Texans' Season Ends in Familiar Fashion - and C.J. Stroud Faces a Defining Offseason
Another year, another early playoff exit for the Houston Texans. And once again, it comes at the hands of a team that’s haunted them in January for years: the New England Patriots.
From the opening snap, things felt off. Calen Bullock lost his footing on a slick, snowy turf, and the Patriots capitalized instantly, jumping out to a 7-0 lead.
The Texans answered with a field goal - a familiar, if uninspiring, response. But after that, the wheels didn’t just wobble - they came off entirely.
C.J. Stroud, who once looked like the future of the franchise, had a game that will linger in Texans fans’ memories for all the wrong reasons.
He finished 20-of-44 for 212 yards, one touchdown, and four interceptions - one of which was returned for a score. It was the kind of performance that forces a hard conversation about a player’s trajectory, especially when it comes in the biggest game of the season.
This was the Texans’ seventh trip to the divisional round - and their seventh time coming up empty. But what makes this loss especially tough to swallow isn’t just the result. It’s what it might say about the quarterback at the center of it all.
Stroud looked rattled. Not just pressured or hurried - rattled.
He made throws that defied logic, decisions that couldn’t be chalked up to miscommunication or bad luck. These were the kind of mistakes that suggest a deeper issue - whether it’s confidence, processing, or simply being overwhelmed by the moment.
And that’s the concern. Because the version of Stroud we saw as a rookie - calm, composed, electric - hasn’t been the version we’ve seen lately.
If that early success was a glimpse of his ceiling, the last two years have raised questions about his floor. And after a game like this, the Texans have to ask themselves: which version of Stroud is the real one?
If he’s still the guy they believed in, then this is a bump in the road - a brutal one, yes, but a learning moment. But if it’s not just a blip? Then Houston is stuck in a difficult place - good enough to stay competitive, not bad enough to land a top draft pick, and suddenly unsure about the most important position in the sport.
That brings us to the looming decision: the fifth-year option. Based on the last two seasons, it’s hard to argue that Stroud has earned it.
His rookie campaign felt like the start of something special. Now, it’s starting to look more like an outlier.
And while quarterbacks often develop at different speeds, this isn’t about patience - it’s about progress. And right now, that progress feels stalled.
Could Davis Mills have made a difference in this game? That’s a fair question, but probably not the right one.
Mills has had his own struggles, and it’s unlikely he would’ve flipped the outcome. But the fact that the question is even being asked speaks volumes.
When your starting quarterback puts together a first half like that, and there’s a debate about whether he should’ve been pulled, that’s a red flag.
Still, benching Stroud mid-game could’ve done more harm than good. If he’s going to rebound, he needs reps - and belief from the coaching staff.
But that belief can’t be blind. Bobby Slowik (or whoever is calling plays next season) may need to adjust the offense to better suit Stroud’s current limitations.
Nick Caserio and the front office have to take a hard look at the quarterback room and decide if they need to bring in real competition - or even explore a bold move in the draft or trade market.
This loss stings, not just because of the scoreboard, but because of what it represents. The Texans entered this season with real aspirations.
A young, hungry defense. Playmakers on both sides of the ball.
A quarterback who had shown flashes of brilliance. But in the biggest moment, it all came undone - and now, the franchise faces an offseason full of questions.
There’s no easy answer. But one thing is clear: the Texans can’t afford to tread water.
Not at quarterback. Not in a division that’s only getting tougher.
And not with a fan base that’s been through this heartbreak too many times before.
For C.J. Stroud, the next few months will be the most important of his young career.
He’s got the talent. We’ve seen it.
But talent alone doesn’t get you to the next level. The Texans need more than flashes - they need consistency, growth, and leadership.
Because if Stroud isn’t the guy, Houston has to start finding out who is.
