed the rookie camps and OTAs. He's pressing and just not very accurate, right now. You can see the reasons why he was drafted (arm, quickness). TJ's just not close to being there, yet. Still, he came away with a TD in 7-on-7s, with the help of a circus catch by Lester Jean in the right corner of the endzone.

Watt is blowing up people on occasion. An explosive athlete who can overmatch the Texans o-line at times.

Mario is getting held a lot. And when he's not being held, Williams will run himself out of a play and forget backside contain. It's going to be a problem if he doesn't figure this out.

I love how Derrick Townsel comes back for the ball. He has very good instincts for a WR. But, he's tiny. Maybe 2" taller than Holliday. Speaking of Holliday, he looked like a WR in the 2 minute drill. Made back-to-back 1st downs, including beating Kareem on a slant.

The defense was the winner in each 2 minute drill series. Nolan picked off Schaub giving the 2nd team defense the "win" over the 1st team offense. Antonio Smith abused Studdard and Wallace (two guys who likely won't be in the league next month) for back-to-back sacks. Danieal Manning sealed the 2nd team offense's fate with an interception (that's how it's done, Glover) on Leinart's hail mary.

Just one observation on Gary Kubiak during practice. When the offense and defense are going through positional workouts on different fields, Gary takes equal time observing each unit. Wait...no he doesn't. Kubiak didn't even glance over to the defense's field. Gary Kubiak, head coach of the Houston Texans offense. Always has been. Always will be.
 
More notes from things I saw this morning (Sunday 8/7) in practice:

Andre sighting! Didn't take him long to burn Kareem on a go pattern. Andre being Andre.

No Tate to go with no Foster. Ward, Slaton and Chris O. sharing 1st, 2nd, and 3rd team duties.

....

Looks like Tate has a hammy issue too now....

http://profootballtalk.nbcsports.com/2011/08/07/ben-tate-not-ready-to-seize-his-opportunity/

But Tate isn’t quite ready to try to take over. Coach Gary Kubiak told reporters on Sunday that Tate wasn’t able to practice, due to a hamstring problem of his own.

“He came out, warmed up and said his hamstring was tight, so we moved on,” Kubiak said, via quotes distributed by the team. “Derrick [Ward] was back. That group right there has been impressive the last couple days in their work habits and getting the reps that they’re getting. Hopefully he’s back later on.”
 
Matt Jackson is in love with Watt. He will not shut the **** up about him on twitter. People have to strain to say something good about Jackson. Everybody except Lucky is talking about how good Mario looks rushing from the 2 point stance (conversely Lucky is the only one to talk about Mario vs the run).

Updates.
 
More notes from things I saw this morning (Sunday 8/7) in practice:

No Tate to go with no Foster. Ward, Slaton and Chris O. sharing 1st, 2nd, and 3rd team duties.
Per Kubiak, Tate's also dealing with a hamstring issue.

While I wouldn't have been shocked to see him as a salary cap casualty, I'm glad Slaton's still around. It will be interesting to see how preseason touches are handed out - regardless of Foster & Tate's health.
 
Just one observation on Gary Kubiak during practice. When the offense and defense are going through positional workouts on different fields, Gary takes equal time observing each unit. Wait...no he doesn't. Kubiak didn't even glance over to the defense's field. Gary Kubiak, head coach of the Houston Texans offense. Always has been. Always will be.

Cowher delegates and trusts his subordinates while Gary is only concerned with one aspect of the team. lol Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.
 
This is why you don't cut Slaton who I think is making 1.2 million this year if I'm not mistaking. There aren't ever enough running backs on the team.
 
Cowher delegates and trusts his subordinates while Gary is only concerned with one aspect of the team. lol Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.

That's the way Gruden was with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He was in charge of the offense and the HC and Kiffin was in charge of the defense.
 
