The Mercury News

Win over Packers could give Colts a huge boost

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It’s difficult to sneak up on anybody in the NFL, given the attention the sport commands.

Yet the Indianapol­is Colts have been something of a secret at 6-3. If you’re surprised to see them tied with Tennessee atop the AFC South, it’s excusable.

After beating the Titans, should they handle one of the NFL’S elite teams, the Packers, today, well, evaluation­s of the Colts will change from outsider to contender.

“We enjoyed the heck out of that win (at Tennessee). We were all excited,” quarterbac­k Philip Rivers says. “That was a big win, but at the same time we know you just have to keep pushing. I refer to it as ... it’s a week-to-week league. It’s what are you doing this Sunday?

“As excited as we are to put ourselves in position here after nine games, we know that our best football needs to be ahead of us starting this week.”

Green Bay (7-2) is solidly in control of the NFC North and in strong position to pursue the conference’s top seed and lone playoffs bye. The Packers have only one future opponent that currently has a winning record, the Titans.

Aaron Rodgers disregards the upcoming schedule.

“I think every game is a measuring stick, and there’s ways we can look at every aspect of our matchup and use it to our advantage when critiquing ourselves or coaching up certain things,” the outstandin­g Packers quarterbac­k says. “Numbers are used to project things, but they’re also a reflection of performanc­e.

“I think every week in the NFL, it’s about winning and it’s about execution. We’ve played great defenses in the past and done well, and we’ve played defenses that ranked really low and not done well. It just depends on the execution and how things match up on Sunday.”

TITANS AT RAVENS

It’s all about Derrick Henry, as the Ravens found out in last January’s playoff loss to the Titans’ superb running back. Henry, second in the NFL in rushing with 946yards, ran for 103 yards in his previous game, a loss to Indianapol­is. Henry has five 100-yard rushing games this season and 11 since the start of the 2019schedu­le. But the Ravens lead the NFL in fewest points allowed per game (18.3), forced fumbles (17) and fumble recoveries (10). And they can also run the ball, having rushed for at least 100yards in 32straight games, the third-longest streak in NFL history. Tennessee has the NFL’S fewest turnovers with four. The Titans lead the NFL with a plus10 turnover differenti­al. Baltimore, coming off a messy defeat in nasty weather at New England, saw its Nfl-record run of scoring at least 20 points in 31straight games end. So did its streak of forcing a turnover in 21 successive games.

JETS AT CHARGERS

Two teams headed nowhere. New York has not won a regular-season road game against the Chargers since 2004, and has never been 0-9 before. We might be repeating the phrase each week as the numbers climb. At least L.A. has had one positive in 2020: Justin Herbert is the first rookie to throw multiple TDS in six straight games. Most likely he’ll make it seven.

EAGLES AT BROWNS

The Eagles have won five straight against the Browns and four in a row at Cleveland. But these Eagles have been serious underachie­vers — injuries have had a lot to do with that — and are on top of the NFC East only because the division is so week. The Eagles’ next five opponents are a combined 32-13. They do play the run pretty well, and the Browns run well. Nick Chubb returned last week after missing four games with a sprained right knee and rushed for 126 yards. Kareem Hunt added 104 yards against Houston; Chubb and Hunt are the first Cleveland backs to run for 100 yards apiece since Hall of Famer Leroy Kelly and Ernie Green in 1966.

DOLPHINS AT BRONCOS

Turnovers often are decisive in the NFL, so get this: The Dolphins rank second in takeaways per game at 1.7. They have a takeaway in 16consecut­ive games, the longest streak in the league. Denver leads the league with 21giveaway­s, including a league-high 16intercep­tions. The Broncos turned over the ball five times at Las Vegas last week. Miami’s Tua Tagovailoa could match Ben Roethlisbe­rger as the only QBS in the past 40years to win their first four starts as a rookie. Roethlisbe­rger won his first 13starts in 2004. The Dolphins’ five-game winning streak is their longest since 2016.

STEELERS AT JAGUARS

The Steelers don’t play particular­ly well in Jacksonvil­le, but they still have squeezed out victories in their past three trips. While their running game has sagged a bit, there’s nothing wrong with the defense. The Steelers have at least one sack in 66 consecutiv­e games, three shy of Tampa Bay’s NFL record set between 1999 and 2003. Jacksonvil­le, which has lost eight in a row, is one shy of a very dubious mark: 100 defeats under owner Shad Khan. He fired coach Gus Bradley following a ninth straight loss in 2016. The Jaguars are 41-99 in Khan’s nine-year tenure. A loss Sunday would tie him with former New Orleans Saints owner John Mecom Jr. as the second fastest to reach 100.

COWBOYS AT VIKINGS

Kirk Cousins can’t feel comfortabl­e against the Cowboys, even if Dallas is one of the league’s worst teams. Demarcus Lawrence has more sacks, with five, of Cousins than any other player in his career. Cousins is 2-6 in his career against the Cowboys but has 14TDS against five intercepti­ons for a 99.2 passer rating in the eight starts, mostly with Washington. Slowing Minnesota running back Dalvin Cook is the key for Dallas, while Cowboys RB Ezekiel Elliott has struggled and still does not have a 100-yard rushing performanc­e in 2020.

FALCONS AT SAINTS

The Falcons are playing better under interim coach Raheem Morris, and the Saints, minus Drew Brees, could be vulnerable. The Saints have won six straight games, the fourth straight season they’ve had a winning streak that long. Whether it continues might depend on if Jameis Winston can protect the ball better than he did when he was with Tampa Bay, and how productive Alvin Kamara is against a vulnerable Atlanta defense. Kamara ranks second in the NFL in scrimmage yards with 1,134, and has 11 TDS.

BENGALS AT WASHINGTON

The top two selections in last April’s draft face off. Bengals QB Joe Burrow ranks second in the NFL with 370 pass attempts and third with 242 completion­s. He has five 300-yard passing games, tied for second most among rookies in NFL history. Washington edge rusher Chase Young hasn’t had nearly as much impact, but leads all rookies with 3 1-2 sacks. Young committed a roughing-thepasser penalty that set up the Lions for Matt Prater’s winning 59-yard field goal last Sunday.

LIONS AT PANTHERS

The Lions are 3-2 on the road, the Panthers are 1- 4 at home and have dropped five in a row overall. Surprising factoid: Carolina’s Robby Anderson ranks fifth in yards receiving ( 772), and DJ Moore ranks 10th with 736, making Carolina the only team in the league with two players with more than 700 yards receiving.

PATRIOTS AT TEXANS

Even though the Patriots have won two in a row, it’s difficult to get excited considerin­g they were pushed to the limit by the winless Jets, then knocked off Baltimore in ugly weather last week. Weather won’t be a factor in Houston — and the Texans might not be, either. It’s easy to feel for talented QB Deshaun Watson, who is getting little help. Houston’s only two victories are against Jacksonvil­le, which is almost as hapless as the Jets.

 ?? FREDERICK BREEDON — GETTY IMAGES ?? The Colts, winners of three of their last four games, take a 6-3 record into today’s home game against the 7-2 Packers.
FREDERICK BREEDON — GETTY IMAGES The Colts, winners of three of their last four games, take a 6-3 record into today’s home game against the 7-2 Packers.

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