Sand in my Shoes
Written by Deshawn Zombie   
Monday, 23 November 2009 10:17

note:  comments on this post are now working

Oddly enough, this isn't a post about 'things that irritated me' but merely an explanation that I'm on vacation right now.  I'll still be working hard to give you all a quality post each day, but the links probably won't come as fast and furious as normal.  If you find something good you want everyone to read, please post in the comments instead of emailing it to me.  I'm using a funky mobile broadband card, and my service is spotty, so be patient.  I did manage to watch the game on a funky slingbox connection that went in and out at times.  If there were specific things I missed (like apparently an egregious hold of Mathis), I'm sorry. 

Reasons to Smile:

  • Joe Addai's running.  Nice burst, great running on the TD play.  Oh yeah, great blitz pick ups too. 
  • Gary Brackett's pick.  That was as fine a read and clutch a play as you'll ever see a middle linebacker make.  Defensive plays don't come any bigger than that.
  • The goal-line stand.  Anyone still think we miss Ed Johnson?  Great plays by more guys than I can count
  • The defense in general.  That Ravens team has a good offense, and Indy played a classic game for their scheme.  They kept everything in front of them (except the one deep ball which Lacey had incredible coverage on).  They forced the Ravens to go on long drives and not make any mistakes.  Eventually, they did.  Even the missed field goal becomes a factor of the law of averages.  Make a kicker take 6 FG tries, and chances are decent one of them will miss.
  • Dallas Clark's TD catch.
  • Tom Santi's play.  I know he fumbled, but he got CRUSHED on the play.  Sometimes the other guy makes a big play.  Do I wish Santi had hung on to the ball?  Sure, but there's a difference between your guy fumbling because he's doing something dumb and a fumble that comes from getting blasted.  Santi was a big factor all day, and that's a good sign for a team that needs to find new options on offense.
  • FRENCHY!  Huge game.  This is where he's different than '08 Harrison: he's on the way up.  This was a game that showed he's going to be good someday.
  • Reggie Wayne's effort on the key third down. 
  • Zero sacks, good time for Manning.

Reasons to Frown:

  • No sacks, very little pressure.  If there is a reason that the Ravens got inside the 30 seven different times, this would be it.  It didn't seem to matter if the Colts blitzed or not, there was not getting to Flacco.
  • Manning's second pick.  Ignore Dierdorf's nonsense about Manning's eyes and the pump fake.  He had moved Reed right where he wanted him.  Wayne was wide open, and if Peyton leads him left toward the front pylon it's a touchdown.  Instead the bail sailed on him and drifted back to the right.  For a QB, this is the equivalent of Garcon running that sloppy route a few weeks ago.  This was a 'physical' pick, not a mental one.  He had the right read, but made a terrible throw.  This worries me because that's two 'physical' picks in the last two weeks for Peyton.  I think it's wise for them to rest his arm.
  • The play call on first down after the Flacco pick.  Addai ends up going out of bounds.  I'd blame Joe, but you could clearly see him dancing to try and stay in play, but the play call was designed too wide.  It wasn't a well thought out call, in my opinion.
  • Instant replay.  Let me be clear: both calls probably accurately reflected what really happened on the field. Neither fumble should have been overturned.  I say that because the evidence is supposed to be indisputable.  On both plays, the only angles I saw showed the runner with a knee down and large parts of the ball exposed (when freeze framed).  I realize that after this point, you see Lacey rip the ball completely free, but I don't see how it's indisputable that the runner still had full control at that point.  Replay is supposed to fix OBVIOUS mistakes.  Unless the official saw angles I didn't, I don't see how either call was obvious.  Poorly done.
  • Clark's effort on the first interception. He wasn't very open.  Manning shouldn't have thrown the ball.  Still, Clark leans back away from the contact, allowing the defender to get inside of him and bat the ball up in the air.  Clark needs to attack the ball there and at worst it's incomplete.  That pick was 70% on the QB, but the receiver could have done more to prevent the turnover.

Best Call:

You already know what I'm going to say.  GOING FOR IT ON FOURTH AND ONE!  That made my heart happy.  Addai made an incredible run for the yardage, but Saturday's smart hold brought it back.  I say it was a smart hold because he knew he was beat and by grabbing the guy, he kept the drive alive and allowed Indy to punt. 

