Houston 17, Indianapolis 31

1 2 3 4 T
HOU (1-8) 0 7 10 0 17
IND (9-0) 7 14 7 3 31

Final

1:00 PM ET
November 13, 2005

Colts pound woeful Texans to stay unbeaten

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Team Stat Comparison
 
1st Downs1126
3rd down efficiency
4-134-10
4th down efficiency
0-10-0
Total Yards209419
Passing126293
Comp-Att
16-2526-35
Yards per pass
5.08.4
Rushing83126
Rushing Attempts
2429
Yards per rush
3.54.3
Penalties4-356-50
Turnovers02
Fumbles lost
02
Interceptions thrown
00
Possession27:2532:35
Air/Ground Leaders
Houston Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Carr16/2513810
Indianapolis Passing
 C/ATTYDSTDINT
Manning26/3529730
Houston Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
Wells1558114
Morency61806
Indianapolis Rushing
 CARYDSTDLG
James26122112
Manning3405
Houston Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Johnson442014
Gaffney229116
Indianapolis Receiving
 RECYDSTDLG
Harrison7108130
Stokley673123
Houston Fumbles
 FUMLOSTREC
Morency101
Buchanon100
Indianapolis Fumbles
 FUMLOSTREC
David110
Jackson110
Scoring Summary
FIRST QUARTERHOUIND
TD10:31Dallas Clark 14 Yd Pass From Peyton Manning (Mike Vanderjagt Kick)
Drive: 10 plays, 70 yds, 4:55
07
SECOND QUARTERHOUIND
TD3:46Edgerrin James 5 Yd Run (Mike Vanderjagt Kick)
Drive: 12 plays, 86 yds, 6:46
014
TD9:24Brandon Stokley 21 Yd Pass From Peyton Manning (Mike Vanderjagt Kick)
Drive: 9 plays, 71 yds, 4:32
021
TD13:07Jonathan Wells 14 Yd Run (Kris Brown Kick)
Drive: 3 plays, 34 yds, 1:02
721
THIRD QUARTERHOUIND
TD6:34Jabbar Gaffney 13 Yd Pass From David Carr (Kris Brown Kick)
Drive: 11 plays, 60 yds, 6:34
1421
TD9:06Marvin Harrison 30 Yd Pass From Peyton Manning (Mike Vanderjagt Kick)
Drive: 5 plays, 75 yds, 2:32
1428
FG14:01Kris Brown 24 Yd
Drive: 6 plays, 24 yds, 3:06
1728
FOURTH QUARTERHOUIND
FG3:30Mike Vanderjagt 45 Yd
Drive: 11 plays, 58 yds, 4:29
1731

INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- The Indianapolis Colts have a message for the NFL: The Triplets are back and better than ever.

Not to mention still perfect.

It was over when ...
Peyton Manning hit Brandon Stokely for a 21-yard touchdown with just over five minutes left in the first half to give Indianapolis a 21-0 lead. The only question left at that point was whether Houston could cover the spread. They did.
Game ball goes to ...
Manning. He was 26-for-35 for 297 yards, 3 TDs and 0 INTs. So much for having a quiet statistical year.
ESPN's take ...
Eric Allen The Colts are looking focused and sharp and that's huge coming after their win last week. That focus is a testament to the coaching staff's diligence. This could very easily have been a letdown game for the Colts, but they went out there and got the job done. This team is very focused on winning and focusing on the big picture of winning the Super Bowl. Right now the momentum is on the Colts' side.
-- Eric Allen
For the second straight week, Peyton Manning threw three touchdowns and Marvin Harrison and Edgerrin James each topped 100 yards, helping the Colts retain their title as the NFL's only unbeaten team with Sunday's 31-17 victory over Houston.

"In this offense, it can be anyone's day," said Manning, the league's two-time MVP. "But when you see it on film, we do spread it around. ... It can put the defense in a bind."

As if the Texans (1-8) weren't already overmatched, playing the league's hottest team with a makeshift offensive line and missing their top running back.

