On the eve of this year’s draft, the Texans hosted free agent defensive end Dawuane Smoot, per ESPN’s Field Yates. According to Aaron Wilson of KPRC2, Smoot’s visit was “positive,” and the two sides left the door open to an agreement once the draft dust settled.
The Texans were aggressive in the free agent and trade markets this offeason as they attempt to capitalize on the financial freedom that having quarterback C.J. Stroud on his rookie deal affords them. That was especially evident in the club’s approach to its defensive front, as it added players like Foley Fatukasi, Denico Autry, Tim Settle, and Mario Edwards Jr. to the unit while re-signing Derek Barnett and landing one of this year’s biggest free agent fish, Danielle Hunter.
Smoot would presumably compete for reps with Barnett and 2023 fourth-rounder Dylan Horton behind starters Will Anderson and Hunter. The Texans are plenty familiar with Smoot, a longtime cog of the division-rival Jaguars, and his signing would represent a low-risk, high-reward endeavor for the overnight championship contenders.
Now 29, Smoot was selected by Jacksonville in the third round of the 2017 draft. While it took several years for him to find his footing in the professional ranks, he quietly emerged as a consistent pass rusher, collecting 22.5 sacks for the Jags between 2019 and 2022. That included a 2021 campaign in which he started a career-high 10 games and compiled 36 tackles, six sacks, and 16 QB hits.
Smoot unfortunately suffered a torn Achilles towards the end of a similarly productive 2022 season, which proved to be especially poor timing since he was finishing up the two-year, $10MM deal he signed the year before. Smoot lingered on the open market until last July, when he inked a modest one-year pact to remain with the Jaguars. He was promptly placed on the PUP list due to the Achilles injury and did not make his 2023 debut until the middle of October. In 12 games (zero starts), Smoot recorded just one sack and four QB hits.
Still, now that he is over a year removed from the Achilles tear, it is fair to expect him to recapture at least some of the form he displayed during his peak years in Duval. At the very least, he should be able to serve as a useful rotational pass rusher, and he can likely be had for another low-cost contract.
Houston did not add an edge defender until the seventh round of the 2024 draft, when it selected USC product Solomon Byrd. As such, it seems that nothing that…