By MICHAEL MAROT
AP Sports Writer
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — The Indianapolis Colts weren’t supposed to be here, playing a prime-time game in Week 18 with a chance to make the playoffs.
Not with a rookie quarterback who then suffered a season-ending injury that forced Indy (9-7) to rely on a veteran backup for its final 12 games. Not with an inconsistent running game or a first-time head coach. And certainly not with a defense allowing 24.5 points per game.
Yet this gritty bunch is here, one win away from reaching the postseason for the first time since 2020, completing a mission perhaps only they believed possible and, yes, proving the critics wrong. They can’t wait.
“One thing I’ve learned is how scrappy, how tough this team is,” 2021 NFL rushing champ Jonathan Taylor said after Sunday’s 23-20 win over Las Vegas. “We knew we had tough players, but it’s a different story when you say you have a tough team.”
Taylor is one of many Indy players who have overcome obstacles.
He opened training camp and the regular season on the physically-unable-to-perform list with an ankle injury, forcing him to miss Indy’s first four games. Thumb surgery kept him out of three late-season contests. Now, he appears to be rounding into form.
Quarterback Gardner Minshew struggled with turnovers during a three-game losing streak after replacing the injured Anthony Richardson in Week 5. He rebounded by leading the Colts (9-7) to four straight wins before alternating wins and losses over the past four weeks to forge a three-way tie with Houston and Jacksonville atop the AFC South.
If Minshew extends his career-best single-season victory total to eight Saturday night against the Texans, Indy will be playoff bound. With a win and a Jaguars loss Sunday at Tennessee, the Colts would claim their first division crown since 2014.
“In this league, everybody’s got a chance,” Minshew said. “There’s a lot of parity, and then I think even when you’re struggling a little bit there at 3-5, I think everybody pulled together instead of growing apart. We were able to get us in this position. So, I think everybody is fired up for the opportunity.”
Now that they are here, the Colts don’t intend to fritter away this opportunity — playing at home, playing for the postseason and playing to prove they are every bit the playoff team they thought they could be.
“We know what’s at stake,” Steichen said. “It’s go out and take care of business. It’s win or go home.”