Daily Archives: September 14, 2008

No quit in Colts. Vikings blow 15-0 lead, lose 18-15 in fourth quarter collapse.

MINNEAPOLIS — There was absolutely no quit in the Indianapolis Colts offence on Sunday afternoon. 

 

After trailing for the entire game, the Colts put up 18 unanswered points in the second half, 11 in the fourth quarter, as the Colts came from behind to defeat the Minnesota Vikings 18-15.

 

The Vikings had built a 15-0 lead in the third quarter on a five Ryan Longwell field goals (of 45, 27, 53, 46 and 28 yards) but without any touchdowns, the Vikes simply didn’t get far enough ahead of Peyton Manning and the Colts, 

 

“I’m very proud of our effort today,” said Colts head coach Tony Dungy in a strangely quiet Colts locker room after the game. “We never got discouraged even though we were down 15-0 and I think a lot of that had to do with the fact we didn’t give up a touchdown. We had this feeling that if we hold them to field goals, then we can still catch them. It was great to see us win that game even though we continued to make a lot of mistakes.”

 

This was a huge win for Indy. As Dungy pointed out, “It’s important to get to 1-1 with Jacksonville next week.”

 

“That’s a big inter-divisional game for us and being 0-2 and facing those guys (the Jaguars) would have been really tough,” Dungy added. “What we take out of this victory is that we kept it close enough to win.”

 

Not surprisingly, the Colts comeback was led by quarterback Peyton Manning who played almost flawlessly in the final quarter to give the Colts their first win two starts this season.

 

On the final Indianapolis drive — right after the Colts defence stopped the Vikings inside their own five — Manning got Indy into  position for Adam Vinatieri to kick a 39-yard field goal with three seconds left on the clock to win it. 

 

On a third-and-nine, Manning threw a 20-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne in the fourth quarter to tie the game, after Joseph Addai had run a yard for a disputed touchdown in the third quarter (not one replay showed clearly that the football ever got near the plane of the goal-line let alone crossed it).

 

With the win, Manning avoided the first 0-2 start since his rookie season in 1998. Yesterday Manning completed 26-of-42 passes for 311 yards, one touchdown and two interceptions.

 

“It just took a long time for us to get going,” Manning said afterward. “That’s two games in a row that we just didn’t come out firing on all cylinders. We’ll have to work on that.”

 

The Vikings, meanwhile, wasted an outstanding defensive effort and a particularly solid bit of work from tailback Adrian Peterson. Peterson rushed for 160 yards while Jared Allen, the multi-million dollar free-agent defensive end, who was acquired in a trade with Mansas City in the off-season, had three tackles and his first sack as a Viking.

But as the Colts’ Canadian offensive lineman, Calgary’s Dan Federkeil pointed out, the Vikings tired in the fourth quarter. 

“I’m really tired, but I don’t think I’m as tired as those guys (the Vikings defence),” said Federkeil, the University of Calgary grad who starts at right guard for the Colts. “That was a tough game today, but if you look at the way their defence played in the first quarter, compared to the fourth quarter, there was just no comparison. They tired and we were able to hang in there long enough to get the offence going.”

Vikings fans, in a loud, sold out Metrodome, really wanted to blame quarterback Tarvaris Jackson for the loss, but it was hardly his fault. Bernard Berrian, who was paid $16 million as a free-agent this past off-season, dropped three passes right in his hands. Visanthe Shiancoe dropped a perfect pass in the end zone. With any kind of help, Jackson could have been the hero.

The Vikings, now 0-2, face Carolina at the Metrodome next Sunday.

It’s Week 2 in the NFL. Here are the 10 things you need to know.

MINNEAPOLIS — It’s Week 2 in the National Football League and we’re here in the press box at the Metrodome in downtown Minneapolis for a pretty important matchup between the Indianapolis Colts and Minnesota Vikings.

One of these teams will shuffle out of the Humphrey Dome with an 0-2 record and after both teams were borderline dreadful in Week 1, no one will be surprised which of these two teams it is.

As he was called in a headline in the Twin Cities Star-Tribune this morning, Indy’s Peyton Manning is the "rusty, slow, dangerous quarterback." Granted, he and the Colts were drilled at home by Chicago last week, but you can never underestimate the things Manning can do.

The Vikings, meanwhile, are a team that didn’t pass the consistency test last week in Green Bay. They lost 24-19, but had a dozen opportunities to win the game. In the end, quarterback Tarvaris Jackson threw an interception on the final drive to lose it.

One of these teams will snap out of it today and we’ll have all the action and colour right after the final gun.

In the meantime, here are the 10 things you need to know heading into Week 2. (By the way, go see Brad Pitt and George Clooney in Burn After Reading. Spectacular flick.)

