The Houston Texans continue to prove they are perhaps the most inept organization in the history of pro sports. The Falcons robbed the Texans here. I think Matt Schaub may very well develop into a good QB, but he has two career starts, and has 6 TD and 6 INT lifetime. To give up this much for a mostly unproven backup is ridiculous, especially when you are simultaneously giving up on a potentially great QB in David Carr. I just don't think Schaub is an improvement on Carr. Schaub certainly benefited from playing behind the atrocious Michael Vick, where the unspoken belief of so many fans was "geez, he looks much better than Vick- he could be a great starter somewhere." In this respect, Schaub's value was terribly overinflated, much like Rob Johnson's was several years ago, when he had one decent game with Jacksonville, and Buffalo ended up trading a #1 draft pick for him. As a huge David Carr fan, this may or may not be good for him. With the stupidity that runs rampant in pro sports (this trade certainly provides a great example of that), there is no guarantee that he will be given a chance to start anywhere else, even though many teams are fielding inept quarterbacks. Carr played behind the worst offensive line that pro football has ever seen, for five long seasons. He was never given anything to work with; not only did Houston never draft an offensive linemen higher than last year's pair of third-rounders, they never drafted a single skill position player in the first two rounds outside of Andre Johnson. I'm really disappointed in Gary Kubiak. This guy is no genius if he thinks that David Carr was the problem in Houston. Kubiak allegedly worked "magic" with the QBs in Denver (why Shanahan doesn't get any credit, I don't know), but it's certainly much easier to get anyone to produce behind the fantastic offensive lines they always had. Carr has no good options, as far as the teams who are left looking for a QB. Cleveland? Terrible situation, perhaps a tad better offensive line than Houston's, and marginally better WRs and RBs. Oakland? Another pitiful offensive line, and only a disgruntled, underachieving Randy Moss as an offensive weapon. Kansas City? Perhaps the best potential situation, with a strong running game and decent offensive line, but few weapons to throw to beyond Gonzalez and an idiotic coach with little imagination and less patience. Minnesota? Solid offensive line, but virtually no playmakers on offense. Hopefully, David Carr gets a real chance somewhere; if he's given more than two seconds to get rid of the ball, I'm confident that he will show everyone he is a great player.