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    Let Them Pass

    Easy pickings: Rams show you needn't be elite to torment Texans and their simple gameplans

    MoiseKapenda Bower
    MoiseKapenda Bower
    Oct 13, 2013 | 11:46 pm

    The youthful St. Louis Rams were respectful and judicious, following their 38-13 drubbing of the Houston Texans on Sunday at Reliant Stadium with the delicately measured words of a team on the cusp of something intriguing yet lacking any accomplishments substantive enough to gloat over.

    The Rams strolled into town and stood opposite a collection of veterans so discombobulated that nothing could mask their withering self-confidence. For all those empty words about hard work the Texans were a shaken bunch ripe for exploiting, and while the Rams wouldn't directly acknowledge as much in the aftermath of their stunning win, their perspective was transparent.

    In the NFL, few problems are internal. Struggles are laid bare for the entire league to observe.

    Teams are acutely aware of what ills the Texans. That the Rams could capitalize so breathlessly was a damning display.

    Inventory is taken when future opponents stagger and stumble, and when opportunities are presented to capitalize on the weak, the predatory are quick to pounce. The Texans, saddled by their inefficient quarterback play, undermined by their defensive red zone woes, exposed by their lopsided turnover margin, were the equivalent of a ball on a tee. The Rams came armed with an illegal corked bat and bashed away with ruthless impunity until the Texans cried uncle.

    "They're a good football team despite how they've been playing," Rams defensive end Chris Long said. "If you give them any momentum they can really hurt you. We had to tighten up in the red zone and make sure we got those takeaways, and we did that. Our offense did their part and the rest was history."

    That two-pronged approach sounds simple in premise because it is precisely that. Texans kicker Randy Bullock had three red-zone field goals on his ledger entering play on Sunday, so the first step in emasculating the Texans was forcing them to settle for field goal attempts inside the 20-yard line. On their third possession the Texans rode running back Arian Foster into the red zone before imploding, surging to the St. Louis 4-yard line before a Derek Newton false start stalled momentum and yielded a 20-yard Bullock field goal that cut the deficit to 10-3 in the second quarter.

    Just prior to the intermission the Texans breached the red zone again and readied to close to within one score after the Rams answered the first Bullock field goal with a touchdown. But quarterback Matt Schaub took a sack, courtesy of Rams defensive tackle and Houston native Michael Brockers, scrimmaging from the St. Louis 19 before an errant toss on third down led to another Bullock chip shot.

    The Texans penetrated the red zone four additional times, with their last foray resulting in a meaningless Ben Tate one-yard touchdown run with 3:15 remaining. They turned the ball over three times inside the St. Louis 20, including a DeAndre Hopkins fumble at the Rams 14-yard line and a pair of T.J. Yates second-half interceptions, the first of which was returned by Rams linebacker Alec Ogletree 98 yards for a touchdown. Rams linebacker James Laurinaitis scooped and returned Hopkins' fumble 43 yards to set up the Rams' lone field goal.

    The Texans Trouble

    For all their accumulated Pro Bowlers, their collections of stat-fat stars at quarterback, running back and receiver, the Texans have long struggled scoring red zone touchdowns. What transpired on Sunday wasn't a new development, but to witness the Rams shackle the Texans so effectively in the red zone was to recognize their confidence in their defensive approach.

    In the NFL, few problems are internal. Struggles are laid bare for the entire league to observe.

    "When you get into the red zone as an offense you want to get seven," Long said after the Rams allowed the Texans just one touchdown on six trips into the red zone Sunday. "When we hold them to field goals or force a turnover that's a back breaker.

    "We did that a couple times and then from there we made the adjustments we needed to make and were a lot better."

    The Ogletree Pick-6 was icing on the Texans' turnover cake, particularly given that it came with Yates at quarterback and not the maligned Matt Schaub. That perverse bit of humor aside, the Texans should feel overwhelmingly troubled for having racked up four additional turnovers against the Rams, with three coming in the red zone and the fourth, a Keshawn Martin fumble on a kickoff return, resulting in a touchdown.

    The Texans entered play on Sunday with a minus-8 turnover margin; the Rams did not commit a turnover on Sunday.

    That Schaub escaped with a clean statistical ledger (but not without injury) was immaterial. With his having been victimized by a Pick-6 in four consecutive games, the Rams were keen on forcing the Texans into mistakes in the passing game. Foster was exceptional in accounting for 198 yards on 24 touches and there was an element of concession in the Rams afterward, allowing that Foster is remarkably reliable and as close to infallible as any running back in the league. Where the Texans could be had was in their inconsistent, turnover-prone aerial attack.

    "Even though they had their struggles they're still a great team," Brockers said. "They're still a team that can go out and put on a streak. For the most part we wanted to focus on being accountable, stopping the run and making them pass, and I think we did a great job of that."

    At this stage the Texans appear to have mastered the domain of statistical anomalies. Their defense allowed just 216 yards and the Rams managed only 41 offensive snaps. But the Texans' lack of discipline (95 first-half penalty yards), their catastrophic turnovers, and maddening red-zone inefficiencies make for an easy game plan for opponents to script, proofread and memorize.

