
Every Play Counts is Michael David Smith's weekly look at one specific player or one aspect of a team on every single play of the previous game.
Heading into the Colts' game against the Ravens on Sunday, Peyton Manning looked like he was having, by his standards anyway, a lousy season.
Through the first four games of the year, Manning had five touchdown passes, putting him on pace for a career low, and five interceptions, putting him on pace for his most in seven years. His completion percentage was the lowest it had been since his second year in the league.
And with the Ravens coming to town, things weren't likely to get any easier. Through the first four games of the season, Baltimore had the best defense in the league. And so, of course, Manning proceeded to complete 19 of 28 passes for 271 yards, with three touchdowns and no turnovers, and the Colts blew out the Ravens, 31-3.
So how did it Manning do it? I'll explore that in this week's Every Play Counts.
It didn't start well for Manning. The first time he dropped back to pass, he threw incomplete to Reggie Wayne into tight coverage. The second time, he was inundated by the Ravens' rush and sacked by Ray Lewis. The third, he threw incomplete through the arms of Marvin Harrison.
And then Manning proceeded to pick apart the Ravens' defense like they were a bunch of high school kids. It started on a third-and-8 on the Colts' second drive, when Ravens linebacker Bart Scott came on a blitz and Colts running back Dominic Rhodes ran a short route past Scott. Ordinarily, a quarterback in that position would dump the ball off to the running back, but Manning didn't think Rhodes could pick up eight yards, so he hung in the pocket and took a hard shot from Scott, but not until after he had delivered the ball to Reggie Wayne on the other side of the field for a 10-yard gain.
The pass on the next play was probably Manning's best of the day. After freezing the Ravens' linebackers with a play action fake, Manning dropped back and uncorked one to Marvin Harrison. Manning's right foot was planted on the 25-yard line in the middle of the field when he released it, and Harrison was at the other 27-yard line near the right sideline when he caught it. Traveling more than 50 yards in the air, the ball hit Harrison in the hands without him having to break stride, and he took it in the rest of the way for a 67-yard touchdown that they made look easy.
As great as Manning's deep balls look, however, I was equally impressed on Sunday with the way he took all the short passes the Ravens would give him. On a second-and-4 in the first quarter, Manning saw that the Ravens were rushing five, while free safety Ed Reed was lined up 12 yards off the line of scrimmage. That guaranteed that there would be something short open, and he hit Reggie Wayne on a quick slant for eight yards.
During the TV broadcast of the game, it was revealed for the first time that Manning actually had two knee surgeries during the off-season. Manning said he was finally ready to admit that his knee injury was worse than he previously let on because he now feels completely healthy and isn't concerned about it anymore, and he certainly looked like he was moving around well on Sunday.
On a second-and-11 in the first quarter, the Colts seriously botched their pass protection. Rhodes was supposed to come over and help out with Ravens defensive end Trevor Pryce, but he ended up missing Pryce completely and colliding with his own teammate, left tackle Charlie Johnson. That allowed Pryce to rush around the edge and also gave Scott room to pressure Manning from the inside, and Manning had to roll out. But Manning had no trouble with that, running to his right, throwing on the move, and hitting Wayne right on the money for a first down.
In fact, far from being concerned about his limited mobility, Manning looked most comfortable when the Ravens were pressuring him. On a third-and-10 from the 22-yard line, the Ravens rushed seven and Manning threw one high and to the corner of the field. Wayne ran under it for an easy touchdown.
It had to be an extremely frustrating day to be a member of the Ravens' front seven. On a first down in the second quarter, Ravens linebacker Jarret Johnson beat Colts left tackle Charlie Johnson and was about to get Manning, only to have Manning lob the ball right into the flat that Jarret Johnson had vacated for an easy pickup of 18 yards by running back Mike Hart.
Manning did all this, by the way, without any threat of a running game. Joseph Addai got hurt and finished with two carries for three yards; his replacement, Rhodes, did break a 38-yarder but did next to nothing other than that, gaining a total of 35 yards the other 24 times he ran the ball.
The way Manning picked apart the Ravens reminded me a lot of the way he picked apart the blitzing of the Philadelphia Eagles in 2002. In that game, he completed 18 of 23 passes for 319 yards, with three touchdowns and no interceptions, and the Eagles never sacked him, even though they blitzed him a lot and always looked like they were just one step away from bringing him down.
Blitzing Manning just doesn't make very much sense. He's too good at getting the ball away quickly and finding the right spots in the secondary. The Colts' offensive line isn't very good, and opposing defenses need to be confident that they can pressure Manning simply by beating that Indianapolis line with their own defensive line. If you bring linebackers and safeties against Manning, you're asking for trouble.
