The
Indianapolis Colts are a professional American football team based in Indianapolis, Indiana
. They are members of the
South Division of the
American Football Conference
(AFC) in the
National Football
League (NFL).
The club
was officially founded in Baltimore
, Maryland
in 1953, but
can trace its history to the Dayton
Triangles, a founding member of the NFL that was originally
created in 1913. After a series of changes, it assumed the
"Baltimore Colts" name, replacing
a previous team that
folded in 1950.
Playing at Baltimore's Memorial
Stadium
, the Colts became the first NFL team to have
cheerleaders. The team then
relocated to Indianapolis in 1984, first playing at the RCA Dome
before
moving to Lucas Oil
Stadium
in 2008.
The Colts won four NFL championships (three
NFL Championships in
1958,
1959,
1968; and
Super Bowl V in 1970) while in Baltimore. Since
moving to Indianapolis, they won
Super
Bowl XLI in 2007. Also since 1998, the team has become the
first in league history to win 12 games or more in five consecutive
seasons—extending this record to six after the 2008 season. The
team has also had significant rivalries with championship-caliber
teams such as with the 1950-60s
New York
Giants, the late 1990s
Kansas
City Chiefs, and the 2000s
New
England Patriots.
The team headquarters and practice facilities are also located in
Indianapolis.
The club currently holds their annual
training camp from late July to mid-August on the campus of
Rose-Hulman Institute of
Technology
in Terre
Haute
, Indiana
.
Franchise history
The Colts franchise was officially created in 1953, but can trace
its history to before the NFL actually began: its earliest
predecessor was the
Dayton
Triangles, a founding member of the NFL that was originally
created in 1913. That team went through the following
changes:
- Dayton Triangles relocated and
renamed Brooklyn Dodgers in
1930.
- Changed name to Brooklyn Tigers in 1944. In the same year, the
Boston Yanks are founded.
- Merged with Boston Yanks in 1945 as the wartime "The
Yanks."
- Franchise cancelled in 1945 by league and the team's temporary
merger with the Boston Yanks is made permanent, as a parallel team
(AAFC New York Yankees) is
founded by the Tigers' former owner.
- Miami Seahawks of the AAFC are purchased and relocated to
Baltimore and renamed the Colts (Originally wearing Green and
Silver). This franchise was dissolved by the league on January 18,
1951.
- Boston Yanks move to New York in 1949 and become New York Yanks, absorbing much of the
Yankees' roster the next year.
- New
York Yanks move to Dallas
in 1952 as
Dallas Texans.
- Texans become a road team halfway through the 1952 season and
are dissolved shortly thereafter.
- Dallas Texans franchise was
moved to Baltimore on January 23, 1953 where, keeping the "Colts"
nickname, they keep the Texans team colors of blue and white.
The AAFC Baltimore Colts
In December 28, 1946, the bankrupt
Miami
Seahawks of the
All-America Football
Conference were purchased and relocated in Baltimore by a group
headed by Bob Rodenberg. As the result of a contest in Baltimore,
won by Charles Evans of Middle River, Md., the team was renamed the
"
Colts." On
September 7, 1947, wearing the green and silver uniforms, the
Colts, under Head Coach Cecil Isbell, won their initial AAFC game,
16-7, over the Brooklyn Dodgers. The team concluded its inaugural
season before a record Baltimore crowd of 51,583 by losing to the
New York Yankees, 21-7. The Colts finished with a 2-11-1 record,
good for a fourth place finish in the Eastern Division. The Colts
completed the 1948 season with a 7-8 record, tying the Buffalo
Bills for the division title. The Colts compiled a 1-11 mark in
1949.
Y. A.
Tittle was the Colts starting
quarterback.
The AAFC and NFL merged in 1950, and the Colts joined the NFL.
After posting a 1-11 record for the second consecutive year, the
franchise was dissolved by the league on January 18, 1951, because
of its failing financial condition. But many Baltimore fans
protested the loss of their team and continued to support the
marching band (the second in
professional football, after that of their local rivals, the
Washington Redskins) and
fan club, both of which remained in
operation and worked for the team's revival.
