It's still only OTA's, so it probably hasn't hit a lot of Texans fans yet, but, for the first time since 2008, there will be no Arian Foster in a Texans' uniform in training camp. I'm not going to lie, when those sweltering late July early training camp sessions begin, the absence of number 23 will feel awfully strange, certainly on par with the first training camp without Andre Johnson.

Johnson, as we all know, took his act to the Texans' chief division rival in Indianapolis, so perhaps that squelched any sentimental feelings Texan fans may have had. We have yet to see where Foster will take his talents, knowing only that it appears he plans on taking them somewhere. Actually, let's take inventory of what we know or feel like we know with regard to Arian Foster.

We know what we heard in Foster's interview with David Nuno on Channel 13 a couple weeks ago, that he's been working out at a breakneck pace every morning with his brother and trainer, Abdul, and that he felt, at the time, he was about a month away from being back at his peak form....

We also know that, according to the Miami Herald, the Dolphins have cooled on their approach to Foster, instead opting to see what they have in youngsters Kenyan Drake and Jay Ajayi.

With that in mind, here's what I feel like we know about Foster and what he may be looking for in a team —

1. After three seasons of Schaub/Yates/Keenum, Fitzpatrick/Mallett/Savage/Keenum, and Hoyer/Mallett/Yates/Weeden, I believe Foster is only going to go to a team with an established quarterback who has either won a Super Bowl or has Super Bowl-potential type chops.

2. I don't know if Foster expects to be a 20- to 25-touch workhorse again, but I'm guessing he wants to go somewhere that he has a chance to at least be an equal or near equal committee member, so no teams with bell cow type running backs.

3. A team that is either a Super Bowl contender or whose arrow is pointed significantly upward.

So, by my count, here are the top six contenders, in order of their Super Bowl chances:

NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS

QB: Tom Brady

RB Depth Chart: LeGarrette Blount, Dion Lewis, James White, Brandon Bolden

Super Bowl Odds: +600

Cap Space: $9,470,093

Analysis: This might be the deepest backfield of the six teams on this list, but if Foster were to work his way into this rotation, the Patriots are the most intriguing in terms of how they might use him. If he's healthy, I could see Foster being a 50-60 catch guy out of the backfield easily.

SEATTLE SEAHAWKS

QB: Russell Wilson

RB Depth Chart: Thomas Rawls, Christine Michael, CJ Prosise, Alex Collins

Super Bowl Odds: +600

Cap Space: $9,980,839

Analysis: This would be a spot where Foster can disappear from the radar of Texans fans. This is a very young backfield, with two rookies (Prosise and Collins) in the mix, and Rawls (undrafted in 2015) in line to start.

DENVER BRONCOS

QB: Mark Sanchez or Paxton Lynch or Trevor Siemian (i.e. not ideal)

RB Depth Chart: C.J. Anderson, Ronnie Hillman, Devontae Booker

Super Bowl Odds: +1200

Cap Space: 6,232,142

Analysis: This backfield is crowded with the Broncos re-signing both Anderson and Hillman and using a third-round pick on Booker, but it's Gary Kubiak's team, so they make the list almost by default.

BALTIMORE RAVENS

QB: Joe Flacco

RB Depth Chart: Justin Forsett, Lorenzo Taliaferro, Kenneth Dixon, Trent Richardson

Super Bowl Odds: +2500

Cap Space: $8,386,576

Analysis: The Ravens are coming off a 5-11 season, which, if we've learned anything about Baltimore, means they're primed to get back to the postseason this year. Flacco is a guy who's won at the highest level, and there are no world beaters in this backfield. A healthy Foster could start here.

OAKLAND RAIDERS

QB: Derek Carr

RB Depth Chart: Latavius Murray, Taiwan Jones, Roy Helu, George Atkinson

Super Bowl Odds: +2500

Cap Space: $3,464,289

Analysis: Kind of a wild card, a young team that is everyone's chic "sleeper" pick. Foster grew up a Raiders fan, so that may hold some weight.

NEW YORK GIANTS

QB: Eli Manning

RB Depth Chart: Rashad Jennings, Andre Williams, Shane Vereen, Paul Perkins

Super Bowl Odds: +2500

Cap Space: $18,585,805

Analysis: The Giants spent a ton of cap space and draft equity shoring up the defense, and they've got weapons on offense. Also, Foster has expressed publicly how much he likes New York City.

Listen to Sean Pendergast on SportsRadio 610 from 2 to 6 p.m. weekdays. Also, follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/SeanTPendergast and like him on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/SeanTPendergast.