Worst Call:

I'm cheating here.  Other than griping about the play calling inside the 10 on the last drive (which was probably Manning's call anyway), Caldwell coached a clean game.  Harbaugh did not.  Calling a time out and then challenging the spot was awful.  First, the spot was bad...but in Baltimore's favor.  Secondly, he should have just thrown the flag immediately.  A head coach has to go into that situation prepared to use his challenge as a time out.  It's like he never considered that very obvious strategy before.  Instead of his team getting the ball back with nearly a minute to play, there were just seconds left.  Bad job by him.

Reasons I'm Flying:

  • This defense is for real.  Other than a short stretch in the NE game, it has been playing at an elite level for weeks now.  The corner play was for the most part strong.  They completed some passes on Lacey, but even so he had tight coverage most of the time.  The Ravens stymied the Colts' pass rush, and still couldn't get touchdowns.  When a D stops a good run O on the goal line...that's when you know it can handle all phases of the game.
  • The toughest part of the schedule is nearly over, and the Horse won't do any worse than 3-1.  Don't worry about how the team is "playing".  You don't beat average and good NFL teams when you aren't playing your best.  Unless you are the Colts.  The Patriots are clearly the #2 team in the AFC, and right there with the Vikes and Saints.  Indy beat them.  They can play with anyone right now.  And...they can still get better.
  • The run game is becoming dependable.  I actually want them to run the ball now. That's a good sign.
  • The resilience of Pierre Garcon.  He had a rough game last week, but hasn't folded.  Just the opposite, he made a big catch at the end of the game against the Pats and loomed large in this one.  That's the mark of a guy who's going to stick and blossom.

Reasons I'm Dying:

  • Just one really:  the bad throw by Manning.  I worry that his arm isn't quite right or that he's getting fatigued.  That's a ball that he should hit every time and to see it get away from him...I don't know, it worried me.

The Bottom Line:

4-2 secures a #1 overall seed. 3-3 probably gets it done.  The Colts are in the middle of the toughest stretch of games they'll have until January and have acquitted themselves well.  My confidence in this team grows each week.  It feels like the vets are playing with a little extra something.  Doesn't it seem like Reggie Wayne is 100% locked in and ready to do anything to win a title?  There are lots of old nemesis still out there waiting for Indy, but with any luck the Pats and Chargers will finish 2-3.  I don't care in what order they finish, just so long as we don't have to play both of them.

10 wins.  Again.  It's hard to complain about anything.


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Comments (24)Add Comment
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written by npb1985, November 23, 2009
For a game we won in sloppy fashion with not much style, there is not a lot to complain about. As for Peyton's arm strength, don't be nervous. He threw it better yesterday than he had in a long while. The one to Garcon was a thing of beauty. The picks to Dallas and Reggie were just ballsy passes into double coverage. Granted, you're right about him overthrowing Reggie, but if you watch again, you will see that Reggie and the DB had some incidental contact that slowed him down off his route. Chalk the picks up to just big risks rather than fatigued arm. He only threw 31 times yesterday, so he is in fact throwing less.

The run game was great, and I not only want to see more of it, but in fact am sure we will. As soon as D Brown gets back in form, I could see is running the ball 30-40 times and throwing about 10-15 passes fewer per game. I'm with you on the replay too. They may have well in fact been fumbles after being down, but there was no replay footage to show anything close to irrefutable evidence of that. Whatever, though.

Also give Peyton big time credit for what he did with Tom Santi. You criticize his picks (and criticism is due, but not anxiety), but yet again, he turned a no name (to non Colt fans) into a stud in that game. Clark had trouble and Santi got open. Another example of turning another no name into a weapon. When he got lit up by Lewis, he definitely played shaky from that moment on, but played a great game. Garcon played great, his best game all year by far, and regardless of what the media says, that was a solid win. The D played outstanding. Coming off an emotional high profile win, some teams would take a week off. Not the Colts. Not Peyton Manning.

PS, no offense, but it seems you have had minor concerns about him for a while now, and are "worried," yet he still is putting up huge games week after week. It's one thing to nit pick, but to say you're worrying just because he hasn't been perfect is going a bit overboard.
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written by DemondSanders, November 23, 2009
Who are referring to in that last paragraph?
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written by Tyler_P, November 23, 2009
I believe he was referring to Peyton.

First of all, I know you're trying to find SOMETHING to be worried about, that's the whole point of your last part of your column, but I think we can let this slide.

My thoughts are this. We're winning the ugly games. That's tough football. We're finding ways to win. Our offense can't score 30 points every game (theoretically it can) but when Peyton is getting 300 yards a game, that means something is happening.