The NFL Dallas Texans
After two seasons without professional football, NFL Commissioner
Bert Bell challenged Baltimore in December
1952 to sell 15,000 season tickets within six weeks in order to
re-enter the NFL. That 15,000-ticket quota was reached in four
weeks and three days. On January 23, 1953, under the principal
ownership of
Carroll Rosenbloom,
the NFL’s
Dallas Texans
franchise was moved to Baltimore where, assuming the "Colts"
nickname, the Texans' team colors of blue and white were retained.
This is the franchise that exists today in Indianapolis.
The Texans
had a long and winding history; they started as the Boston Yanks in 1944 and merged with the
Brooklyn Tigers (previously known as
the Dayton Triangles, an original
NFL team established in the 1910s) for the 1945 season before
moving to New
York
as the Bulldogs in 1949. The team then
became the
Yanks in 1950, and many of
the players from the
New York
Yankees of the
All-America Football
Conference were added to the team.
The Yanks moved to
Dallas after the 1951 season, but played their final two "home"
games of the 1952 season at the Rubber Bowl
in Akron,
Ohio
.
The NFL Baltimore Colts
1953–1970
The Colts began the 1953 season with a blockbuster trade, swapping
five Baltimore players for 10 Cleveland Browns. Among the players
who came to Baltimore were future coach
Don
Shula;
Bert Rechichar,
Carl Taseff and
Art
Spinney, among others.
The 2nd incarnation of the Baltimore Colts
first took the field at Memorial Stadium
on September 27, with Coach Keith Molesworth. The Colts would
stun the Bears that day 13-9 to get the new franchise off on the
right foot. However, the Colts struggled to a 3-9 season in their
inaugural year.
NFL Championship Games
On December 28, 1958, Baltimore faced the New York Giants in the
NFL Championship game at Yankee Stadium. The Colts went to halftime
with a 14-3 lead after scoring 2 touchdowns in the 2nd quarter. The
4th quarter would end tied a 17, meaning the NFL would have to use
sudden death overtime for the first time ever.
Johnny Unitas hit wide receiver
Raymond Berry with a pass that gave the Colts
a 1st down in Giants territory. Baltimore continued to drive down
to the 1-yard line, with first and goal. Unitas handed off to
Alan Ameche who dove across the goal
line to give Baltimore a 23-17 win, in what many call the
greatest game ever played. The
game would serve as a launching point for the NFL's remarkable boom
in popularity.
The next season, Baltimore had a Championship Game rematch with the
New York Giants, with the game this time being played at Memorial
Stadium. For the first three quarters the Colts fell behind 9-7.
Unitas led the Colts back in the 4th quarter scoring 24 unanswered
points, and Baltimore to claim their 2nd straight NFL Championship
with a 31-16 victory.
In 1964, after losing the first game of the season to the Vikings,
the Colts went on a 10-game winning streak on the way to winning
the Western Division Championship with a 12-2 record. Unitas won
the NFL MVP award after amassing 2,824 yards passing. The Colts
faced the
Cleveland Browns in the
Championship Game. However, nothing would go right in Cleveland as
the Colts were defeated 27-0.
Unitas won his second NFL MVP award in 1967 with 3,428 yards
passing as the Colts went undefeated through the first 13 games of
the season with a record of 11-0-2. However, the Colts still needed
to beat the Rams in Los Angeles to claim the Coastal Division
Championship. The Rams would win the game 34-10 to win the Division
title and advance to the postseason, as the Colts went home despite
an 11-1-2 record.
Unitas missed most of the 1968 season with an elbow injury. Backup
quarterback
Earl Morrall stepped in and
won the NFL MVP award, while leading the Colts to a 13-1 season.
While Morrall led the offense, the Colts defense shut out 3
opponents while allowing a record low 144 points. In the Divisional
Playoff the Colts beat the Minnesota Vikings 24-14 before a sold
out crowd at Memorial Stadium.
