NFL.com: Justin Houston Is Colts' Most 'Underappreciated' Player

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Mar 19, 2019
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Currently, Houston is eighth in the NFL among active players in career sacks (89.5), 13th in tackles for loss (109) and is tied for 15th in forced fumbles (16), which has resulted in four Pro Bowls and one First-Team All-Pro nod.


So, like Frelund said, how can one of the most notable pass rushers of the last decade still be underappreciated?


Well, many people thought that when the Chiefs let Houston go that he may not have much left in the tank, but he bounced back in his first season with the Colts in 2019 with his best performance since 2014.


That 2014 season was a historic one for Houston, whose 22.0 sacks fell just a half-sack short of tying Michael Strahan's all-time NFL single season record.


After that season, though, Houston found some bad luck in the injury department. He didn't play all 16 games in any of the next four seasons, and he averaged just 7.5 sacks per season over that time. While those are satisfactory numbers for many players, it was below the standard that Houston had set earlier in his career.


Then the 2019 offseason arrived, and Houston became a salary cap casualty for the Chiefs, landing him in the Colts' lap.


The change of scenery appeared to be exactly what Houston needed, as he finished with double-digit sacks for the first time in five years, completing his first season in Indy with 11 sacks.


He had a stretch of six games in a row from Weeks 5-10 with at least one sack, totaling seven during that span. He wound up as one of 18 NFL defenders to reach double-digit sacks on the 2019 season.


Houston's total numbers on the season were 44 tackles (13 for loss), 11 sacks, two forced fumbles, three fumbles recovered, 18 quarterback hits and one safety.


And while Father Time is undefeated, there's nothing indicating the 2020 season is the year that Houston begins to slow down.


In fact, a huge acquisition that the Colts made this offseason could help Houston stay productive and consistently leave him with one-on-one matchups and fewer double teams.


In March, the Colts traded for defensive tackle DeForest Buckner, who is widely considered among the top interior defenders in the league. The attention that both Buckner and Houston will command should provide the two of them, and those around them, with plenty of opportunities to disrupt opposing offensive lines week in and week out.


"I mean, Justin is one of the best in the game," Buckner told reporters about his new linemate recently. "He is a talented player against the run and obviously against the pass. I mean, he is a quarterback's worst nightmare."
 
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