Nico Collins keeps showing why he’s become the kind of wideout NFL evaluators love to build around.
ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler polled NFL coaches, executives and scouts for his Top 10 wide receivers, and Collins landed at No. 8 - ahead of names like A.J. Brown, Davante Adams, Malik Nabors and Mike Evans. Around the league, the Texans receiver is being viewed as the prototype: big, strong, fast and dependable in the moments that matter.
“As one personnel exec with an NFL team put it, Collins has the traits that you would draw up if building a receiver from scratch.
'Combination of size, strength and speed, route running, hands and ball skills,' the executive said. 'Can make plays when contested and is physical after the catch.'
That reputation fits the production. Collins has put together three straight 1,000-yard receiving seasons with C.J.
Stroud at quarterback, tying for the longest streak in Texans history. Last season, about 25% of his catches went for 20 or more yards, and he tied for second in the league with five receptions of 40-plus yards.
He’s also been one of the more reliable targets in the game. Collins averaged 15.0 yards per reception over his five-year career, and his 1.7% drop rate - two drops on 119 targets - ranked seventh among receivers with at least 100 targets last season.
That consistency mattered for Houston during a season that brought plenty of turbulence at receiver because of injuries and new role players. Even with the upheaval around him, Collins stayed steady and gave the Texans a mainstay in the room.
The offense had its limitations when the Texans last took the field, but Collins wasn’t one of them. He helped carry his share of the load during a 12-win regular season, then was part of the group that beat the Pittsburgh Steelers in the AFC Wild Card game before Houston fell to the New England Patriots in the AFC Divisional Round.
There’s already buzz in Houston about an improved offensive line, and that could open the door for even more from Collins and the Texans offense. For now, the confidence starts with the receiver himself. The Texans know what they have in him, and Collins will be aiming for a career-best season in 2026.
In Other News...
C.J. Stroud Just Put The Texans In A Franchise Defining Spot
The Texans have reached the kind of quarterback crossroads that can shape a franchise for years, with C.J. Stroud now sitting at the center of a decision that goes well beyond routine contract talks. Houston can try to lock him in on a long-term extension, but the fact that a trade is even part of the conversation shows how high the stakes are for a team that still views itself as building around a young passer.
League reaction to Strouds market is split, which is part of what makes this so tricky for Houston to sort through. He has already shown enough in the regular season to draw serious interest, but his uneven postseason and the lingering question of whether he can become more than a solid starter leave evaluators divided, and any team trying to pry him loose would likely need to pay in draft capital and commit to him financially for the long haul. [Read more 🡒]
Will Anderson Sends Clear Message After Texans Painful Playoff Exit
After the Texans run ended with a loss to the New England Patriots in the AFC Divisional Round, Will Anderson Jr. was already looking ahead. Speaking at his football camp, the defensive end said the teams attention has shifted to what comes next, with a clear emphasis on putting the disappointment of the previous season behind them and building toward 2026 with bigger expectations.
Anderson pointed to the way the whole roster has approached the offseason as a sign of where this group is headed, noting the work being done across offense, defense and special teams. He also liked what he saw from the rookies during OTAs, which only adds to the sense that Houston is trying to turn an early playoff exit into fuel for the next step. [Read more 🡒]
Calen Bullock Just Entered A Different Tier For Texans Fans
Calen Bullocks rise has gone from promising to hard to ignore, and it now has national validation to go with it. ESPN senior NFL reporter Jeremy Fowler included the Texans safety in his top 10 ranking for 2026, the first time Bullock has cracked that tier, a notable step for a player whose reputation has been built on range, instincts and a knack for finding the football.
Across his first two seasons, Bullock has already piled up nine interceptions, and league sources clearly see the turnover creation as the defining trait in his game. His tackling has been viewed as adequate to average, but for evaluators around the league, the ability to erase mistakes and flip possessions is carrying more weight than the rough edges, which is exactly why his stock keeps climbing. [Read more 🡒]
