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    Keenum Sets Up Coach of Year

    Case Keenum should win Bill O'Brien Coach of the Year: Crazy, fiery pregame speech removes any doubt from first-year run

    Chris Baldwin
    Dec 22, 2014 | 7:04 am

    Lyle Lovett marches through the bowels of NRG Stadium, almost full-bore grinning. The country singer stayed to the very end of the Houston Texans' 25-13 win over the Baltimore Ravens (no early celebrity bolt here) and he seems to be enjoying every moment of it despite his laconic image.

    Dikembe Mutombo is already in the Texans locker room at this point, the legendary NBA giant camping out in the training room to pose for pictures. Many of them seemingly requested by Mutombo himself rather than the other way around. It looks very much like Mutombo just wants to be part of something like this again.

    There is nothing that quite compares to a winning locker room in big-time sports. Just ask Case Keenum, the first-time NFL winner who pulls an ordinary black backpack on (both straps tight around his arms, none of this casual one-strap hanging look for Keenum) and heads for the interview room. Or ask J.J. Watt . . . he's the hulking guy over there in the red reindeer Christmas sweater. Sure, his face is a little busted up. But it's all good.

    "Everything feels better after a win, so I don’t feel it too much," Watt says.

    "It certainly got everyone going. He does a great job of bringing players up to his level of intensity."

    It's good feelings and high cheer all around in Texans land and No. 99 cannot help but notice it.

    "It was kind of like one big Houston family out there," Watt says, mentioning he ran into Lovett. "It was pretty fun. Pretty cool."

    The creator of this scene has already retreated from sight. He's well into planning for Jacksonville now.

    First-year Texans coach Bill O'Brien's made all this possible with one of the NFL's all-time great single-season coaching jobs. There is no other way to describe what O'Brien's pulled off with these Texans anymore. Taking over a lifeless 2-14 team, starting four different quarterbacks and essentially playing the whole season without the game-changing No. 1 pick in the entire NFL Draft, O'Brien still has Houston alive in the playoff race going into Week 17.

    OK, so the Texans (8-7) are still ultra playoff long shots, only able to get to nine wins in an AFC where both Wild Card teams are likely to have at least 10 wins. And OK, Keenum — the so-called fourth string quarterback Houston beat Baltimore with — probably never should have been cut by O'Brien in the first place. But none of that changes the larger scope of what Bob McNair's handpicked coach has done.

    In Case Keenum's return game, O'Brien does it by delivering one of the most fiery pregame speeches that's likely been heard in any NFL locker room this season. In it, the coach rails against the Texans being completely dismissed as no-shot, no-threats to the Ravens. Ex-Texans like Gary Kubiak and Owen Daniels get all the attention before the game. O'Brien's team is less than an afterthought.

    And that clearly does not sit well with a coach who all but bounces off the walls during his pregame talk in the team auditorium. Several players say O'Brien brings up how no one outside of the locker room gives them any chance of beating a nine-win Baltimore team.

    "Very interesting," Texans left tackle Duane Browns says, grinning when someone asks about the speech. "A lot of expletives, a lot of stuff I can't repeat."

    It's not the type of speech that is ever going to be shown on HoustonTexans.com. It's a little too real. It's much too Bill O'Brien unfiltered.

    But it's the type of speech that no one in that Texans locker room is likely to ever forget.

    "It certainly got everyone going," linebacker Brooks Reed tells CultureMap. "He does a great job of bringing players up to his level of intensity."

    It's not the type of speech that is ever going to be shown on HoustonTexans.com. It's a little too real. It's much too Bill O'Brien unfiltered.

    That's an interesting way to put it. A perfect way, really. Reed's right. O'Brien's gift in getting these Texans to play hard no matter what's stacked against them has been underrated all season.

    The defense has never lost hope — even as things seemed to fall apart around them — and now that side of the ball is on a roll that is reminiscent of the late push of that 2011 first Texans playoff team. Houston's defense has held Andrew Luck and now Joe Flacco to less than 200 yards passing in back-to-back weeks. On this Sunday, cornerback Kareem Jackson and third-year defensive end Jared Crick are as big of stars as NFL MVP contender J.J. Watt.

