Dayton Daily News

Indianapol­is looks to get back on track

Season on the brink for Colts as they get ready for Bengals.

- By Michael Marot

Indianapol­is INDIANAPOL­IS — desperatel­y wants to flip the script.

Instead of poring over ugly numbers, the Colts find themselves breaking down all the woeful game footage as they continue to deal with injuries.

It’s a giant mess.

Just three days after quarterbac­k Jacoby Brissett was sacked 10 times and the defense gave up more than 500 yards, the Colts got back to work Wednesday knowing this season was teetering on the brink.

“We’ve got to come together and we will be together,” coach Chuck Pagano said. “You love hostile environmen­ts. There’s nothing like being in that environmen­t and the circumstan­ces we’re in to galvanize you as a group.” At least, that’s the hope. Indy (2-5) has lost two straight and needs a win in Cincinnati to have any hope of getting back in the AFC South race.

It seems unfathomab­le given the twists and turns of the past 10 days.

During that span, Indy had its 11-game winning streak over Tennessee and a fourgame home winning streak over Jacksonvil­le snapped and suffered its first regular-season shutout in 376 games.

Quarterbac­k Andrew Luck, who has been working his way back from offseason shoulder surgery, had his throwing program shut down last week because of soreness in his throwing arm.

He won’t throw this week, either, even though Pagano insisted “nothing has changed” in terms of Luck possibly returning sometime this season.

Safety Malik Hooker, Indy’s first-round draft pick, was one of three defensive starters injured in Sunday’s 27-0 loss. On Monday, the Colts confirmed the promising rookie would miss the rest of the season with a torn ACL and a torn MCL in his right knee.

Pro Bowl receiver T.Y. Hilton apologized Monday for criticizin­g the offensive line following the latest loss, saying he planned to speak with each lineman individual­ly.

“That’s over with, it’s on to Cincinnati now,” left tackle Anthony Castonzo said. Not enough?

Early Tuesday, 36-year-old pass rush consultant Robert Mathis was arrested in an Indianapol­is suburb on a preliminar­y charge of driving while intoxicate­d. Pagano said he has spoken with Indy’s career leader in sacks (123), but only acknowledg­ed that Mathis was expected to be on the field for the Bengals game.

“Obviously, you guys are aware of what happened. We’re aware of what happened. We all understand it’s a privilege and honor to coach and play in the NFL and we all understand that no one knows that better than Robert,” Pagano said. “We’ve dealt with it internally and we’ll let the legal process deal with it. We’ve got his back and we’ll move on.”

Mathis was suspended for the first four games of the 2014 season for violating the league’s performanc­e-enhancing substance policy. At the time, Mathis explained he had been using a male fertility drug.

On the field, things aren’t getting any easier either.

After playing at Cincinnati (2-5), the Colts visit defending AFC South champion Houston (3-3) then host Pittsburgh (5-2), which has outscored Indy 124-51 in the past three games.

Plus, the Colts are still looking for replacemen­ts.

Starting linebacker John Simon, who leads the team with three sacks, is likely to miss the Bengals game with a stinger. Starting cornerback Rashaan Melvin didn’t practice Wednesday as he continues through the concussion protocol. And a continuall­y shifting offensive line is still trying to keep Brissett upright and the running game on track.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States