We look at Peyton Manning as someone who can do no wrong and when he goes for 300 yards 1td 2int, he gets the whole 'we're worried about him'. Peyton has one bad pass (to RW) and we jump on him. ONE bad pass. He's a great QB and I believe top 3 QB of all time even though he's still playing 5-7 more years, but he is still going to have bad passes. He had RW open just made a bad pass that sailed on him, maybe the wind caught it, we don't know. The pass to DC was risky and we know PM will definitely take risks (seems like he took ALOT of them yesterday). But that's what makes him great, because more often then not, he completes the pass.

We are winning the games we're supposed to win and winning the games we aren't supposed to win, so we're doing something right.

We just need to continue this into the playoffs. That's when it matters.
Good review of the game.
written by Cass, November 23, 2009
I like the positive focus of it. This team is looking really good, and it was really only close because of a couple fluky things (INT's, that crushing fumble, those overturned plays that shouldn't have been overturned). It makes me feel all happy inside.

Make sure you all enjoy this while it lasts. We can focus on the playoffs when they get here, but I for one am going to milk 10-0 for all it's worth. We're still going to be talking about how great these Colts teams are in 20 years.

By the way Demond, I believe that npb1985 was referring to Peyton in that last paragraph.
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written by Attila, November 23, 2009
While the 3 WR sets are working well this year, from now on, the offense should use more 2 TE sets. This and a few other things help the run game, and Peyton has to take care of is arm. I agree with that. Also Brown has to get back into his rhythm.

Peyton has to be more patient in the games. Colts were leading, and he forced into coverage. Addai was open I think on the Dallas Clark interception, probably on the Reggie interception too. Clark was open on the FG drive on 3rd and goal maybe. Interceptions happen, but why force a 30-50 yard gain, when 10 yard gains are right there and the defense needs rest.
Powers and Lacey....and Jennings
written by Tyler_P, November 23, 2009
How well did Powers and Lacey play yesterday. My goodness they are fun to watch. Jennings on the other hand just got picked on ALL day long. He had a few good plays but more often then not, whoever he was on got the timely completion to keep a drive going.

There was one play when I think it was Lacey (can't remember) who just got blown out of his coverage by Mason. That was pretty amusing. Mason caught the ball at like the 15 yard line and Lacey was already in the end zone. That was funny to see such a broken play. Luckily Mason caught the ball and went right out of bounds.
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written by DZ, November 23, 2009
I'm guilty not writing much about the CBs mostly because I had trouble distinguishing between them all because of my crappy feed...I figured it was better to stay silent and wait until I saw a clearer replay....

but yes, they look good. They completed a deep ball on Powers, but he was ALL over it and it could have been a pick just as easily
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written by 35er, November 23, 2009
I don't know if I'm worried about this but I do know I don't like it. Trick plays. It's not us. That's not what we do. We did that stupid end around to Garcon on the FG drive we had. Luckily Bmore had a penalty so it didn't hurt us, but one of those plays is going to get us into a hole one of these days. Hopefully it's not in January. Is this something Caldwell likes to do cause I can't remember ever having so many of these in one season. The only trick play I can remember attempting is this time we played @Philly a few years back.
same old feeling...
written by Nacho from Buenos Aires, November 23, 2009
I could`t watch the game. But after reading many articles and blogs, my feeling is that the Colts are having difficulties with the knock-out punch. Instead of finishing games early, an interception, a fumble or something, is giving the opposite team a second chance. And particularly many many times this year, except from NE and MIA (where in my opinion the colts were outplayed, and clearly deserved to lose) this was a constant. It`s always great to find a way to win close games, if you can focus on the mistakes and not on your winning record. Winning close games will not take you to the SB. You have to worry on building a solid team, instead of worrying in just winning.
Not a complaint but ...
written by JTBLA, November 23, 2009
Donald Brown has not looked himself the past two weeks (8 rushes, 24 yards; 1 catch, 8 yards). Is this just the Colts bringing him back slowly? Or knowing Addai was the man and keeping him in? Brown looked so terrific prior to getting hurt, but he has been a non-factor the past two weeks. Any theories?
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written by DZ, November 23, 2009
My assumption is that he's not 100%. Also, he didn't look that great before his injury. Take out his one long run against the Rams, and he was averaging about 3.5 ypc. I think people have the impression that he was doing better than he was.
Donald Brown
written by Tyler_P, November 23, 2009
I think he is still hurting some, but that's no excuse really. From what I've seen (and remember) it seems like we do much better running inside then we do on the stretch play. Yea, it worked a couple times yesterday but I can only think of a handful of times when it has worked throughout the season. I think we need more power running on the inside. Misdirections are key and as you saw, Addai can definitely put the moves on (Ray Lewis whiffed badly) when he needs to. It seems like the RBs are hitting their holes quicker in the middle then they are on the outside.

