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Rotoworld

  • SEA Tight End #88
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    Seahawks signed TE Harrison Bryant, formerly of the Texans.
    Bryant is a former fourth-round pick of the Browns, spending the first four years of his career in Cleveland and the last two years with the Raiders and Texans. As a receiver, Bryant is yet to surpass 300 yards receiving in a single season with the bulk of his production coming in tandem with David Njoku in Cleveland. He can line up inline and in the slot while his blocking is also a serviceable trait. Bryant was depth for the Texans last season, seeing just four targets in the regular season but five targets in the post-season amid injuries to the tight end room. The Seahawks will add him as depth to a room featuring A.J. Barner, Elijah Arroyo, and Eric Saubert.
  • HOU Linebacker #0
    Texans signed LB Azeez Al-Shaair to a three-year, $54 million contract extension.
    Al-Shaair was set to play out the final year of his current contract this season. Instead, Houston keeps him locked in with a long-term deal. Al-Shaair has been with the Texans for two years, starting all 27 regular season games he has been active for. In 2025, Al-Shaair totaled two interceptions, one forced fumble, and a team-high 103 combined tackles.
  • HOU Cornerback
    Texans signed Stanford CB Collin Wright.
    Wright (6'0"/188) was a three-year starter at Stanford, manning the perimeter in his sophomore and senior campaigns. He operated as an inside-outside coverage defender in 2024 and led the Cardinal in passes defended (five) and interceptions (three). Wright participated in the vertical jump (39”) at the NFL Scouting Combine. His inside-outside versatility should help him secure an NFL roster spot.
  • HOU Wide Receiver
    Texans signed Incarnate Word WR Jalen Walthall.
    Walthall spent three unproductive seasons at Hawaii before transferring to Incarnate Word in 2024. He posted a career-best receiving line, 85/1,290/14, that year, setting his new school’s single-season receiving yards record along the way. He measured 6’1/191 and produced a 10’1 broad jump at the NFL Scouting Combine before leaping to a 38.5” vertical jump at Incarante Word’s Pro Day. Walthall earned first-team All-SLC honors in each of the past two seasons and earned first-team All-American honors in 2025 despite missing two games with a shoulder injury. He has a chance to make the active roster.
  • HOU Running Back
    Texans signed Oregon RB Noah Whittington.
    Whittington (5’8”/205) is a sixth-year back who started his career at Western Kentucky in 2020. As a sophomore, he posted a 102-619-2 rushing line while averaging an impressive 6.1 YPC, and averaged over 6.0 YPC in three of his seasons, although one was an abbreviated 2023 campaign at Oregon due to a torn ACL. Whittington is a short, compact runner who looks like a bowling ball going through the defense, but he lacks the explosiveness to break to the second level and has an average missed-tackle force rate of 19.1 percent. Whitington never handled a true bell cow workload at Oregon, and profiles as a rotational back. In 44 career games with the Ducks, he averaged just 10.9 touches per game. What value he has in the passing game is more as a blocker than a receiver, as he never totaled more than 169 receiving yards in a season despite finishing his career with 88 receptions. Per Dane Brugler’s The Beast,’ Whitington is described by scouts as an “all-football guy.” He won’t earn a meaningful role as a rookie out of camp, but his willingness to play special teams and ability as a kick returner (19 career kick returns) give him multiple avenues to earn a roster spot.
  • HOU Linebacker
    Texans selected Indiana LB Aiden Fisher with the No. 243 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
    Fisher spent two seasons at James Madison, earning third-team All-SBC honors in 2023. He followed head coach Curt Cignetti from James Madison to Indiana in 2024 and, per The Athletic’s Dane Brugler, became the first Indiana linebacker to earn All-American honors, notching first-team spots in both 2024 and 2025. He earned first-team All-Big Ten honors in both seasons as well. A lingering left knee injury cost him one game last year. In his final college season, Fisher, 22, totaled 97 tackles, 10.5 TFLs, 4.5 sacks, one forced fumble, one pass defended and two interceptions. He stands 6’1/232 and contributed on special teams in all four college seasons.
  • HOU Wide Receiver
    Texans selected Boston College WR Lewis Bond with the No. 204 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
    Spending all five of his college seasons at Boston College, Bond(5’11/190) enters the NFL as the Eagles’ all-time receptions leader. His highest-volume season was as a redshirt senior in 2025, tallying 88 receptions for 993 yards and a touchdown. Bond is a fluid route-runner whose compact frame gives him balance and the ability to drive through contact after the catch. Though he is not a fast downfield runner nor does he have a large frame to make contested catches, Bond can excel in the intermediate area with quick-game route-running. At the next level, Bond profiles best as a ball-carrier in space. With a few years of practice reps, Bond could emerge as an underneath option for C.J. Stroud.
  • HOU Safety
    Texans selected USC S Kamari Ramsey with the No. 141 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
    Ramsey (6’0/202) is a versatile defensive back who logged 235 coverage snaps in 2025, allowing just 6 receptions on 14 targets (42.9 percent) for 32 yards and a laudable 0.14 yards per coverage snap, illustrating high-end efficiency in underneath assignments. The former multi-spot safety translated smoothly into nickel usage, pairing disciplined eyes with quick route recognition while adding 3 PBUs and a 14.3 percent forced incompletion rate. Ramsey also contributed 32 tackles with a strong 94.1percent tackle rate, though his 40.6 percent run-defense involvement and limited 1 run stop highlight modest box impact. Athletically, he brings a solid 8.48 RAS with 4.47s speed (89th percentile) and a 36-inch vertical (70th percentile), giving him enough range to survive in split-safety shells but with some stiffness that shows when transitioning in space. Ramsey projects as a scheme-versatile DB2/DB3 who fits best in zone-heavy systems where his processing speed and efficiency can shine, though durability concerns and average change-of-direction cap his upside.
  • HOU Linebacker
    Texans selected Clemson LB Wade Woodaz with the No. 123 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
    Woodaz, 22, was a rangy, productive four-year player and two-plus-year starter who wore the green dot at Clemson. In 2024, Woodaz totaled 83 tackles, 10 TFLs, three sacks, three forced fumbles, six passes defended and three interceptions. In 2025, he totaled 70 tackles, seven TFLs, 0.5 sacks and three passes defended. He should contribute right away on special teams and could eventually compete for a starting role.
  • LAC Tackle
    Chargers traded up with the Texans to select Memphis OT Travis Burke with the No. 117 overall pick in the 2026 NFL Draft.
    Burke (6’9/325) spent four years at Gardner-Webb and FIU before landing at Memphis for a career year. He had primarily been a left tackle before 2025, but the Tigers flipped him to the right side, a move that may have earned Burke a shot at playing in the pros. He allowed just 13 pressures on 429 pass-pro snaps. It was the fewest pressures he had allowed in a single season despite logging the second-most pass-blocking snaps of his career. Burke plays with power in the run game and isn’t easily moved off his spot as a pass-protector. However, defenders can find success by getting under his lengthy frame. A lack of lateral speed could also be an issue at the next level. Burke is facing a big step up in competition, going from the AAC to the NFL. It will take him some time to acclimate, but Burke’s combination of size and power should earn him a shot at a starting job at some point. The Chargers acquired the No. 117 overall pick from the Texans in exchange for the Nos. 123 and 204 overall picks.