Super Bowl III
Super Bowl III was the third AFL-NFL Championship Game in
professional American football, but the first to officially bear
the name "Super Bowl" (The two previous AFL-NFL Championship Games
would retroactively be called "Super Bowls" as well). This game is
regarded as one of the greatest upsets in sports history. The heavy
underdog American Football League (AFL) champion New York Jets
(11-3) defeated the National Football League (NFL) champion
Baltimore Colts (13-1) by a score of 16–7. It was the first Super
Bowl victory for the AFL.
The game was played on January 12, 1969 at the Orange Bowl in
Miami, Florida—the same location as Super Bowl II. Entering Super
Bowl III, the NFL champion Colts were heavily favored to defeat the
AFL champion Jets. Although the upstart AFL had successfully forced
the long-established NFL into a merger agreement three years
earlier, the AFL was not generally respected as having the same
caliber of talent as the NFL. Plus, the AFL representatives were
easily defeated in the first two Super Bowls.
After boldly guaranteeing a victory prior to the game, Jets
quarterback Joe Namath completed 17 out of 28 passes for 206 yards,
and was named the Super Bowl's Most Valuable Player, despite not
throwing a touchdown pass in the game or any passes at all in the
fourth quarter.
Following the next season, coach
Don Shula
who fell out of favor with owner
Carroll Rosenbloom was allowed to resign
and he took the coaching job with
Miami
Dolphins. Assistant Coach
Don
McCafferty would replace Shula.
1970–1983
Prior to the 1970 season, Rosenbloom,
Art
Modell of the Browns, and
Art Rooney
of the
Pittsburgh Steelers
agreed to have their teams join the ten AFL teams in the AFC as
part of the
AFL-NFL merger giving
each conference an equal amount of teams, and divisions. The Colts
won the Eastern Division while posting an 11-2-1 record. During the
season the Colts would get revenge for Super Bowl III, by beating
the New York Jets, who were now a division rival. In the Divisional
Playoffs the Colts defeated the Cincinnati Bengals 17-0 at Memorial
Stadium. The Colts then defeated the Raiders 27-17 to advance to
the Super Bowl.
Super Bowl V
In
Super Bowl V against the
Dallas Cowboys, the Cowboys jumped out to a
6-0 lead on 2 field goals before Baltimore tied it on a 75-yard
pass from Unitas to
John
Mackey. However, Baltimore's PAT was blocked and the game
remained tied. The Cowboys would jump out in front again and went
into the 4th quarter holding a 13-6 lead into halftime. Earl
Morrall relieved an injured Unitas in the 2nd half the game as the
two teams kept fumbling the ball back-and-forth in a game that got
the nickname blunder bowl as both teams combined had 11 turnovers.
Baltimore would tie the game midway through the final period on a
2-yard plunge by running back
Tom
Nowatzke. With less than 2 minutes left Cowboys RB
Dan Reeves fumbled the ball setting up the Colts
in Dallas territory. Baltimore would win the game on a 32-yard
field goal from
Jim
O'Brien with 5 seconds left.
Following a 1-4 start in 1972, McCafferty was fired. The Colts
would go 4-5 in their final 9 games under
John Sandusky to finish with a 5-9 record,
their first losing mark in 16 years. Following the season Unitas
was traded to the
San Diego
Chargers. However, Unitas would not leave without coming off
the bench his final game at Memorial Stadium. Leading the Colts on
a 55-yard Touchdown pass late in the 4th quarter to help beat the
Buffalo Bills 35-7. Memorial Stadium gave the legend a standing
ovation as a small plane flying overhead carried a banner reading
"Unitas We Stand." After a 4-10 season in 1973 and a 0-3 start in
1974, head coach
Howard
Schnellenberger was fired and replaced by
Joe Thomas. The Colts would not
perform any better under Thomas compiling a miserable 2-12
season.
Under new coach
Ted Marchibroda the
Colts would get off to a 1-4 start in 1975. However, the Colts
would start winning as quarterback
Bert
Jones, and runningback
Lydell
Mitchell came of age and led the Colts on a 7 game winning
streak. The Colts would go on to win their last game of the season
to claim the AFC East with a 10-4 record. However, in the
Divisional Playoffs the young Colts were no match for the Steelers
in Pittsburgh, suffering a season ending 28-10 loss. Marcibroda
resigned as head coach but was re-hired for the 1976 season. The
Colts would go on to have a stellar season led by Jones who won the
NFL MVP by passing for 3,104 yards. The Colts put together a solid
season and win the AFC East with an 11-3 record. However in the
Divisional Playoffs the Colts were defeated again by the Pittsburgh
Steelers, this time at Memorial Stadium, 40-14. In 1977, the Colts
were again defeated in the Divisional Playoffs by the
Oakland Raiders, 37-31. Following the 1979
season, Marchibroda was fired and replaced by
Mike McCormick..
