
Drake Maye's first career start came against the Houston Texans and their vaunted defense.
Maye will get another look at perhaps the finest defense in the NFL on Sunday when the New England Patriots battle the Texans in the AFC divisional round on Sunday at Foxborough, Mass.
Maye is an MVP candidate after starring in his second regular season, but the quarterback relishes that first start against Houston. The Patriots lost 41-21 on Oct. 13, 2024.
"It feels like 10 years ago," Maye said Wednesday. "It's been a long journey. Just taking time to reflect on running out there with the team (and having) first-snap jitters was pretty cool. It's fun to look back on."
Maye was intercepted twice that day while throwing for 243 yards and three touchdowns. That provides a hint at the challenge ahead in trying to help the Patriots advance to the AFC title contest.
"We got our hands full," Maye said. "We know it's going to be a tough game. We have to play the game the right way."
Patriots coach Mike Vrabel also is concerned with the Texans, who led the NFL in total defense and finished second in scoring defense and takeaway margin during the regular season.
"They chase the football and they get a lot of hats to the football," Vrabel said. "They create turnovers. They play physical."
Maye helped lead second-seeded New England to a 16-3 victory over the Los Angeles Chargers, the franchise's first postseason win since Super Bowl LIII against the Los Angeles Rams. He passed for 268 yards and one touchdown and was intercepted once.
Maye was sacked five times and this week's matchup features Houston pass rushers Danielle Hunter and Will Anderson Jr., known for their speed and relentless style.
Texans coach DeMeco Ryans -- a former two-time Pro Bowl linebacker -- is concerned about the foot speed of Maye, who had 66 yards on 10 rushes against the Chargers.
"Where he's taking that next step is his ability to escape the pocket," Ryans said Wednesday. "I think it really doesn't get talked about much, but his athletic ability, his ability to escape the pocket has been really clutch for them. He's made some big runs to really hurt a lot of defenses, so we have to be conscious of that."
The fifth-seeded Texans advanced with a 30-6 road victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers on Monday night.
Sheldon Rankins returned a fumble for a touchdown after Anderson's strip-sack of Aaron Rodgers and Calen Bullock intercepted Rodgers' final pass of the game and returned it for a score. The Texans allowed just 175 total yards and 13 first downs.
Quarterback C.J. Stroud passed for 250 yards and a touchdown but was sloppy with three turnovers (one interception, two lost fumbles).
Stroud admitted he must be better with ball protection. He's now focused on notching a second straight playoff win in a tough road atmosphere.
"I think last week was a good test for us," Stroud said. "I think being able to get past that with a ‘W,' this next week is going to be the same type of environment -- loud."
Regardless, Houston has the opportunity to reach the AFC Championship Game for the first time in franchise history.
"I don't take it lightly to be one of the final four teams left in the AFC," Ryans said. "It's where you want to be, it's the position you want to be in if you're a competitor and I'm a true competitor."
It appears Houston won't have Nico Collins on Sunday. The three-time 1,000-yard receiver sustained a concussion during the Monday night game and was one of four Texans to miss practice Wednesday. The others are defensive end Denico Autry (knee), offensive tackle Trent Brown (ankle) and receiver Justin Watson (concussion). Autry has blocked 14 kicks in his career.
Sitting out for New England were offensive tackles Morgan Moses and Thayer Munford Jr., both with knee ailments. Cornerback Christian Gonzalez remains in concussion protocol after being hurt against the Chargers. Vrabel is hopeful Gonzalez will be cleared by Sunday.
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