    On one of his two interceptions — both of which set up Texans scores — Jackson absolutely just out fights Owen Daniels, the overhyped former Texan, for the football.

    That's a Bill O'Brien play. That's the type of ferocious effort the coach screams for in the pregame.

    "We were trying to be in those guys' hip pocket every step of the way — everywhere they went," safety Kendrick Lewis says.

    They are. Daniels might as well be trapped in a phone both for all the room he has. "I think every team takes on the personality of their head coach and this team has really done that in a good way," Texans linebacker Brian Cushing says.

    No Case Keenum Whisperer

    O'Brien will receive most of his credit for the work that he and quarterbacks coach George Godsey do with Keenum. And there is no doubt the wildcat-utilizing, Arian Foster-throwing-a-touchdown-pass gameplan is inventive. But in truth, Keenum deserves the majority of the praise for getting himself ready in six days to go from the St. Louis Rams practice squad to throwing it 42 times as the Texans QB starter.

    Keenum shows how good O'Brien can be as a coach. But it's this East Coast leader's fiery push, his lifting up of an entire franchise, that illustrates why Bill O'Brien should be the NFL's Coach of the Year.

    With Bruce Arians' team fading in the Arizona desert, unable to endure through the type of quarterback calamity that the Texans are somehow getting better under, the contest truly shouldn't even be that close. Arguing for Cowboys coach Jason Garrett is akin to giving an Oscar to the guy who won the Razzie award for worst actor of the year for three years running. Garrett only looks good now because he deflated Dallas' record for years by wasting talent.

    Oh, with the politics of NFL awards media voting and the late-to-the-party, year late nature of these honors, Bill O'Brien probably won't win Coach of the Year this season.

    But his players know. And who knows? Case Keenum may have just shown the rest of the NFL just how good of a coach the guy who cut him is.

    The blistered walls of the Texans auditorium certainly need no reminder.

    Case Keenum threw the ball 42 times and led the Texans on seven scoring drives.

    Case Keenum pressure Texans
      
    Photo by Michelle Watson/CultureMapSnap
    Case Keenum threw the ball 42 times and led the Texans on seven scoring drives.
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    J.J. Watt Dance Master

    J.J. Watt's supporting cast needs to be shown the money now: Keeping Case Keenum at QB key to retaining rightful MVP's help

    Chris Baldwin
    Dec 28, 2014 | 11:52 pm
    J.J. Watt's supporting cast needs to be shown the money now: Keeping Case Keenum at QB key to retaining rightful MVP's help
    Photo by Michelle Watson/CultureMapSnap
    J.J. Watt spent most of the Houston Texans' season-ending win over the Jaguars dancing.

    J.J. Watt breaks into a shimmy, rolling his hips like he never could in that omnipresent Verizon commercial. The most dominant defensive football player of this generation is forever dancing in the Houston Texans last game of the season.

    It's almost like Watt's determined to prove to everyone that he really can dance — while winning the NFL MVP.

    When you're this good, why not multi-task? So Watt breaks into dance after his first sack, after his second sack and after the safety that accounts for his third. He shimmies after nearly every time that "Turn Down For What" — or "Turn Down For Watt" in Texans land — song blares over the NRG Stadium sound system. Which seemingly happens after almost every defensive play on this rollicking Sunday Funday.

    Watt's day ends with those three sacks (making him the first player in NFL history to record two separate 20-sack seasons), a forced fumble, a safety, six tackles and a 23-17 win over the Jacksonville Jaguars. It doesn't add up to a playoff berth for Bill O'Brien's great first-year turnaround story, but that should hardly deny Watt his rightful league MVP.

    "I love this team, love this city. I have a lot of friends here. And I almost feel like we're finally here (as a team). It'd be sad to leave."

    MVP voters who won't vote for Watt now because of no playoffs are essentially saying their decision hinged on whether the Baltimore Ravens would choke enough to completely blow a playoff berth. How does that make sense?

    No, Justin James Watt is the 2014 NFL MVP. He earns it by getting the most out of his freakish athletic ability on every single play.

