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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Houston Texans rely on defense

Cornerback Johnathan Joseph, right, helped the Houston Texans go from the NFL’s worst pass defense last season to the third stingiest this year. (Associated Press)
Kristie Rieken Associated Press

HOUSTON – A year ago, the Houston Texans had the NFL’s worst pass defense and were near the bottom of the league in total defense.

They remodeled by bringing in defensive whiz Wade Phillips and signing cornerback Johnathan Joseph.

Now in the playoffs for the first time, Houston hopes its highly rated defense can lead the team to a victory Saturday against the Bengals, the team Joseph played for before joining the Texans.

“It doesn’t get any better than this,” Joseph said about helping Houston to its first postseason game against his former team.

He has communicated with 20 to 25 of his former teammates this week and is proud of what the Bengals have done this season. But he certainly won’t feel torn Saturday.

“I’m a Texan now,” he said.

Phillips has had a difficult few weeks after having kidney and gall bladder surgery Dec. 15. He missed two games, but rejoined the team last week and coached from the press box Sunday.

He isn’t feeling great – he has a chair to sit in for parts of practice – but knew it was important to be with the team during this critical time.

“It’s taken a lot out of me but I’m working my way back, doing what the doctors say, ready to keep building up,” Phillips said.

Coach Gary Kubiak insisted the defense wasn’t any different with Phillips away, but acknowledged Wednesday that his return has given the unit a boost.

“I know from a confidence standpoint for everybody it’s nice to have him back in the locker room last weekend and have his presence throughout the course of the week, so that’s been a good thing,” Kubiak said. “We’ve got to make sure Wade gets good and healthy and everything goes OK.”

Linebacker Brian Cushing, who leads the team with 114 tackles, said Phillips’ importance to the team can’t be overstated.

“He’s been huge,” Cushing said. “For what he’s done in turning this defense around has been unbelievable. So much credit goes to him, from scheme, to coaches he’s brought to just the personality of the team.”

Joseph has helped Houston’s secondary go from allowing a league-worst 267.5 yards to just 189.7 this season – the third fewest in the NFL.

“To come in and be embraced by the guys and make such an impact to be counted and looked upon as a leader here has been a tremendous experience for me altogether,” Joseph said.

Houston has thrived in Phillips’ 3-4 defense even without 2006 top overall pick Mario Williams. The former defensive end was expected to star at outside linebacker in the new scheme, but had a season-ending injury during the fifth game.

Phillips, who has more postseason coaching experience than any member of the staff with 26 games, encouraged the team to focus this week in practice with one of his “gems” of which outside linebacker Connor Barwin is so fond.

“He walks out and says real mellow like he does: ‘Every single play is the playoffs now,’ ” Barwin said of Phillips. “So we knew every single play we do in practice is so important just because we’re in the playoffs now.”