2009 Indianapolis Colts season

Last updated

2009 Indianapolis Colts season
Owner Jim Irsay
General manager Chris Polian
Head coach Jim Caldwell
Home field Lucas Oil Stadium
Results
Record14–2
Division place1st AFC South
Playoff finishWon Divisional Playoffs
(vs. Ravens) 20–3
Won AFC Championship
(vs. Jets) 30–17
Lost Super Bowl XLIV
(vs. Saints) 17–31
Pro Bowlers 7 (see Awards and honors )
AP All-Pros 4 (see Awards and honors )
Uniform
AFCS-2002-2011-Uniform-IND.png

The 2009 season was the Indianapolis Colts' 57th in the National Football League (NFL) and their 26th in Indianapolis. It was the first season since 2001 that the Colts did not have Tony Dungy on their coaching staff, due to his retirement from coaching. Dungy's long time assistant, Jim Caldwell (who had been with Dungy since 2001 when he was still the head coach of the Tampa Bay Buccaneers) was named the new head coach. The 2009 Indianapolis Colts improved upon their 12–4 record from 2008 as well as winning their sixth AFC South division championship in seven years with a 14–2 record. The Colts also clinched the top seed in the AFC. The Colts were the sole undefeated team after Week 15. The following week, the Colts lost to the New York Jets after benching their starters. During the playoffs, the Colts defeated the Baltimore Ravens in the divisional round and the New York Jets in the AFC Championship game and represented the AFC in Super Bowl XLIV. The 14–2 Colts lost to the 13–3 New Orleans Saints in Super Bowl XLIV, 31–17.

Contents

This was the first season since 1995 that Marvin Harrison was not on the opening-day roster, as he retired during the offseason.

Offseason

Head coach announcement

On January 12, 2009, Head coach Tony Dungy announced his retirement from coaching in the National Football League (NFL). [1] Two days later, then-assistant head coach and quarterbacks coach Jim Caldwell was formally announced as Dungy's successor. [2]

Staff changes

Additions

Pos.PlayerDateNotes
OG Brandon Barnes April 23, 2009 [11]
WR Hank Baskett September 17, 2009 [12]
RB Donald Brown August 2, 2009 [13] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
TE Colin Cloherty April 27, 2009 [14]
September 7, 2009 [15]

Added to practice squad
WR Austin Collie August 1, 2009 [16] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
QB Chris Crane April 4, 2009 [17]
C Kyle DeVan April 21, 2009 [18]
S Aaron Francisco September 6, 2009 [19]
WR Sam Giguère September 7, 2009 [15] Added to practice squad
DT John Gill September 7, 2009 [15] Added to practice squad
LB Cody Glenn September 6, 2009 [19] Later assigned to the practice squad
DE Rudolph Hardie August 13, 2009 [20]
RB Mike Hart September 7, 2009 [15] Added to practice squad
DT Ed Johnson April 5, 2009 [21]
WR John Matthews September 7, 2009 [15] Added to practice squad
P Pat McAfee July 29, 2009 [22] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
RB Walter Mendenhall August 13, 2009 [20]
August 22, 2009 [23]
DT Fili Moala August 1, 2009 [16] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
LB Michael Okwo February 16, 2009 [24]
QB Curtis Painter July 29, 2009 [25] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
S Marcus Paschal August 22, 2009 [23]
G Tom Pestock August 19, 2009 [26]
TE Jason Pociask September 8, 2009 [27] Added to practice squad
LB Adam Seward March 21, 2009 [28]
WR Taj Smith September 7, 2009 [15] Added to practice squad
LB Michael Tauiliili April 4, 2009 [17]
DT Terrance Taylor July 29, 2009 [29] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
OG Jaimie Thomas July 29, 2009 [25]
September 7, 2009 [15]
Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
Added to practice squad

