Manning throws 2 TD passes in final 2 minutes of 1st half, giving Colts 17-3 lead over Ravens

By Michael Marot, AP
Saturday, January 16, 2010

Colts lead Ravens 17-3 at halftime of playoff game

INDIANAPOLIS — Peyton Manning threw two touchdown passes in the final 2 minutes of the first half, giving the Colts a 17-3 lead over Baltimore in Saturday night’s divisional playoff game.

Manning, playing for the first time since winning a record fourth MVP, was 21 of 29 for 180 yards in the half, showing no signs of rust. The Ravens are 2-7 this season when allowing more than 200 yards passing.

Indy looked sharp after going nearly a month without playing a meaningful game, as Manning and the offense moved the ball efficiently.

Manning used up 8 minutes on the first touchdown drive, and when the Colts got the ball back with 1:26 left in the half and two timeouts, he cashed in again — thanks in part to the Ravens.

Domonique Foxworth was called for pass interference on the drive and Ray Lewis drew a personal foul, both giving the Colts first downs.

Manning took advantage with a nifty inside pass to Reggie Wayne, who stretched across the goal line for a 3-yard score with 3 seconds left to make it 17-3.

The Colts marched 54 yards on the game’s opening possession, setting up Matt Stover for a 44-yard field goal against his former team for a 3-0 lead with 10:44 left in the first quarter.

Baltimore responded in its customary fashion, draining the clock with a new wrinkle — the no-huddle ball-control offense.

Joe Flacco, who completed four passes for 34 yards in last week’s win at New England, was 4 of 6 for 55 yards on the Ravens’ first series. He took them on a 15-play scoring drive that consumed 7 minutes, 47 seconds.

As in the teams’ first meeting in November, the Ravens couldn’t get into the end zone. Instead, Billy Cundiff made a 25-yard field goal that tied it with 2:57 left in the quarter.

It was Indy’s defense that dominated in the second quarter. The Colts forced three Ravens punts and allowed no first downs.

At halftime, Indy had 218 total yards to 91 for the Ravens.

The Colts have dominated this series against the city they once called home. Indy has won the last seven.

Baltimore is trying to break the NFL record for playoff road victories in a decade. The Ravens and 1970s Dallas Cowboys have both won six postseason road games.

It was the Colts’ first playoff game in 2-year-old Lucas Oil Stadium, and the boos that resonated throughout the venue in Indy’s last regular-season game were replaced by loud cheers Saturday as Indy tried to end a two-game losing streak in the playoffs. Indy hasn’t won in the postseason since beating Chicago in the Super Bowl following the 2006 season.

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