The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Chiefs aim to rewrite playoff history vs. Colts

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Given the postseason history involving Indianapol­is and Kansas City over the years, Andrew Luck and the Colts have every reason to feel confident heading to Arrowhead Stadium on Saturday.

The Chiefs have every reason to believe they’re due.

Four times the teams have met in the playoffs, twice in the wild-card round and twice with a spot in the AFC title game on the line. Each time the Colts emerged victorious. All but one were down-to-thewire nail-biters, one a recordsett­ing shootout and another a defensive slugfest, and each left Colts fans feeling euphoric and Chiefs fans feeling cursed.

Asked whether he understood the magnitude of the next installmen­t in the onesided series, Chiefs cornerback Kendall Fuller replied quite simply: “Oh yeah.”

“We definitely see how fans feel, what they’re expecting and stuff like that,” he said.

There was the 1996 wildcard matchup in which Chiefs kicker Lin Elliott missed three field goals and the Colts won 10-7. The divisional showdown in 2003, when the Colts won 38-31 in a game featuring no punts. The 23-8 whitewashi­ng three years later and, most recently, the 45-44 shootout in which Luck led the Colts from a 38-10 second-half hole to beat Andy Reid’s first Chiefs team in 2013.

There are still more than a dozen players around who were involved in that game five years ago, yet each acknowledg­ed this week that history has no bearing on what will transpire Saturday .

“Obviously they are a great team,” said Colts kicker Adam Vinatieri, who has played in the past two playoff games against Kansas City. “They’ve won a lot of games. They’ve got a very explosive offense. They’ve got probably the best returner in the National Football League with (Tyreek) Hill.”

The Chiefs earned the No. 1 seed with their third consecutiv­e AFC West title, and have arguably the game’s best young quarterbac­k in Patrick Mahomes. Hill joins Travis Kelce, a healthy Sammy Watkins and running backs Spencer Ware and Damien Williams in giving him plenty of weapons, while a defense that’s been statistica­lly poor also has more sacks than any other team.

Yet the Colts, the sixth and last seed in the playoffs, may be the hottest team playing . They rebounded from a 1-5 start to win nine of their last 10 games to reach the postseason, then dominated the Houston Texans last week with a bludgeonin­g ground game and stingy defense.

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