Luck runs in for Indianapolis

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (center) completed 18 of 26 passes for 227 yards and rushed for 2 second-quarter touchdowns in Thursday’s game against the Jacksonville Jaguars in Jacksonville, Fla. Luck also threw an interception that was returned for a touchdown.

Indianapolis Colts quarterback Andrew Luck (center) completed 18 of 26 passes for 227 yards and rushed for 2 second-quarter touchdowns in Thursday’s game against the Jacksonville Jaguars in Jacksonville, Fla. Luck also threw an interception that was returned for a touchdown.

Friday, November 9, 2012

— Inspiration one week, domination the next.

The Indianapolis Colts became the latest team to hammer the Jacksonville Jaguars at home, winning 27-10 on Thursday night behind two rushing touchdowns from rookie quarterback Andrew Luck.

Darius Butler returned an interception for a score as the Colts (6-3) won their fourth consecutive game and snapped a three-game losing streak in the series. The Jaguars (1-8) have lost six in a row.

The Colts had cause for concern following an emotional victory four days earlier, one in which cancer-stricken coach Chuck Pagano delivered a passionate, postgame speech in the locker room. Interim coach Bruce Arians was worried the team might crash from the emotional high.

Not even close.

Indianapolis scored on three consecutive possessions in the first half, opening a 17-0 lead that started emptying the stands at EverBank Field.

Luck, coming off an NFL rookie record 433 yards passing against Miami, wasn’t quite as sharp. He didn’t need to be, either.

Luck completed 18 of 26 passes for 227 yards with an interception and a fumble. But he was unstoppable near the end zone, deking defenders with two pump fakes and scrambling for a 5-yard score on one drive and then plunging across the goal line on fourth down on the next possession.

That was plenty against the Jaguars, who have the NFL’s worst offense and played a third game without star running back Maurice Jones-Drew.

Jacksonville has lost every game since a come-frombehind, 22-17 victory at Indianapolis on Sept. 23. Blaine Gabbert hit Cecil Shorts III for an 80-yard touchdown in the final minute, stunning the Colts.

There was no drama in the rematch.

The Colts essentially sealed the victory when Butler stepped in front of Gabbert’s pass in the flat and went untouched for an 11-yard score early in the third quarter.

Indianapolis became just the third road team to win on Thursday night this season, and just the fifth in the past two seasons. NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said before the game that the league is analyzing whether home teams on short weeks have a distinct advantage.

It certainly would help any road team to play in Jacksonville.

The Jaguars have been outscored 153-44 at home this season, with lopsided losses to Houston, Cincinnati, Chicago and Detroit.

Against Indy, nothing seemed to go Jacksonville’s way.

Marcedes Lewis, Rashad Jennings and Shorts dropped passes early. Josh Scobee missed a 44-yard field-goal attempt, snapping a streak of 20 consecutive made field goals.

The Jaguars had an interception overturned by a roughing the passer penalty on Terrance Knighton, keeping alive a drive that ended in a touchdown. They also were on the losing end of two reviews.

Laurent Robinson fumbled at the end of a 9-yard gain, getting the ball stripped by Moise Fokou. Officials initially ruled Robinson was down, but the call was overturned on review. That turnover led to Indy’s second touchdown and led to Jaguars Coach Mike Mularkey’s meltdown on the sideline.

Mularkey lost his cool when officials refused to acknowledge his pleas for a review on Luck’s fourth-down touchdown run. Luck appeared to fumble the ball as he crossed the goal line.

All scoring plays are reviewed, so Mularkey couldn’t challenge, but he seemingly wanted officials to take a longer look at the scoring play. He whipped his play sheet and headset onto the field, drawing a flag for unsportsmanlike conduct.

Players followed his lead, getting flagged for five more 15-yard penalties. Knighton, center Mike Brewster, safety Dawan Landry, defensive end Andre Branch and receiver Justin Blackmon all drew flags.

Trailing 17-0, Mularkey wanted to go for it on fourthand-4, but Gabbert bobbed his head and was flagged for a false start. Mularkey settled for a field goal.

Gabbert completed 18 of 31 passes for 209 yards with an interception. He left the game in the fourth quarter after reinjuring his left, non-throwing shoulder.

Shorts caught six passes for 105 yards and a touchdown, a 4-yarder from backup Chad Henne. Robinson finished with nine receptions for 77 yards.

Sports, Pages 21 on 11/09/2012