Week 11, 2020, 1PM at Texans

Finally an early game again!!!
This is a game the Pats' O can use to really get humming again.
The Texans are 31st in rush D; the Pats are 3rd in rushing offense. No contest there. They are 18th in pass D.
On offense they're weak running the ball (31st) which is a blessing for us, and their strength on O is passing (8th) which is also our strength on D. I'll take our pass D every time.

Opening odds: The Pats are 1.5 pt favorites - play the Pats. The Texans are 2-7 with both wins over the lowly Jax Jaguars.

When the Patriots run - Edge: Patriots
Sometimes trying to figure out the best plan of attack for a game can be challenging. Then there are matchups like this that seem to make things quite easy. The Patriots love to run the football behind their physical offensive line. Damien Harris has injected new life into the ground game and is coming off his third 100-yard game of the season against the Ravens. New England ranks third in rushing and appears to be hitting its stride behind Harris' punishing style. Meanwhile the Texans can't stop the run – even when they know it's coming. That was the case when Cleveland took over at its own 3 with just under five minutes left while protecting a 10-7 lead last wek. Despite the obvious situation, the Browns chewed up the remaining time behind Kareem Hunt and Nick Chubb, who ground the Texans to death. It wasn't an aberration, either. Houston ranks last in rushing yards allowed as well as rushing yards per play. Even when the weather conditions made passing quite challenging, Houston still was powerless to stop Cleveland on the ground. Expect Harris to continue to see the bulk of the workload, and Rex Burkhead to continue in his support role as both a runner and receiver. That has become the Patriots formula for offensive success, and Houston doesn't have the horses to do much about it.
When the Patriots pass - Edge: Patriots
The Texans aren't much better against the pass, as evidenced by the 7.35 yards per pass they allow for the season, which ranks 26th. The overall yardage (241.7 yards, 18th) is likely a product of teams being content to run the ball instead, which is why the yards per play number is more telling. The Texans employ Bradley Roby and Vernon Hargreaves at corner with Justin Reid and Eric Murray at safety. Lonnie Johnson and Michael Thomas work as extra DBs, but the group has struggled all season as the Texans pass rush hasn't been as potent as normal. Houston has just two interceptions all year and hasn't been able to slow down most of the offenses it has faced. The Patriots are using the passing game as a complementary piece and lately Cam Newton has done a nice job of protecting the ball. Short throws to Jakobi Meyers and Burkhead have represented the bulk of the passing attack, and Meyers has emerged as an important piece with several strong games in recent weeks. The Texans have the ability to put pressure on the passer with J.J. Watt (4 sacks) and Whitney Mercilus (3 sacks) but neither has consistently done so to the point where the secondary has benefited. The Patriots won't likely be chucking it around NRG Stadium but should make enough plays to augment the rushing attack.
When the Texans run - Edge: Patriots
This is an area where a Texans weakness matches with a Patriots weakness. Houston hasn't been able to run the ball much this season for a variety of reasons. David Johnson was serviceable as the lead back before being knocked out of the lineup with a concussion, leaving pass catching threat Duke Johnson as the main option. Duke Johnson averages just over 3 yards per carry. The Texans also have played much of the season from behind, eliminating their opportunities to run the ball more frequently. As a result they rank 31st in the league, averaging just 87.9 yards per game on the ground. So, the fact that the Patriots have experienced their struggles stopping the run this season should be somewhat mitigated against Houston. In addition, New England is coming off a strong effort stopping the run against the Ravens Sunday night, which should give the group some confidence moving forward. Newcomer Carl Davis has stepped in the contributed alongside Lawrence Guy, who returned to the lineup after a one-game absence. Practice squad call-up Terez Hall has looked comfortable working inside in place of the injured Ja'Whaun Bentley, and the Patriots front should have enough to control the Texans on the ground.
When the Texans pass - Edge: Texans
The Texans do have one very dangerous weapon to deal with on offense and that is Deshaun Watson. Despite the Texans 2-7 record, Watson gives his team a chance to win every week and Houston has had a chance to win virtually every week as a result. Watson has 18 touchdowns against just five interceptions and has a 107 passer rating for the season while completing more than 68 percent of his throws. Will Fuller and Brandin Cooks are dangerous as big-play threats with nine touchdowns between them, and Watson can also do damage with his legs, averaging almost 5 yards per rush. The Patriots secondary has been a bit inconsistent as of late, a fact illustrated perfectly by J.C. Jackson. Jackson has interceptions in a team-record five straight games, but he's also given up his share of plays during the stretch. Baltimore's Lamar Jackson was able to enjoy one of his better passing nights in a monsoon Sunday night, and that followed Joe Flacco's strong night a week prior. The Texans will use Cooks, Fuller and slot man Randall Cobb, as well as Duke Johnson out of the backfield as they try to put points on the board behind Watson. The Texans have trouble protecting him at times, but the Patriots haven't consistently generated much heat this season. Houston has shown the ability to put points on the board, and if that's the case Sunday it will likely be due to Watson's brilliance.
Special Teams - Edge: Patriots
The teams are fairly even in this matchup with Houston's Ka'imi Fairbairn doing a solid job in the kicking department alongside punter Bryan Anger. Fairbairn has missed three field goals, one coming last week in tough wind conditions in Cleveland. Nick Folk missed a PAT last week in the rain but that snapped a five-game stretch of perfection for the veteran kicker. Both have been steady for their teams overall. Jake Bailey continues to turn in great work for the Patriots, consistently creating field position for New England. Neither side is generating anything in the return game. DeAndre Carter was handling both punts and kicks for Houston but was released earlier in the week. C.J. Prosise (kicks) and Fuller (punts) could fill the roles Sunday against the Patriots. Gunner Olszewski has handled both jobs for the Patriots but hasn't gotten much going. Each team has been solid on the coverage units, continuing the even nature of this matchup.
 
