Will Derrick Henry continue to torment the Texans with the Ravens?
When Derrick Henry left the Tennessee Titans as an NFL free agent to sign with the Baltimore Ravens in March, the Houston Texans probably didn’t shed any tears.
During his time with the Tennessee Titans, the former Alabama All-American tormented the Texans as perhaps no other running back has any other franchise.
Henry is tied for the NFL record with six 200-yard rushing games. O.J. Simpson and Adrian Peterson also had six apiece of the 163 200-yard rushing games in NFL history.
Ten times, the same player has run for 200 yards against the same team twice, including Henry against the Jacksonville Jaguars.
But only one player has run for 200 yards against the same team more than twice – Henry, who has done so in four games against Houston.
With Henry leaving the division, the Texans could face the Titans twice annually as AFC South rivals without having to play Henry.
But Houston still has to play against Henry this season. The Texans will play the Ravens for the 13th time in franchise history on Wednesday as the second half of the NFL’s Christmas doubleheader, giving Henry the opportunity to add to his 1,431 rushing yards against Houston.
Henry enters Wednesday’s game with 1,636 rushing yards, the second-most in the NFL in 2024.
“I think Derrick has found that fountain of youth,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said. ”He’s playing fast. He’s playing physical. He is tough as ever. Looks like the old Derrick Henry. And he’s low, and he’s playing very powerful. He has some really long runs, long runs for touchdowns, so he has it all — the speed, physicality. Like, he brings it all, and the O-line is doing a really good job of giving him some nice lanes to run through, so it’s going to be a difficult match up for us when it comes to just stopping the run game, probably the best run unit we’ve seen all year.”
The Ravens lead the AFC with 2,718 rushing yards and the NFL with an average gain of 5.7 yards per rushing attempt in 2024.
On Saturday, Henry ran for 162 yards in a 34-17 victory over Pittsburgh that pulled Baltimore into a tie with the Steelers for first place in the AFC North. Both teams have qualified for the postseason, but the one that wins the division title will open the playoffs at home while the other will start on the road.
Houston has secured its postseason spot, too, but already has secured the AFC South title.
The Texans and Ravens will square off at 3:30 p.m. CST Sunday at NRG Stadium in Houston. They play after the Steelers and Kansas City Chiefs meet at noon at Acrisure Stadium in Pittsburgh.
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Mark Inabinett is a sports reporter for Alabama Media Group. Follow him on X at @AMarkG1.