Manning carved up the Texans secondary, completing 26 of 35 passes for 297 yards and three TDs. Harrison caught seven passes for 108 yards, including a 30-yard TD pass that made Manning and Harrison the first duo in NFL history to account for 10,000 yards. The tandem now has 755 completions for 10,034 yards and 90 touchdowns -- all NFL records.

James, too, had a milestone day. He carried 26 times for 122 yards -- his 47th career 100-yard game, tying him with Pittsburgh's Franco Harris for the eighth most in league history -- while topping 1,000 yards for the fifth time in his career.

It also marked the 21st time James and Harrison accounted for 100 yards in the same game, breaking the NFL record of 20. The record previously belong to Dallas' Emmitt Smith and Michael Irvin.

And the trio made Houston look bad all day.

"They have so many weapons, you just can't let up," linebacker Antwan Peek said of Manning. "But it's tough to stop them all."

This victory, though, didn't follow the usual script for the Colts (9-0).

Coach Tony Dungy worried all week about his team's response to an emotional Monday night victory at New England, and at times, Indianapolis had problems.

Twice they muffed short punts when the ball hit blockers running down field. Houston turned those miscues into 10 points, keeping it closer than most people expected.

But Manning & Co. answered every challenge as Houston dropped to 0-8 all-time against Indy.

"I thought our guys played well," Dungy said. "We had a few glitches on the punts, but there's not really anything you could do about that."

On paper, it looked like a mismatch -- and that was long before the Texans put running back Domanick Davis (knee), offensive linemen Zach Wiegert (ankle), Drew Hodgdon (sprained arch) and Todd Washington (neck) on the inactive list.

Coach Dom Capers improvised. He moved offensive lineman around, then had to make another adjustment when right tackle Todd Wade sprained a knee ligament in the fourth quarter. Capers called both Wade's injury and safety Jason Simmons' pulled hamstring significant.

The rash of injuries also included defensive tackle Gary Walker, who limped off the field once and later returned.

"It looks like we can't play a game without losing someone," Capers said.

Indianapolis took advantage.

They limited Houston to only two first downs, one by penalty in the game's first 27 minutes.

Manning led the Colts on three straight touchdown drives, throwing 14 yards to Dallas Clark for one score, getting a 5-yard TD run from James and then connecting with Brandon Stokley on a 21-yard touchdown pass that made it 21-0 midway through the second quarter.

Houston got back in the game when Ramon Walker recovered the first muff and Jonathan Wells, Davis' replacement, scored on a nifty 14-yard run as he stretched across the goal line. Wells finished with 15 carries for 58 yards.

The Texans made it 21-14 on the opening possession of the second half when David Carr threw a 13-yard TD pass to Jabar Gaffney. Carr was 16-of-25 for 138 yards and was sacked three times.

But Manning countered with the 30-yard TD pass to Harrison, and Houston never challenged after that.

"Peyton threw for a high percentage again," Dungy said. "We ran the ball well. That's what we've been doing all year in the right situation _ making plays."

Game notes
Colts defensive end Robert Mathis failed to record a sack for the first time this season, ending his consecutive games streak at eight. ... Carr threw a touchdown pass in his ninth straight game, a career-high. ... Harrison's 50th career 100-yard game tied Don Maynard for second on the all-time list. Jerry Rice's 76 100-yard games are an NFL record.


NFL Scores

Sunday, November 13th 2005
Kansas City 3 Final
Buffalo 14
San Francisco 9 Final
Chicago 17
Arizona 21 Final
Detroit 29
Houston 17 Final
Indianapolis 31
New England 23 Final
Miami 16
Minnesota 24 Final
NY Giants 21
Baltimore 3 Final
Jacksonville 30
Denver 31 Final
Oakland 17
NY Jets 3 Final
Carolina 30
Green Bay 33 Final
Atlanta 25
St. Louis 16 Final
Seattle 31
Washington 35 Final
Tampa Bay 36
Cleveland 21 Final
Pittsburgh 34
Monday, November 14th 2005
Dallas 21 Final
Philadelphia 20