INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - New England's players firmly stand behind coach Bill Belichick's
costly gamble.
The Patriots failed on a fourth-and-2 deep in their territory
with two minutes to play, giving Peyton Manning a prime opportunity
to steal a victory after trailing by 17 points early in the fourth
quarter. Manning took advantage, throwing a 1-yard touchdown pass
to Reggie Wayne with 13 seconds left to give the Colts a 35-34 win
over the Patriots on Sunday night.
When asked if he understood why his decision would be
questioned, Belichick answered with a short "yes." Patriots
quarterback Tom Brady, however, took it as a compliment and saw it
as a show of faith in the offense.
"Coach is being aggressive, and I love that about him," Brady
said. "He gave us a chance to make the play, and we just came up a
little short."
It was the most improbable victory for the Colts (9-0) in their
18-game regular-season winning streak, which is now tied for the
second-longest in league history with New England.
The Patriots (6-3) have lost five of the last six in this
series, one that has often had long-term implications. Since 2003,
the regular-season winner has claimed the AFC title four times and
become the Super Bowl champion three times.
The game was filled with offensive firepower and big plays.
Brady was 29 of 42 for 375 yards with three touchdowns and one
interception. Randy Moss finished with nine catches for a
season-high 179 yards and two TDs and Wes Welker had nine
receptions for 94 yards.
Manning, who was 28 of 44 for 327 yards with four touchdowns and
two interceptions, now has eight 300-yard games this season. He
passed Fran Tarkenton for fourth on the career victories list with
126, and became the first quarterback to throw 300 touchdowns in a
decade.
Wayne caught 10 passes for 126 yards and two touchdowns.
But the Colts' big defensive play was the one that turned the
game.
Needing a first down to seal the game, Belichick decided to go
for it from his own 28 with 2:08 to go. The Patriots called their
second timeout of the drive, leaving them with none, to set up the
play: A short pass from Brady to Kevin Faulk.
Faulk made a juggling catch, but safety Melvin Bullitt drove the
Patriots running back into the ground a half-yard short of a first
down.
"He looked like he was past, and then they knocked him
backward," Brady said. "The refs ... I think they said he bobbled
it, so they couldn't give him forward progress. We had no timeouts,
so we couldn't review it or anything like that."
Faulk said the Patriots should have made Belichick's choice look
good.
"He is the head coach and makes all the decisions," he said.
"It's our job to execute -- or try to."
The Colts didn't like the call.
"Total disrespect," linebacker Clint Session said. "They
disrespected us and got what they deserved."
Colts defensive end Dwight Freeney agreed.
"To be honest with you, that's how we take it," he said. "Any
defense should take it the same way."
The failed play didn't excuse the Patriots' defense, which
wilted under the pressure of Manning's precision and defending a
short field. They simply needed to keep the Colts out of the end
zone to preserve the win, but they failed to handle the switch in
momentum.
"That's part of the game," linebacker Derrick Burgess said.
"That's what we do. That's what we have to be able to do to be a
good defense."
It wasn't the first time Belichick had made such a decision. At
Atlanta, he went for it on fourth-and-1 from his own 24. But that
was in the third quarter, and those were the Falcons, not New
England's nemesis.
On the Colts' final drive, Manning hooked up with Wayne for 14
yards. He let Joseph Addai carry the ball for 13 yards, down to the
Patriots 1. He sent Addai inside again on first-and-goal, the same
play Addai scored on to win the 2006 AFC Championship game, but he
got nothing. So Manning went back to Wayne in the end for the
win.
"Certainly, a great team comeback win," Manning said. "Everyone
had to do their part. Defense had to hold them at the right times.
It certainly was as much adversity as we've seen all year."
Belichick didn't regret removing some of that adversity in the
final minutes.
"It's a case of trusting the team," he said. "Give them (the
Colts) credit, they made the play."