Braddock column: Texans' hubris could be their undoing

Jayson Braddock

Braddock column: Texans' hubris could be their undoing image

As we all know, the word “fan” comes from “fanatic." The definition of a fanatic is “Marked by excessive enthusiasm and often intense uncritical devotion.” 

It used to be frowned upon in the sports industry to show your rooting interest when covering the team. The social media age has allowed a new age of coverage where open fandom from reporters is not only allowed but celebrated from the local markets and hated by 31 others. 

We’ve seen the new-age coverage bleed over into trained professionals. The open rooting for their favorite team on live broadcasts. When Rich Eisen and Mike Greenberg talk about the Jets for the 1,000,000 time on a national broadcast, don’t pretend that 31 fanbases and the majority of the audience aren’t rolling their eyes or turning channels. 

Is that what you want to hear as an audience? Eisen and Greenberg may be great men and extremely talented, but their open fandom at the level they’ve raised to in the industry is off-putting to most media. Although, most media wouldn’t call out some of the biggest names for fear of backlash. The truth is the truth.

The acceptance at the top level has led to trickle-down effects to every local market. What’s my issue with it? It makes it extremely difficult to provide actual coverage of the good, the bad, the strengths and the weaknesses. Fans now only want the “muffin top." Negative stories and issues get brushed over or go uncovered.

Give them only the sweet, ignore the sour ... until it becomes a national storyline, then you can cover it. I prefer the old-school method of covering the team with no bias and reporting the concerns along with the celebratory storylines.

National attention on Stroud's comments

Here's a few videos and an article on some of the talk surrounding C.J. Stroud's talk this offseason. There's plenty of critical articles and videos, nationally, that view Stroud's comments as troublesome.

This is a very small sample size of what's available from the outside view on the 22-year old, quarterback.

Pro Football Talk

Speak

Pat McAfee Show with J.J. Watt

CBS Sports

Texans' hubris could be their undoing

The pro-team coverage and the national praise this offseason really has left Caserio and yes, even second-year stud quarterback C.J. Stroud feeling themselves.

This isn’t going to be popular as none of the group can do any wrong this offseason and speaking ill of Caserio and Stroud in Houston can only be seen as a “hater.” 

But, if we moved on from the juvenile social media labels on takes and actually separated ourselves from the insanity that is fandom, then you could actually see a reason for concern. 

Texans' world media tour puts them in bigger spotlight ... for better and for worse

If I could give the Texans organization a bit of professional, stern advice that is meant in their best interest it would be: “Kindly, STFU!” 

Yes, the Texans had a great turnaround, rookie class, playoff run and everything else that has been reported this offseason. Texans fans loved seeing Stroud in Tokyo, filming videos with Cowboys pass rusher Micah Parsons, talking about the Colts’ linebackers, Aaron Rodgers, giving his top-5 quarterback rankings and everything else he’s done.

Now, it’s not only Stroud, Nick Caserio is getting shots off at something as trivial as how teams respond after making draft selections? The fanbase in Houston is eating it up. “Way to go, Nick!” Why? What’s the benefit of saying it? Why talk down other teams, GMs for something so meaningless just to prop up your style of calling draft picks?

 

But for fans, any content that makes the team look good in their eyes is good. Meanwhile, tell me what other franchise has a 22-year old kid talking down on everyone and a general manager doing the same.

What has Houston accomplished again? Another AFC South championship, sure, followed by another one-win in the playoff followed by a loss.

“Oh, Jayson, it’s about this year and the future!” Even after all of the offseason additions, Houston is considered the fourth or fifth-best team ... in the AFC. Honestly, getting past what they did in 2023 is going to be a challenge. They’ll have up to six new starters on defense. 

I hate to be the one to say this but someone has to: Stop talking and do something that has never been done in Houston. This false bravado from an organization that is talking before ever winning anything is a turnoff to those not blinded by fandom and to everyone outside the city of Houston.

The 11 games Houston won this past year, including the playoffs, matched the 11 they won in the three years prior in totality. Now, you win one playoff game at home against an almost 40-year-old Joe Flacco and you run your mouth to the world like you’ve accomplished something. 

It’s a turnoff to everyone who is not a Texans fan. Now, this is the part where you ignore everything I wrote and reply back, “Who cares about non-Texans fans!”... and don’t forget to add a laughing emoji to drive home your point.

Jayson Braddock

Jayson Braddock Photo

Jayson Braddock has been covering the Houston Texans since 2009. He previously worked in Houston sports radio at SportsTalk 790 and ESPN 97.5, along with co-hosting on SiriusXM Fantasy. Braddock graduated from the Sports Management Worldwide “Football GM & Scouting” course back in 2009, which was led by former NFL personnel man, John Wooten and former NFL scout Russ Lande. Since leaving the course, Jayson has been evaluating college prospects and NFL talent for different media companies, including RotoExperts, Scout and DrRoto to name a few.