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We've already chronicled some of the 'greatest games'
from a purely aesthetic standpoint, but now it's time to look at some
of the 'most important' wins in franchise history. These games are
placed in order of their importance to the Colts in Indianapolis. The
list isn't finished yet. We want your help to write more paragraphs
about some of the games. If your write-up is selected, you will receive
a copy of the official Super Bowl program from Super Bowl XLI. Submit
your entry along with your name and address to
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. Choose
from any of the 'unfinished' games on the list. If you want to suggest
a game not on the list, you are welcome to do so, but make a good case
why it is more important than the ones we listed.
1. Super Bowl XLI-February 4, 2007
In
a pouring rain, the Colts accomplished what so many doubters said they
could never do. They won the Lombardi trophy. For obvious reasons, this
is the single most important win by the franchise. Even the classic AFC
Championship game would have been rendered meaningless had the Colts
not pulled through with a win in Super Bowl. The Bears led early thanks
to a game-opening kickoff return by Devin Hester. Manning put the boys
on the board later in the first quarter with a sensational 53 yard
touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne. Despite yielding another score to the
Bears, the defense played well and forced 3 turnovers (including a
massive forced fumble by Bob Sanders). The Colts and Bears traded field
goals into the fourth quarter when Kelvin Hayden picked off an errant
Rex Grossman pass and ran it back for a touchdown, barely keeping his
feet in bounds. The Colts punished the Bears on the ground in the
second half and walked home with a 29-17 win that was more comfortable
than the score indicated.
Heroes: There were
almost too many to enumerate. The running backs (Addai and Rhodes)
combined for a huge day (190 yards rushing, 74 Receiving, 1 TD). The
Zombie had a pick and a forced fumble. Ultimately, this game was about
Manning. He dominated the Bears mentally. By throwing a long TD early,
he kept the Bears from crowding the line of scrimmage. They later said
they were shocked at his ability to stay patient, throw underneath and
continually call run plays. Manning scared a physical Bears defense
into playing soft. The line and the backs did the rest.
Factoids:
Adam Vinatieri was huge in the 07 postseason, but missed a FG at the
end of the first half. Later in the game, he would become the all-time
postseason scoring leader. Due to a rain storm, my TV reception went
out in the middle of Manning's pass to Wayne. I was simultaneously
listening to Bob Lamey streaming over the internet. I heard Reggie
score well before I ever saw it.
2. Colts 10 Kansas City 7 AFC Playoffs January 7, 1996
After
beating the San Diego Chargers soundly in the AFC Wildcard round, the
Colts were rewarded with a chilly trip to Arrowhead Stadium and a date
with Kansas City Chiefs who owned the NFL's best record @ 13-3. In
addition to this the Colts were without Marshall Faulk and Tony
Siragusa. Game-time temperature was 11 degrees, with a wind-chill of
minus 9. KC scored first on a Steve Bono pass to Lake Dawson, but
these would be the last points KC would put on the board. Harbaugh to
Tuner tied the game @ 7-7 in the 2nd quarter and Blanchard put the
Colts ahead 10-7 in the 3rd. Getting desperate, KC benched Bono in
favor of Rich Gannon, but this did nothing to change the outcome of the
game. The defense was stout and limited the Chiefs to FG attempts.
Speaking of FG attempts, Colts fans had to be swaying in their homes
which induced two more additional Lin Elliot FG misses that could have
tied the game, and just about everyone probably passed out with
euphoria when Elliot's 42-yard attempt missed with 37 seconds left.
Hero:
The Colts' defense. They played without "The Goose" and only gave up
a TD in the 1st quarter and shut out the Chiefs for the remainder of
the game. A special nod should go to KC placekicker Lin Elliot. He
missed three field goals during the game.
Factoid:
Did you know every time the Colts have faced KC in the playoffs they
have made it to the AFC Championship game? This occurred in 1996, 2004
and 2007.
Submitted by: Justin Landon
3. The Halloween Massacre- Colts 55 Broncos 23 October 31, 1988
The first MNF game in Indy. Write a review, and you can win a prize.
4. Colts 24 Bucs 6 December 27, 1987
The Colts clinch their first playoff birth in Indy.
