Tier 1 – The Unmemorable
Games
15.) 2001 Week 6 -
Patriots 38 @ Colts 17
Review: Who knows anything about this game,
really. While it was slightly closer than the other game in 2001, it didn't
have a special quality that one did. This was the last game these two teams
played as divisional rivals, but it marked the beginning of some interesting
trends that have defined most of the series. The Patriots jumped out to a 28-6
lead behind a composed performance from Brady, and fumbles by people not named
Peyton Manning. Manning himself had a decent game, but they fell behind too
much too early to do anything with this game.
Interestimg/Memorable
Play: David Patten threw
a TD in this game. He also ran for a TD. And of course he caught a TD. Yes,
these things always seemed to happen against the Colts.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact: Two of the first
three drives by the Colts ended with blocked field goals. Another running trend
in this matchup, just awful special teams performances by the Manning led
teams.
14.) 2012 Week 5 -
Broncos 21 @ Patriots 31
Review: In the first game of rivalry after Manning's
move to Denver, the Patriots still did to Manning's team what they always did.
They capitalized on non-Manning turnovers, and opened up a giant lead. The
worst agressor was Demaryius Thomas, who fumbled down the field after a
catch-and-run that put the Broncos inside the Patriots 20. The next worse was
Willis McGahee dropping a 4th down pass near midfield, and then a McGahee
fumble inside the red zone near the end of the game. The Broncos did mount
somewhat of a comeback, but you can't recover from too many 31-7 deficits on
the road.
Interesting/Memorable
Play: With the Patriots
leading just 17-7, they faced a 3rd and 17 in punt territory. The Patriots
called an inside hand-off to Woodhead, which gained a perfect 19 yards. Yup,
those things happen.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact: This was the first time
since the 2001 we just finished that Peyton Manning did not throw an
interception in this matchup.
13.) 2005 Week 9 - Colts
40 @ Patriots 21
Review: Our first win by the Manning side was also the
most forgettable win for the Manning side. Nothing was really all that great
about this game, other than teh Colts continuing their initial run at
perfection. Manning was mostly brilliant against a banged-up Patriots defense.
This game was the only real case of the Manning side jumping out early when he
was on the Colts. They ran up a 28-7 lead built mostly off the offense humming
at all cylinders. The Colts scored on 7 of their 9 drives, including a nice
little eff-you TD right at the end with Manning hitting a deep ball to Marvin
Harrison. If you could draw up a Colts blowout, you would have Manning throw
for 300 yards, Edge rush for 100 yards, and both Harrison and Wayne get 120+
yards on 9 catches each.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact: This was the one time
where it was Brady who was felled by his team despite a great game. He had his
receiver fumble, Vinatieri miss a field goal, and was so far out of the game
despite not throwing an incompletion in the first half.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact 2: As this was the
last year of MNF being on ABC, this was the only Monday Night game these two
would play.
12.) 2001 Week 3 - Colts 13 @ Patriots 44
Review: This was the most lop-sided
of the games between the two teams, so why is it so high up? Because this was
the first start of Tom Brady’s career. And like in so many games early on in
Brady’s career, the Patriots defense forced tons of turnovers, Brady got the
benefit of an excellent running game (39 rushes for 177 yards), and Brady
himself didn’t have to do much (13-23 for 168 yards). Manning was not good in the
game, but this was at the height of the talent suck that was the Jim Mora
Colts. The Patriots had no idea what they had in Brady in this game, or this
season.
Interesting/Memorable Play: So, what was the first real play of the rivalry? A sack of Tom
Brady by Brad Scioli for a 9-yard loss. The first series was a three-and-out.
Actually both QBs started the game with three-and-outs.
Tier
II – The Games that Should Have been Better
11.)
2004 AFC Divisional - Colts 3 @ Patriots 20
Review: In a game that made me reevaluate my belief that there was such thing as an unstoppable offense, the Patriots beat the Colts in a playoff game in a more “eff-you” way than the previous year. In the opposite of the previous season, Manning was one of the few Colts who played well, going 27-42 for 238 yards. What really turned the game was two dominating drives that went 86 and 92 yards by the Patriots to turn a 6-3 game in the 3rd quarter to a 20-3 blowout. The key was a run game that went for 210 yards. The Patriots held the ball for 40 minutes and blanketed the Colts, limiting them to short gain after short gain when they didn’t have the ball. In reality, the best way to describe the game was the play where Tedy Bruschi just ripped the ball out of Dominic Rhodes’ hands. It was, arguably, the greatest day in the Patriots dynasty.
Interesting/Memorable Play 1: The turning point of the game may have been on the Colts first drive of the 2nd half. Trailing just 6-3 at that point, the Colts had a 4th and 1 on the Patriots 48, and Tony Dungy, still in his conservative phase, punted. The Patriots then immediately began their two brutal clock-killing TD drives.
