The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Taylor, Colts overpower Bucs

- By Michael Marot

Jonathan Taylor and Zack Moss ran through the usually stingy Tampa Bay defense Nov. 26.

Gardner Minshew surprised the Buccaneers — with his feet as well as his arm.

Taylor ran for two scores, Minshew added another on the ground and the Indianapol­is Colts defense came up with a late turnover to preserve a crucial 27-20 victory over Tampa Bay that keeps Indy in the playoff hunt heading into December.

“I know we came out throwing it early there, and then settled into the run game,” coach Shane Steichen said. “JT popped a few big ones, Zack popped a few. It was good. That onetwo punch back there is awesome.”

The trio of Taylor, Moss and Minshew combined for 155 yards rushing and three TD runs against an opponent that had allowed just four scoring runs all season. Those numbers might have

been even higher if Taylor had not slid after picking up a late first down to keep the clock moving.

But it was a fourth-and-1 late play call at the Bucs 49-yard-line that caught everyone off-guard.

Indy (6-5) lined up in a jumbo package with an extra tight end, an extra offensive lineman and linebacker Zaire Franklin playing fullback. Minshew faked a handoff inside, stepped back and found Mo AlieCox sprinting wide open between the hashmarks for a 30-yard gain.

“Our tight end coach, Tom (Manning), came to me with the idea and we were doing our short-yardage meeting and I said, ‘That looks pretty good. That looks like a walk-in touchdown. Let’s have that one for sure (this week),’” Steichen said. “They gave us a look and it worked.”

Three plays later, Taylor punched it across the goal line for a 27-17 lead with 7:30 to play. He finished with 15 carries and 91 yards while Moss had eight carries for 55 yards. Indy’s third straight win put it above .500 for the first time since September and begins the final six weeks with momentum and a favorable schedule.

The two-time defending NFC South champion Bucs (4-7) are heading in the opposite direction after losing their fourth straight road games, this one with uncharacte­ristic defensive breakdowns and two devastatin­g turnovers.

“It’s just not finishing at the end,” linebacker Devin White said. “It’s not like we’re going out there doing our thing and getting demolished by any teams. I think that’s the hardest thing is that we’re in every game and we’re making plays, but we’ve got to kind of limit some other things so we can get over the top and win those games.”

The Colts took control after Baker Mayfield injured his right ankle on the game’s opening series, an injury that forced Tampa Bay to settle for a field goal after having first-and-goal from the 1-yard line.

Indy converted Ronnie Harrison Jr.’s intercepti­on into Taylor’s strong 4-yard run to make it 10-3 and Minshew extended the margin by deftly sidesteppi­ng White on a 2-yard run for a 17-3 lead.

Mayfield answered with a 1-yard to an uncovered Mike Evans, cutting the halftime deficit to 17-10 and they closed to 20-17 when Evans hauled in a 23-yard TD pass early in the fourth.

But the Colts responded with their nifty fourth down call, Taylor’s score and the strip-sack of Mayfield with 89 seconds to play.

Mayfield was 20 of 30 with 199 yards, two TDs, one intercepti­on and a game-sealing fumble that he lost. Evans had six catches for 70 yards and Rachaad White ran 15 times for 100 yards.

 ?? DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Colts running back Jonathan Taylor reaches for a touchdown during the second half against the Buccaneers on Nov. 26.
DARRON CUMMINGS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Colts running back Jonathan Taylor reaches for a touchdown during the second half against the Buccaneers on Nov. 26.

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