Texans Camp Battles Are About To Decide Who Gets Squeezed Out

As the Houston Texans gear up for their 25th season, fierce battles for key roster spots in their veteran lineup unfold during training camp, setting the stage for a transformative path to playoff success.

Houston Texans training camp opens July 21 at the Houston Methodist Training Center, and the first real fights of the summer are already easy to spot.

With a veteran-heavy roster trying to push through in the playoffs during the franchise’s 25th season, Houston has more depth than usual - and that means more jobs up for grabs. The 90-man roster is set to get trimmed, but a few of the toughest decisions will come in the battles that play out over the next few weeks.

At center, the Texans are essentially running a full-scale open tryout. The group includes Jake Andrews, Keylan Rutledge, Evan Brown, Febechi Nwaiwu and Jarrett Patterson, and GM Nick Caserio is treating the position like a numbers game. Andrews, the incumbent, is fighting just to stay on the roster after Houston used first-round capital on Rutledge and added fourth-rounder Nwaiwu.

There’s also plenty of versatility in this room. Almost everyone in the mix has taken snaps at more than one spot on the offensive line, which gives Houston some flexibility if it wants to keep multiple players.

Evan Brown, whose arrival was so debated we nicknamed it “ Browngate ”, has also worked with the first unit. Right now, the best guess is that Rutledge, Nwaiwu and Andrews stick, while Patterson or Brown ends up on the practice squad.

The backup nickel job looks much simpler. It comes down to Alijah Huzzie and rookie Kamari Ramsey, and only one of them is likely to win it.

Huzzie, an undrafted UNC product from last year, was elevated from the practice squad several times in 2025 and brings a physical, man-heavy style. Ramsey offers more flexibility, with the ability to play strong safety, free safety and nickel, though he’s best closer to the line.

Even with Huzzie’s edge in toughness, Ramsey appears to be the better bet for the roster spot, while Huzzie could wind up back on the practice squad and back with the team during the season.

Wide receiver has another interesting final spot battle, and this one pits sixth-round rookie Lewis Bond against veteran Justin Watson. The Texans have carried seven receivers in each of their past two initial 53-man rosters, but that doesn’t look likely this time because of the other roster crunches elsewhere.

Bond has been one of the standout surprises from rookie minicamp and OTAs, showing sharp route running and a quick grasp of the offense. Watson is coming off a career-worst season after a calf/achilles tendon injury, and his role is murky beyond being the experienced voice in a room full of draft picks.

The prediction here: Bond makes it, Watson doesn’t, and Watson also misses out on the practice squad.

The defensive end room has one obvious problem: after Danielle Hunter, Will Anderson Jr., and for the most part Dylan Horton, there isn’t a settled fourth option. Dominique Robinson is the current favorite among the unproven group, with Ali Gaye and Solomon Byrd also in the mix, plus the possibility that Houston adds a free agent. Fans and BRB writers want help brought in, and the guess here is that the Texans eventually re-sign Derek Barnett or Haason Reddick midway through camp and move on from the rest.

Linebacker may be the deepest competition on the roster, but that doesn’t make the decision any easier. Houston could keep two or three of Jake Hansen, Jake Hummel, Jamal Hill, Wade Woodaz, Aiden Fisher and Marte Mapu, depending on how much depth it wants behind E.J.

Speed. Hansen and Hill were special teams-only pieces last year, while Woodaz and Fisher are rookies whose Day Three draft status doesn’t make them safe.

Hummel and Mapu are newer names at linebacker, and the Texans need someone in that group to separate himself in camp.

In Other News...

Texans Finally Linked To The Kind Of Receiver Stroud Needs

A recent PFSN mock draft took a long view on how the Texans might keep building around C.J. Stroud, pointing to a receiver prospect who could fit the kind of offense Houston has been trying to sharpen. The appeal is straightforward: a dynamic target with contested-catch ability and enough route polish to matter in a passing game that could always use another dependable outlet.

The projection is still far down the road, and that is part of what makes it worth noting. At this stage, it is less about a concrete move and more about the type of receiver Houston might want to track as the next draft cycle develops, especially if the Texans are still hunting for more explosion and reliability on the outside. [Read more 🡒]

Henry TooToo Sounds Like A Different Kind Of Texans Leader

Henry To'oTo'o has quietly become one of the more important pieces of the Texans' defense, settling in as a starting linebacker and working alongside Pro Bowl partner Azeez Al-Shaair. Entering the final year of his rookie contract, To'oTo'o has already put together 261 career tackles and established himself as more than just a depth option, the kind of young defender a contender needs to keep growing if it wants to stay in the mix.

What makes him stand out now is the way Houston is asking him to do more than just make plays. To'oTo'o wants to help younger teammates find their footing while still sharpening his own game, a balancing act that comes with the territory when a player reaches this stage of his career. For a Texans team trying to turn progress into something bigger, his focus is squarely on helping push the group toward a Super Bowl run. [Read more 🡒]

Tommy Togiai Earned This Texans Recognition After His 2025 Breakout

Tommy Togiais 2025 season was the kind of climb that tends to get noticed in a building like this. He began the year on the practice squad, then worked his way onto the active roster and carved out a real role on Houstons defensive line, giving the Texans reliable snap-to-snap work in the middle of the defense. For a team that values depth up front, Togiais emergence mattered because it gave them another interior piece they could trust in rotation.

The production followed. Togiai posted the best numbers of his career and became a steady part of the Texans run support, which helped stabilize a group that leaned on multiple bodies throughout the season. The question now is how much of that role carries into 2026, because Houston has added more competition at the position and still has young depth waiting behind him. [Read more 🡒]