The Houston Texans have spent the past year building one of the NFL’s most complete defenses and the numbers showed it. The team finished 2025 ranked No. 1 in total defense at 277.2 yards allowed per game and No. 2 in scoring defense at 17.4 points allowed per game, with a +17 turnover margin. Even with that production, the Texans decided the front seven still needed another body capable of changing games in the middle.
That is where Ohio State Buckeyes‘ Kayden McDonald enters the picture. The Texans selected the 6-foot-3, 326-pound defensive tackle 36th overall in the second round of the 2026 NFL Draft, making him the highest-drafted Ohio State defensive tackle since Johnathan Hankins in 2013 and the highest-drafted Buckeye to Houston since C.J. Stroud.
“McDonald was the top nose tackle in this class after a breakout 2025 in coordinator Matt Patricia’s scheme at Ohio State,” ESPN writer Field Yates wrote on Monday. “McDonald had three sacks last season, but he’ll be tasked with being a dominant run defender in Houston’s overwhelming defense.”
“While the Texans’ defense is at the top of the league, it needed youth at defensive tackle. McDonald should benefit from having two dominant edge rushers (Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter) drawing attention away from him.”
What the Numbers Say for Kayden McDonald?
GettyKayden McDonald celebrates after being selected thirty-sixth overall pick by the Houston Texans.
McDonald capped his career at Columbus with unanimous All-America honors, Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year recognition and a 2025 season that produced 65 tackles, 9 tackles for loss, 3 sacks, 2 forced fumbles and 2 pass breakups. Over 37 college games, he finished with 85 tackles, 11 tackles for loss, 3 sacks and 3 pass breakups.
McDonald was not merely a space-eater at Ohio State. He flashed enough burst and power to disrupt plays in the backfield and his most productive stretch came in high-leverage games. He had a career-high eight tackles three times, including against the Texas Longhorns, Penn State Nittany Lions and Miami Hurricanes.
How Kayden McDonald Fits in the System?
With Will Anderson Jr. and Danielle Hunter occupying attention on the edges, McDonald should see cleaner one-on-one chances inside than most rookie tackles receive. That matters for a Texans defense that already thrives on leverage, speed and disruption.
GettyKayden McDonald of the Ohio State Buckeyes will be an instant impact at Houston.
DeMeco Ryans’ team ranked first in opponents’ three-and-out percentage(29.7) and first downs per game(16.2), so the added job for McDonald is not to become the centerpiece. It is to clog the interior, hold the point against the run and create the kind of churn that lets the rest of the front attack downhill. That is the blueprint Houston is betting on.
The Washington Commanders got an early return from Da’Ron Payne, who opened his rookie year with 56 tackles, 5 sacks and a forced fumble and made the PFWA All-Rookie Team, while Tampa Bay Buccaneers’ Vita Vea entered the league as a run-first anchor and finished his rookie season with 25 tackles and three sacks in 13 games.
Those are the kinds of interior linemen who matter because they change the math on first and second down, not just the sack column. The Texans are now asking McDonald to follow that path after his 2025 breakout at Columbus.
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