After two losing sasons, McCormick was fired and Bert Jones was
traded to the
Los Angeles Rams.. In
1982, attendance begins to dwindle at Memorial Stadium as the Colts
struggle during a season interrupted by a 2-month strike. Actually
the strike provided relief for the Colts, as they possibly avoided
one of the worst seasons in NFL history. The Colts would go winless
while tying 1 game in a 9-game season. With the first overall pick
in the
1983 NFL Draft the Colts
drafted quarterback
John Elway. However,
Elway refused to play for owner
Robert
Irsay and threatened to play minor league baseball or in the
newly formed
USFL. Fearful the Colts would get
nothing for his rights the Colts traded Elway to the
Denver Broncos.. On December 18, 1983,
unbeknownst to the team or fans, the Colts played their final home
game (against the then
Houston
Oilers) in the city of Baltimore. 27,934 fans showed up, 516
more fans than the crowd that had turned out for their first home
game in 1947.
Ownership's discontent
.jpg/280px-Memorial_Stadium_(Baltimore).jpg)
Memorial Stadium in Baltimore

Baltimore Stadium (Later renamed
"Memorial" Stadium) with 33rd Street in the foreground
As far
back as November 1971, Carroll Rosenbloom announced that the Colts
would not return to Memorial Stadium
when their lease ran out following the 1972 season
and that he was not interested in negotiating with the city
anymore. He wanted out of Baltimore for a few reasons —
money, problems with Baltimore Orioles ownership, a running feud
with the Baltimore press, and his
new
wife's desire to move to the West Coast. Will Keland, a real
estate investor was originally slated to buy the Colts from
Rosenbloom. However, Keland could not generate enough funds
necessary to purchase the team. His golfing buddy,
Robert Irsay who was originally slated to own 1
percent of the team, did have the money available and he realized
that he didn't need Keland. On July 13, 1972, Robert Irsay became
the owner of the Colts. Under the terms of the arrangement, Irsay
bought the
Los Angeles Rams for $19
million, then traded them to Rosenbloom for the Colts and $3
million in cash. The players for each team remained in their
respective cities.
In 1971, Baltimore mayor
William
Donald Schaefer and the state's governor,
Marvin Mandel, created a stadium committee to
examine the city's stadium needs.
Their report was a blow to Memorial
Stadium
. Some of the problems mentioned: 10,000
stadium's seats had views that were "less than desirable"; 20,000
seats were out-dated bench seats that had no back support; 7,000 so
called seats were actually poorly-constructed temporary bleachers
that were installed for football games only. Also, there was not
enough office space adequate enough for the front offices of either
the Orioles or Colts, much less both teams combined.
Both teams had to
share locker rooms, the upper deck of Memorial
Stadium
did not circle the field, ending instead at the
50-yard line, thousands of potential seats (and added revenue) were
missing. Any expansion plans for the stadium had usually
mentioned less attractive (and less expensive) end-zone seats, not
upper deck seating.
And the number of bathroom facilities in
Memorial
Stadium
was deemed inadequate.
Maryland's planners came up with an ambitious project.
Nicknamed the
"Baltodome", the original plan was to create a facility near the
city's Inner Harbor known as Camden Yards
. The new stadium would host 70,000 fans for
football games, 55,000 for baseball and 20,000 as an arena for
hockey or basketball.
For an estimated $78 million, the city would
build a facility that would have kept all parties; Orioles owner
Hoffberger, Colts owner Irsay, the Stadium Complex Authority,
Baltimore
Mayor Schaefer and the state's governor, Marvin
Mandel.
