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Indianapolis gets back on track with defense, running game

Philip Rivers hands off to Jonathan Taylor of the Indianapolis Colts during the first half at Lucas Oil Stadium on Sept. 20, 2020, in Indianapolis. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images)

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Frank Reich kept it simple Sunday: Run the ball and let the defense do its job.

And once again, the Indianapolis Colts proved old-school football still works.

“There’s
no question that this is a blueprint to what we want to look like,”
Reich said after Indy’s 28-11 victory over Minnesota. “Defensively, we
played such a good game on defense. I can’t say enough about how they
played. On offense, we wanted to re-establish the run.”

They accomplished both.

Jonathan Taylor became the first Colts rookie to top the 100-yard mark since 2012, scored his first career touchdown on a nifty 5-yard run to give Indy an early 7-3 lead, and proved he could be the NFL workhorse he was at Wisconsin.

The 21-year-old running back carried the ball 26 times
and caught two passes Sunday, and lost yardage on only three plays for a
total of 4 yards. Two games into his pro career, Taylor has accumulated
199 total yards despite no mini-camps, no offseason team activities and
no preseason.

Even Philip Rivers enjoyed handing the ball off.

“I’ve
always felt like the term game manager is seen as a negative. I don’t
think it’s a negative,” he said after his first win with Indy. “If
that’s the term ‘game manager,’ and that’s what today was, it was a heck
of a lot of fun.”

The defense did its part, too.

Pro Bowl defensive tackle DeForest Buckner got his first career safety, the Colts (1-1) picked off Kirk Cousins three times and sacked him three more times.

Indy
allowed 175 yards Sunday, the fewest in six years, and Cousins’ rating
of 15.9 was the lowest by an opposing quarterback against Indy since
October 2005.

It worked just like Reich planned.

“We stopped
the run. We had turnovers. We made the statement we wanted to make
defensively.,” Reich said. “The players just came, and they played with
discipline. They played aggressive. We did everything on defense as a
unit that you need to do to stop an explosive run game.”

WHAT’S WORKING

Short
passing game. While Rivers hasn’t put up huge numbers in his first two
games with the Colts, he has been accurate and comfortable getting the
ball out quickly to the running backs and tight ends.

WHAT NEEDS HELP

Red-zone
offense. For the second straight week, the Colts nearly doubled an
opponent’s total yardage and this time they scored enough points to pull
away. But Indy must do better than converting 4 of 9 red-zone
possessions into TDs.

STOCK UP

Mo Alie-Cox. The converted basketball player
from Virginia Commonwealth emerged as one of Rivers’ favorite receivers
Sunday, catching five passes for 111 yards — nearly matching his
receptions totals each of the past two seasons. He’s already topping
last year’s yardage total, too.

With two-time Pro Bowler Jack Doyle hurt and Trey Burton on injured reserve, Alie-Cox’s value should rise at tight end.

STOCK DOWN

T.Y.
Hilton was angry about dropping two passes at the end of the Colts’
loss in Jacksonville. Then came another drop, in the end zone, on
Sunday. Hilton caught three passes for 28 yards against Minnesota and
now has seven catches for 81 yards this season.

INJURED

Starting
safety Malik Hooker became the second Indy player in two weeks to
suffer a season-ending Achilles tendon injury. Both he and running back
Marlon Mack, injured last week at Jacksonville, were also in the final
year of their contracts. Hooker left the game early in the second
quarter.

Receiver Parris Campbell received slightly better news
after hurting his left knee on Indy’s second play against the Vikings.
He will be out indefinitely, though he did not tear his ACL, and coach
Frank Reich said Campbell may not need surgery.

Cornerback Rock
Ya-Sin was released from a local hospital after missing Sunday’s game
with a stomach illness. Reich provided no additional details about
Ya-Sin’s status.

KEY NUMBERS

40 and 25. Reich acknowledged
he didn’t call enough running plays at Jacksonville. The fix: calling 40
runs and 25 passes against Minnesota, which allowed the Colts to
control the game and eventually put it away.

NEXT STEPS

Against
Minnesota, the Colts showed they can be successful with this style of
play. Now they must show they can play that way consistently. Next
week’s game against the New York Jets (0-2) gives them that opportunity.