Tough Texans should test unbeaten Colts
By BARRY WILNER
Once.
That's how many times the Houston Texans have beaten the Colts. When the
Texans visit Indianapolis on Sunday, they will carry a 1-13 mark against the
Colts since Houston joined the NFL as its most recent expansion team in 2002.
Oddly, Houston's 27-24 home victory came in 2006, the season the Colts took
the Super Bowl.
Overall in the series, the Colts have outscored the Texans 432-253. Indy
(7-0) is also the only unbeaten team remaining in the AFC - New Orleans, which
hosts Carolina on Sunday, is the NFC's lone perfect team. The Colts rank fourth
in offense (first in passing, thanks to the superb work of Peyton Manning) and
ninth in defense.
So why should Houston even show up at Lucas Oil Stadium?
Try this: The Texans have never been this good. They are 5-3, including 3-1
on the road. They have the third-best passing game and Matt Schaub is tied for
the league lead with 16 touchdown passes - one more than Manning.
Their defense is more physical than ever, too.
``It's time for us to go up there and get a win,'' cornerback Dunta Robinson
said. ``You can't hesitate to say that.
``We felt like it was progress when we beat them a couple of years ago. But
we lost to them last year and it was like, 'Here we go with the same old thing
again.' This is a team that we feel right now that we're good enough to win
against and we've got to go out and do it.''
Oddly, Schaub and star receiver Andre Johnson have never been on the field
together against the Colts because of injuries.
Of course, the Texans have little experience at such lofty heights. They've
never finished better than .500 and have not been to the playoffs.
Indy, on the other hand, is a regular visitor to the postseason and knows
quite well how to deal with long winning streaks. This is the fourth time in
five years the Colts have been 7-0, even though they have a new coach, Jim
Caldwell, who replaced the retired Tony Dungy.
``We've been here before,'' defensive end Dwight Freeney said. ``I've said
this before, 'We've been 13-0 and lost in the first round.' For us, it's
business as usual, I guess. We're just trying to keep this thing rolling and
we'll see what happens in January.''
Two more teams with strong credentials to be playing in January, Pittsburgh
and Denver, will meet in an intriguing Monday night game in the Mile High City.
Elsewhere Sunday, it's Dallas at Philadelphia; San Diego at the New York
Giants; Baltimore at Cincinnati; Miami at New England; Arizona at Chicago;
Washington at Atlanta; Green Bay at Tampa Bay; Tennessee at San Francisco;
Kansas City at Jacksonville; and Detroit at Seattle.
Off this week are Buffalo, Oakland, Minnesota, St. Louis, Cleveland and the
New York Jets.
Carolina (3-4) at New Orleans (7-0)
The Saints have a three-game lead in the NFC South and are finding the end
zone with such regularity they should challenge New England's record for
points, 589, set two years ago. Oh, by the way, the Patriots went 16-0 that
season.
And New Orleans' performance on defense has been just as impressive,
including a league-high 21 takeaways and 16 interceptions.
Carolina has won three of four, with a strong showing at Arizona last
weekend indicating the Panthers might be back on course. Still, they have an
NFC-leading 21 giveaways.
Pittsburgh (5-2) at Denver (6-1)
Yet another scintillating Monday night matchup and yet another opportunity
for the Broncos to prove they are an elite team. They came off a bye and were
flat at Baltimore, and now play the defending champions and cream of the strong
NFC North.
The Broncos will want to run the ball against the league's top rushing
defense, which would keep the Steelers' key playmakers (James Harrison, LaMarr
Woodley, Troy Polamalu) busy and eventually open receiving lanes for Brandon
Marshall and Eddie Royal. And the Steelers, who have not been productive on the
ground, can't be one-dimensional against the NFL's second-most stingy defense.
Dallas (5-2) at Philadelphia (5-2)
The winner will take charge of the NFC East. Philly is 2-0 in the conference
with wins the last two weeks against the Redskins and Giants, and its potent
offense was particularly dynamic versus New York. Young receivers DeSean
Jackson and Jeremy Maclin and breakout tight end Brent Celek will be difficult
matchups for the Cowboys.