Interesting/Memorable Moment: After the game, Tedy Bruschi let out what was the Patriots’ version of Bart Scott’s “Can’t Wait!” speech, telling the world, “If you want to change the rules, change them” and “that’s what we do, we win.” I still admire those Patriots because they weren’t robots. They talked quite a bit of smack.
10.)
2010 Week 11 - Colts 28 @ Patriots 31
Review: Every game from
here on out was memorable for one reason or the other (including four absolute
classic games at the top of the list). This was a very interesting facsimile of
the game the year earlier (and much more memorable). Once again, the Patriots
jumped out to a huge lead. The Patriots led 14-0, 21-7 and then 31-14. Brady
was great in having to do nothing. The Colts defense was atrocious, and Manning
was throwing to Jacob Tamme and Blair White (after Collie’s 2nd concussion).
The Colts then staged a furious rally based on Manning throwing two TDs to that
same man Blair White. The Colts forced another punt, and then Manning was
driving. One year after having a controversy-enabled comeback from 31-14 down,
the Colts nearly did the exact same thing, this time on the road, with no 4th
and 2. It all ended abruptly, though, when the Colts, in field goal territory,
turned it over when Manning’s arm was hit when throwing and James Sanders
picked it off.
Interesting/Memorable Plays: This was the last game in the Colts/Patriots chapter of the
rivalry. The last pass of that era was Manning getting picked. The last play by
Brady was Brady throwing a terrible pass right to Colts linebacker Tyjuan
Hagler’s face, but he couldn’t corral it. Nothing defined this part of the
rivalry more than James Sanders making a great play to pick off Manning, and
Hagler dropping a gimme pick on Brady.
Interesting/Memorable Play: This might be me reading too much into something, but I have
never seen Bill Belichick so happy to win a regular season game. He was more
ecstatic than ever. Had to be because he knew he dodged another ridiculous
Manning comeback.
9.) 2013 AFC
Championship Game - Patriots 16 @ Broncos 26
Review: Oh, how I would love
to be a major homer and put this in the 'Good Games' category. Alas, I want to
be kind of objective, so it sits here. I quite famously did not watch this game
live, but have watched every play of it a few times since and you can basically
boil down this game to two things. First, The Patriots had three points through
three quarters against a defense that was missing five opening day starters
(Miller, Vickerson, Woodyard, Moore, Harris), and that the Broncos offense
averaged 60 yards a drive. Manning had his third brilliant AFC Title Game, with
a beautifully controlled performance, going 30-41 for 400 yards. After Aqib
Talib went out the Patriots never stopped the Broncos until the Broncos final
drive of the game, which they knelt on the 12 yard line. Belichick had no real
answer for Manning's offense apart from 'let Julius Thomas drop a TD and force
a field goal'. Brady missed some open throws, but when you're throwing deep to
guys Manning made famous a football lifetime ago (Austin Collie) you probably
are out gunned.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The most infamous play from the game is Wes Welker's block on Aqib Talib. It was probably a split second too early, but to say John Fox sent Welker, who had just come back from a concussion a week prior, to intentionally slam into Talib is idiotic. And for Belichick, who's team does the exact same stuff, to call Welker out on it was pathetic.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: Through three quarters, the Broncos led 23-3 and had held the Patriots to under 200 yards of offense. Through three quarters in the divisional game, they led the Chargers 17-0, holding them under 200 yards. So, against two of the Top-6 offenses in the NFL, the Broncos cast-off defense held, in the first three quarters, to 3 total points.
Interesting/Memorable Play: The most infamous play from the game is Wes Welker's block on Aqib Talib. It was probably a split second too early, but to say John Fox sent Welker, who had just come back from a concussion a week prior, to intentionally slam into Talib is idiotic. And for Belichick, who's team does the exact same stuff, to call Welker out on it was pathetic.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: Through three quarters, the Broncos led 23-3 and had held the Patriots to under 200 yards of offense. Through three quarters in the divisional game, they led the Chargers 17-0, holding them under 200 yards. So, against two of the Top-6 offenses in the NFL, the Broncos cast-off defense held, in the first three quarters, to 3 total points.
Tier III – The Good Games
8.) 2004 Week 1 - Colts 24 @ Patriots 27
Review: In the last time these
two teams would play in September, the tradition of the defending Champion
starting the season was initiated. The game itself was good game, with neither
QB playing perfectly. Both were done in by the rest of their respective teams a
bit. Manning threw a pick because Clark slipped near the goal-line. Edge James
fumbled at the 1-yard line with Indy about to take a 31-27 lead late. Brady
himself threw a pick. It was one of the few games where Brady definitely had
the better day, throwing for 335 yards and 3 TDs against 256 and 2 for Manning.
