AFC WILD CARD
WEEKEND PREVIEW
THE BACKSTORY
Oddly enough, it was a failed risk taken against the Texans that
might have turned Indianapolis' season around and led the Colts to
this very opportunity.
Tied at 34-34 late in an AFC South meeting between two
struggling teams, rookie coach Frank Reich decided to take a chance and put
faith in his unproven Colts.
On fourth-and-4 from their 43 with 0:36 left in overtime, Reich elected not to
punt. The result was a turnover on downs, and a game-winning field goal from
Houston's Ka'imi
Fairbairn 33 seconds later.
Negative result, right? The loss dropped Indianapolis to
1-3, appeared to be one of the most bone-headed decisions of the early portion
of 2018, and eventually sent Houston on a nine-game winning streak. But Dan
Orlovsky will tell you it's actually what changed the Colts'
season, and he's not entirely wrong:
Indianapolis lost its next two games after that (38-24 to
New England and 42-34 to the New York Jets), but eventually got on track and
found itself streaking toward an unlikely turnaround just behind the team that
ended up winning the division. While the decision might have been inspiration
for a young, unproven team, what likely helped them even more was the return of
left tackle Anthony
Castonzo from injury and resulting
shift in personnel up front. Castonzo made his season debut in the
loss to the Jets in Week 6, and has started every game since. The Colts have
lost just once in that span.
Meanwhile, the Texans went
from 0-3 to 9-3. Coincidentally, their winning streak both started and ended
with the Colts,
who snapped the run in Week 14 with a 24-21 win. In between, the Texans eked
out multiple close wins and smashed opponents intermittently, riding their
12th-ranked defense and playmaking quarterback to an AFC South crown.
There's also the success of Lamar Miller,
an under-the-radar veteran who rushed for 973 yards and five touchdowns in 14
games. When he runs well, the Texans'
offense is drastically better. When he doesn't, the wheels all but fall off
Houston's offense.
It wouldn't be Colts-Texans in 2018 (now 2019) without a three-point
margin of victory, right? But which of the hotter AFC South teams can come away
on the right side of a nail biter?
UNDER PRESSURE
HOUSTON
TEXANS' OFFENSIVE LINE: Deshaun
Watson is lauded for his playmaking ability, and while it's a
major reason why the Texans find
themselves here, Houston also relies on it too often. It's a two-fold issue:
First, Houston's offensive line hasn't been even passable in the pass
protection department. The three interior linemen consistently fail to maintain
pocket integrity, getting pushed back into the face of Watson, and his tackles
aren't much better against edge rushers. Stunts confuse this group, and it has
all combined to speed up Watson's internal clock. As a result, sometimes he
runs from nonexistent pressure, forcing more of those outside-the-pocket plays
that don't always end up working out (this helps explain his 62 sacks, tied for
the most of any quarterback who made the playoffs in the Super Bowl era). Houston avoids these
issues when it runs the ball well, with both gap and zone schemes producing
solid gains for Miller. But when that's not working? Yikes. To Bill O'Brien's
credit, he's gotta his running quarterback doing more of that in the absence of
Miller, who missed time with an ankle injury, and it's paying off. But this
group will need to stand firm against the 11th-ranked Colts defense,
which ranks 11th in yards allowed per game (339.4) but is in the lower third
when it comes to pressuring the quarterback (21st in sack rate, 22nd in QB
pressures, per Next Gen Stats).
DONTRELLE
INMAN, WR, COLTS: We know what T.Y. Hilton brings
to the table against the Texans.
In fact, in just this season alone, Hilton has 1.2 more receptions per game and
has nearly doubled his receiving yards per game (157 versus Houston; 79.7
versus all other opponents). For his career, he's averaging 103.2 yards per
game against Houston. This paints a giant target on him, and on tight end Eric Ebron,
who's tied for second in the NFL in receiving touchdowns this season. These
factors clear space for Inman to make a significant impact, and he doesn't need
to be superhuman -- he just needs to take advantage of the opportunities when
they arrive at his feet. He's done so lately, catching nine passes for 123
yards and two touchdowns in his last two games combined. There will also be an
element of surprise, as Inman wasn't on the roster in Week 4 and missed Week
14's meeting.
MATCHUP TO WATCH
JADEVEON
CLOWNEY AND J.J. WATTVERSUS COLTS'
OFFENSIVE LINE: We spent a healthy amount of space above talking about
the importance of Houston's offensive line, but the Texansfeature
an excellent pass-rushing duo that must be accounted for by any opponent with
aspirations of victory. Watt and Clowney have combined for 102 QB pressures
this season, third most of any edge-rushing duo in the NFL, per Next Gen Stats.
Watt is the leader of the pair, ranking sixth with 57 pressures, but they're
both in the top five in average time to sack (3.61 seconds for Watt; 3.73
seconds for Clowney). They also combined for 34 tackles for loss this season,
the most among a teammate duo in the NFL. See the importance of this matchup?
Indianapolis features four of the top 45 linemen in the NFL in Castonzo (No.
24) and tackle Braden Smith (No.
44) and guards Quenton
Nelson (No. 31) and Mark
Glowinski (No. 45), according to Pro Football Focus. In fact,
center Ryan Kelly --
a key piece -- is the lowest-rated member of the group (No. 64), which has been
excellent since it came together in Week 6. Of quarterbacks with at least 150
attempts, Luck has been pressured the seventh least in the NFL (22.1 percent),
and that number improved from Week 6 on (Luck bumps up to sixth at 19.4 percent
of dropbacks). We'll see which side wins this clash of the titans (while the
actual Titans lament
their third-place finish behind these two teams).
PREDICTION
This Texans team
spent a lot of the season winning ugly and rarely did victories come in
convincing fashion. They needed all of overtime and a field-position break to
beat the Colts early
in the season and couldn't get a similar stop in a fruitless comeback effort in
Week 14. Furthermore, they'll need a running game that hasn't shown up for
these meetings to establish control.
The bright side: They're playing at home. The downside to
that bright side: They lost to the Colts at
home a month ago. Indianapolis has been on an upward path for the last half of
the season and continues that journey, taking down the division champ and
attempting to dethrone another the following week in one of the best surprise
stories of the season.
FINAL SCORE: Indianapolis
Colts 24, Houston
Texans 17
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