Houston’s backfield looks a lot different than it did a year ago, but Woody Marks still matters.
That’s the case for the second-year Texans running back landing at No. 19 in the team’s 2026 top-25 rankings. He may not be the headliner in the room anymore, but after what he showed as a rookie, he’s still squarely in the mix as a useful and important piece of the offense.
Marks was a fourth-round pick who got thrown into a much bigger role than expected when Joe Mixon was out with what remains a mysterious foot injury with no exact details available. Houston’s ground game wasn’t exactly lighting the league on fire during that stretch, but Marks made the most of the chances he got.
In 16 games last season, he totaled 196 carries for 703 yards and added 24 catches for 208 yards. He also finished with five total touchdowns. Beyond the numbers, he gave Houston value in more than one way, contributing as a runner, as a receiver, and as a blocker in pass protection.
That’s the key here: the Texans’ rushing attack was still one of the weaker parts of the offense, but Marks’ rookie year was productive anyway. Both things can be true.
Houston’s answer this offseason was to bring in David Montgomery from the Detroit Lions in a trade for a couple of day three picks. That move changes the shape of the depth chart and pushes Marks into the RB2 role when both backs are healthy.
Even with that shift, Marks still brings plenty to the table. He’s an explosive weapon with the ball in his hands, whether he’s running it or catching it. He’s also underrated in pass protection and has the kind of hands and footwork that make him useful on passing downs.
There are limits, too. He doesn’t have the prototypical size for a heavy-usage back, and availability was inconsistent in a number of games last season.
Still, the Texans are in a better spot now than they were when the backfield was thin behind Marks and, at the time, Mixon. Back then, Nick Chubb and Jawhar Jordan were the main options left to lean on, and that wasn’t a particularly appealing setup.
Now Houston has more protection against that kind of problem. Montgomery can take on a much larger share of the workload, and that becomes even more valuable if Marks misses time at any point during the season.
As for what his role looks like in 2026, the expectation is that his touches may dip compared with his rookie year. He’s more likely to be used as a change-of-pace option and third-down back than as the primary early-down or goal-line runner.
But that doesn’t make him less important. If anything, the fit with Montgomery could make Marks even more effective in a narrower role. His burst, his receiving ability, and his value in protection give Houston a back who can stay involved without needing to be the No. 1 guy.
His sophomore season may not be as flashy as his rookie year, but the Texans are better equipped to use him the right way now. That’s why No. 19 feels like the right spot for Woody Marks.
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