Dreams and Nightmares: Texans 2024 Draft

Dreams and Nightmares: Texans 2024 Draft
Battle Red Blog Battle Red Blog

Hold up wait a minute, y’all thought Caserio was finished?

Meek Mill may not be in the Big Three of rappers, but his hit song Dreams and Nightmares is an all time hype up song that was the anthem of 2019.

I wrote this same column in 2022 heading into the draft coverage and thought I could bring this back again as we approach the phase of the pre-draft process that’s all smoke and mirrors. Logistically, nothing will change from now until the draft, unless you’re T’Vondre Sweat at this point....

Jokes aside, Houston is in a good place compared to this time last year. What can put them over the hump is a big win in the draft.

Nightmare: Houston mortgages too much draft capital to move back into the first round. No one expects Houston to use all nine of its draft picks, so there's reason to believe they’ll move up. But will the gnawing sensation of not drafting on night one compel GM Nick Caserio to expend exorbitant draft capital to make it happen? Hopefully not.

Dream: One of the top cornerbacks falls into the second. For some reason I have begun to see Nate Wiggins and Kool-Aid McKinstry available in the second round. If that’s the case come next Friday, the league will be giving Houston an immense favor. Houston would head into next season with two young bona-fide CB1s.

Nightmare: Run on defensive players early in round two. Tyler Nubin, Kamari Lassiter, Edgerrin Cooper, Braden Fiske, T.J. Tampa, Javon Bullard, Kris Jenkins all off the board? Possibly. Yes, there’s plenty of other defenders capable of being drafted at 42, but Houston is hoping to snag an elite, day-1 prospect still hanging around the mid second round. A run on defense after a heavy offense first round would dilute from the pool of prospects Houston can pick from.

Dream: Houston snags a talented running back in the fourth round. RB is a position of value later in the draft - especially in a class where there’s zero consensus on the top seven running backs. Houston could easily draft their second or third ranked back in the fourth round and be set at the position for several seasons.

Nightmare: Houston waits too long to address defensive tackle. Houston has added a handful of DTs during free agent; enough to go into the season with. However, their cumulative upside is limited. This isn’t a fantastic pool of DT prospects, meaning that if a string of them come off the board between Houston’s picks, the players available may not be talented enough to improve upon the current group.

Dream: Offense takes up 65% of the first 41 picks. For the non-math inclined, that's 26-27 picks. Realistically, Houston needs six QBs, 12 offensive lineman, one tight end, and eight wide receivers. That’s extremely do-able given this draft class.

Nightmare: Houston takes another interior offensive lineman on day two. Enough is enough, or is it? The goal is to provide weapons...