Vancouver Sun

Colts savour ‘ surreal’ comeback over Chiefs

- MICHAEL MAROT

INDIANAPOL­IS — When coach Chuck Pagano arrived home after Saturday’s playoff victory, he tried to settle down.

Instead, he settled in for the reality that the Colts aren’t finished yet.

“You’re able to go home and sit on the couch, turn the TV on and find out that it did happen. It is real. It wasn’t surreal,” Pagano said Sunday, less than 24 hours after his team pulled off the secondgrea­test comeback in playoff history.

“Those guys, our players, they lay it on the line week in and week out. They truly left nothing, nothing, out there.”

The shocking turnaround, from a 38- 10 second- half deficit to 45- 44 victory over the Chiefs, left Indianapol­is spent both physically and mentally, linebacker Jerrell Freeman said.

And it has Indianapol­is ( 125) waiting to see if it plays at Denver or New England next weekend in the divisional round.

Those are the results of this monumental victory.

But a rare non- game day Sunday also gave the Colts a brief chance to reflect on what had been accomplish­ed.

— They won their first postseason game without Peyton Manning since January 1996.

— They won their first postseason game without Manning or Jim Harbaugh behind centre since John Unitas was the starter in 1971.

— They became the first NFL team in playoff history to win despite giving up 40 points and losing four turnovers.

— And they did it all with Andrew Luck leading the way on a less than stellar day.

How? By following Pagano’s long- standing mantra of playing hard until the final whistle and never losing faith in their aptly- named quarterbac­k.

“Hey, he does it all. As long as we continue to get the ball to him, we know some kind of way he’s going to put points on the board, that offence is going to get rolling,” Freeman said, referring to Luck.

“( Offensive coordinato­r) Pep ( Hamilton) has a lot of different schemes. I’m sure you- all see it. They can do it in the passing game and the run game. It’s great to have a quarterbac­k like that.” It’s not just Luck, though. These Colts thrive on debunking convention­al wisdom.

When they started the rebuilding process after the 2011 season with a first- time general manager, a first- time head coach, a rookie quarterbac­k and no Manning, they were considered one of the worst teams in football.

They wound up winning 11 games and making the playoffs even with Pagano missing 12 games to battle leukemia.

This summer, when some said Indy would regress in terms of wins against a tougher schedule, the Colts still wound up winning 11 and captured their first AFC South title without Manning.

And on Saturday, after trailing by 28 with 28 ½ minutes remaining and everybody else giving up on them, the Colts still believed.

NFL sacks champ Robert Mathis walked to the bench and slammed his helmet, then stewed stoically on the bench waiting for his next chance as Luck took the field one more time.

Saturday marked the 11th time he led the Colts to a winning score in the fourth quarter or overtime over the past two seasons — more than any other quarterbac­k in the NFL.

And after Saturday, even the outsiders are beginning to wonder if there’s anything Luck can’t do.

Pagano and his players already know the answer.

“I don’t know what level it is, but he sure went to another one ( Saturday),” Pagano said. “He’s a guy that is able to put things behind him in a hurry.

“I’ve seen a lot of guys on either side of the ball have some poor plays here and there. Whether it’s a quarterbac­k and you throw three intercepti­ons, you come right out of the half and you’re gunned up and ready to go play good football and, boom, you start the second half the way we started the second half. The guy is just strongmind­ed that way.”

 ?? MICHAEL CONROY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Indianapol­is quarterbac­k Andrew Luck dives for a touchdown after recovering a fumble by teammate Donald Brown during the second half of an NFL wild- card playoff game against the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday in Indianapol­is.
MICHAEL CONROY/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Indianapol­is quarterbac­k Andrew Luck dives for a touchdown after recovering a fumble by teammate Donald Brown during the second half of an NFL wild- card playoff game against the Kansas City Chiefs on Saturday in Indianapol­is.

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