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    Texans 4-Man QB Battle

    Tom Savage to battle Case Keenum: Mr. Transfer once fled adversity, now he embraces fierce Texans QB fight

    Chris Baldwin
    May 11, 2014 | 6:01 am

    Say this for Bill O'Brien: For a quarterback guru, the new Houston Texans coach is hardly stuck up on having the prettiest QB of the bunch.

    O'Brien seems set to head toward training camp with a seventh round pick from Harvard, a fifth-round pick from North Carolina, an undrafted free agent and a fourth round rookie battling it out to be the Texans' starting quarterback. One thing appears certain — O'Brien is not going to coach by-the-book scared.

    There's nothing traditional about the combatants in the Texans' most important position fight of all.

    Tom Savage, the University of Pittsburgh quarterback who Houston took in the fourth round of the NFL Draft Saturday, is the newest entrant in what's shaping up (at least for now) as a four-man quarterback battle. When a reporter directly asks if Savage would have to wait a while to get into the mix of competing for the job and maybe even have to sit for an entire season, O'Brien immediately dismisses that notion.

    "We’ll just add Tom to the mix and let him get in there and see what he does."

    “I don’t know if we think that way . . . " O'Brien says. "When we begin the full minicamps, when the whole team is here, there will be competition at every single position. Quarterback is definitely one of them. The guys that were here last week, they know that.

    "They’re competing and they’ve been a great bunch of guys to work with. We’ll just add Tom to the mix and let him get in there and see what he does.”

    Savage's certainly taken the long, winding road to competing for an NFL starting job. The 24-year-old attended three different colleges, transferring twice from programs because he wasn't happy with his playing situation. He went 1,024 days without taking a college football snap in the middle of the odyssey.

    Now Savage admits those trials and tribulations were largely of his own doing.

    It's hard to fault him for the second transfer from Arizona University to the University of Pittsburgh. The coaching staff he went to play for at Arizona got fired before he could play a game (The unforgiving NCAA should allow free transfers in cases of a coaching change.) But the first bolt, leaving Rutgers University after he lost his starting quarterback job, that's on Savage.

    "At that time I was just a young, 19-year-old bitter kid who thought that I was entitled to some things," Savage says in a conference call with Houston reporters.

    Now he's an experienced college football vet who owns the distinction of being the first quarterback drafted in the Bill O'Brien era.

    In the end, Savage could find himself competing against Case Keenum for a job, even The Job. Interestingly, the 26-year-old Keenum recorded a much higher completion percentage (69.4 percent) for his entire college career at the University of Houston than Savage did in the one season at Pittsburgh (61.2 percent) that impressed O'Brien so.

    Keenum found himself criticized for holding the ball too long in his half season NFL baptism last season, which is something Savage was also knocked for at Pittsburgh (he got sacked a whopping 43 times last season, most of any quarterback in the FBS). Heck, Keenum and Savage even wear the same number (7). Though presumably as the rookie, Savage will have to change to a different number with the Texans.

    Of course, the difference is Savage looks like the NFL's often narrow definition of a quarterback. He stands 6-foot-4 and weighs 228 pounds. Keenum does not. He's still fighting the senseless QB size obsession in a game where Drew Brees and Russell Wilson are two of the most effective quarterbacks in pro football.

    Another departure point between the two No. 7s is that O'Brien and his staff scouted and chose Tom Savage. That might prove to be the most important telling point of all.

    Houston Texans Quarterback School

    Still, it figures to be a fascinating quarterback battle. With veteran $7.5 million free agent signee Ryan Fitzpatrick (The Harvard Man) arguably the leader in the clubhouse (though O'Brien hasn't said anything publicly indicating that) and the long forgotten T.J. Yates also at least technically still in the mix, there are no shortage of interesting candidates.

    And not a pretty boy, Golden Boy quarterback among them.

    In the end, Savage could find himself competing against Case Keenum for a job, even The Job.

