New England
Patriots vs. Houston Texans
Sunday, Jan.
13, 2013
4:30 p.m.
(EST)
CBS
Texans'
offense vs. Patriots' defense
Texans
receiver Andre Johnson, running back Arian Foster and quarterback Matt Schaub
are possibly the league's most dangerous offensive trio, but the key to
stopping the Texans' Big Three will be the Patriots' big 325-pounder: nose
tackle Vince Wilfork. Wilfork's role in the Patriots' defense is simply to
occupy as many blockers as possible in order to help other Patriots defenders
remain unblocked. It's a role he fills well, and if he fills it well enough in
the run game, the rest of the Texans' offense will hit a major speed bump.
Behind the
line of scrimmage, Foster's not the most elusive or hard to bring down, so if
the Patriots' front seven can shoot through the gaps and shut down the outside
run, the scales tip in New England's favor. If the Patriots' front seven can
only push Houston's offensive linemen back, but can't fully penetrate the
Texans' zone-blocking scheme, Foster has the patience and vision to find an
avenue from which to terrorize the Patriots' defense.
Wilfork will
be the determining difference-maker deciding whether the Patriots disrupt or
merely react to the Texans' running game. If he can anticipate where Foster's
headed and take the right angle to force two or more offensive linemen to
engage him, it will wreak havoc on the Texans' zone-blocking scheme and allow
the rest of the front seven to shoot into gaps to get behind the line of
scrimmage.
If the
Texans can't get the run game going and have to rely primarily on their passing
attack, they're going to have a much harder time winning. Andre Johnson is one
of the league's top receivers and Matt Schaub puts up big numbers, but
Houston's passing game struggles mightily when Schaub is under consistent
pressure and doesn't have the benefit of play-action passing on his side.
Schaub doesn't step up in the middle of the pocket when it's vacant, and he
frequently underthrows balls when rushed up the middle. When he gets pressured
and tries to move in the pocket, focuses his eyes on the pass rush, which leads
to dangerous mistakes throwing under duress.
When the
Texans are passing, Wilfork will be the primary factor responsible for ensuring
Schaub is pressured into the mistakes he's prone to making when he can't lean
on the run game. Against the Patriots in Week 14, the Texans usually assigned
two offensive linemen to block Wilfork, with a running back or fullback often
staying in the backfield to chip whichever rusher got close to the quarterback
first.
If Wilfork
can shed a blocker and force the back to engage him, it will occupy the back
and give other pass rushers a cleaner lane to get to Schaub. If Wilfork can't,
the back can focus on another pass rusher and give Schaub more time to
accurately get the ball to Johnson, which is an extremely undesirable outcome
for the Patriots.
Patriots'
offense vs. Texans' defense
New England
offensive tackles Nate Solder and Sebastian Vollmer are going to be crucial in
the Patriots' efforts to stop defensive end J.J. Watt. Watt's probably the best
3-4 end in the league, and the number of blockers required to slow him can
disrupt the rest of the offense's protection schemes.
If Solder
and Vollmer can anchor the tackle positions and handle any outside rushers
without help, it frees up all three interior linemen and whoever the Patriots
have blocking in the backfield to work to neutralize the inside rush. If Solder
or Vollmer start needing another blocker's help taking care of the outside
rush, that takes away a blocker who can help with the inside rush and makes the
pocket more likely to collapse from the middle. As long as the protection holds
up, quarterback Tom Brady will be able to find open targets all day.
The Texans
struggle to adjust their coverage before the snap when a tight end lines up
flexed out wide, so tight ends as skilled as the Patriots' Aaron Hernandez and
Rob Grownkowski give an offense an edge against the Texans. With Gronkowski
sidelined by a broken arm in Week 14, Hernandez lined up all over the field,
catching eight passes for 58 yards and two touchdowns in a 42-14 victory for
the Patriots. Now that Gronkowski's back, the Patriots will now have two tight
ends with whom they can exploit the Texans' biggest defensive weakness.
On the
outside of the field, receivers Wes Welker and Brandon Lloyd aren't the fastest
deep-threat receivers in the league by any means. However, both are
well-regarded for being able to run clean, precise routes with convincing fakes
and double moves. Houston cornerback Kareem Jackson can be undisciplined at
times, so he's going to have to play with good fundamentals against the
Patriots or the slightest stutter-step will fool him and lead to a big gain for
New England.
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