JACKSONVILLE, Florida (AP) - Peyton Manning was nearly perfect, exactly what the Indianapolis
Colts needed to overcome all the emotion the Jacksonville Jaguars
got from Richard Collier's return.
Manning completed his first 17 passes, picked apart
Jacksonville's secondary and led the Colts to their eighth
consecutive win and seventh straight playoff berth.
Manning threw for 364 yards and three touchdowns, and the Colts
secured the No. 5 seed in the AFC playoffs with a 31-24 victory
over the Jaguars on Thursday night.
Indianapolis (11-4) took its first lead of the game when Keiwan
Ratliff intercepted a pass from David Garrard and returned it 35
yards for a touchdown and a 31-24 lead with 4:48 remaining.
The Jaguars had two chances to tie it, but both drives ended
with sacks. Garrard drove Jacksonville to the 7-yard line with 29
seconds remaining, but Maurice Jones-Drew sprained his knee on a
reception, and since the Jaguars had no timeouts, there was a
10-second runoff.
Garrard misfired on first down, then got sacked by Dwight
Freeney to end the game.
The Colts overcame a 14-0 deficit in the second quarter and a
24-14 hole early in the fourth. They won without receiver Marvin
Harrison (hamstring), running back Joseph Addai (shoulder) and
linebacker Gary Brackett (leg).
Coach Tony Dungy said earlier in the week that a victory would
allow him to rest many starters next week against Tennessee. So
Indy could get as many as 17 days of rest before opening the
postseason.
The Jaguars (5-10) lost for the seventh time in the past nine
games and fell to 2-6 at home this season. This one may have been
more emotionally draining than any of the others.
Collier, a 6-foot-7 offensive linemen paralyzed from the waist
down following a shooting in early September, returned to the field
for the first time and was recognized during pregame ceremonies. He
drove onto the field, sat next to his teammates during the national
anthem and then headed to midfield as an honorary team captain for
the coin toss.
He answered a few questions afterward, then went to a luxury
suite with family members to watch the game. He must have liked
Jacksonville's fast start. The Jaguars scored touchdowns on their
first two possessions and led 14-0 early in the second
quarter—possibly feeding off Collier's emotional return.
"It's a bittersweet moment," Collier said. "I'm here now, but
I'm not a player anymore. But it's also great with all the love
that's been shown from everybody. … It was like I'm back at
home. Everybody showed me love. It was good".