For CJ Stroud, there’s no sugarcoating it anymore—protection isn’t a luxury, it’s survival. After taking 52 sacks last season—second-most in the NFL—the face of H-Town’s franchise has had enough. “Everything starts up front. Whether it’s the run game or pass protection… that competition across the line has been really good.” Stroud wasn’t politicking when he said that. He knows, especially with Nick Caley calling plays now and DeMeco Ryans pulling the strings, this offensive line better show up—or else everything else collapses. And Ryans? He just made a bold move.
To that point, the Texans just locked in their final rookie from the 2025 draft class. Aireontae Ersery (48th overall – one of the second-round holdouts), a towering 6-foot-6, 331-pound mauler out of Minnesota, signed his four-year, $9.2 million deal. A former Big Ten OL of the Year, Ersery brings serious juice and has already rotated with the starters. Not just at right tackle against Blake Fisher—but also on the left side filling in for Cam Robinson. The fact that he’s getting first-team snaps this early? That’s not a coincidence. The coaches are watching, and the message is clear—competition’s wide open.
Meanwhile, DeMeco Ryans isn’t hiding his early praise. “Ersery, he’s done a great job,” Ryans said. “The biggest thing with Ersery is getting acclimated to learning what it takes to be a pro. I see Ersery, he’s steadily gotten better at the things off the field, of finding his routine, and also on the field, just seeing his footwork, his pad leverage, is getting better, it’s improving.” But with all eyes on Ersery, someone else in the trenches is running out of time. That someone? Juice Scruggs.
Now, speaking of urgency, no one’s facing more heat than Scruggs. As Texans insider Cody Stoots put it bluntly, “Scruggs has been a disappointment from a second-round pick to a player that has not locked down and solidified the center spot for the Houston Texans.” That’s about as real as it gets. Last season, Scruggs started 13 games, played 871 snaps, and earned a 64.2 PFF grade. Decent? Maybe. But reliable? Not really.
Credits: Imagn
“He didn’t even play center his rookie year,” Stoots added. “He was going to be the starting center last year… it was okay to bad most of the time.” And now? He’s in a three-way fight with Jared Patterson and Jake Andrews. Both of them snapped at center before Scruggs during OTAs. At most, he might be a backup guard, though even that’s uncertain. With Laken Tomlinson and Titus Howard ahead of him, he’s battling just to stay on the 53.
Ultimately, as Stoots summed it up, “he should have the opportunities both at center and guard to find himself a potential starting spot and if not a backup spot but I wouldn’t be really confident in telling you that Juice Scruggs is going to be on the 53-man roster for this Houston Texans team.”
Versatility helps, sure—but it’s not unique. In H-Town’s trenches this summer, it’s put up or pack up.
CJ Stroud’s blindside now in the hands of a $100 million experiment
Let’s be clear—this isn’t your average offensive line rebuild. The Bayou City’s front office didn’t just reshuffle a few pieces. They ripped out the cornerstone, Laremy Tunsil, and stitched together a whole new unit out of veterans like Cam Robinson, Trent Brown, and Laken Tomlinson. Mix in Titus Howard’s $56 million deal and two feisty rookies, Blake Fisher and Aireontae Ersery, and you’ve got a full-on overhaul. The gamble? Bold. The stakes? Massive.
Naturally, the money tells the story. Houston’s brass committed over $100 million to this new wall, and yet, there’s more uncertainty than ever. And Albert Breer nailed it, saying, “If it comes together, this could be a Super Bowl team. If it falls apart, look out.” That’s the weight CJ Stroud carries into year three. He’s already conquered life’s toughest trenches—from family hardship to NFL history books. But even “Cool Breeze” can’t create miracles if he’s flat on his back every other snap.
On top of that, Nick Caley’s scheme—lifted from the Sean McVay school of motion-heavy madness—demands time. Time for Kirk to cook in the slot, time for Collins to break open downfield, time that Stroud needs to drop dimes like the playoff-sealer against Cleveland or that 75-yard bomb to Collins against the Colts. And time doesn’t come cheap—it comes with protection. And that leads to the real questions—can this unit gel? Can Robinson stay healthy? Can Fisher or Ersery rise quicker than expected?
That distant Lombardi dream waits. H-Town’s counting on the trenches. They paid for Stroud’s wall. Now it has to stand tall.
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