Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Colts, Texans, Seahawks are delivering big turnaround­s

- By Barry Wilner

Turn back the clock to September. What do you see if you root for the Colts, Texans and Seahawks? Ugliness. Losing. Little hope. It’s now after Thanksgivi­ng, and Houston leads the AFC South, with Indianapol­is in hot pursuit. Seattle has stamped itself as a wild-card contender in the NFC, and an opponent most teams would like to avoid.

All three have made impressive turnaround­s that could become memorable should they lead to the playoffs — and January success.

So how does it happen? Indy was 1-5 and now is 6-5. Seattle had two dirty defeats to open the schedule and was headed down a long losing path. Houston went 0-3, yet has become the first team to win eight straight after such a weak start.

“There is just a real upbeat aura about this team,” says Seahawks coach Pete Carroll, who majors in upbeat and is doing one of the best jobs of his distinguis­hed career.

“They’re real hungry to learn, they’re hungry for the challenges,” he added. “They’ve just been real competitiv­e throughout and they’ve enjoyed the challenges. They have not allowed themselves to go downward at any time. They keep looking to the future and what’s up and what’s coming. It’s just been a really good group to work with.”

Sounds like

Houston.

“You just have to believe,” explains defensive end J.J. Watt, who majors in believing — and is in the midst of a spectacula­r comeback season. “A lot of it comes down to belief, remaining positive even in a difficult situation and believing in yourself, and believing in each other, and knowing that you can turn it around.

“I think sometimes you’re 0-3 or you’re in a tough situation, you look around and you’re like, M` aybe that’s just us.’ I think we all in that situation this year knew that wasn’t us. I think we knew we had the players in the room and the ability to play a lot better than we did and to win those games. So, I think it’s easy to believe when you know that about your guys.”

The main guy in Indianapol­is has been Andrew Luck, who in strange circumstan­ces never fully explained, missed the entire 2017 season with a shoulder injury. Like Watt, he’s having a monster of a comeback year.

Folks in Indy cite coach Frank Reich — a second choice after Josh McDaniels reneged on his deal with the Colts — playing to win in tight situations, such as the overtime loss to the Texans — as being a turning point.

“I think Frank has done a great job of keeping us just focused at the task at hand, whether we were losing games, winning games (or) whatever it is,” Luck says.

“The approach has been the same. So in that department, really nothing has changed. We’ve just come in and try to make the most out of each day. I know it sounds cliche, but it’s what’s working for us. That’s where our focus needs to stay. I think it is and we will fight against letting our focus go elsewhere.”

The key to winding up with a positive season after a negative start really comes down to faith. Faith in the coaching staff, in the players, in staying healthy enough, and in getting some breaks.

Stay the course, and that course might lead you deep into January.

“We will see it down the stretch, for sure, that wellcoache­d teams get better as the season goes along unless they are decimated by injury,” says Hall of Famer Bill Polian, the guiding force for three winning franchises as a team executive.

Personnel changes that have worked also have led to success in all three cities.

Polian believes the Colts have contenders for both top rookie awards, guard Nelson on offense, linebacker Darius Leonard on defense. New tight end Eric Ebron has 11 touchdown receptions.

The Texans obviously have Watt and Watson back, along with linebacker Whitney Mercilus, and third-round cornerback Justin Reid. Adding veteran wideout Demaryius Thomas when Will Fuller tore up his knee is paying off, too.

For Seattle, a stable of running backs, from first-round pick Rashaad Penny to second-year player Chris Carson to fourth-year vet Mike Davis has kept the backfield fresh. Second-year receiver David Moore has become a contributo­r, and the tight ends have picked up the slack with Jimmy Graham gone to Green Bay.

Most of all, the Legion of Boom has gone bust, but the secondary still has progressed throughout the schedule. what’s going on in

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