Toronto Star

Colts, Chiefs in similar spots heading into wild-card clash

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INDIANAPOL­IS— Colts coach Chuck Pagano has kept it loose all week.

He’s been cracking jokes, encouragin­g laughter and trying to put football in perspectiv­e. He does not want Saturday’s playoff game to change the routine, so he is imploring the Colts to make this business as usual — even with the Chiefs coming to town for a wild-card game (Chiefs at Colts, 4:30 p.m., CTV, NBC).

“It’s no time to pressure up, it’s no time to get outside of anything you’ve done at this point,” Pagano said.

“You come in, you meet, you have a walkthroug­h, you practice well and then you play well. Don’t do anything different.”

Pagano has seen what happens when teams play tight. So have Colts fans, more times than they care to count.

There are all sorts of potential distractio­ns — ticket requests, travel plans, holiday celebratio­n, even unforeseen medical emergencie­s. Last year, just before their wild-card game at Baltimore, Colts offensive co-ordinator Bruce Arians was hospitaliz­ed. Indy managed only three field goals in a 24-9 loss as a bunch of Colts made their post-season debuts. Arians turned out to be okay and wound up getting hired by the Cardinals. But the Colts’ youngsters learned some key lessons that have helped this time around.

“There can be a little more focus during the week. There can be some more distractio­ns. That’s where you really need to sort of hunker down,” quarterbac­k Andrew Luck said. “As far as playing the game and practice, we’ve gotten to this point doing some things well. Let’s keep doing those.” Now, it’s the Chiefs’ turn. Coach Andy Reid and new general manager John Dorsey followed the same plan Pagano and Ryan Grigson used to rebuild the Colts — new coach, new GM, new quarterbac­k, new roster. Kansas City, like the Colts, went from 2-14 to11-5 and back to the playoffs with nearly two dozen first- or second-year guys.

A few of the playoff veterans now find themselves explaining to teammates what to expect Saturday.

“My first time, I acted like a rookie. I was excited and fumbled the ball twice,” AFC rushing champion Jamaal Charles said. “Now I’m going in my second time and seeing other people, becoming a vet, 27 years old, I really want this, I really want to go far, and if I have to put the team on my back, I will.”

 ?? DAVID EULITT/MCT ?? Indianapol­is Colts head coach Chuck Pagano, left, and Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid after Indy’s 23-7 regular-season victory back on Dec. 22.
DAVID EULITT/MCT Indianapol­is Colts head coach Chuck Pagano, left, and Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid after Indy’s 23-7 regular-season victory back on Dec. 22.

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