Departures

Pos.PlayerDateNotes
LB Rufus Alexander April 4, 2009 [17]
K Shane Andrus September 16, 2009 [30]
RB Lance Ball September 5, 2009 [31]
TE Colin Cloherty August 31, 2009
CB Michael Coe August 31, 2009Placed on waived-injured list
S Brannon Condren July 29, 2009 [32]
QB Chris Crane August 22, 2009 [23]
LB Buster Davis March 30, 2009 [33]
P Mike Dragosavich April 4, 2009 [17]
CB Brandon Foster July 29, 2009 [32]
WR Sam Giguère September 5, 2009 [31]
DT John Gill September 5, 2009 [31]
S Matt Giordano September 6, 2009 [19]
DT Adrian Grady September 5, 2009 [31]
CB Nick Graham September 5, 2009 [31]
WR Roy Hall August 13, 2009 [20] Placed on waived-injured list
DE Rudolph Hardie August 31, 2009Placed on waived-injured list
SBrandon HarrisonJuly 29, 2009 [32]
WR Marvin Harrison February 24, 2009 [34]
RB Mike Hart September 5, 2009 [31]
T Corey Hilliard August 19, 2009 [35]
DE Marcus Howard September 5, 2009 [31]
CB Dante Hughes September 5, 2009 [31]
LB Curtis Johnson August 31, 2009
C Steve Justice September 5, 2009 [31]
S Travis Key September 6, 2009 [36] Placed on waived-injured list
T Pat Kuntz July 29, 2009 [32]
OL Cornelius Lewis July 29, 2009 [32]
WR John Matthews September 5, 2009 [31]
WR Brett McDermott September 5, 2009 [31]
RB Walter Mendenhall August 18, 2009 [37]
September 5, 2009 [31]
S Marcus Paschal September 1, 2009 [38]
G Tom Pestock August 13, 2009 [20]
September 5, 2009 [31]
TE Jamie Petrowski September 5, 2009 [31] Placed on waived-injured list
LB Tyrell Sales July 29, 2009 [32]
LB Jordan Senn September 7, 2009 [39]
LB Adam Seward August 22, 2009 [23]
WR Taj Smith September 5, 2009 [31]
LB Mike Tauiliili September 5, 2009 [31]
DT Terrance Taylor September 5, 2009 [31] Drafted by Colts in 2009 NFL Draft
OG Jaimie Thomas September 5, 2009 [31]
DE Josh Thomas September 5, 2009 [31]
OT Michael Toudouze September 5, 2009 [31]

Free agents

Pos.PlayerTagResult
RB Lance Ball ERFARe-signed with Colts [40]
ILB Buster Davis ERFASigned with Texans [33] [40]
G/T Daniel Federkeil RFARe-signed with Colts [40]
SS Matt Giordano UFARe-signed with Colts [41]
CB Kelvin Hayden UFARe-signed with Colts [42]
OLB Tyjuan Hagler [43] UFARe-signed with Colts [44]
OLB Freddie Keiaho [45] UFARe-signed with Colts [46]
DT Daniel Muir ERFARe-signed with Colts [47]
CB Keiwan Ratliff UFASigned with Steelers [48]
DT Darrell Reid UFASigned with Broncos [49]
RB Dominic Rhodes UFASigned with Bills [50]
C Jeff Saturday UFARe-signed with Colts [51]
P Hunter Smith UFASigned with Redskins [52]
DE Josh Thomas [53] UFARe-signed with Colts [37]
UFA: Unrestricted free agent; RFA: Restricted free agent; ERFA: Exclusive rights free agent

2009 NFL draft

2009 Indianapolis Colts Draft Selections
Draft orderPlayerPositionHeightWeightCollege
RoundChoice
127 Donald Brown Running back 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)208 lb (94 kg) Connecticut
256 Fili Moala Defensive tackle 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)303 lb (137 kg) Southern California
392 Jerraud Powers Cornerback 5 ft 10 in (1.78 m)192 lb (87 kg) Auburn
4127 Austin Collie Wide receiver 6 ft 2 in (1.88 m)212 lb (96 kg) Brigham Young
4136 Terrance Taylor Defensive tackle6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)319 lb (145 kg) Michigan
6201 Curtis Painter Quarterback 6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)225 lb (102 kg) Purdue
7222 Pat McAfee Punter 5 ft 11 in (1.80 m)228 lb (103 kg) West Virginia
7236 Jaimie Thomas Guard6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)330 lb (149 kg) Maryland

Undrafted free agents

2009 Undrafted Free Agents of note
PlayerPositionCollege
Colin Cloherty Tight end Brown
John Gill Defensive tackle Northwestern
Ramon Humber Linebacker North Dakota State
Jacob Lacey Cornerback Oklahoma State

Staff

Indianapolis Colts 2009 staff
Front office

Head coaches

Offensive coaches

 

