Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Luck’s workload up because of bad starts

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INDIANAPOL­IS — Andrew Luck’s surgically repaired right shoulder is being tested in ways even he couldn’t imagine.

The Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k threw 121 passes during a five-day span last week — easily the highest total he’s ever accrued in consecutiv­e games.

Dropping back so frequently subjects Luck to more potential hits and more potential injuries as well.

And it’s something the Colts know must change if they intend to keep Luck on the field for the final 11 games.

“I think for us a big part of it is we need more success early,” said Coach Frank Reich, a former NFL quarterbac­k.

Circumstan­ces primarily dictated the Colts’ play-calls against Houston and New England.

Luck had to throw on nearly every play after the Colts fell into an 18-point, third-quarter deficit against the Texans. He led the Colts to a late, tying score that forced overtime before Indy lost 37-34.

On Thursday, Luck helped Indy cut a 21-point halftime deficit to seven in the fourth quarter before losing 38-24 at New England.

Luck also had the Colts (1-4) in position for go-ahead touchdowns in the final two minutes against Cincinnati in the season opener and at Philadelph­ia in Week 3, only to come up short both times.

But the expanded workload has shown up in the numbers.

Luck’s 245 attempts through five games lead the league and have him on pace to throw 784 times this season, a number that would shatter Matthew Stafford’s single-season record of 727 from 2012.

It’s uncharted territory for Luck, who never threw more than 63 passes in backto-back games at Stanford, never threw more than 99 passes in any previous twogame stretch in the NFL and can’t even remember a time in high school when he threw so frequently.

So far, Luck’s arm seems to be just fine.

“Physically, I feel better and better,” he said Wednesday. “I think there’s been a concerted effort in this locker room so guys continue to progress physically, stay strong, keep getting strong and not plateau. I subscribe to that theory and I think it’s paying off in the recovery from games, the recovery from throwing a bunch of throws, and I’m excited to keep rolling.”

While game situations certainly have forced more throws than Reich scripted, injuries to Luck’s supporting cast haven’t helped, either.

Starting running back Marlon Mack missed four of the first five games with a hamstring injury. He hopes to return Sunday against the New York Jets (2-3).

Backup running back Robert Turbin, Indy’s short-yardage specialist, returned last week after missing the first four games for violating the NFL’s policy on performanc­e-enhancers.

Pro Bowl receiver T.Y. Hilton couldn’t finish the Houston game and sat out against New England with a hamstring injury, and Pro Bowl tight end Jack Doyle has missed three consecutiv­e games with an injured hip.

Indy’s starting offensive line also has been in flux. Left tackle Anthony Castonzo (hamstring) might make his season debut this weekend and the Colts already have used four different starters at right tackle.

The good news is Denzelle Good returned to practice Wednesday after missing the last week following the death of his brother, Overton, in a drive-by shooting in South Carolina and could return Sunday.

But right guard Matt Slauson, who started each of Indy’s first five games, will miss the rest of the season after breaking two vertebrae against New England. Rookie Braden Smith, who started last week at right tackle, could return to his more natural spot on the interior line in Slauson’s absence.

“There are a couple of different options we’re looking at and obviously we’re pretty geared into it,” Reich said.

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