Since finishing his days as a University of Houston baseball player in 1966, Worrell has been one of the finest broadcasters in the history of the city, a true pro's pro. On television, that voice belongs to legendary play-by-play man Bill Worrell. In every city that has won a championship, there's an announcer whose voice is synonymous with that climb to the mountaintop (or in the case of the Houston Rockets, multiple climbs to the mountaintop). Watt, the big kid from Wisconsin, has become a Texan, in both the football and the very literal sense of the word. In just two years, he has become a fixture at charity events, a 300-pound angel to kids all over town, from the six-year-old girl whom he "pretend married" for a day when he saw her sobbing on a viral video, to his befriending and helping raise thousands of dollars for the Berry children, who were orphaned in a tragic car accident in 2011 (before Watt had even played a down as a Texan) that left two of them confined to wheelchairs. But in record time, Watt has become so much more than that to Houston. Oh, sure, he is the very best at what he does in all of football, sacking quarterbacks 20.5 times and knocking down 16 passes in 2012 on his way to NFL Defensive Player of the Year honors. To call him merely "Texans defensive end" feels like you're short-selling Watt. Truth be told, there are probably about a dozen categories across multiple sections of the "Best of" issue for which Texans defensive end J.J.