5. Colts 41 Broncos 10 AFC Playoffs January 4, 2003
For
the Denver Broncos, the game-plan was simple: run the football. Only
two weeks earlier, they had come to the RCA Dome and dominated with 227
yards rushing, a 3-to-1 time-of-possession advantage, and a 31-17
victory. As one Bronco player put it, they were going to give the Colts
"a whole lotta bump-bump." It was going to be easy, they thought.
Peyton Manning had other plans.
Stepping
on the field that day with a personal playoff record of 0-3, number 18
turned the rodeo into a derby. He quickly led the team on a six-play,
70 yard drive that culminated on a 31-yard touchdown pass to wide
receiver Brandon Stokely. After the Broncos responded with a Jason Elam
field goal, Manning scored again, this time with one of the most
memorable plays in Indianapolis Colts history. On 3rd-and-8 from the
Denver 46, he connected with wide receiver Marvin Harrison at the 30
yard line, converting the first down. But the play wasn't over. As the
Bronco defenders argued amongst themselves, Harrison stood up and
sprinted to the endzone. He hadn't been touched. The play counted for
six and, just like that, the Colts were up 14-3. As the Jake
Plummer-led Bronco offense began to sputter (two punts and a David
Macklin interception), Manning was just getting warmed up. He threw two
more TD passes in the half (Stokely, Harrison), and led the team down
the field for a Mike Vanderjagt 3-pointer as time expired. At halftime,
the Colts were up 31-3 and the game was essentially over. In the third
quarter, Manning threw his fifth TD pass of the night to wide receiver
Reggie Wayne. The Broncos failed to mount a comeback, and the Colts
cruised to a 41-10 triumph.
It was the first home playoff win in
Indianapolis Colts history. It was the first playoff win of Peyton
Manning's career. Manning and the Colts proved to the NFL that they
were contenders and would not be beaten easily. The city of
Indianapolis got a taste of playoff victory that would strengthen the
fanbase and contribute to the building of a new stadium right in the
heart of downtown.
Hero: Peyton
Manning. In the face of tremendous pressure from fans and media alike,
the co-NFL-MVP completed 22 of 26 passes for 377 yards and 5 touchdowns
with no interceptions. He was so good, in fact, that he didn't have to
finish the game. He was relieved in the fourth quarter by Brock Huard.
Factoids: This was the first of two consecutive playoff games in which
the Colts never punted. It was also the first of two consecutive
playoff games in which Manning had a perfect passer rating. Although he
never scored, running back Edgerrin James was a key contributor with
over 100 yards from scrimmage. Defensive end Dwight Freeney also had a
good day, registering a sack and a forced fumble.
Submitted by Big Dave
6. Colts 10 Patriots 7 December 23, 1995
In
order to keep the magical season alive and to clinch a playoff berth
Captain Comeback needed one more miracle. Although the Colts lost
Marshall Faulk to injury, they mounted a second-half rally to beat the
New England Patriots in the Indianapolis on national TV. Falling behind
7-0 at halftime, Harbaugh drove the Colts 65 yards on eight plays for
the tying score. Kicker Cary Blanchard kicked a 30-yard field goal
with 5:51 remaining and the defense held on to secure a playoff berth.
Hero:
Who else, Jim Harbaugh. His 13 yard pass to Floyd Turner tied the
game and eventually led the Colts to victory without their top rusher
Marshall Faulk (lost to injury).
Factoid:
This win ultimately led to the Indianapolis Colts winning their first
playoff game against the San Diego Chargers the following week, which
in itself was a milestone.
Submitted by Justin Landon
7. Colts 27, Dolphins 24 October 8, 1995
The
birth of Captain Comeback and the Cardiac Colts. After the Colts
stumbled out of the gate with a 1-2 start, Jim Harbaugh secured the
starting QB job (taking over for an ineffective Craig Erickson) and the
birth of a magical season began. The Colts, after falling behind,
24-3, rallied and cut the lead to 24-17 midway through the fourth.
Harbaugh and Bailey knotted up the score at 24 points with 1:09 left
with a 21-yard TD pass and later stunned the Dolphins and their fans
with an improbable 27-24 overtime victory.