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Can’t blame the offence this time. Defence couldn’t get it down again in the backfield. Not helped by having no pressure coming on Watson.
The ol was awful today, and Cam needs to straighten out his mcnabbian dirtball issue.
The D sucked most of the game though, true.
 
What a terrible defensive performance. Could not rush, could not tackle, could not cover. Watson had his way with us all day with 2 of his top receivers missing and half his Oline out.
 
The next 3 weeks we have Murray, Herbert and Tua. We have to figure out the secondary and pass rush.
 
This team just does not have the talent anywhere to compete. RBs aren't bad, but everywhere else... they simply suck. No playmakers. We're fucked for the next 3-5 years at best.
 

After going down 11 points and letting the Texans walk into into the end zone three touchdowns without much of an issue, it seems the offense abandoned the game plan and began to sling it. Which is fine, but Texans began to tee off. The OL struggled with blitz pick up and the rest is history.
 
I'm very disappointed in the loss.

I'm going to be seeing JJ Watt batting down passes with his sternum in my sleep. That was, by far, the best game he's ever had against us. I'm tempted to suggest that Romeo had a great defensive game plan. They didn't cave on the run like Baltimore did when they lost great NT Brandon Williams early on and our guys had trouble figuring out where Watt was from play to play. In addition, Isiah Wynn struggled all day on his bad ankle before suffering what appeared to be a knee injury. We don't defend Tight Ends well enough and Baltimore built their first half lead targeting their 3 huge TEs. Newton's release point is so low that it negates his height and Houston was looking for it. His short touch was non-existent today. Our pass rush was MIA and remains a major problem. Deatrich Wise was stuck on blocks like rat in a glue trap-- not to pick too much on him.

I'll have flashbacks of watching Ryan Izzo attempting to iso block Watt and ending up a toad in a lawnmower. That was predictable. I pick on poor Ryan, but it's not his fault that he is too damn small to block the big guys and too athletically challenged to do much to help us in the air game. He's working hard, but his ceiling is lower than an igloo.

DeShaun Watson was deadly accurate most of the day which is what happens when you've got all day to throw. He's still a hell of a QB and we get just about all of them this year.

We don't do enough things well. The things we can do well we don't do well enough to depend on game in game out. We don't stress people into busting coverages because nobody is particularly worried. They just focus on the 2 or 3 useful guys we have and let the chips fall.

If I was looking for some rays of hope, we now have two WRs that can be depended on, which is two more than we had 3 weeks ago. Harry caught a few and appears to still be technically alive, at least. Cam threw downfield pretty well and didn't dissolve into tears in the postgame presser. Carl Davis looks pretty damn strong in the middle and it was good to see Gilmore return. We continue to get glimpses of what Kyle Dugger will be when he figures out he isn't facing the Newberry Wolves anymore. Also, I found it comforting when I noted that the McCourtys are twins instead of triplets.

So we go back to work and keep grinding. And we listen to the banshees howl until we're good enough to shut them up.
 
Probably next season, with a better qb, the Patriots smoke teams like the Texans, and beat better teams, too. There may or may not be a different head coach, but Newton doesn't have that extra winning attitude, like Brady did. They're going to need a better quarterback. And soon, it'll be time to go with Stidham, for experience sake. I don't think they'll finish 10-6 anymore. I'm thinking more 6-10 now. Or 5-11. It's okay, and it is what it is. Obviously, they need to get better pass rushers and a good tight end, and wide receivers. They may. I like the offensive line this year, though.
 
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