Defensive coaches

Special teams coaches

Strength and conditioning

Roster

Indianapolis Colts 2009 final roster
Quarterbacks

Running backs

Wide receivers

Tight ends

Offensive linemen

Defensive linemen

Linebackers

Defensive backs

Special teams

Reserve lists


Practice squad


rookies in italics
53 active, 10 inactive, 7 practice squad

Schedule

Preseason

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
1August 14 Minnesota Vikings L 3–130–1 Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
2August 20 Philadelphia Eagles W 23–151–1Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
3August 29at Detroit Lions L 17–181–2 Ford Field Recap
4September 3at Cincinnati Bengals L 7–381–3 Paul Brown Stadium Recap

Regular season

WeekDateOpponentResultRecordVenueRecap
1September 13 Jacksonville Jaguars W 14–121–0 Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
2September 21at Miami Dolphins W 27–232–0 Land Shark Stadium Recap
3September 27at Arizona Cardinals W 31–103–0 University of Phoenix Stadium Recap
4October 4 Seattle Seahawks W 34–174–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
5October 11at Tennessee Titans W 31–95–0 LP Field Recap
6 Bye
7October 25at St. Louis Rams W 42–66–0 Edward Jones Dome Recap
8November 1 San Francisco 49ers W 18–147–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
9November 8 Houston Texans W 20–178–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
10November 15 New England Patriots W 35–349–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
11November 22at Baltimore Ravens W 17–1510–0 M&T Bank Stadium Recap
12November 29at Houston Texans W 35–2711–0 Reliant Stadium Recap
13December 6 Tennessee Titans W 27–1712–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
14December 13 Denver Broncos W 28–1613–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
15December 17at Jacksonville Jaguars W 35–3114–0 Jacksonville Municipal Stadium Recap
16December 27 New York Jets L 15–2914–1Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
17January 3, 2010at Buffalo Bills L 7–3014–2 Ralph Wilson Stadium Recap

Standings

AFC South
WLTPCTDIVCONFPFPASTK
(1) Indianapolis Colts 1420.8756–010–2416307L2
Houston Texans 970.5631–56–6388333W4
Tennessee Titans 880.5002–44–8354402W1
Jacksonville Jaguars 790.4383–36–6290380L4

Game summaries

Week 1: vs. Jacksonville Jaguars

Week 1: Jacksonville Jaguars at Indianapolis Colts – Game summary

With the win the Colts started out the season 1–0 and improved their regular season winning streak to 9 games.


Week 2: at Miami Dolphins

Week 2: Indianapolis Colts at Miami Dolphins – Game summary

With the win, not only did the Colts improve to 2–0, but Peyton Manning's 119th career victory would surpass Johnny Unitas for the most quarterback wins in franchise history. The win also helped the Colts' improved their winning streak to 10 games in the regular season. The Colts' offense would make the most of its time on the field, as they were only in the game for 14:53.


Week 3: at Arizona Cardinals

Week 3: Indianapolis Colts at Arizona Cardinals – Game summary

With the win the Colts improved to 3–0 and their regular season winning streak to 11 games.


Week 4: vs. Seattle Seahawks

Week 4: Seattle Seahawks at Indianapolis Colts – Game summary

With the win, the Colts improved to 4–0 and made their record 12 straight regular season games. Colts QB Peyton Manning would tie Fran Tarkenton for the third–most career touchdown passes in NFL history (342), behind only Brett Favre and Dan Marino. Also, Colts head coach Jim Caldwell would become the franchise's first rookie head coach since Lindy Infante in 1996 to win their first four games.


Week 5: at Tennessee Titans

Week 5: Indianapolis Colts at Tennessee Titans – Game summary

With the win the Colts improved to 5–0 into their bye week and increased their winning streak to 13 games.


Week 7: at St. Louis Rams

1234Total
Colts14771442
Rams30306

at Edward Jones Dome, St. Louis, Missouri

Coming off their bye week, the Colts flew to the Edward Jones Dome for a Week 7 interconference duel with the St. Louis Rams. Indianapolis came out of the gates early in the first quarter as quarterback Peyton Manning completed a six-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. The Rams would respond with a 30-yard field goal from kicker Josh Brown, yet the Colts answered with Manning hooking up with tight end Dallas Clark on a 22-yard touchdown pass. Afterwards, running back Joseph Addai would acquire the only score of the second quarter with a six-yard touchdown.

St. Louis would begin the third quarter with Brown booting a 45-yard field goal, yet Indianapolis calmly responded with rookie cornerback Jacob Lacey returning an interception 35 yards for a touchdown. Afterwards, the Colts closed out the game with Manning finding rookie wide receiver Austin Collie on an eight-yard touchdown pass and running back Chad Simpson getting a 31-yard touchdown run.