This game would come back to haunt the Colts as Vanderjagt’s missed field goal
was the difference between the Colts playing that divisional round game loss to
New England in Indianapolis and not Foxboro. It was the opposite of every early
Patriots vs. Colts game, with the Colts run offense working spectacularly (200
yards), and the Patriots having to rely on Brady, but the one constant was
untimely turnovers by the Colts. That cost them the game, and eventually the #2
seed.
Interesting/Memorable Play: Mike Vanderjagt missed a 47-yard game-tying field goal at the gun.
47 isn’t tough, but a huge McGinest sack cost the Colts 11-yards on that field
goal the play before. Still, the idiot kicker did not help.
Interesting/Memorable Fact: This was the 2nd of five straight meetings (and 7 of
the first 9) in Foxboro. The Patriots did lose the last two, but a lot of the
10-5 overall record in favor of New England is simply location (Manning’s side
is 3-3 at home; 2-7 in New England).
7.) 2003 AFC Championship Game - Colts 14 @ Patriots
24
Review: In weather that could only be described
as a wintry mix so awful that it would have exceeded Bill Belichick’s most
hopeful expectations (Colts' columnist Bob Kravitz called it Belichick's vision
of Hell for Manning), the Patriots stopped a Colts offense that hadn’t punted
in their first two playoff games. Peyton Manning had the worst day of his
career. It actually didn’t start out too bad, as on their initial possession,
the Colts drove the length of the field, but Manning threw an interception into
the end zone. It was all downhill from there. In the 1st half,
Manning threw another pick, Marvin Harrison fumbled inside the Patriots 20, and
on their 1st punt of the playoffs, the snap flew over punter
Hunter Smith’s head for a safety. Due to Brady (interception into the Colts end
zone) and the Patriots’ inability to cash in these short fields for TDs, the
Colts were only down 21-14 with 1:50 left when they started a drive. Four
incompletions (including two obvious un-called defensive holding penalties)
later it was all over, and the Patriots accomplished their finest defensive
performance. Of course, like many things the Patriots have done since, there
was a little wee controversy about what really was a decisive win.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact: The fallout from
the game tends to be spinned that Jim Irsay, Bill Polian and the Colts whined
and got new rules added. That is mostly hogwash. Yes, Bill Polian (and only
Bill Polian) complained, but there was no new rule. The NFL just told the
officials to start enforcing the illegal contact rules that had been on the
books since 1978. Also, the NFL admitted that they missed six illegal
contact and defensive holding calls against the Patriots, including the 3rd and
4th down passes on that last failed drive when the Colts were
down 21-14.
Interesting/Memorable
Fact 2: This is the last AFC
Championship Game to really feature adverse weather. There were a few flurries
in the 2008 AFC Title Game in Pittsburgh, but there was no rain or snow in any
of the games since. It really is amazing that in those days, when the Patriots
needed bad weather, they always seemed to get snow or wintry mixes in the
playoffs (Tuck Rule, ’03 & ’04 vs the Colts).
6.) 2006 Week 9 - Colts 27 @ Patriots 20
Review: This might be too high,
but I am not exactly unbiased in ranking these games. This game was a big win
for the Colts, allowing the rematch to be in Indianapolis and not New England.
It was also big because it cemented their ability to beat New England. They
dominated in 2005, but this was more important. This was winning without the
clearly superior team. Brady had his worst day in the rivalry, throwing four
picks and looking totally lost. Manning was brilliant. Against a very good
Patriots pass defense and pass rush, Manning was harassed constantly, but threw
some amazing passes on the run. It wasn’t Manning’s best game in the rivalry,
but might have been his most impressive. The game’s real highlight wasn’t
Manning though, it was Marvin. Never a guy to have big games against New
England, Marvin Harrison abused the Patriots secondary to the tune of 8 catches
for 145 yards and two TDs. The last TD was the ridiculous one, the play where
he dove, tapped the ball up to himself, got both feet inbounds and then spiked
the ball in Mike Vrabel’s face (the best part). John Madden had no idea how
Marvin did that. No one did. Peyton didn’t even know how to respond. When it
was over, the Colts won in a calm, comfortable manner.
Interesting/Memorable Play: This game was also notable for Adam Vinatieri’s return to New
England. Of course, Vinatieri went 2-4 on field goals, including a huge miss
late in the game that would have put the Colts up 30-20. Instead the Patriots
took over with good field position in the last two-minutes. They could have
drove for a tying TD, but Brady thew pick #4.
Interesting/Memorable Play 2: The most impactful play of the game came on the Colts first
series. Quickly rushed, Manning sprinted out to his left and set his feet to
launch a bomb right before being killed by Rosie Colvin. The pass was caught by
Marvin Harrison way downfield, and he fought off Rodney Harrison on the play.
Rodney broke his arm on that play, ending his season.