But the
proposal did not receive support to pass the Maryland
legislature, in spite of the fact that assurances
that contributions from taxpayers would be limited strictly to city
and state loans. Stadium Complex Authority chairman Ed
Rovner issued an important statement about the project, "A major
consideration in Mr. Irsay's trading of franchises was the city's
firm commitment to proceed with these plans." But on February 27,
1974 Maryland's Governor Mandel pulled the plug on the idea. Robert
Irsay was willing to wait. "I'm a patient man.
I think the people of
Baltimore
are going to see those new stadiums in New Orleans
and Seattle
opening in a year or two around the country, and
they are going to realize they need a stadium ... for conventions
and other things besides football."
But
Hyman Pressman, Baltimore's
comptroller, was against the use of public funds to build a new
complex. During the 1974 elections, Pressman had an amendment to
the city's charter placed on the fall ballot. Known as Question P,
the amendment called for declaring "the 33rd Street stadium as a
memorial to war veterans and prohibiting use of city funds for
construction of any other stadium." The measure passed 56 percent
to 44 percent, and the same jingoistic ideas that had been used to
upgrade the then Baltimore Stadium (Originally built in 1922) in
the late 40s and rename it Memorial Stadium, effectively destroyed
any chance of a new, modern sports complex being built in
Baltimore.
Although the Colts made the playoffs for three straight years from
1975-77, there had still been no progress made on a new park for
the team.
Robert Irsay first spoke with Phoenix
, Arizona
in 1976 and then Indianapolis
, Indiana
in 1977
about the possibility of relocating his team to one of those
cities. In 1979 Irsay began shopping the Colts
around in earnest, talking first to officials from the Los Angeles
Memorial Coliseum
Commission, Memphis
, Tennessee
and Jacksonville
, Florida
where he visited the Gator
Bowl packed with 50,000 cheering fans trying to convince him
that Jacksonville would be the best home for the Colts.
That same
year Irsay presented Maryland's Governor Harry Hughes with a
request for $25 million in renovation to the dilapidated 64,124
seat Memorial
Stadium
. Irsay's request for $25 million in
improvements was decreased to $23 million by the Maryland
legislature. The plan added more seats (but
none of the revenue-generating skyboxes), improving the plumbing
and would've given both teams better office space. The plans
approval was contingent on both the Colts and
Baltimore Orioles signing long term
leases. The Orioles challenged the requested football improvements
and refused to sign anything more than a one year lease. Irsay also
refused to sign long term. As a result, the funds and improvements
never came.
Relocation to Indianapolis
Under the administration of
Mayor Richard Lugar and then continuing with
William Hudnut, Indianapolis was
making a serious effort to reinvent itself into a 'Great American
City'. In 1979, Indianapolis community leaders created the Indiana
Sports Corp. in order to attract major sports events to central
Indiana. The next year, Indianapolis Mayor
William Hudnut appointed a committee to study
the feasibility of building a new stadium that could serve
primarily as a boon to the city's convention business and,
secondarily, as a lure for an NFL team .
In 1982 construction
on the Hoosier
Dome
(later renamed the RCA Dome) began. Deputy
Mayor David Frick, who would later lead the negotiations with the
Colts and then go on to become chairman of the Indiana state
commission that would oversee construction of the RCA Dome's
replacement, Lucas Oil Stadium, would say that the RCA Dome was a
key to changing the city's image. "Sports was an element in our
game plan to change the image of the city back in the late 1970s,
early 1980s,".
In February 1983, after relations between
Irsay and the city of Baltimore had deteriorated significantly,
Baltimore Mayor Schaefer asked the Maryland General Assembly to
approve $15 million for renovation to Memorial
Stadium
. The legislature did not approve the request
until the following spring, after the Colts' lease had expired, and
only half of that $15 million would go towards improvements that
the Colts were seeking (The other half for the Orioles').
However,
Baltimore reportedly did offer Irsay a generous $15 million loan at
6.5%, a guarantee of at least 43,000 tickets sold per game for six
years, and the purchase of the team's Owings Mills
training facility for $4 million.
