The Herald Bulletin

Afternoon Update

Colts

November 24, 2009

Colts hope close games create tougher playoff team

Indy has won four straight games by four points or fewer

INDIANAPOLIS — On paper, everything looks perfect for Indianapolis.

The Colts are 10-0 again, in charge of the AFC South again, and could lock up another playoff spot in the next two weeks.

Yet with four straight victories by four points or fewer, coach Jim Caldwell knows this is not like the last time Indy opened the season with 10 straight wins. It's been a whole lot tougher.

"The realistic thing is that this is more typical of what you see week-to-week in the NFL," he said Monday. "I think there are a number of areas we need to improve upon, but the bottom line is we're getting the job done."

Nobody can quibble with the results. Indy holds a three-game lead in the chase for the AFC's top seed. What many want to know is whether the Colts might be living on borrowed time.

In some ways, this looks like the same old Colts.

They went 7-0 in 2007 before losing to eventual AFC champion New England. They were 9-0 before losing at Dallas in 2006, and they opened 13-0 in 2005 before San Diego finally stopped their quest for perfection. Peyton Manning has topped 3,000 yards for a 12th consecutive season, second only to Brett Favre's 17, and they have overcome the usual spate of injuries to key players.

In other ways, these Colts are very different.

Their 19-game regular-season winning streak is now the second-longest in league history, trailing only New England's 21-game streak. The Colts haven't missed a step with Caldwell taking over for Tony Dungy while Reggie Wayne and Dallas Clark have taken up the slack left by Marvin Harrison's departure. Wayne and Clark have combined for 141 receptions this year, the most by teammates over the first 10 games of a season in league history.

But the big change is how Indy is winning games.

Back in 2005, the Colts opened 13-0 with an average victory margin of 16.3 points. None of the wins came by fewer than seven points, though Indy wound up losing three of their last four including a divisional round game to eventual Super Bowl champion Pittsburgh.

This year, the Colts have won six of their 10 games by four or fewer points — including three straight escapes.

Houston's Kris Brown missed a potentially tying 42-yard field goal as time expired, Bill Belichick lost his risky fourth-down gamble and Baltimore's Joe Flacco threw an late interception, thwarting a chance at a possible go-ahead field goal Sunday.

Lucky? Perhaps.

Caldwell thinks all these close calls could make Indy a tougher playoff opponent.

"We certainly feel we've developed a pretty solid mental toughness," he said. "Hopefully, it's going to serve us down the road and make us continue to get better. Hopefully we can benefit from it."

There are already indications that philosophy is taking root.

Over the first 10 games, the offense and defense have traded big plays.

At Miami, Manning had the ball less than 15 minutes yet rallied the Colts for an improbable victory. Against New England, the defense stopped the Pats short on fourth-and-2 and Manning slowly took the Colts 29 yards for the winning score. On Sunday, it was middle linebacker Gary Brackett fooling Flacco and then making a nifty grab for his first interception since 2007.

And it's the defense that has made the greatest progress.

Baltimore was forced to kick five field goals Sunday, giving Indy a three-game total of six TDs allowed vs. 10 field goals.

That's not good enough against Manning.

"With our offense, nobody is ever going to beat us kicking field goals," safety Antoine Bethea said after Sunday's 17-15 victory.

The question, of course, is whether Indy can continued winning close contests.

"Obviously, any time your team is finding ways to win, particularly when things haven't gone perfectly, you find some satisfaction there," Caldwell said. "You can also look at it is maybe there are some situations that occurred earlier in the game that could have put you in a little bit better position, but the reality and the fact of the matter is that typically in this league that's what the games boil down to."

Text Only
Colts
  • ellie2.JPG Former Arabian prepares for Pac-12 championships, cheers Luck

    Stanford sophomore Ellie McCardwell was in the training room with some of the Cardinal’s football players two weeks ago when the Indianapolis Colts selected university legend Andrew Luck with the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft.
    A two-time state champion in the pole vault at Pendleton Heights, McCardwell said she’ll never forget the reaction as Stanford athletes around the room cheered one of their own.

    May 9, 2012 1 Photo

  • 0812 news Colts fans 100a.jpg Colts to hold camp at AU again

    The Colts ended months of speculation Monday by announcing they will hold training camp at Anderson University this summer for the third straight year. Players are scheduled to report July 28, and the first practice will take place July 29.

    May 7, 2012 1 Photo

  • 0507 Chapman 1.jpg Colts rookie Chapman just happy to be here

    Not many players get excited about the mundane details of football. Not many openly hope to face double-team blockers. Not many play through serious injury. But Indianapolis Colts rookie Josh Chapman is not like many players.

    May 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • George Bremer.jpg George Bremer: Could T.Y. come to rescue?

    T.Y. Hilton understands what it takes to build a football program from the ground up.

    May 6, 2012 1 Photo

  • Colts Luck Begins Foo_Harl.jpg Luck improves on Day 2

    The Indianapolis Colts don’t have much time with Andrew Luck this week, but they intend to make the most of it. A day after earning near universal praise for his ability to pick up and execute complex offensive terms, Luck was thrown another bagful of new concepts Saturday. And he wouldn’t have it any other way.

    May 5, 2012 1 Photo

  • Colts Luck Begins Foo_Harl.jpg New era dawns with Colts rookie camp

    By the time owner Jim Irsay rolled up to the sideline driving a golf cart Friday afternoon, it was abundantly clear this was no ordinary rookie mini-camp for the Indianapolis Colts. ESPN and the NFL Network each sent reporters to the Indiana Farm Bureau Football Center, and they were joined by about a dozen other reporters and photographers from various local media outlets. Everyone was on hand to get a glimpse of the future — the first on-field look at No. 1 overall pick Andrew Luck.

    May 4, 2012 1 Photo

  • 0502 spts Freeney.jpg Freeney adjusting to new OLB role

    Dwight Freeney has been the subject of rampant offseason speculation.
    With the Indianapolis Colts transitioning to a 3-4 defense, Freeney is slated to move from the defensive end position he’s played for the past 11 years back a few steps to outside linebacker.

    May 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • 0501 spts Pellerin.jpg Colts sign 15 undrafted free agents

    Less than 48 hours after the conclusion of the 2012 NFL draft, Indianapolis Colts general manager Ryan Grigson finally found his cornerback.
    Four of them, actually.

    May 1, 2012 1 Photo

  • George Bremer.jpg George Bremer: Critics, hold your horses

    Colts fans with an uneasy feeling in their stomachs likely learned an important lesson this weekend. This process that the outside world calls rebuilding and the Colts internally term “Building the Monster” is not going to be an overnight success.

    April 29, 2012 1 Photo

  • 0429 Mr Irrelevant.jpg Offense rules Colts 2012 draft

    The Indianapolis Colts open and closed Ryan Grigson’s first draft by taking a quarterback.
    In between, the team almost exclusively added playmakers to lineup alongside them. Eight of the Colts’ 10 picks were on the offensive side of the ball, including four of six picks on Saturday.

    April 28, 2012 1 Photo