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Pushing the Envelope: NFL Mailbag, Week 5

You've got questions. I've got answers. If not, I'll make them up. Each Thursday at 1 p.m. EST, I answer your queries on all things related to the NFL. If you have a question, send it over to NFLMailbag@gmail.com. Don't forget to include your name and location. Click here for the archives. Rock'n'roll.

How bad will the Colts beat the Texans on Sunday? Also, will the Texans win a game this year? Matt Schaub got in tune with the game for a while last week but he is so inconsistent. I think it's time for him to take a hike and take Gary Kubiak with him.
- Ward77029, Texas

Oh ye of little faith. The Texans won't continue to slide into the 2008 twilight. While the Dolphins and Rams last year offered legitimate hope for an 0-16 season, the Texans are simply too talented to continue losing, and I think it comes together this week in what most would consider a shocker. Schaub did begin to harmonize last week, and though the Colts defense is offering a remarkably stout pass defense, they're also now missing Bob Sanders, and if we've learned anything about the Colts it's that their defense relies quite heavily on that tiny young man. Add in a remarkable Texans front four that will be playing against a Colts line that will be missing Tony Ugoh and Ryan Lilja (though the line has done a good patchwork job of protecting Peyton Manning, they've been awful on the ground, and they haven't played a unit like this), and I like the increasingly-healthy Texans' chances of getting in the win column this week. Added motivation? I don't care what Bob McNair says, the Texans have a chip on their shoulder after Jerrah equated the fourth-largest city in America with Mayberry.

NFL Offseason Roadmap: New Orleans Saints

NFL Offseason Roadmap is a series focused on the needs of NFL teams as they begin the offseason.

1. Defensive Tackle/Linebacker/Cornerback
. I know this reeks of a cop-out, and I guess you're right. But every time I think that the Saints need one of these positions over the others, I change my mind. On one hand you've got defensive tackle, where Hollis Thomas, the only true nose tackle, is 34 and playing year-to-year. He's consistent against the run and pass, but can't play a full game anymore. The rest of the tackles are just adequate, and starting 3-tech Brian Young's a free agent who probably won't be back. Then there's linebacker, which features just two players, because middle linebacker Mark Simoneau has no impact whatsoever. Scott Shanle ain't no prize, neither. Finally, there's cornerback. The crew, outside of Mike McKenzie, is terrible (admittedly, with faint hints of promise). And McKenzie's torn ACL should keep him out until October at earliest. So you decide which is worse off.

I don't expect the Saints to go after any of the marquee free agents at these positions, but I wouldn't be surprised to see under-the-radar signings like Corey Williams or Drayton Florence. Most of the improvement will come in the draft. I'm all for Sedrick Ellis in the first, even if the Saints have to move up a few spots from 10 to get him. This is a deep draft for linebackers, which is helpful, and good young corners like Dominique Rodgers-Cromartie will be available after the first round.

NFL Offseason Roadmap: New York Jets


NFL Offseason Roadmap is a series focused on the needs of NFL teams as they begin the offseason.


The offseason roadmap for the New York Jets isn't hard to follow. They need to get better, pretty much everywhere. Some areas have more urgent needs than others. A failure to upgrade them would doom the team to a 2008 as dark as 2007 while others require more modest improvements that will make the team a more potent one.

1. Offensive Line – The problems with this unit started in training camp when the team failed to settle a squabble with Pete Kendall and traded him to the Redskins. The loss of their most experienced blocker threw the line into disarray. Adrian Clarke, his replacement, was awful and offered no help to the running game or the pass blocking. Anthony Clement, the right tackle, was almost as poor and the Jets need to upgrade the talent at each position.

Jets Need an Offensive Line for Christmas

We didn't learn anything new about the Jets in yesterday's 10-6 loss to the Titans. We knew they couldn't run the ball before Albert Haynesworth used Thomas Jones for target practice. We also knew they couldn't protect the quarterback before Kyle Vanden Bosch sacked Chad Pennington three times. Taken in tandem, those two things make it clear what the Jets number one offseason priority must be. Forget about Darren McFadden and Matt Ryan. Drafting them without massively upgrading the offensive line would be like buying a Porsche and outfitting it with bald tires and leaded gasoline.

That doesn't mean the Jets shouldn't draft an impact offensive player, however. They have money to spend under the cap and there are several appealing free agents to be on the offensive line. Alan Faneca, Ryan Lilja and Jake Scott are three guards who would represent a quantum leap on the Jets front while Jordan Gross and Max Starks deserve a look at tackle.

Mike Tannenbaum hasn't shown much proclivity for the free agent market since assuming the GM job but he needs to change course. They were playing practice squadders yesterday and it's a wonder Pennington didn't get killed. If the Jets are going to improve on this dreadful season, they must do everything they can to make their offensive line a wall instead of a sieve.

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