From the Chronicle

Apparently Optimus Prime has returned
(hey if Detroit's CJ can be Megatron, then our AJ must be Optimus)
Andre Johnson, ever the warrior, returned to practice Sunday and made a number of difficult catches, no matter that he's still dealing with a compound dislocation of his left index finger. Most impressive was a ball he pulled in despite solid coverage by new free safety Danieal Manning.
Troy Nolan, Manning's backup, made the defensive play of the day, picking off a Matt Schaub pass in a crowd at the goal line.
CB Jonathan Joseph, the Texans' top free-agent acquisition, had a strong practice. He drew a big roar from the crowd by breaking up a Schaub pass at the goal line that Jacoby Jones appeared to have caught.
The offense still lacks timing, but the defense is looking strong. Gary Kubiak said he was "pleasantly surprised" at the progress new defensive coordinator Wade Phillips has made in just a week's time implementing his 3-4 system.
There's nothing more fun than watching Joe Marciano run his special teams drills. The intense Marciano likes to mix it up himself, occasionally taking on a blocker to make a point about kick coverage. But he expects intelligent play, too. When things got a little chippy, he screamed, "Don't throw him down! It's a penalty!"
LB Brian Cushing is still more than a week away from getting into the mix, it seems. But he's trying to get his surgically repaired knee strong enough by pushing a heavy sled up and down the field.
Matt Leinart had a great week of camp. He's super accurate and very poised. He again looks like the All-American quarterback he was at USC, not the guy who fell on his face at Arizona.
Mario Williams experienced some hamstring tightness during a pass-rush drill, but after getting a trainer to stretch him out, he appeared to be moving fine.
With Ben Tate taking the morning off because of a tight hamstring and joining Arian Foster on the sidelines, rookie Chris Ogbonnaya got extra work and earned praise from Kubiak.
The players are getting a break until meetings Monday night, returning to the practice field Tuesday morning. The "Youth Day" workout from 8 to 10 a.m. is open to the public. Go to the Texans' web site to print free tickets.



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Read more: http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/sports/fb/texansfront/7686931.html#ixzz1UMWHnUs7
 
Cowher delegates and trusts his subordinates while Gary is only concerned with one aspect of the team. lol Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.

To be fair, Rex Ryan does the same thing in NY. He leaves his offense in the hands of his coordinators and micromanages his Defense. While he is the head coach, his fingerprints are all over the Jet D.
 
Cowher delegates and trusts his subordinates while Gary is only concerned with one aspect of the team. lol Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.

Pretty sure he learned it from Shanahan who has basically done the same thing. This is also how Sean Payton won a SB (needed a solid D coordinator).
 
A position of concern for me.... NT. Anyone have any observations on how the Cody/Mitchell pair has looked?
 
People have been saying that Mitchell has been looking really good.

Cant wait for Monday night to see the boys in action. The ability to plug the middle (however we can do it, 2 gap pen w solid lb support,etc) will be something to keep a close eye on this preseason.
 
• Matt Leinart had a great week of camp. He's super accurate and very poised. He again looks like the All-American quarterback he was at USC, not the guy who fell on his face at Arizona.


Wow that's kind of hard to believe. Can't wait to see him play in pre-season then
 
Anyone who's gone to camp, can you please let me know how Brooks Reed is doing? I read on Twitter that he's struggling, bad.

It's early, but I'm really hoping he comes in and provides the pass rush we need on 3rd down in his rookie season. Hopefully competes for a starting spot next season.

Thanks.
 
Anyone who's gone to camp, can you please let me know how Brooks Reed is doing? I read on Twitter that he's struggling, bad.

It's early, but I'm really hoping he comes in and provides the pass rush we need on 3rd down in his rookie season. Hopefully competes for a starting spot next season.

Thanks.

I'm going on Tuesday. I'll try to get some videos in if possible
 
lol Seriously, you couldn't make this stuff up.
I'd probably laugh, too. If I hadn't watched 5 seasons of suckass defense while the head coach did absolutely nothing about it.

The other play was Harris. Here's a sample of that:
Harris came on a nickel CB blitz today during the 2 minute drill. Schaub got the ball out in time, but it's clearly going to be part of Wade's pass rush arsenal.
 
Anyone who's gone to camp, can you please let me know how Brooks Reed is doing? I read on Twitter that he's struggling, bad.
All of the OLBs are trying to learn the position. None have played LB before. Which I find odd. Wouldn't you expect the Texans to bring in at least one veteran who had 3-4 OLB experience? Just to show the rest of the guys how it's done, by example?

Having said that, Reed looks noticeably smaller than the other OLBs. Will he have a difficult time getting off blocks against NFL tackles? I don't know. I did see Dreessen handle Reed one-on-one on a running play. With no mini-camps or OTAs, it's a process that is being accelerated perhaps too quickly.
 
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