With the win, Indianapolis improved to 6–0 and increased their winning streak to 14 games.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 8: vs. San Francisco 49ers

1234Total
49ers770014
Colts363618

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

The Colts began three straight home games in Week 8 with an interconference duel against the San Francisco 49ers. Indianapolis would find themselves trailing in the first quarter as 49ers running back Frank Gore got a 64-yard touchdown run. The Colts answered with kicker Matt Stover getting a 38-yard field goal. In the second quarter, Indianapolis crept closer as Stover made a 33-yard field goal, yet San Francisco answered with quarterback Alex Smith completing an eight-yard touchdown pass to tight end Vernon Davis. The Colts closed out the half with a 31-yard field goal from Stover.

In the second half, Indianapolis narrowed San Francisco's lead to two as Stover booted a 40-yard field goal. In the fourth quarter, they executed a halfback option play as running back Joseph Addai's threw a 22-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Reggie Wayne. Afterwards, the defense held off against the various comeback attempts from the 49ers.

With the win, the Colts improved to 7–0 for the fourth time in five seasons and they set a franchise record with 15 consecutive regular season wins.

Also, quarterback Peyton Manning (31/48 for 347 yards) joined Dan Marino, Brett Favre, and John Elway as the only players in NFL history to complete 4,000 career passes. In addition, he became the fastest to reach the milestone as he reached it in 183 games.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 9: vs. Houston Texans

1234Total
Texans037717
Colts1030720

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

Coming off their win over the 49ers, the Colts stayed at home for a Week 9 AFC South duel with the Houston Texans. Indianapolis would get off to a fast start in the first quarter as quarterback Peyton Manning completed a seven-yard touchdown pass to running back Joseph Addai, followed by kicker Matt Stover nailing a 22-yard field goal. The Colts would add onto their lead in the second quarter as Stover booted a 37-yard field goal, while the Texans would close out the half with a 56-yard field goal from kicker Kris Brown.

In the third quarter, Houston began to rally as quarterback Matt Schaub found running back Ryan Moats on a one-yard touchdown pass. The Texans would take the lead in the fourth quarter with a one-yard touchdown run from running back Steve Slaton, yet Indianapolis regained the lead with Addai's two-yard touchdown run. The Texans attempted to force the game into overtime with a 42-yard field goal attempt, which went wide left.

With the win, the Colts improved to 8–0 for the third time in five seasons as well as increasing their winning streak to 16 games.

Peyton Manning (34/50 for 318 yards, 1 TD, 1 INT) would become the first quarterback in NFL history to throw for 40,000 yards in one decade.

Jim Caldwell would become the first rookie head coach to start 8–0 since Potsy Clark in 1931.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 10: vs. New England Patriots

1234Total
Patriots71701034
Colts7702135

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

The Indianapolis Colts and New England Patriots set up for their rivalry game at Lucas Oil Stadium. The Colts came in at 8–0 while the Patriots came in 6–2, both shooting for home field advantage during the playoffs. The Colts struck first with a 15-yard touchdown pass from Manning to Addai. However New England answered with 24 unanswered points in the first and second quarter. The Colts finally got back into the game with a 20-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne towards the end of the first half. The third quarter was scoreless with the Colts still trailing by 10, but the Patriots started the fourth with a touchdown pass to Randy Moss with the Patriots now leading 31–14. The Colts came back quickly scoring a touchdown, making it 31–21. After a New England field goal, the Colts scored a touchdown on an Addai run. The Patriots were still in the lead 34–28, however the Colts were hot with Peyton Manning ready to lead them to a win if the defense could hold the Patriot offense for one more drive. With less the two and a half minutes remaining in the game, the New England Patriots were faced with a fourth and two on their own 28-yard line. Bill Belichick decided to go for it on a controversial play, where Brady threw to Kevin Faulk, who gained control of the ball behind the first down marker, forcing the Patriots to turn the ball over on downs. Having wasted their last time out on the preceding play and the play occurring before the two-minute warning, the Patriots couldn't challenge the ruling on the field. With a minute left Peyton Manning found Reggie Wayne for the touchdown to seal a 35–34 victory over the Patriots as the team improved to 9–0 and their winning streak continued with 17 games.