    After a draft in which the Texans clearly became a bigger, stronger, more physical team with general manager Rick Smith, another truth has emerged. No quarterback is going to be anointed and given an easy pass to the starting job by O'Brien. It's almost comical to hear anyone call a draft in which a once-in-a-generation defensive force like Jadeveon Clowney was secured as anything but a resounding success.

    The Texans are a much more dangerous team this Sunday morning than they were Thursday afternoon. The absence of a Golden Boy quarterback doesn't erase that. O'Brien's going to make his first quarterback work as hard as everyone else and emerge from a battle. There just might be something to that.

    "You look at quarterbacks and what makes a quarterback successful — the ones I have been around are the ones that are able to keep their eyes downfield when the proverbial all heck is breaking loose around them," O'Brien says.

    "People are diving at their feet. People are rushing at their shoulders. Or at their heads. I think it’s so important for a guy to be able to hang in the pocket and deliver the football on time with accuracy. That’s a big part of the NFL game: A guy that’s able to do that.

    "As we move forward that is something we will be looking for out of all of our quarterbacks.”

    If it's a real open competition — if the best quarterback is truly guaranteed to win whether he's an O'Brien era addition or not — the Texans are not in such a bad place. Who says your quarterback can't be an ugly duckling who had to scrape his way up out of the pond?

    Case Keenum brings his own moxie and early NFL success to a four-way quarterback race.

    Case Keenum excited Texans
      
    Photo by Michelle Watson CultureMapSnap
    Case Keenum brings his own moxie and early NFL success to a four-way quarterback race.
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    Houston Astros ballpark gets cool new name for the next 15 years

    Eric Sandler
    Nov 18, 2024 | 10:48 am
    Houston Astros Daikin Park rendering
    Courtesy of the Houston Astros
    The Astros' stadium will have a new name in 2025.

    The Houston Astros are about to have the coolest ballpark in Major League Baseball. The team announced on Monday, November 18 that its has reached a naming rights agreement HVAC manufacturer Daikin Comfort Technologies North America, Inc.

    Beginning on January 1, 2025, the stadium will be known as Daikin Park (die-kin). Scheduled to run through the 2039 season, the new name replaces Minute Maid Park, which has been the stadium’s name since 2002. It opened in 1999 as Enron Field.


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    Astros fans online are already calling the new stadium “The Ice Box,” replacing its informal “The Juice Box” moniker. That name feels likely to stick.

    Japan-based Daikin Industries is a leading manufacturer of HVAC systems. It sells air conditioning units and other products under brand names such as Daikin, Goodman, Amana® and Quietflex. Critically, it operates Daikin Texas Technology Park in nearby Waller, which is the largest HVAC manufacturing facility in North America. The company employs approximately 10,000 people in Greater Houston, according to a release.

    “We are excited to be partnering with Daikin for our ballpark’s naming rights,” Astros owner Jim said. “Daikin is an international company that proudly calls the Greater Houston area its North American home. The Houston Astros and Daikin share the same values, a commitment to excellence and a desire to give back to our local community. As we celebrate the 25th anniversary of this ballpark in 2025, I am proud to have Daikin alongside us to create even more special memories for our fans now and in the future.”

    The Astros will use the revenue for new stadium amenities and other upgrades. It will also continue the team’s various community initiatives. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. the Houston Chronicle notes that naming rights deals may be worth anywhere from $3.5 million per year (T-Mobile park in Seattle) to $11 million per year for the Texas Rangers’ Globe Life Field.

    The team’s first game in Daikin Park will take place on Monday, March 24, which it plays an exhibition against its Triple-A affiliate, the Sugar Land Space Cowboys. It will open the regular season on Thursday, March 27 against the New York Mets.

    “Daikin fit all of the criteria we set out to find in a naming rights partner,” Astros senior vice president Matt Brand added. “Their name and reputation fit our iconic downtown Houston home, and their values mesh perfectly with those of the Astros. We are grateful to partner with the entire Daikin team and to help them succeed in their business goals. Daikin Park will be a special place for our fans for many years to come.”

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