Hero:
Jim Harbaugh, who completed 25 of 33 passes for 319 yards and three
touchdowns. He became an icon with his catchy nickname and got the
Colts their first taste of national attention.
Factoid:
Dan Marino broke the NFL record for pass completions on the October
8th against the Colts with 3,686. Then 2 weeks later in Indianapolis,
Marino threw his 343rd career TD pass breaking Fran Tarkenton's record.
Both ironically occurred in losses to the Colts.
Submitted by Justin Landon
8. Colts 15 Ravens 6 AFC Playoffs January 13, 2007
The
beloved Indianapolis Colts traveled to a truly hostile environment to
Baltimore, the city from whence they came, to play the #1 defense in
the league in a second round divisional playoff game. The question was,
could the Indianapolis defense that had shut down Larry Johnson
re-emerge, or would the defense that gave up yards like water through a
screen rear its ugly head again? The game started with the Colts
holding Jamal Lewis to three rushing yards, and the Ravens going three
and out. Manning then led the Colts on an 11-play drive that resulted
in an Adam Vinatieri field goal of 23-yards. Ravens ball, and on second
down Nick Harper put a textbook hit on Todd Heap to force a fumble,
recovered by Gary Brackett. This sets up Vinatieri's second field goal
of the night, this one from 42-yards. This game was a defensive battle
from the beginning, but the #1 defense in the league wasn't up to the
challenge. Probably the biggest play of the game came mid-way through
the second quarter, with Baltimore on the Colts 5-yard line. On 3rd and
4, Bethea intercepted McNair's pass at the 1-yard line, ending their
scoring threat. Manning then led the Colts 65 yards in 6 minutes,
capped off by a monster 51-yard field goal by Vinatieri, giving the
Colts a 9-3 lead. The game was undecided until the 4th quarter, where
midway through the Ravens and Colts traded three and outs, but then the
Colts ran a 47-play, 7 minute drive capped off again by a Vinatieri
field goal, putting the game virtually out of reach at 15-6. The Ravens
last drive ended in fitting fashion, as Mathis sacked McNair, forcing a
fumble that he recovered.
Hero: Adam
Vinatieri and team defense. AV hits 5 field goals, tying an NFL record
for most field goals in a playoff game. He also breaks Gary Anderson's
post-season records of FGAs and FGMs in this game. The defense holds
the Ravens to 83 rushing yards, 246 total yards, 2-11 on third down,
and forced 4 turnovers. Bob Sanders and Rob Morris both had 10 total
tackles.
Why its important: Coupled with a San Diego loss, this win lets the
Colts host their first ever AFC Championship game in the Dome, en route
to their first Super Bowl title in Indianapolis.
Submitted by Josh Brown
9. Colts 17 Steelers 16 October 21, 1984
One of the first home wins in Indianapolis. The Colts score 17 in the 4th quarter.
10. Colts 31 Vikings 10 December 24, 2000
Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the dome
The fans were stirring with the Colts' fate unknown
The Raven hung another L on the Jets with a sound thumping
Keeping the Colts' playoff hopes alive and pumping
Christmas came early for the Colts as Santa delivered a some magic and
a Colts win on Christmas Eve. A mere three weeks ago, the playoffs
seemed to be no more realistic than Ralphie getting a Red Ryder BB Gun
for Christmas. However the Colts got hot and strung together some W's
against Buffalo and Miami while the Jets folded like a house of cards
losing three in a row and now only needed to beat Minnesota. Not only
did the Colts beat Minnesota, they destroyed them in the process
winning 31-10. The defense knocked out Culpepper after three series
and held the #5 offense at the time to 236 total yards.
Hero: Santa Peyton. Manning tossed at that time a career high 4 TDs
and 283 yards and broke Johnny Unitas' 41-year-old club record for
touchdown passes in a season.
Factoid: Manning, Edge & Harrison all set records in this game.
Manning led the NFL with 33 TD passes, Edge set an NFL record for most
# of TDs by a player in his first two seasons and Marvin finished with
102 receptions leading all receivers for the 2000 season
Submitted by Justin Landon
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