Colts-Jaguars preview: Indianapolis have score to settle in Jacksonville
The Colts were denied a playoffs spot by the 2-14 Jaguars last season and head back to Jacksonville on Sunday, where the home team are looking for a rare win.
Over eight months ago, Super Bowl hopefuls Indianapolis visited the Jacksonville Jaguars with a trip to the playoffs on the line. The Colts only had to beat a 2-14 team to punch their postseason ticket.
Instead, Trevor Lawrence and Jacksonville played like the playoff contender and dominated for most of a 26-11 rout that ended the Colts’ season and concluded Carson Wentz’s one-year run as the team’s quarterback.
The teams cross paths again Sunday in Jacksonville as each will try for its first win after Week 1 disappointments. Indianapolis had to rally from a 20-3 deficit to notch a 20-20 tie at Houston, while the Jaguars led in the fourth quarter but fell 28-22 at Washington.
Colts coach Frank Reich hasn’t acted like someone who has put last season’s stunning loss in the rear-view mirror. He had the final score painted near the locker room as a reminder of why they always need to be ready.
Reich might want to add last week’s draw below 26-11. Indianapolis gained a whopping 517 total yards, 161 coming from defending NFL rushing champion Jonathan Taylor, but committed a pair of turnovers and drew seven penalties for 89 yards.
Reich: “You can’t walk away with 20 points”
“When you gain those kind of yards, you got to score 40 points,” Reich said. “You can’t walk away with 20 points.”
The Colts still could have won the game in overtime, but kicker Rodrigo Blankenship missed wide right on a 42-yard field goal with 1:57 remaining. That was his last miss with the club, as it waived him on Tuesday and intend to use veteran Chase McLaughlin or Lucas Havrisik in Jacksonville.
New quarterback Matt Ryan threw for 352 yards and a touchdown on 32-of-50 accuracy, but also tossed an interception and stopped a second promising drive by fumbling a snap that forced a punt from the Houston 40.
"We shot ourselves in the foot a lot of times," center Ryan Kelly said.
Meanwhile, Jacksonville displayed some promise offensively in the second half but made enough mistakes on both sides of the ball to ensure an 0-1 start under first-year coach Doug Pederson.
Lawrence threw for 275 yards and a touchdown, while big-money free agent receiver Christian Kirk caught six passes for 117 yards in his Jaguars debut. Top overall draft pick Travon Walker became the first player since T.J. Watt in 2017 to come up with a sack and an interception in his NFL debut.
Those glimpses of greatness might be why the team isn’t reaching for the panic button or sinking into that old “here we go again” motif after losing for the 30th time in 34 games, dating back to the 2020 season.
Pederson: “We’re not going to panic”
“It starts with me and I’m not going to let that creep into our thinking at all,” Pederson said. “I’m just not going to let that happen. We’re not going to panic.”
Indianapolis owns a 26-16 lead in the all-time series.
Colts wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. (quad) and cornerback Kenny Moore II (hip) missed practice Thursday after being limited participants in Wednesday’s practice. Defensive tackle DeForest Buckner did not practice for the second straight day, while wideout Alec Pierce (concussion) went from DNP Wednesday to limited Thursday. Linebacker Shaquille Leonard (back) practiced fully both days.
The Jaguars reported no injuries Wednesday or Thursday.