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Three to Watch: Key Matchups in Patriots vs. Texans Divisional Round Playoff Clash

The Patriots welcome the Houston Texans and their potent defense for the Divisional Round playoff game.

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Fresh off a resilient Wild Card win over the Chargers, the Patriots are on to the Divisional Round, where they'll face another AFC contender in the Houston Texans. Houston enters playing some of their best football of the season, having won their last 10 games, and they boast one of the NFL's elite defenses.

The Texans represent the biggest challenge the Patriots have faced this season. Their defense smothered Pittsburgh last week in their Wild Card game, showcasing exactly why they rank among the league's elite by most important metrics.

The Patriots, meanwhile, continue to ride the ascendence of Drake Maye and a defense finding its postseason stride. Maye had two turnovers against Los Angeles, but thanks to a defense that allowed just three points, and a late touchdown throw to Hunter Henry that put the game out of reach, the Pats advanced. They'll need to be even better this week to do it again.

With a trip to the AFC Championship Game on the line, here are the three keys that will determine whether New England keeps its season alive.

1. Protect the Edges

This is the story of the game.

Houston's defense is one of the league's true nightmares. They rank 2nd in DVOA, 2nd in points allowed, 1st in total yards allowed, and 6th on third down. The Texans have blue-chip talent at every level, but their calling card is their bookend defensive ends. Danielle Hunter and Will Anderson Jr. are violent, disruptive, and create consistent pressure. Together, they combined for 27 sacks this season, wrecking gameplans by winning quickly off the edge, collapsing pockets, and forcing quarterbacks into hurried decisions.

"I think there's talent, length, and effort," said Mike Vrabel of the duo this week. "If they get blocked, they don't stay blocked long."

After handling the Chargers front last week, the Patriots offensive line now faces a very different challenge: Houston doesn't spin the dial schematically; they win with speed and aggressiveness, with all 11 players knowing where to be and flying to the ball.

Patriots offensive coordinator Josh McDaniels will have plenty of tools at his disposal to keep the Houston defense from taking control of the game. Having tight ends to chip the edges or incorporating more heavy personnel could slow down Anderson and Hunter, as could moving pockets or letting Maye do damage with his legs.

Most important is avoiding the kind of game-changing turnovers that the Texans are so good at forcing. They forced 10 fumbles and grabbed 19 interceptions this season, the second-highest takeaway sum in the NFL.

2. Maye's Day

Everything starts with protection, but Maye's decision-making and outlet usage will matter just as much.

Houston plays a healthy amount of zone coverage (14th in frequency), but mixes in enough man looks (19th) to challenge route timing and force young quarterbacks to find who is separating. Their secondary is fast, physical, and extremely competitive at the catch point. Derek Stingley Jr., Kamari Lassiter, and Jalen Pitre lead one of the most aggressive secondaries in football, and they all play within the defense.

"The thing about the Texans is what they do, they're good at it," said Maye this week. "They're really good at it… They play some man coverage. They play some zone. They've got eyes on the quarterback. They've got eyes on creating turnovers."

Maye can also expect the Texans to take a page from the Chargers and aim squarely at taking Stefon Diggs out of the game, especially on third down. Houston will rotate coverage toward him, drop coverage players out underneath him, and dare Maye to consistently look elsewhere.

This is where the Patriots must evolve. Kayshon Boutte, Pop Douglas, and Kyle Williams all need to be active participants, especially on short underneath concepts.

The tight ends and backs will be important as well. Last week, Hunter Henry delivered New England's only touchdown and continues to serve as a valuable safety outlet. Austin Hooper was inches from scoring as well and has come through in some timely spots this season. Getting Rhamondre Stevenson and TreVeyon Henderson the ball in space might just be the Patriots most effective way to mitigate the Texans pass rush while hunting for big plays.

If the Patriots want to advance, Maye must get the ball out on time, take the yardage Houston will concede underneath, and lean on his depth pieces to keep drives alive. The Texans are too good to beat with one option.

3. Effort and Finish Personified, Again

The Patriots defense is coming off arguably its finest performance of the season, a Wild Card effort that set the tone early and kept Justin Herbert from ever finding a rhythm. It was the kind of disciplined, energized defensive showing that travels in January, and they'll need every ounce of it again this week against C.J. Stroud and a Texans offense that hunts explosive plays.

Stroud is one of the NFL's most efficient downfield passers, and Houston's passing game thrives on calculated deep shots. That makes explosive‑play prevention the name of the game, and the Patriots job could be a little less difficult with the anticipated absence of Nico Collins, who suffered a concussion in the Wild Card round. Still, rookie Jayden Higgins is a big, athletic player who has the downfield speed to be a game-changer.

The Patriots secondary did a great job last week preventing big plays, and it will be just as vital this week.

"[Stroud]'s athletic enough to extend, but also the pocket presence that you want," said Vrabel this week. "He can turn his back to the defense, come out of there, and throw play action. Does a good job on a boot game. He keeps his eyes downfield. He's accurate. So, he kind of gives you a little bit of both as far as the ability to extend plays, but always keeping his eyes down the field."

The Patriots pass rush needs to be as disruptive as they were against the Chargers. The Steelers forced Stroud into plenty of mistakes last week. If the Patriots can repeat that performance, it will give New England a big advantage.

Against Herbert last week, the Patriots generated pressure without getting burned thanks to synced-up coverage and rush. That same approach is crucial now, not only to hurry Stroud's internal clock but to avoid giving him easy escape lanes. Stroud is not a run‑first quarterback, but he is more than capable of hurting opponents when plays break down.

To win, the defense must play with the same urgency they showed in the Wild Card round, rallying to the football, and forcing Stroud into the kinds of tight-window throws that even elite young quarterbacks can miss under playoff pressure.

Another full‑unit performance, another week of "no naps" and "all cylinders," and New England will give themselves every chance to punch their ticket to Championship Weekend.

DISCLAIMER: The views and thoughts expressed in this article are those of the writer and don't necessarily reflect those of the organization. Read Full Disclaimer

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