Imperial Valley Press

Luck welcomes soreness after throwing 53 passes in opener

- BY MICHAEL MAROT AP Sports Writer

INDIANAPOL­IS — Andrew Luck’s postgame recovery process turned into a quick reminder of what he’d missed over the past 20 months.

The throws, the hits and, yes, even the Monday morning soreness.

So on his 27th birthday, the Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k stood at his locker and reflected on how he was dealing with moving beyond one game and onto the next.

“I forget what it felt like, sort of the postgame, the next day,” Luck said Wednesday with a laugh. “I’ve never been in a serious car wreck thankfully, but I imagine you get a little bit of that feeling. It’s always good to take those steps and look at the game objectivel­y and also physically move around and get going.”

It’s certainly different from last year’s weekly routine.

But this is the next step in Luck’s long road back.

He threw 53 passes in Sunday’s game against Cincinnati, the fourth-highest single-game total of his career behind only the 55 he threw in a comeback victory over Green Bay in 2012, the 54 he threw in a comeback victory at Detroit later that season and the 54 he attempted in the Colts’ playoff loss during his rookie season.

Two years later, Luck threw 53 passes against Denver and Cleveland.

Since then, though, he had never topped 50 — something new coach Frank Reich didn’t intend to do in his first regular-season start since January 2017. The Bengals defense dictated it.

Luck also was sacked twice and took an additional seven hits during the game, managed to draw two penalties for roughing the passer and even endured a helmet-to-helmet collision that led to the ejection of Bengals safety Shawn Williams late in the first quarter.

Following the game, Luck said he felt fine.

On Monday, the painful reminders came rushing back.

“I was sore. I felt a couple of those hits,” Luck said. “Otherwise, I think I came out fairly clean. I felt like I had juice left in my arm, which I am excited about. We did throw a lot, I didn’t realize we threw it that many times.”

Luck felt better Wednesday as preparatio­ns kicked into high gear for this weekend’s matchup at Washington, where rain and wind from Hurricane Florence could make it challengin­g.

Reich doesn’t anticipate making any significan­t changes to the game plan or practice schedule yet, waiting for more accurate forecasts as the weekend and the hurricane get closer.

“We’ll take some snaps with a wet ball, but I’m not a big believer in throwing with a wet ball too much, it gets heavy. Sometimes that can put a little stress on a quarterbac­k’s shoulder,” the former NFL quarterbac­k said.

“You might do a little bit of a wet ball drill by quarterbac­k-center exchange and a few light tosses here and there.”

Of course, neither Reich nor Luck were there for last year’s blizzard in Buffalo — a game played in conditions 23-year veteran Adam Vinatieri called the worst he’s ever faced.

Reich said there have been “ongoing communicat­ions” with league officials about potential contingenc­y plans.

Meanwhile, it appears Luck will have his longtime left tackle, Anthony Castonzo, back in the lineup.

Castonzo hasn’t been full-go since re-injuring his hamstring Aug. 4.

He initially was hurt during workouts between the end of minicamp and the start of training camp, went on the physically unable to perform list and then had another setback shortly after returning to practice.

The Colts (0-1) considered bringing back Castonzo for last week’s opener before deciding to deactivate him.

This week, Castonzo promises he’ll be on the field.

“I’ll be full-go, I’ll be at left tackle,” he said. “It was extremely close (last week), I talked it over with the coaches and doctors about the risk of going out there, it was just a really high risk.”

Castonzo’s return could allow Joe Haeg to slide from the left side to the right side where he played more frequently during the previous two seasons.

J’Marcus Webb started at right tackle last weekend, but was placed on injured reserve Tuesday after hurting his hamstring on the Bengals’ 83-yard fumble return, which sealed the 34-23 victory.

 ??  ?? Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck (12) is chased by Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Jordan Willis (75) and defensive end Michael Johnson (90) during the second half of an NFL football game in Indianapol­is, Sept. 9. AP PHOTO/JEFF ROBERSON
Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k Andrew Luck (12) is chased by Cincinnati Bengals defensive end Jordan Willis (75) and defensive end Michael Johnson (90) during the second half of an NFL football game in Indianapol­is, Sept. 9. AP PHOTO/JEFF ROBERSON

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