If there's anything that opposing defenses can do to Manning, it's to force him to throw to someone other than Wayne, who is by far the Colts' best receiver. When the Ravens were matching up Wayne one-on-one with Corey Ivy, it was like Manning and Wayne were playing catch. When the Ravens were giving safety help to the cornerback on Wayne, things weren't quite as easy.
And make no mistake, despite Harrison's two touchdown catches on Sunday, he's just not a very good receiver anymore. Harrison only caught three of the eight passes Manning threw him on Sunday, whereas Wayne caught eight of the 10 passes Manning threw him. The best chance a defense has of stopping the Colts' passing game is to make that passing game go through Harrison.
But even then, it won't be easy. Based on the way Manning played on Sunday, I'd have to say that his knee problems are behind him, he's shaken off the rust that came from missing all of training camp and the entire preseason, and that we should expect a typical Peyton Manning season from here on out.


















Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-15-2008 @ 9:44AM
Brody said...
It'll be interesting to see how they match up with the Packers this week - another struggling team. The Packers DC loves to try to get pressure with just his front four, leaving the rest of his guys in coverage. When he does blitz, he rarely brings more than one DB/LB. The Packers' secondary has been pretty good this year and has had a nose for the ball. They managed to hand Owens his worst game in nearly a decade...of course, they still lost.
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10-15-2008 @ 11:05AM
Disco Stu said...
I know that the teams are different, but when these teams played four years ago, the Packers blitzed, blitzed, and blitzed. Peyton torched it. The Colts threw the ball on the first 22 offensive plays. Peyton had 5 TD's in the first half. If there is any Packer coach still around that remembers that game, I would be surprised to see a lot of blitzing. It just backfired on them time after time. Plus, they saw what Peyton and the wideouts just did to a Raven defense that thought they could cover the wideouts one on one.
I know that the Packer corners are great, but Peyton doesn't care who is covering Reggie and Marvin. He believes they will win against any corner.
It will be fun to watch.
10-15-2008 @ 10:48AM
Disco Stu said...
Harrison is just not a very good receiver anymore? Compared to what? The Marvin of old? I agree with that. Before his injury, the guy was ahead of Jerry Rice's pace for catches, yards, and TD's. He clearly isn't that good anymore.
He still can play and accomplish some things. Your claim that Marvin only caught 3 of the 8 balls thrown his way would lead people to believe that this was all Marv's fault. That just isn't the case. Peyton threw a HORRIBLE ball that cost Marvin another TD early in the game. Marv ran a slant and go and was WIDE open at the 5 and could have moonwalked in. A bad throw occurred....not Marv's fault. Plus, on Marv's 2nd TD, he made a nice adjustment to ANOTHER bad throw that was high and behind him.
Look, I live and die Colts football. I am not blind to Marvin's decline, but I'm not ready to write him off yet. Peyton had been REALLY bad in the first four games. The tape doesn't lie. He has missed Marvin (and Reggie) for big plays due to bad throws SEVERAL times so far. It's been maddening. They have been close, but just off enough.
I would estimate that Peyton's early season rust has cost Marvin 3 TD's for sure...possibly 5. And when I say for sure, I mean FOR SURE. The kind of plays that Marvin has beaten the corner by 10 yards or more and he was flat out missed. The kind of plays that have been TD's for a decade now.
Marvin can only do so much. He has regularly been open. Now that Peyton seems to have his act together, let's see about Marvin.
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10-15-2008 @ 11:29AM
Brody said...
It is a completely different team now - all the coaches are different, from top to bottom. The current defensive coordinator practically refuses to blitz. And like I said, when he does decide to blitz, he rarely brings more than one LB/DB.
He generally just tries to get pressure with his front four. Some games they do it, other games they don't. If they can get pressure, then that secondary is going to give Manning fits. But if they can't...well Peyton is too damn good for you to expect any secondary to maintain coverage all day.
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10-15-2008 @ 6:46PM
Trogdor said...
How much of Manning's improvement can be attributed to his knee healing enough to allow them to run the stretch? In the first few games, they had to pitch it to run wide, negating much of the play-action benefit from that play. I wasn't paying all that much attention Sunday, but I thought I saw them running the stretch handoff a few times. Even when the running game isn't awesome, that's gotta hold the front seven better than the pitch, and it has to be good for Manning's rhythm to be running that play again, I'd think.
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