First quarter

Second quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 11: at Baltimore Ravens

1234Total
Colts770317
Ravens660315

at M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore

Following their comeback win over the Patriots, the Colts flew to M&T Bank Stadium for a Week 11 duel with the Baltimore Ravens. In the first quarter, Indianapolis got on the board first with quarterback Peyton Manning passing to tight end Dallas Clark for a three-yard touchdown. Baltimore would respond as kicker Billy Cundiff made a 46-yard and a 44-yard field goal. In the second quarter, the Ravens took the lead with Cundiff nailing a 38-yard field goal, until the Colts came right back when running back Joseph Addai's five-yard touchdown run. The Ravens would close out the half with Cundiff booting a 36-yard field goal.

After a scoreless third quarter, Cundiff's 20-yard field goal gave the Ravens the lead again in the fourth quarter. Fortunately, Indianapolis would regain the lead again as former Baltimore kicker Matt Stover booted a 20-yard field goal.

With the win, the Colts would improve to 10–0, which includes a franchise-best nine-straight road win dating back to last season well as 18 straight wins overall.

Dallas Clark (1 reception for 3 yards and 1 TD) would break John Mackey's record for the most receptions by a Colts tight end with 321.

First quarter

Second quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 12: at Houston Texans

1234Total
Colts0772135
Texans1460727

at Reliant Stadium, Houston

Coming off their road win against the Ravens, the Colts flew to Reliant Stadium for an AFC South showdown with the Texans, their second meeting of the season. Houston dominated throughout the first half, scoring 17 points. The Colts took over from there, scoring 35 points, one of which was an interception returned 27 yards by Clint Session.

With the win, the Colts went to 11–0 and their winning streak improved to 19 games.

Also, with the win and Jacksonville's loss to San Francisco, the Colts clinched the AFC South division title, the first team to clinch a playoff berth this season.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 13: vs. Tennessee Titans

1234Total
Titans370717
Colts7170327

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

Coming off their come-from-behind road win against Houston, the Colts went home for a divisional duel with the 5–6 Tennessee Titans. Indianapolis started off the scoring with an eight-yard run from Joseph Addai. The Titans came back with a 20-yard field goal by Rob Bironas. Indianapolis struck again in the second quarter on another Joseph Addai run, then again on a four-yard pass to Austin Collie. The Titans would hit paydirt next with 0:20 left in the half, but Indianapolis would close out the first half with a 43-yard field goal by Matt Stover. After a scoreless third quarter, the Colts would strike next on another field goal, this time from 36 yards. The Titans scored again on a 17-yard pass to Bo Scaife. The Titans regained possession on an onside kick, but the Colts Defense kept the Titans from scoring again.

With the win, the Colts went to 12–0

Also with the win, the Colts tied the 20062008 Patriots record for most consecutive regular season wins with 21.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 14: vs. Denver Broncos

1234Total
Broncos070916
Colts1470728

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

The Colts improved their season record to 13–0 and broke the 20062008 Patriots record for most consecutive regular season wins with 22.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 15: at Jacksonville Jaguars

1234Total
Colts0217735
Jaguars31414031

at Jacksonville Municipal Stadium, Jacksonville, Florida

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


With the win the Colts improved to 14–0 and their winning streak improved to 23. Also, with the Saints' loss the Colts became the NFL's only undefeated team.

The Colts also became the first team since the 2007 Patriots to start a season at 14–0.

Week 16: vs. New York Jets

1234Total
Jets03151129
Colts636015

at Lucas Oil Stadium, Indianapolis

With this loss, the Colts ended their perfect season run and had a record of 14–1 heading into the last week of the regular season. The Colts also ended their 23–game regular season winning streak.

First quarter

Second quarter

Third quarter

Fourth quarter


Week 17: at Buffalo Bills

Week 17: Indianapolis Colts at Buffalo Bills – Game summary

With the loss, the Colts finished the season with a league-best 14-2 .


