Oswlek
Veteran Starter w/Big Long Term Deal
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 9,086
- Reaction score
- 5,955
Personally, I thought the Colts were the fourth best team in the AFC going into the playoffs last year and just got hot at the right time. They were lucky enough to face Herm Edwards and the Chiefs in round one (Edwards is probably the biggest choke artist coach there is and he was moronic to keep Trent Green in the game when he was clearly lost). They also faced a Pats team that was on their third road game in four weeks and spent most of their energy beating the Chargers the week before.
Although it sounds I am swiping at them, I'm not. Many teams have won the Super Bowl eventhough they were clearly not the best team in the NFL, but got hot at the right time in the playoffs. The Pats did it in the 2001 season. The Steelers did it in the 2005 season.
But because of they were a team that wasn't the best team in the NFL, but won the Super Bowl; I don't expect them to repeat. I still think the Pats and Chargers (and possibly Broncos and Ravens) are better than the Colts. I don't know if the Colts really fixed their run defense because the Ravens ran well on them, but quit running and the Pats and Chiefs just quit all together. The Pats ran out of healthy RBs and Herm Edwards blew it by not committing to the run (how you only rush the ball 13 times with Larry Johnson is beyond me). I expect them to have a lot of problems stopping the run again this season. Maybe not as bad if Sanders can stay healthy, but still have problems. You can't win Super Bowls if teams can run all over you especially if they face the Chargers in the playoffs.
You can't ever say that Denver is better than the Colts. Indy has pwned* that team.
*misspelling intentional.
And KC's problem was not that they abandoned the run, it was that they weren't creative at all with how they did it. Run twice up the middle and then pass on 3rd and 8. They didn't try to take advantage of Indy's DE's crashing the middle of the field with misdirection. They didn't do any playfakes until the third quarter (which would have worked like a charm since Indy's DEs weren't even rushing the passer until 3rd down). It was by far the most pitiful display of playoff coaching that I have even seen.
The Colts most certainly did *not* fix ther run D. They just faced the perfect combination of poor health, lousy QBs and lousy coaches to disguise the issue.
Edited to say that Indy does deserve credit for being consistently good enough to take advantage of years like last year. When you are always in the playoffs and always a very good team, you give yourself plenty of opportunities for the breaks to line up like that.
Last edited:











