NFL owners approved Cal McNair as the new principal owner of the Texans, the team announced Tuesday. McNair, who previously served as the team's CEO and chairman, becomes the official representative of the club.
The Houston Texans are a team on the rise in the NFL right now, which was clear as day when they made it to the Divisional Round of the 2024 playoffs. Off the field, though, there’s been a bit of drama surrounding the team, with their owner, Janice McNair, facing a lawsuit from her own son, Robert Cary McNair Jr.
A Houston judge ruled in favor of Texans owner Janice McNair on Tuesday, denying her oldest son's request for an independent medical exam to determine her mental capacity, the Houston Chronicle reports.
When the late Bob McNair introduced the Houston Texans in September 2000, he did so with the idea of having a franchise that could leave a mark on NFL history.
On the field, it's been a magical season for the Texans. Off the field, a legal fight among members of the McNair family clouds the team's success. Via multiple reports, Robert Cary McNair, Jr., has asked a court to find team owner Janice McNair declared incapacitated and to appoint a guardian.
Former NFL.com columnist Jim Trotter has filed his discrimination lawsuit against the NFL, which issues an assortment of race-based allegations against a number of team owners.
When Houston won the turf war with Los Angeles about an expansion team making its return to the gridiron in the city, then-owner Bob McNair went to work on a team name.
It was outstanding, but just HOW outstanding? This season, the Houston Texans will add to their Ring of Honor. Joining WR (and soon-to-be-Hall-of-Famer if the HOF voters have any semblance of brains) Andre Johnson and founding owner Bob McNair, will be DL and Hero-of-the-City JJ Watt.
Every NFL team has their own version of the Ring of Honor. It's each team's way of honoring those special players who left an indelible mark on the fans and became a franchise legend.
The Houston Texans announced Monday morning J.J. Watt will officially be inducted into the Ring of Honor during the team’s Week 4 contest against the Pittsburgh Steelers on Sunday, Oct.
Watt will join franchise founder Bob McNair and wide receiver Andre Johnson
"Dream Big, Work Hard.'' The Houston Texans are announcing that J.J. Watt will be inducted into the team's Ring of Honor, making the legend's personal motto continue to resonate all over again.
If coach DeMeco Ryans did not feel back at home yet in Houston, he does now. On Sunday, Ryans met with Janice McNair, owner of the Texans. Janice, widow of the late Bob McNair, has of course been involved with the franchise since Ryans’ first stint in Houston as a player.
It was never a certainty that there would be a Houston Texans NFL team. In these series of “What If’s?” for the Houston Texans, we have looked at the on and off-field moves of the Houston Texans as a NFL franchise in its 20 years of playing.
- After two decades of working together inside the walls of NRG Stadium Stadium, Houston Texans CEO Cal McNair didn’t just address the passing of former team president Jamey Rootes.
The Houston Texans paid tribute Tuesday to former team president Jamey Rootes, who died at 56 after a battle with "mental health issues." Rootes wife,
The Houston Texans sport the ninth-best logo in the NFL, according to a new fan survey conducted by Quality Logo Products Blog. The late Texans owner and founder Bob McNair once said his team's logo represents what a "Texan'' is.
Houston Texans owner Cal McNair issued an apology on Tuesday for using an anti-Asian slur during a team charity golf tournament in May. Bally Sports reporter Michael Silver revealed on Tuesday that McNair, the franchise's CEO and chairman, used the slur while referring to the COVID pandemic.
The comparison that just won’t go away In a story line that seems to have no end, several months back we heard whispers that people inside the Houston Texans organization had nicknamed team owner Cal McNair, “Tommy Boy”.
Let’s take a look, shall we? Houston – “Uneasy is the head that wears the crown. They get all of the credit…and all of the blame, depending on the fortunes of their empire.
Usually these actions draw little attention from the public and have become as much a part of the MLB machine as Opening Day and the Home Run Derby. But then there are times like last week when a $5,000 donation to a U.S. Senate candidate from Mississippi created an uproar — partially in the wake of a Twitter post from famed television writer Michael Schur.
"We're allowed to protest and they're allowed to do what they do out there, and as basketball players, majority of us African American in the league, we
Front Five: The top stories that shaped both sports & politics this week "NFL leadership has hurt Papa John's shareholders. This should have been nipped
Front Five: The top stories that shaped both sports & politics this week “All I know is I would personally do the right thing for me.” - Steph Curry
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