Listen, we’ve all seen the highlights of C.J. Stroud making magic happen, but we’ve also seen the lowlights of him running for his life before a play even develops. As the 2026 NFL Draft is just days away, the same question is echoing through every sports bar from Downtown Houston to the suburbs of Cypress, Should Nick Caserio finally stop “patching” the interior offensive line and make it the undisputed priority?
Last season was a rollercoaster. While the pass protection technically improved from the "dumpster fire" of 2024, the running game remained stuck in second gear, and Stroud still took way too many hits in critical moments. Caserio has been busy this offseason, snagging veterans like Wyatt Teller and Braden Smith, and re-signing Ed Ingram. On paper, it looks like a veteran wall, while the moves are praised, there is concern regarding the injury history of these new additions. But if we’re being honest with ourselves, is this a long-term foundation or just another set of expensive band-aids?
There is a growing sentiment among the Texans faithful that the "best player available" philosophy has a limit, and that limit is reached when your franchise QB is getting hit 50+ times a season.
Protecting the Investment: C.J. Stroud is the sun our solar system revolves around. If the interior (Guard and Center) is soft, it doesn’t matter how good Nico Collins or Tank Dell are, Stroud won’t have the time to find them.
Fixing the Run Game: Trading for David Montgomery was a power move, but a RB is only as good as the hole his line creates. The Texans’ run-stuff rate last year was bottom-tier. If we want to be a physical, "bully-ball" team under DeMeco Ryans, it starts with a dominant interior.
Aging Veterans vs. Long-Term Core: Teller and Smith are proven, but they aren't getting younger and both have recent injury histories. Relying on them without a "Plan B" is a risky gamble.
Nick Caserio has shown us who he is. He is a man who loves flexibility. He prefers to have a roster full of 8 to 10 "versatile" linemen rather than over-investing in one specific spot. The front office's current stance seems to be, in my opinion is: “We’ve addressed the starters in Free Agency; now let’s take the best athlete available at pick 28.”
The risk here is that "versatility" often becomes a euphemism for "average at several spots but elite at none." While the defense could certainly use another edge rusher or a powerhouse defensive tackle, many fans feel that the offense will never reach its "Super Bowl ceiling" until the middle of that line is a fortress.
If I’m sitting in the war room, I’m looking at names like Max Iheanachor or Keylan Rutledge. These aren't just depth pieces; they are the "young, cost-effective" anchors the Texans need to keep this window open for the next decade.
Free agency was a great start, but Caserio shouldn't wipe his hands of the O-line just yet. A veteran line is great for 2026, but a blue-chip rookie in the early rounds is what secures 2027 and beyond.
What do you think, Texans fans? Are you comfortable with the veteran additions, or do you want to see a "big man" called with that first-round pick?
