advertising
Link to jump to start of content The Seattle Times Company Jobs Autos Homes Rentals NWsource Classifieds seattletimes.com
Seahawks / NFL Scattered Clouds

46°F

Sunday, January 7, 2007 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

E-mail article     Print view      Share:    Digg     Newsvine

Colts' defense saves day

INDIANAPOLIS — Peyton Manning knows all about falling apart in the playoffs. Though he struggled Saturday, the Indianapolis Colts' stunningly stingy defense came to the rescue.

Manning and the Colts beat the inept Kansas City Chiefs 23-8 Saturday, and while the star quarterback's numbers were good — 30 of 38 for 268 yards — his performance was mediocre. At least it was for the most prolific passer of his generation.

He threw three interceptions, didn't complete a deep pass and, ultimately, was bailed out by his defense.

"You have to keep playing," said Manning, who improved to 4-6 in the playoffs. "Every time you drop back to throw, your goal is to possess the ball on the next play. Three times, I was very poor on that. As soon as it gets you second-guessing, as soon as it gets you gun-shy, that's when you have problems."

The beleaguered Indianapolis defense was so good — or perhaps Kansas City's offense was so bad — that Manning's miscues didn't stop the AFC South champs from advancing to the next round at Baltimore on Saturday.

"Our defense was awesome today," Manning said. "We made some mistakes and the defense made sure we didn't pay for it."

A defense that yielded 173 yards rushing per game this season allowed only 32 to Larry Johnson, the Chiefs' Pro Bowl running back Larry Johnson.

Manning's effort


Peyton Manning's numbers Saturday were not bad but they hid some mistakes.

30-38 - Passing attempts-completions

268 Yards passing

1 TD passes

3 Interceptions

Kansas City's initial first down came with 3:34 left in the third quarter. Indianapolis had four sacks, two by Dwight Freeney, and two interceptions. The Chiefs managed 126 total yards.

"We heard it all about having the worst defense," Freeney said. "Now we can hear this: We have the best run defense in the playoffs."

Meanwhile, Adam Vinatieri made three field goals and rookie Joseph Addai rushed for 122 yards and a TD for the Colts (13-4). Wisely, with Manning unable to throw deep, Indianapolis gave Kansas City (9-8) a steady dose of short passes that wore out the Chiefs.

That was most evident after Kansas City finally woke up and drove 60 yards to a 6-yard touchdown catch by Tony Gonzalez with eight seconds remaining in the third period. Then the Colts went 71 yards on nine plays, mostly victimizing the Chiefs' linebackers underneath. Reggie Wayne caught a 5-yard TD pass to make it 23-8.

When Bob Sanders intercepted Green's desperate lob with just more than six minutes remaining, the Colts could start making travel plans for Baltimore — the city they left 23 years ago.

"It's a big challenge," Manning said. "Playing Baltimore is tough enough, but to go there — I think it's one of the tougher places to play. And they've been off a week and are fresh."

Copyright © 2007 The Seattle Times Company

advertising

advertising

advertising

Local sales & deals Play games Find a job
Search for a job
Job type