The 49ers are coming. The 49ers are coming!! But, they're not here just yet, so the Texans had one final practice before Kyle Shanahan's group arrives at the Houston Methodist Training Center. Here's the Harris Hurry-up from Tuesday's workout.

-- Early in camp, defensive back Johnson Bademosi knocked passes away with regularity. He did that again today, matching and mirroring the route of the receiver before knocking away the pass on an out route.

-- Receiver Braxton Miller can absolutely lose coverage in one-on-ones, especially inside the numbers. He did that today to get wide open for a completion.

-- Receiver Will Fuller V is still fast and he went by a couple of Texans defensive backs in one-on-ones. I just want one day of my life to be as fast as Will.

-- Fellow receiver Sammie Coates got loose downfield as well during one-on-ones.

-- I spent a decent majority of practice watching the Texans outside linebackers. It hit me how truly youthful that group is as I watched them during individual period. Brennan Scarlett is the grizzled veteran (without Whitney Mercilus today) and he's only going into his third year.

-- Speaking of Scarlett, he made an excellent play on a wide run to his side. He was put in conflict yet still ran down the ball carrier in the backfield. Going back to watch the KC game, Scarlett was a major problem and he's done nothing but get better.

-- For all the great things that Deshaun Watson does as a quarterback and all of his assets, one that's not often discussed is his quick release. He can reload and release with the best of them and he showed that on a throw to rookie tight end Jordan Akins during team drills. Ball was on the money, too.

-- Watching DeAndre Hopkins do his work is a joy. On one route against Johnathan Joseph, J-Jo was in perfect position matching Hop's cut perfectly. But, Deshaun Watson threw the ball higher than usual and Hopkins went up and snatched it out of the air for a catch.

-- Later in the same one-on-one drill, Hopkins was matched against a different defensive back (I couldn't see who it was through a menagerie of bodies). He stacked him off the line of scrimmage, which essentially put the defensive back in a losing position. The ball was overthrown though, so he didn't get a ball he could catch.