San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

COLTS DEFEAT PATS WITH RUN GAME

- BY MICHAEL MAROT Marot writes for The Associated Press.

Jonathan Taylor understood the challenge long before he suited up Saturday night.

He anticipate­d defensive mastermind Bill Belichick would stack the line of scrimmage and dare the Indianapol­is Colts to beat them with the passing game as he’s done to so many other opponents.

This time, Taylor turned the tables. The second-year running back rushed for 170 yards, including a 67-yard touchdown run with 2:01 left to seal Indy’s 27-17 victory over New England.

“I think it just says we’re a team that’s going to come in and play 60 minutes, four quarters of hard football and we’re not going to give up till the clock hits zero,” Taylor said after logging 29 carries. “It was just all out effort.”

Taylor’s performanc­e may have changed their season, too. By winning for the fifth time in six games and snapping an eight-game losing streak against a bitter rival, Indy (8-6) solidified its playoff

Colts 27, Patriots 17

hopes with another crucial conference victory.

He’s run for a score in 11 straight games, tying Hall of Famer Lenny Moore for the longest streak in franchise history.

Nobody inside the Colts locker room was surprised by his stat line — or the epic highlight of Taylor breaking through the line, eluding a tackle and sprinting to the front corner of the end zone..

“I almost called a pass there because I thought we needed a first down and I talked it over with Marcus Brady and said ‘No, let’s call one more pass,’ ” coach Frank Reich said referring to his offensive coordinato­r. “There’s no way anybody’s catching him.“

For the Patriots (9-5), it marked the end of a sevengame winning streak and dropped them out of the No. 1 slot in the AFC playoff chase. And it was mostly of their own making.

A bevy of uncharacte­ristic mistakes put the Pats in a 20-0 hole and Taylor’s long run made sure they couldn’t come all the way back.

The game had a little bit of everything — drama, physical play, shouting matches, even a fight that led to the ejections of Patriots safety Kyle Dugger and Colts receiver Michael Pittman Jr.

But Indy won this one by stealing a page out of Belichick’s playbook — using the ground game to chew up the clock and closing it out with a back-breaking play in the waning minutes. It was Indy’s first win over New England since 2009.

“I’ve said it like five times, I can say it another five times,” Belichick said. “We didn’t do anything well enough to win tonight.”

 ?? ANDY LYONS GETTY IMAGES ?? Jonathan Taylor (28) and Nyheim Hines of the Colts celebrate after Hines’ early touchdown vs. the Pats.
ANDY LYONS GETTY IMAGES Jonathan Taylor (28) and Nyheim Hines of the Colts celebrate after Hines’ early touchdown vs. the Pats.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States