Texans Fans Wont Like Where Outsiders Just Put David Montgomery

As David Montgomery enters a pivotal season, questions arise about his impact on the Houston Texans' backfield alongside emerging talent Woody Marks.

David Montgomery may be the new name in Houston’s backfield, but PFF isn’t exactly rushing to crown him.

Dalton Wasserman and Max Chadwick’s 2026 Running Back Rankings put Montgomery well down the list, even though he’s coming off three productive seasons in Detroit and now steps into a bigger opportunity with the Texans. Jahmyr Gibbs, who was ahead of him on the Lions’ depth chart, checked in at No. 2 overall.

PFF’s write-up on Montgomery was respectful, but hardly glowing: “Montgomery enters his age-29 season coming off of three productive years in Detroit. Though he set new career-lows in carries, rushing yards and missed tackles forced in 2025, Montgomery ranks sixth in the NFL with 33 rushing touchdowns over the past three regular seasons. He’ll continue to play a complementary role in Houston alongside youngster Woody Marks.”

That touchdown total still stands out. Montgomery has scored 33 times on the ground over the last three regular seasons, and Houston is clearly hoping there’s enough left in the tank for him to handle a meaningful role. He’s also expected to share the load with Woody Marks, who was included in PFF’s honorary mentions.

Marks earned his spot after a rookie season that turned heads despite the circumstances. PFF noted: “Woody Marks, Houston Texans

Marks is yet another rookie rusher who shined in 2025. Though he averaged just 3.6 yards per carry behind a suspect offensive line, Marks added much-needed toughness to Houston’s backfield.

He provided his signature performance in the team’s playoff victory over Pittsburgh, as he rushed for a season-high 112 yards and a touchdown. He should form a competent backfield pairing alongside Montgomery.”

Marks’ 3.6 yards per carry wasn’t flashy, but it was enough to make an impression. PFF graded him at 68.8 overall in 2025, which placed him 40th out of 55 eligible running backs. Montgomery finished ahead of him at 20th with a 75.3 grade.

The bigger picture for Montgomery is a career that has already covered a lot of ground. He spent four seasons with the Chicago Bears before three in Detroit, and across seven NFL seasons he has topped 1,000 rushing yards twice and piled up 6,115 career rushing yards.

There’s still a path to a big Houston season if everything clicks. If Montgomery could somehow get back to his 2023 level - 4.6 yards per carry, 1,015 yards and 13 touchdowns in 14 starts - the Texans would have landed a major win. But the more realistic expectation is that both Montgomery and Marks fall short of 1,000 yards in 2026 as the offensive line settles in and the two backs split work.

That workload matters, especially with Joe Mixon’s absence leaving Montgomery with a chance to take on a larger role. Still, this is Year 8 for a back who already has 1,477 carries on his body, and that kind of mileage tends to show up.

So yes, Houston fans can absolutely talk themselves into Montgomery. The production is real, the opportunity is there, and Marks has already shown he can help. But the numbers, the grades and the wear and tear all point in the same direction: this backfield might be useful, but it may not be dominant.

The question now is simple: will Montgomery lead the Texans in rushing in 2026, or will Woody Marks keep making his mark?

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