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Texans receiver Tank Dell comeback continues at minicamp: ‘Looking for him to be Tank’

Texans wide receiver Tank Dell (Aaron Wilson, KPRC 2)

HOUSTON – Tank Dell is taking pivotal steps in his ongoing comeback from a crushing knee injury that threatened his football career.

Although the Texans have limited the former University of Houston star in drills at the minicamp they wrapped up Thursday with plans for him to increase his practice activity at training camp, the outlook is becoming more positive.

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Dell has been running and cutting without any setbacks. He isn’t as dynamic as he was before dislocating his knee and tearing his anterior cruciate, medial collateral and lateral collateral ligament two years ago while catching a touchdown pass against the Kansas City Chiefs at Arrowhead Stadium.

Dell has even caught passes in team drills. There is still a lot of work to be done, but significant progress has been accomplished.

Just ask his position coach: Texans receivers coach and passing game coordinator Ben McDaniels.

“Looking for him to be Tank,” McDaniels said. “He’s been working really hard to get back to what he knows he is and can be. It’s been a long process and he’s still at it.

“The process isn’t over. It doesn’t need to be over. He’s working all summer and he’ll be working hard to get himself as healthy as he can as he can be and we’re excited for him to be ready.”

He is not a full participant yet. Nonetheless, Dell looked pretty good.

It was an encouraging sign for Dell, who has endured hard luck and tough breaks while flashing a lot of skill and impactful playmaking in his first few NFL seasons.

“Just excited for him to continue really through the summertime, too,” McDaniels said. “This has been a long build. He’s fought like crazy. He’s extremely determined to get back healthy and run around and impact the game like he knows he can. We’ll be excited for training camp to start.”

After missing an entire full season and undergoing two surgeries to repair the damage suffered in December of 2024, Dell is making strides.

And his teammates appreciate and respect his powerful motivation to work his way back from a devastating injury.

“I love when I see Tank on the field,” Texans veteran tight end Dalton Schultz said. “It’s been two long years for him. I know he’s gone through a lot. He’s had a crazy road to recovery, but every time he’s out there, he’s a dude that just brings juice, brings good energy.

“At the end of the day, the kid’s a hell of a receiver. I know when he lines it up, when he’s on the field, we’re going to have a good matchup. To just to see him back out there is motivating for guys, especially considering what he’s gone through.”

First, Dell broke his leg as a rookie. Then, he got shot as an innocent bystander that offseason in his leg. Two seasons ago, Dell tore up his knee in Kansas City.

The Texans are taking a patient, big-picture approach with Dell. The hope is that he can ramp up his participation by training camp and regain his old form.

“Tank is still working off on the side,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said during the first organized team activity. “When that time is set for him to be back, he’ll be back out there.”

And that time is approaching, gradually.

“Tank has been around, working out all throughout the offseason while no one else was here,” Ryans said. “Tank has been here working, grinding in the background. I’m excited to see Tank when it is his time to get back out and play football, as is everybody here. We all love Tank. We’ve seen the ability that he has, the big playmaking ability.

“Nobody loves Tank more than me. I’m hopeful that we can get him back to playing, back to the level that he was playing. But I think it’s also, we know how devastating of an injury that was for Tank. So, I’m proud of the young man. For him just working in the background, working in silence to be back here working out with the guys and having that opportunity to go play again.”

Texans general manager Nick Caserio said previously that the team will evaluate where Dell stands after spring workouts to determine his activity level at training camp. He was noncommittal on a timeline.

“With Tank, honestly, it’s probably a day-to-day, we’ll kind of see where he is,” Caserio said. “Probably have a better idea as we get through the spring of what his availability is going to be in training camp. He’s been here pretty religiously, since he’s been able to do more once he’s gotten out of the rehab stage.”

Dell has fought through all of the doubt and frustration of an injury that interrupted the dynamic start to his NFL career, leaning on faith, hard work, family, friends and coaches like Ryans to remain positive and optimistic.

Dell called it the hardest year of his life.

Dell is looking forward to making a healthy return and get back to playing the game he loves.

“What I’ve been through is something that taught me to be humble and just keep working, I’m back, I’m feeling good right now,” Dell said earlier this offseason. “Once the season comes, I’m gonna cook up.”

Running free, catching touchdown passes, bolting past coverage.

That’s the vision for Dell. The comeback trail is being paved month by month for Dell as he continues to strengthen his surgically repaired knee.

Dell tried to make a return for the end of the season as the Texans made another playoff run that ended in the divisional round, but it was regarded as too soon for him to get back out there.

“I was making a push, I wanted to be out there with the guys,” Dell said. “Last year, that football season alone, was the hardest year of my life. Just sitting out of football for a year straight.

“Been playing football since I was five and that was my first year I ever had to sit out of football so that was hard. I tried to make a push back, it didn’t go as planned. I got time now and I’ll be ready.”

Aaron Wilson is a Texans and NFL reporter for KPRC 2 and click2houston.com