1.  By Tuesday morning, only 16 teams will be able to boast about having a perfect 2-0 record. That leaves at least 16 clubs at 1-1 or 0-2. Since NFL realignment in 2002, 42 of the 72 playoff teams (58.3 per cent) began the year at either 1-1 or 0-2.  Four of the past seven Super Bowl champions began their seasons with a 1-1 or 0-2 record, including the Super Bowl XLII Champion New York Giants. In case you’ve forgotten, the Giants started 0-2 last season and coach Tom Coughlin nearly got his butt fired.

2.  In case you’ve been living under a rock, here’s a scoop: New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady will miss the remainder of the season with a knee injury. However, the NFL still has plenty of durable quarterbacks. New York Jets QB Brett Favre (I still have trouble writing, "New York Jets QB Brett Favre), who goes head-to-head against Matt Cassel and the Patriots today (more on that later), holds the NFL record for consecutive regular-season starts with 254. Indy’s Peyton manning will start No. 162 here in Minnie today.

3. Speaking of Peyton, he’s had plenty of success against the Vikings. According to the league, Manning has thrown four touchdowns in each of his two career games against Minnesota. With a similar performance today, he can become the first NFL quarterback to pass for four touchdowns in three consecutive games against an opponent. OK, that’s an obscure milestone, but it’s still pretty good.

4. And on the topic of obscure milestones the Eagles Donovan McNabb can break a 22-year-old record this Monday night when Philadelphia plays the Cowboys in Dallas. McNabb, coming off a three-touchdown performance last week against St. Louis, needs two TD passes against Dallas tomorrow night to surpass former Eagles quarterback Ron Jaworski (1977-86) as the Eagles’ career leader. Oh yeah, and Jaworski will be covering the game in Dallas for ESPN.

 5. When the Miami Dolphins and Arizona Cardinals meet up in the Cards home opener today, history suggests there will not be very many incomplete passes. Dolphins QB Chad Pennington (65.5) and Cardinals starter Kurt Warner (65.1) lead the NFL with the highest career completion percentages. That’s right, Pennington and Warner are 1-2 ahead of No. 3 Steve Young and No. 4 Peyton Manning.

6. Perhaps the most intriguing game of the weekend will feature the New England Patriots and the New York Jets. Before the season began, this was going to be a matchup between Jets QB Brett Favre, the NFL career leader in all the major passing categories, against three-time Super Bowl winner Tom Brady. But Brady’s gone for the duration (knee surgery) and a seventh-round draft choice from 2005 named Matt Cassel is the quarterback. Cassel, who backed up Carson Palmer and Matt Leinert at USC, hasn’t started a game since high school. However, be fair. Brady was a sixth-round pick who carried a clipboard for a year before replacing the injured Drew Bledsoe. Favre, who now calls himself "a New Yorkian," was a second-round pick who was traded after his rookie year (and no starts) from Atlanta to Green Bay before he got his chance. This will be an intriguing matchup because after Brady’s success, you can’t write off Cassel quite yet.     

7. Atlanta Falcons rookie QB Matt Ryan’s 62-yard touchdown pass on his first NFL attempt last Sunday was the first time a player threw a TD pass of 50 or more yards in the first quarter of his NFL debut since Roger Staubach hit Lance Rentzel on a 75-yard TD bomb on Sept. 21, 1969.

8. The Cleveland Browns will try to bounce back, as they did last year, from a 28-10 opening game shellacking at the hands of the Dallas Cowboys, to beat the Pittsburgh Steelers and end an ugly streak. After losing 34-7 in their 2007 opener to the Steelers, the Browns roared back in Week 2 last year with a 51-45 win over Cincinnati, so they know a quick turnaround is possible (they eventually finished 10-6). Problem is, the Browns are playing Pittsburgh a team that has won nine in a row over the Browns and 14 of the last 15.

9. What a Monday night matchup. Last week, the Philadelphia Eagles amassed  522 yards of total offence while the Cowboys picked up 487, to rank 1 and 2 after Week1. That means, Monday will be the first time since Nov. 19, 2006 (Cincinnati, 545 at New Orleans, 513) that teams have met the week after posting at least 475 yards of offense.

10. Oh yeah, and the quarterbacks were pretty hot last Sunday, too. Philly’s Donovan McNabb threw for 361 yards and three touchdowns while three Eagles receivers (rookie DE Sean Jackson, Greg Lewis and Hank Baskett) each  put up at least 100 receiving yards (the first time that has happened for Philly since 1960). Meanwhile, the Cowboys’ Tony Romo threw for 320 yards while putting together four long touchdown drives against the Browns.