After the Houston Texans’ emphatic 30-6 victory over the Pittsburgh Steelers in the Wild Card round, the story should have centered on a young team announcing itself on the postseason stage. Instead, attention quickly shifted when Stephen A. Smith used the national ESPN platform to frame the outcome in a way that infuriated Texans fans.
During his on-air commentary, Smith downplayed Houston’s performance, suggesting the result had less to do with the Texans’ strength and more to do with the Steelers “beating themselves.” He pointed to Pittsburgh’s mistakes, lack of execution, and missed opportunities, implying the game unraveled because of the Steelers’ collapse rather than Houston’s control. In doing so, Smith stopped short of fully crediting the Texans for a win that was decisive from start to finish.

In Smith’s telling, Houston didn’t dominate — Pittsburgh simply failed.
That narrative held the studio’s momentum until Tom Brady spoke.

Brady didn’t interrupt. He didn’t raise his voice. He waited for Smith to finish, then responded with the calm authority of someone who has lived through every level of playoff pressure the NFL can produce.
“Stephen, there are games you can blame on mistakes,” Brady said evenly.
“This wasn’t one of them. Houston didn’t get handed anything. They took it. They won at the line of scrimmage, they controlled the game, and they imposed their will. When a team wins 30-6 in the playoffs, that’s not luck — that’s dominance.”
The studio fell quiet.
Brady continued, each sentence measured and unmistakable:
“If you watched that game and only saw Pittsburgh losing, then you missed the bigger story. The Texans played the kind of football that doesn’t give the other team a chance to recover.”
At that moment, the discussion stopped being a debate and became a recalibration of the narrative.
For Texans fans, the exchange was deeply satisfying — not because Brady defended Houston emotionally, but because he articulated what the tape clearly showed. The Texans were physical, disciplined, and relentless. They didn’t survive the Steelers — they overwhelmed them.
Stephen A. Smith, rarely at a loss for words, did not immediately respond. The energy in the room had shifted. This wasn’t about personalities anymore. It was about acknowledging reality.
The Steelers can spend the offseason dissecting their failures. But none of that diminishes what Houston accomplished on the field.
And when Tom Brady — the ultimate standard-bearer for postseason excellence — makes that distinction clear, the conversation ends.
For the Texans, the win spoke loudly enough on its own.
Brady simply made sure everyone heard it correctly.