Dallas has won three straight with a revved-up offense and a revitalized
pass rush. Miles Austin has done everything T.O. might have - and a lot more
quietly.
San Diego (4-3) at N.Y. Giants (5-3)
Back in 2004, these franchises made big news off the field with a draft-day
trade after the Chargers grabbed Eli Manning at the top of the proceedings and
the Giants took Philip Rivers fourth. They have yet to face each other.
Right now, Rivers is outplaying Manning, whose Giants have lost three in a
row. Rivers gets to face a porous New York secondary, but he also has a suspect
offensive line that must neutralize DEs Justin Tuck and Osi Umenyiora.
Baltimore (4-3) at Cincinnati (5-2)
A chance for the Bengals to legitimize their status as contenders comes this
week and next, when they are at Pittsburgh. Cincinnati had a bye on the same
weekend Baltimore was re-establishing itself by handing Denver its first
defeat.
In their last meeting, the Ravens blew a late lead at home to the Bengals,
keying Cincy's winning drive with some awful penalties. Carson Palmer, Cedric
Benson and Chad Ochocinco have been making opponents pay for such things all
year.
Miami (3-4) at New England (5-2)
Well-rested coming off successive blowout wins, the Patriots could be primed
for one of those lengthy runs that catapults them to the top of the AFC. They
certainly will be tested in the next few weeks, with trips to Indianapolis and
New Orleans this month.
And they could be pushed by the inconsistent Dolphins, who rank third in
rushing, thanks in great part to the wildcat and to a physical offensive line.
But Miami's secondary is inexperienced on the corners, which is probably making
Tom Brady, Randy Moss and Wes Welker salivate.
Arizona (4-3) at Chicago (4-3)
After dominating the Giants at the Meadowlands with a physical defense and
timely offense, the Cardinals went home and fell flat against Carolina. They
are 3-1 on the road, however, and Kurt Warner and Larry Fitzgerald will test
Chicago's weak secondary.
The Bears have played a difficult schedule that gets even tougher, with
Philadelphia, Green Bay, Baltimore and two meetings with Minnesota ahead. They
can't afford to fall back even more in the standings.
Washington (2-5) at Atlanta (4-3)
It was back to political intrigue for the folks in D.C. as the Redskins had
their bye. Now, it will be back to blasting anyone and everyone associated with
the team if Washington loses its fourth straight.
Atlanta also is sliding, with two consecutive losses for the first time
since Mike Smith became coach and Matt Ryan took over at quarterback last year.
The way the Falcons came back in New Orleans to have a shot at tying on Monday
night could have given them a boost.
Green Bay (4-3) at Tampa Bay (0-7)
Fortunately for the Packers, their emotionally draining loss to Brett Favre
and the Vikings is followed by a meeting with the only remaining winless team.
Green Bay can't seem to protect quarterback Aaron Rodgers, yet he leads the
league in passer rating. Then again, the Bucs can't seem to get to any QBs.
Tennessee (1-6) at San Francisco (3-4)
Fresh from their first win, the Titans head west, where they tend to
struggle. They get a banged-up 49ers squad missing two key starters: cornerback
Nate Clements and offensive tackle Joe Staley. Two highly drafted quarterbacks
who have their starting jobs back, Tennessee's Vince Young and San Francisco's
Alex Smith, provide an interesting story line.
Kansas City (1-6) at Jacksonville (3-4)
Not even halfway through the schedule, both teams are looking to the
long-term future. Kansas City suspended RB Larry Johnson for this game - not
that he'd done much this season - and its passing game ranks 30th overall.
Jacksonville is another of those crazily inconsistent clubs, but Maurice
Jones-Drew remains a major weapon as a runner and receiver. Jags can't pressure
QBs.
Detroit (1-6) at Seattle (2-5)
Two more teams who need to think beyond this year. At least the Lions have
some of their building blocks in place. Most of Seattle's key players have
gotten injured - for the second straight season.
11/07/09 12:45
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