The 14-yard touchdown run by Davis Mills will be remembered for a very long time by diehard Texans fans.
Even if this season doesn't culminate in a Super Bowl, or an AFC championship game appearance, or even another trip to the divisional round, that was a tough moment to forget.
Season on the line, down at home to a division rival, and in what seems like the most unlikely of outcomes you get Mills scrambling for the score.
While it was gutsy, it wasn't necessarily Mills trying to be a hero in the moment. He was simply doing what the play and his coaching dictated.
When asked this week whether there has been an emphasis for quarterbacks to use their legs in first-year offensive coordinator Nick Caley's system, Mills had this to say:
"We have moved the pockets and ways to get us out of the pocket that are designed. Then a big thing that (quarterbacks coach Jerrod Johnson) has been talking to us about in the QB room is always pushing forward in the pocket. Nothing really good ever happens when you're escaping outside the tackles. You get a lot of holding penalties or guys falling off late and you end up getting sacked or have to throw it away. So, the more you can command up through the pocket, the defense will sometimes fall off their guy and come up and try to get you. As long as you remain a passer, you can find someone open in your progression.
"Or you can take off and get the free yards the defense is giving you and get down. So, I think moving up in the pocket and letting the rush develop and being able to access the defense internally is usually advantageous."