    "I’m trying to make sure they get their money’s worth and our fans get their money’s worth because they deserve that," Watt says. "I was a kid once. I grew up watching a team, I know what it’s like.

    "You want to be that superstar that every average Joe would be if he was a superstar."

    Watt is that worthy $100 Million Superstar, but even a supernova needs some support. And that's why O'Brien's team finds itself at a critical telling point. Watt played at a superhuman level all season. But the Texans truly took off when the rest of the defense caught on, giving defensive coordinator Romeo Crennel the confidence to unleash his full array of disguised coverages and fronts. Over the last month of the season, the Texans arguably played the third best defense in the entire NFL, behind only the defending champion Seahawks and maybe the Rams.

    Now a huge chunk of that defense — six of the 11 starters — are up for free agency and another vital piece (cornerback Johnathan Joseph) could be facing the kind of pay cut scenario that everyone else is trying to force onto Andre Johnson. Watt's great, but he needs many of these guys for the Texans to go anywhere in the future.

    This Texans defense can be great. If its key pieces are kept together.

    "This is something we can look at and build on," safety Kendrick Lewis says after the Texans play lights-out defense for the third straight week. "We have to pick up where we left off. I believe in the defense that we have here, the type of attitude that we have.

    "It is like blood in the water. We want a taste for more."

    Kareem Jackson's Future Keys All

    Cornerback Kareem Jackson is the No. 1 must sign by far, but the Texans would be wise to re-sign Lewis, nose tackle Ryan Pickett (a perfect veteran fit for Crennel's defense) and linebacker Brooks Reed who has been a consistent playmaker for weeks now as well.

    "Of course," Reed responds when asks if he wants to return. "I love this team, love this city. I have a lot of friends here. And I almost feel like we're finally here (as a team). It'd be sad to leave."

    The most disruptive force in football will be one lonely $100 Million Man, if Houston doesn't retain much of this company.

    Desire doesn't necessarily equal reality in the hard-line NFL though. If O'Brien gave Case Keenum a real chance at quarterback, the Texans would have more money to bring back more of their defensive core — and add more important pieces. But it'd be a stretch to expect this coach to think that way.

    It'd be a shame to see this emerging defense disbanded though. Watt & Friends aren't just making Blake Bortles — an offensively challenged rookie who likely would have been the Texans quarterback if Jadeveon Clowney wasn't in the draft — look lost. They flummoxed Andrew Luck and Joe Flacco in back-to-back weeks too.

    "Our defensive kind of changed late in the year," Reed says. "We ran a lot more disguises, made it hard for quarterbacks to see what coverages we were in. It's allowed a bunch of guys to make plays."

    Watt is not the only making them now — the way he was during that 2-14 nightmare last season. Jared Crick — the third-year defensive end who is under his rookie contract for another season — sacks Bortles, drops a running back for another loss and knocks down a pass against Jacksonville. Reed runs sideline to sideline, tracking running backs with his long hair flapping behind his helmet. Jackson . . . well, the once-mocked Jackson just changes everything for these Texans.

    The most disruptive force in football will be one lonely $100 Million Man, if Houston doesn't retain much of this company.

    "I’d definitely love to be back," Jackson says. "At the end of the day, I understand the business side of it. For me, I just have to sit back and just see what happens."

    This Texans defense has come too far to lose key pieces and essentially be left needing to start over learning Crennel's complex schemes in training camp. Watt's the MVP that everything centers around, but he cannot be Bob McNair's only big defensive buy this football year.

    There's a solution staring the Texans in the face: Give Case Keenum the chance to be the effective, low-cost winning starting quarterback. Develop a passer with tons of potential and keep the supporting stars on the other side of the football.

    "We have a chance to be a really explosive defense," Joseph says.

    Only if they're not torn apart. Even a shimmy-happy MVP cannot do it all by his lonesome.

    J.J. Watt spent most of the Houston Texans' season-ending win over the Jaguars dancing.

    J.J. Watt Texans dance Jags
      
    Photo by Michelle Watson/CultureMapSnap
    J.J. Watt spent most of the Houston Texans' season-ending win over the Jaguars dancing.
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