Postseason

Playoff roundDateOpponent (Seed)ResultRecordVenueRecap
Wild Card First-round bye
DivisionalJanuary 16 Baltimore Ravens (6)W 20–31–0 Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
AFC ChampionshipJanuary 24 New York Jets (5)W 30–172–0Lucas Oil Stadium Recap
Super Bowl XLIV February 7vs. New Orleans Saints (N1)L 17–312–1 Sun Life Stadium Recap

AFC Divisional vs. Baltimore Ravens

AFC Divisional: Baltimore Ravens at Indianapolis Colts – Game summary

Entering the postseason as the AFC's #1 seed, the Colts began their playoff run at home in the AFC Divisional Round against the #6 Baltimore Ravens. Indianapolis would open the first quarter with a 44-yard field goal from former Ravens kicker Matt Stover. Baltimore would reply with a 25-yard field goal from kicker Billy Cundiff. In the second quarter, the Colts would deliver a big punch as quarterback Peyton Manning hooked up with rookie wide receiver Austin Collie on a 10-yard touchdown pass and then found wide receiver Reggie Wayne on a three-yard touchdown pass. After a scoreless third quarter, Indianapolis would add onto their lead with Stover's 33-yard field goal. From there, the defense kept forcing turnovers to prevail. Manning ended up yelling at Donald Brown during a play at the beginning of the fourth quarter, which became a meme.


AFC Championship vs. New York Jets

AFC Championship: New York Jets at Indianapolis Colts – Game summary

Coming off their divisional win over the Ravens, the Colts would stay at home for the AFC Championship game against the #5 New York Jets. After a scoreless first quarter, Indianapolis would begin the second quarter with a 25-yard field goal from kicker Matt Stover. However, the Jets responded with quarterback Mark Sanchez completing an 80-yard touchdown pass to wide receiver Braylon Edwards. The Colts would come right back with Stover's 19-yard field goal, but New York answered with Sanchez's nine-yard touchdown pass to tight end Dustin Keller, followed by kicker Jay Feely making a 48-yard field goal. Fortunately, Indianapolis would strike back as quarterback Peyton Manning found rookie wide receiver Austin Collie on a 16-yard touchdown pass.

The Colts would take the lead in the third quarter with Manning hooking up with wide receiver Pierre Garçon on a four-yard touchdown pass. Indianapolis would add onto their lead in the fourth quarter as Manning hooked up with tight end Dallas Clark on a 15-yard touchdown pass, followed by Stover's 21-yard field goal.

With the win, not only did the Colts improve their overall record to 16–2, but they would advance to their second Super Bowl in four years.

The game served as Peyton Manning's last playoff win as a Colt and the team's last playoff win until their comeback win at home against the Kansas City Chiefs in the Wildcard Round of the 2013 playoffs. This would serve as the team's last appearance in the AFC Championship game until the 2014 playoffs. Manning would win his next playoff game in the Divisional Round of the 2013 playoffs as a member of the Broncos.


Super Bowl XLIV vs. New Orleans Saints

Super Bowl XLIV: New Orleans Saints vs. Indianapolis Colts – Game summary

After the coin toss, the Saints wanted the ball first; however, this didn't help their first drive. The Colts drove the ball down the field with an attempt to score the first touchdown but was denied and forced Matt Stover to kick a 38-yard goal. But the Colts were not finished: on their next possession, Pierre Garçon caught a 19-yard TD pass from Peyton Manning, and the Colts led 10–0 after fifteen minutes. In the second quarter, the Saints were forced to look upon Garrett Hartley for two field goals – a 46 yarder and a 44 yarder respectively – and the deficit was reduced to four points by halftime.

Kicking off the second half, the Saints caught Indy by surprise with the "Ambush" play (an onside kick in kickoff formation), which the Saints recovered, shifting the momentum to them. Pierre Thomas caught a 16-yard screen pass from Drew Brees and NO had their first lead of the game, 13–10 after the extra point. The Colts would not be denied from scoring again with the rushing attack of Joseph Addai, capping off the scoring drive with a 4-yard run. From here, however, the Colts would be denied. The Saints still stood by Hartley to keep the game close with a 47-yard field goal, taking the score to 17–16. In the fourth quarter, Jeremy Shockey caught a two-yard touchdown pass from Drew Brees with Lance Moore catching a two-point conversion and the Saints led 24–17. In the end, it was the defense that came through when Tracy Porter intercepted and returned 74 yards for a touchdown to seal the win and the first Super Bowl title for the New Orleans Saints in their 44-year existence.