But then again, our running is improving on both inside and outside and it might just be more of the scheme coming together rather then the RBs hitting the inside hole harder.

It's amazing how much precision needs to be mastered before things start working effectively and for the Colts to be a precision offense for so long is just a masterful display of great teamwork. Quite impressive.
trick plays
written by filiusdextris, November 23, 2009
I'm all for more trick plays in the regular season, especially given the cushion in the standings we have. I just don't want us to use them in the post-season. By using them at 1/game in the regular season, we just make opposing players and coaches waste time and energy on something we aren't planning to employ later. Furthermore, if for some reason it actually makes sense to run a trick play (admittedly, I have no specific criteria in mind), the regular season practice will be useful.
a brief aside
written by m@, November 23, 2009
Can we all just take a minute and share some love for Reggie? He just seems so automatic to me anymore. Take out that one dropped TD in Nashville, and I'd be able to convince myself that he's caught everything thrown his direction this season.
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written by DemondSanders, November 23, 2009
I was down on the stretch play before yesterday, when it finally worked. I'll support anything that works.
trick plays
written by Dave_H, November 23, 2009
I've said it before, and I'll say it again. I don't care for the clown car and unicycle portion of the playbook.
End arounds, half back option passes, all of that junk turns my stomach sour. Even when the stuff works perfectly.
When you have a hall of fame QB, an elite #1 receiver, and one of the best receiving tight ends in football, it seems a little off to go to seldom used tricks at critical portions of games.

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written by npb1985, November 23, 2009
Just to add one more thing that I did not see yet. Jerraud Powers is the best rookie corner in the league thus far. He played excellent yet again and that deep ball to Mason where they both came up with it was a veteran move. The ball goes to the receiver in that situation every time, and Mason made an excellent play, but Powers looked like a stud in his near pick. Had he pulled the ball from Mason, I'd say that would really open some eyes in ROY voting. Lacey played well, too, and that was a great attempt at the strip of McGahee (although he should have fallen on it rather than bad it 15 yards down field and go for scoop and score). All in all, very impressive game by secondare aside from the regular Tim Jennings cushions.

I think Brown is still getting back into game form. I think he was very nervous in the NE game, like all the young guys, and he may still be a little rusty from missing three games. He still had a nice run on one carry and will only get better.

Garcon was absolutely blown up by Ray Lewis. He then got up almost faster than Lewis and shouted something like, "Is that all you got?" Not a fan of the post-"knocked on ass" smack talk, but this guy has no fear and can take a hit like a champ. Slowly he is becoming a star quality player.
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written by DemondSanders, November 23, 2009
I think you hit the nail on the head: they are using these tricks at KEY MOMENTS. Look, I'm not a big fan, but I'll celebrate anything that works. But do it in the second quarter when no one is expecting it. To try this crap in the fourth quarter on a must-score drive is insane.

I'd love to hear Caldwell, Polian or Manning explain the rationale. It just smacks of desperation.
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written by jpjandrade, November 23, 2009
Yeah, +1 here for hating the gimmick plays. It's something I expect from the Dolphins, not the Colts.
garçon's guard
written by m@, November 23, 2009
when pierre was talking to ray, I got my first clear glimpse of his mouth guard. I thought I'd seen fangs on there a couple times earlier in the season, but this was the first relatively close look I'd gotten. anyone else see this/confirm it?

if so, I like. seems to fit his style of play.
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written by DemondSanders, November 23, 2009
For a second on Garcon's run, I thought he was about to pull up and throw the ball. My heart stopped beating.
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written by 35er, November 23, 2009
I thought he was going to throw it too, actually.
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written by Bob M, November 23, 2009
Yas, Garcon has fangs "painted" on his mouth guard; my son and I saw it too. bizarre. Maybe he's not an attitide case but just one bizarrd dude. Yes, i too feared Garcon would throw the ball on that ugly end around.

Reggie's run down near the goal line was as good as Andre Johnson's fantastic pin-ball TD earlier this year. He bounced off guys, kept moving fwd, but most importantly (and you NEVER see this in a WR) he two-hand-cradled that ball as if it were the post precious thing in the universe. Yes, Slurm. Way to go, Reggie.
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written by filiusdextris, November 24, 2009
I still hold that it's better to make our playoff opponents waste a whole bunch of energy scouting our trick plays that we don't even plan on using (hopefully). The regular season hardly matters any more, making the post-season opposition second-guess themselves every time Addai does an end-run may be the difference in a Super Bowl win or not.

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