    Teams young and old are acutely aware of what ills the Texans. That the Rams, disjointed in their pursuit of marginal improvement, could capitalize so breathlessly was a damning display.

    "We definitely saw them on film and knew they were struggling," Ogletree said. "We definitely wanted to come in and keep a lot of pressure on them and just try to make plays."

    Whether Matt Schaub was knocked out of the game or not.

    Matt Schaub Rams Texans doc
    Photo by Michelle Watson CultureMapSnap
    Whether Matt Schaub was knocked out of the game or not.
    unspecified
    series/htx-super-season-2013
    news/sports

    O'Brien Talks Tough

    Tough new sheriff: Bill O'Brien sounds like the anti Kubiak, vows to be hard on Texans players

    Chris Baldwin
    Jan 3, 2014 | 1:43 pm
    Tough new sheriff: Bill O'Brien sounds like the anti Kubiak, vows to be hard on Texans players
    Photo by Rob Carr Getty Images
    Bill O'Brien admits he missed the NFL.

    Bill O'Brien certainly hasn't walked timidly into his new job as the head coach/franchise savior of the Houston Texans.

    With large posters of J.J. Watt and Andre Johnson flanking him on either side of an elaborate press conference stage, O'Brien didn't pay homage as much as he demanded a new standard.

    "To me it's about accountability," O'Brien said. "It's about demanding. It's about putting together a fast, physical football team."

    In other words, Mr. Nice Guy went out the window with former Texans coach Gary Kubiak. O'Brien mentioned "accountability" and "demanding" several times in his introductory press conference Friday afternoon at Reliant Stadium. And you can bet the chorus sounded like sweet music to Texans owner Bob McNair.

    CultureMap was the first news outlet anywhere to report that O'Brien was the Texans' top choice to be the team's new coach way back on Dec. 18. This was a McNair driven pick from the beginning and it is the 44-year-old O'Brien's toughness that drew the owner to the former Penn State coach and Bill Belichick assistant.

    "To me it's about accountability. It's about demanding."

    And McNair himself certainly talked tough on introduction day.

    "I'm ready to kick 2013 the hell out the door," McNair said. "Not acceptable. Not what we're going to do in the future."

    McNair went on to talk about O'Brien having shown he's willing to make the hard decisions — something he clearly felt was lacking as the Texans spiraled from Super Bowl schemers into a 2-14 death march in 2013.

    "Some coaches who have been players still think of themselves as players rather than the head of an organization," McNair said. "And have trouble making difficult decisions."

    Kubiak, of course, played quarterback for the Denver Broncos. As for an inability to make tough calls? Just look at how long Kubiak stuck with a flat-lined Matt Schaub and how he kept trying to go back to Schaub even after the Case Keenum call was made.

    O'Brien noted that "there are a lot of good football players on this team." He also declined to take any pressure off himself and describe this makeover of a team with the worst record in the NFL as a rebuilding job.

    "There are a lot of pieces in place here," he said. "It's all about hard work . . . Quick turnaround, rebuilding are labels. I'm not into all that."

    Tom Brady Tough?

    All in all, it's an impressive opening performance for a first-time NFL head coach. O'Brien knows how to command the stage. Texans general manager Rick Smith talked about the new coach's "charisma."

    O'Brien even makes sure to work in the obligatory Texas joke about the cowboy life.

    "Right after this, I'm going to go out and buy my first pair of cowboy boots," he said.

    It's already becoming clear there will be one cowboy in charge of these Texans. One who happens to be a hard-nosed Northeast guy who's probably still most famous for getting into a sideline screaming match with New England Patriots golden boy quarterback Tom Brady.

    "I'm ready to kick 2013 the hell out the door."

    O'Brien downplayed the incident, but it's clearly helped burnish his taskmaster image.

    "You know it's a competitive sports," O'Brien said. "Tom Brady's a great friend. These things happen. The thing that people don't understand is that 30 seconds after it was over, we were sitting together and going over pictures (of game action)."

    The Texans players are clearly intrigued by O'Brien. Veteran center Chris Myers sat amongst the press at the stadium and listened to the new head man.

    There will be a lot more change coming to the stadium. Smith hinted at as much when he noted how the Texans needed a coach who can guide young players.

    It's hard to imagine O'Brien tip toeing around that change. He plans to meet with all the remaining Texans coaches Saturday (as with any head coaching change, it's unlikely many of the current assistants will be kept by O'Brien). He'll tackle the quarterback question later, though it's clear Keenum is still in the picture.

    Almost every new NFL head coach sounds good on introduction day. Especially when the team brings out a marching band for the occasion. But O'Brien sounds tough and no nonsense.

    Just what Bob McNair wanted. This is his call. His makeover. His tough guy.

    Bill O'Brien will not call the Houston Texans a rebuilding team.

    Bill O'Brien presser
    Photo by Scott Halleran Getty Images
    Bill O'Brien will not call the Houston Texans a rebuilding team.
    unspecified
    series/htx-super-season-2013
    news/sports
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