Awards and honors

AwardPlayerPosition
AP NFL Most Valuable Player Peyton Manning Quarterback
AP NFL All-Pro (first team)Peyton ManningQuarterback
Dallas Clark Tight end
Dwight Freeney Defensive end
AP NFL All-Pro (second team) Reggie Wayne Wide receiver
Pro Bowl Peyton ManningQuarterback
Reggie WayneWide receiver
Dallas ClarkTight end
Jeff Saturday Center
Dwight FreeneyDefensive end
Robert Mathis Defensive end
Antoine Bethea Safety
AFC Player of the Week (week 9)Dallas ClarkTight end
AFC Player of the Week (week 10)Peyton ManningQuarterback
AFC Offensive Player of the Month (September 2009)Peyton ManningQuarterback
AFC Defensive Player of the Month (December 2009)Robert MathisDefensive end

Scores by quarter

1234Total
Opponents59853173248
Colts8314452115394

Criticism

In week 16, the Indianapolis Colts faced off against the New York Jets with an undefeated record of 14–0, having already clinched home–field advantage throughout the playoffs. In the third quarter with a 15–10 lead, head coach Jim Caldwell benched Peyton Manning for Curtis Painter. The Jets forced Painter to fumble, then recovered it for a touchdown and turned into an 18–15 lead. Indianapolis never recovered, never put Manning into the game, and lost 29–15, ending the Colts' chance at an undefeated season. Manning's reaction was, "Until any player in here is the head coach, you follow orders and you follow them with all of your heart." [54] On fans' reaction to the game, Jeff Saturday stated, "I don't blame them a bit, man.. I probably would have booed, too. I don't blame them. They pay to come see us win games, and we didn't get it done." [55]

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The 2006 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 54th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 23rd in Indianapolis and the 5th season under head coach Tony Dungy. The team failed to improve on their regular season record of 14–2 from the 2005 season, finishing at 12–4. However, they did improve upon their postseason performance and advanced further into the playoffs, winning Super Bowl XLI.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2005 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 53rd season in franchise history

The 2005 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 53rd season in the National Football League (NFL), the 22nd in Indianapolis and the fourth season under head coach Tony Dungy. The Colts improved on their 12–4 record from 2004 and finished the season 14–2. Indianapolis started the season with a 13-game winning streak and were heavily favored to go to and win Super Bowl XL. The Colts' rival, the New England Patriots, lost to the Denver Broncos in the Divisional round of the playoffs. The following day, the Colts were favored over the Pittsburgh Steelers because they had easily beaten them in their previous meeting. However, the Colts lost their first playoff game to the eventual Super Bowl champion Steelers, when placekicker Mike Vanderjagt missed a crucial field goal.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 55th season in franchise history; last at the RCA Dome

The 2007 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 55th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 24th in Indianapolis and the 6th season under head coach Tony Dungy. The defending AFC and Super Bowl champions improved upon their 12–4 record from 2006 as well as won their fifth-straight AFC South Championship. They finished the season 13–3 and lost to the San Diego Chargers in the divisional round of the playoffs. The Colts remained under the supervision of head coach Tony Dungy and played all of their home games in the RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana. 2007 was the Colts' final season in the RCA Dome, as they began playing home games in Lucas Oil Stadium in 2008. In early January 2007 the Colts were the co-favorites to win Super Bowl XLII, along with the San Diego Chargers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 New Orleans Saints season</span> NFL team season

The 2007 season was the New Orleans Saints' 41st season in the National Football League (NFL), their 32nd playing home games at the Louisiana Superdome and their second under head coach Sean Payton. The team tried to improve upon its 10–6 record in 2006 and its third division title—the Saints' first in the NFC South. Their other two division titles were in the NFC West, prior to the league's 2002 realignment. After opening up the pre-season in the Pro Football Hall of Fame Game against the Pittsburgh Steelers on August 5, 2007, the Saints ended with a 3–2 pre-season record. The Saints opened the regular season with a nationally televised game against the defending Super Bowl XLI champion Indianapolis Colts, but ultimately had a disappointing season, finishing 2007 with a 7–9 record and were officially eliminated from postseason contention for the first time since 2005. The Saints also had no player make the Pro Bowl for the first time since their 1–15 1980 season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Carolina Panthers season</span> NFL team season

The 2007 Carolina Panthers season was the franchise's 13th season in the National Football League (NFL) and the team's 11th season at Bank of America Stadium. They failed to improve upon their 8–8 record in 2006, finishing at 7–9 and missing the playoffs for the second straight season.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2007 Baltimore Ravens season</span> NFL team season

The 2007 season was the Baltimore Ravens' 12th in the National Football League (NFL), their 9th and final under head coach Brian Billick, and their 6th season under general manager Ozzie Newsome.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2003 New England Patriots season</span> 44th season in franchise history; second Super Bowl win

