Key Takeaways
- Historic Win: The Texans secured the first road playoff victory in franchise history, moving to 1-6 all-time in away postseason games.
- Defensive Masterclass: Houston’s defense outscored the entire Steelers offense, recording two touchdowns via a fumble recovery and a pick-six.
- The Rodgers Watch: At 42, Aaron Rodgers hinted at retirement after a 146-yard performance that ended with a defensive touchdown.
PITTSBURGH — The Houston Texans didn’t just win a football game on Monday night; they dismantled a legacy. Led by a relentless pass rush and opportunistic secondary, Houston throttled the Pittsburgh Steelers 30-6 in the AFC Wild Card round. The victory at Acrisure Stadium marks the Texans’ first-ever road playoff win and sends them into a Divisional Round showdown against the New England Patriots.
The Fourth Quarter Avalanche
While the first half was a 7-6 defensive grind, the fourth quarter belonged entirely to DeMeco Ryans’ squad. The floodgates opened when Will Anderson Jr. blew past the Pittsburgh offensive line, strip-sacking Aaron Rodgers. Sheldon Rankins scooped the loose ball and thundered 33 yards into the end zone, extending the lead to 17-6.
Houston’s offense, despite three turnovers from C.J. Stroud, found its rhythm late. Rookie running back Woody Marks delivered the dagger with a 13-yard touchdown run, capping a night where he tallied 112 rushing yards. The final insult came on Rodgers’ last attempt of the night: a desperate heave intercepted by safety Calen Bullock, who returned it 50 yards for a touchdown to make it a 30-6 rout.
Pittsburgh’s offense was non-existent. The Steelers managed only 175 total yards and went 2-of-14 on third downs. Rodgers finished 17-of-33 for 146 yards, looking physically spent against a Houston front that registered four sacks and double-digit pressures.
Box Score Breakdown
| Stat Category | Houston Texans | Pittsburgh Steelers |
|---|---|---|
| Total Yards | 368 | 175 |
| Passing Yards | 250 (Stroud) | 146 (Rodgers) |
| Rushing Yards | 112 (Marks) | 29 |
| Turnovers | 3 | 2 |
What They Said
“Our defense is the engine. When the offense was struggling to hold onto the ball early, those guys stood in the gap. Scoring two touchdowns on that side of the ball? That’s winning football.” — DeMeco Ryans, Texans Head Coach
“I’m 42 and on a one-year deal. I’ll take some time to step away and see what the future holds, but this isn’t the way anyone wants to go out.” — Aaron Rodgers, Steelers Quarterback
What’s Next: A Date in Foxborough
The Texans now travel to Gillette Stadium to face the New England Patriots in the Divisional Round. While Stroud will need to clean up the fumbles—having coughed the ball up five times (losing two) against Pittsburgh—the Texans’ defense looks like a unit capable of carrying a team to the Super Bowl. For Mike Tomlin, the questions will intensify as his playoff losing streak hits seven games, tying an NFL record for coaching futility in the postseason.

