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Scoreboard
Sunday
Indianapolis 20, Houston 17
Arizona 41, Chicago 21
Atlanta 31, Washington 17
New England 27, Miami 17
Cincinnati 17, Baltimore 7
Tampa Bay 38, Green Bay 28
Jacksonville 24, Kansas City 21
Seattle 32, Detroit 20
New Orleans 30, Carolina 20
San Diego 21, N.Y. Giants 20
Tennessee 34, San Fran. 27
Dallas 20, Philadelphia 16
Today
Pittsburgh at Denver, 8:30 p.m. (ESPN)
Open: Buffalo, N.Y. Jets, Oakland, Minnesota, St. Louis, Cleveland
Associated Press
Houston’s Kris Brown misses on a 42-yard field goal attempt that would have sent Sunday’s game against Indianapolis into overtime.
Indianapolis 20, Houston 17

Colts slip past Texans

Game comes down to wire after early domination

Associated Press
Houston’s Kris Brown reacts to missing a game-tying field goal as time expires against Indianapolis in Lucas Oil Stadium.
Associated Press photos
Indianapolis’ Tim Jennings celebrates after Houston’s missed 42-yard field goal that sealed the Colts win Sunday.

– The Colts have no problems with close games – as long as they keep winning them.

Peyton Manning delivered another milestone performance, Joseph Addai produced a second straight winning score, and the Colts found another unconventional way to win when Houston’s Kris Brown missed a 42-yard field goal as time expired, keeping Indianapolis’ winning streak intact 20-17.

“I think that’s the mark of a great football team,” center Jeff Saturday said, referring to the close calls.

“We’ve won eight games so far, and we’re ahead in our division, which is really our main focus and goal.”

The implications of Sunday’s victory are monumental.

Indianapolis is the fourth team in league history with 17 straight regular-season wins. New England did it twice – winning a record 21 straight from 2006-08 and 18 in a row from 2003-04. Chicago won 17 straight from 1933-34.

Next week, the Patriots come to town with a chance to prevent Indianapolis from matching its original record.

There were plenty of accolades to go around for the Colts on Sunday, too.

Jim Caldwell became the NFL’s first rookie coach to start 8-0 since Potsy Clark in 1931.

Manning, the three-time MVP, tied Hall of Famer Fran Tarkenton for fourth in career victories (125) and became the first player in league history to throw for 40,000 yards in one decade. Tight end Dallas Clark caught 14 passes, the third-highest single-game total by an NFL tight end, and with eight receptions, Reggie Wayne moved past Hall of Famer Raymond Berry and into second on the Colts’ career reception list.

A week after rallying the Colts with a fourth-quarter touchdown pass, Addai caught a touchdown pass, then ran 2 yards for the winning score with 7:11 to go.

The biggest impact: Indianapolis holds a commanding 3 1/2 -game lead in the AFC South over second-place Houston (5-4) and is 3-0 against its division rivals. The Texans (5-4) dropped to 1-14 all time against the Colts, including 0-8 in Indianapolis.

This loss was easily the most frustrating of the series.

After shrugging off the Colts early run and fighting back to take the lead, the Texans had two chances to win it or force overtime. Both failed. Matt Schaub, under pressure from Gary Brackett, was intercepted by Clint Session in Colts territory with 2:13 to go.

Then, after forcing a rare three-and-out, Schaub moved Houston into scoring position again only to see Brown push his field goal attempt to the left, leaving some teammates sprawled on the field in disbelief.

“I missed the kick,” Brown said. “I was going through my routine, and I felt good walking on the field. I take a lot of pride in kicking, especially in these situations. To have that happen is very disappointing.”

It was a strange day indeed.

Although Indianapolis dominated early, running 37 of the game’s first 44 plays, the Colts couldn’t finish drives and never led by more than 13-0.

Things got really weird late in the first half.

Houston lost one scoring chance when a replay reversal ruled Ryan Moats had fumbled at the Colts 1. Further review gave the Colts a touchback instead of putting the ball at the Indianapolis 1.

And then on the final play, Brown’s 56-yard field goal attempt was blocked. One problem: the Colts called timeout to put a returner underneath the goal post, and when Brown got a second chance, he knocked it through to make it 13-3.

After the Texans took a 17-13 lead, Manning responded by moving the Colts 61 yards in eight plays, handing off to Addai for his 2-yard score with 7:11 to go.

Manning was 34 of 50 for 318 yards – his seventh 300-yard game this season.

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