The 2003 season was the New England Patriots' 34th in the National Football League (NFL), their 44th overall, and their fourth under head coach Bill Belichick. They finished with a league-best and franchise-best 14–2 record before advancing to and winning Super Bowl XXXVIII.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Colts–Patriots rivalry</span> National Football League rivalry

The Colts–Patriots rivalry is a National Football League (NFL) rivalry between the Indianapolis Colts and the New England Patriots. As the Colts play in the AFC South and the Patriots are in the AFC East, the two teams do not play every year; instead, they play at least once every three years and at least once every six seasons at each team's home stadium due to the NFL's rotating division schedules during which their divisions are paired up, sometimes more often if the two teams finish in the same place in their respective divisions or meet in the playoffs.

The 1999 Indianapolis Colts season was the 47th season for the team in the National Football League and 16th in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis Colts finished the National Football League's 1999 season with a record of 13 wins and 3 losses, and won the AFC East division, and their first 10 win season since 1977, when they were still in Baltimore. This season marked a turning point for the Colts franchise, who had only made the playoffs 3 times since 1977. Since 1999, the Colts have been one of the more successful NFL franchises, only missing the playoffs eight times, winning two AFC Championships, and earning a Super Bowl title in Super Bowl XLI. No other turnaround was as great as the 1999 Colts until the 2008 Miami Dolphins went from a 1–15 record to an 11–5 record and an AFC East title.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2008 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 56th season in franchise history; first at Lucas Oil Stadium and final one with coach Tony Dungy

The 2008 Indianapolis Colts season was the 56th season for the team in the National Football League (NFL) and the 25th in Indianapolis. It was the first season since 2002 that the Colts did not win the AFC South title. However, after a 3–4 start on the season Peyton Manning led the Colts to a nine-game winning streak, a 12–4 record, and a wild card berth in the playoffs. The Colts' season came to an end in San Diego when they were upset in their wild-card round playoff game against the San Diego Chargers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2009 Baltimore Ravens season</span> NFL team season

The 2009 season was the Baltimore Ravens' 14th in the National Football League (NFL). The franchise entered the season off an 11–5 record in their previous season, a playoff berth, but a loss in the American Football Conference (AFC) Championship game against the eventual Super Bowl XLIII champions, the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Ravens recorded nine victories to seven losses, although they were unable to win the AFC North division title. However, due to various playoff clinching scenarios in the AFC, the Ravens were able to clinch a wild card berth against the Oakland Raiders in Week 17. As the sixth seed in the AFC for the second straight year, they defeated the third seeded New England Patriots in Foxboro in the AFC Wild Card playoffs, handing Tom Brady's first ever playoff loss at home and New England's first home playoff loss since 1978. They, however, lost in the AFC Divisional playoffs against the top seeded and eventual AFC champion Indianapolis Colts; with this loss, the 2009 season came to an end for the Ravens. For head coach John Harbaugh, this was his second year with the franchise, compiling an overall record of 20–12 in the regular season.

The National Football League playoffs for the 2009 season began on January 9, 2010. The postseason tournament concluded with the New Orleans Saints defeating the Indianapolis Colts in Super Bowl XLIV, 31–17, on February 7, at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2010 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 58th season in franchise history; final one with Peyton Manning

The 2010 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 58th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 27th in Indianapolis, and the second under head coach Jim Caldwell. The defending AFC champions were looking to repeat as AFC champions and win it all in Super Bowl XLV to end their four-year championship drought. It was also the final season with Peyton Manning as the team's starting quarterback, as he would sit out the next season due to a neck injury and would be released by Indianapolis on March 7, 2012. Manning's last game as a Colt was on January 8, 2011, a 17–16 loss to the New York Jets in the Wild Card Round and would sign with the Denver Broncos a year later, on March 20, 2012.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2011 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 59th season in franchise history

The 2011 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 59th season in the National Football League (NFL), the 28th in Indianapolis and the third under head coach Jim Caldwell. The Colts were coming off a 10–6 record in 2010 and a second consecutive AFC South championship, as well as a ninth consecutive playoff appearance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">2014 Indianapolis Colts season</span> 62nd season in franchise history

The 2014 Indianapolis Colts season was the franchise's 62nd season in the National Football League (NFL) and the 31st in Indianapolis. It also marked the third season under head coach Chuck Pagano, general manager Ryan Grigson, and quarterback Andrew Luck.

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