Despite
numerous public reassurances that Irsay's ultimate desire was to
remain in Baltimore, he nevertheless continued discussions with
several cities hungry for an NFL franchise (New York
, Phoenix
, Indianapolis
, Birmingham
, Jacksonville
and Memphis
) eventually narrowing the list of cities to two,
Phoenix and Indianapolis. A real estate group in Phoenix, Arizona
along with Arizona Governor Bruce Babbitt and other
top Arizona officials, had secretly met with Irsay early in
January. Preliminary talks seemed promising and another
meeting was scheduled. But when word of a second scheduled meeting
leaked out and was reported by the Baltimore media on the Friday
before the
Super Bowl, Irsay canceled.
Meanwhile, Indianapolis and local real estate developer
Robert Welch, were lobbying the NFL to bring an
expansion team to the city, with Welch as team owner. Welch had
also had personal discussions with
New Orleans Saints owner
John Mecom about buying the team and moving it to
Indianapolis. In January 1984, NFL Commissioner
Pete Rozelle announced that expansion had been
put on hold. As a result of that announcement,
Indiana Pacers' owner
Herb Simon contacted Colts officials in order to
take negotiations between the club and Indianapolis to the next
level. Mayor Hudnut then assigned deputy mayor David Frick to begin
secret negotiations with Colts counsel Michael Chernoff. On
February 13, Colts representatives came to town to look at the
Hoosier Dome construction. Colts owner Robert Irsay visited on
February 23.
"He (Irsay) was visibly moved," former deputy mayor Dave Frick said
commenting on Irsay's reaction to entering the brand new domed
stadium. "Emotionally, he was making the move." Meanwhile in
Baltimore, the situation worsened.
Eventually, the Maryland
legislature intervened and on March 27, one of its
chambers passed legislation giving the city of Baltimore the right
to seize ownership of the team by eminent
domain (An idea first floated in a memo written by Baltimore
Mayoral Aide Mark Wasserman). Robert Irsay
said that his move was "a direct result" of the eminent domain bill
and Colts counsel Michael Chernoff would say of the move by the
Maryland legislature "They not only threw down the gauntlet, but
they put a gun to his head and cocked it and asked, 'Want to see if
it's loaded?' They forced him to make a decision that day".
Phoenix businessmen withdrew their offer the morning of March 28
and Irsay called the Indianapolis Mayor that afternoon and began
serious negotiations in order to move the team before the Maryland
legislature's other chamber could pass similar legislation.
The city
of Indianapolis offered the Colts owner a $12,500,000 loan, a
$4,000,000 training complex, and the use of the brand new $77.5
million, 57,980 seat Hoosier
Dome
. After Irsay agreed to the deal, the
Indianapolis Mayor called John B. Smith, his friend, neighbor and
chief executive officer of
Mayflower
Transit, and 15 trucks were dispatched to the team's Owings
Mills, Maryland training complex at 2:00 AM on March 29 because it
was feared the franchise would be seized early the following
morning. Workers loaded all of the team's belongings and the trucks
left for Indianapolis. By 10:00 AM, the Colts were completely gone
from Baltimore. Each of the Mayflower trucks took a slightly
different route on the way to Indianapolis. This was done to
confuse the Maryland police, who could've been called on to put a
stop to the move. Once each van was at the Indiana state line, it
was met by Indiana state troopers, who escorted each van to the
Colts new home in Indianapolis. Later John Moag, Jr., chairman of
the Maryland Stadium Authority, stated in sworn testimony before
the U.S. Senate subcommittee responsible for the Fan Freedom and
Community Protection Act: "It was the failure of our local
(Baltimore) and state elected officials in Maryland to provide the
Colts with a firm proposal for a new stadium that led Mr. Irsay to
accept an offer from Indianapolis to play in a new dome in that
city."
Baltimore's Mayor Schaefer, who had been promised a call by Irsay
if the team was to move (but never received one) , appeared on the
front page of the Baltimore Sun in tears.After the Colts left, he
placed the building of a new stadium at the top of his legislative
agenda.
Indianapolis Mayor Hudnut held a press conference March 29 to
announce an agreement had been reached and the team was on its way
to Indianapolis. The deal was sealed March 30 with approval by the
Capital Improvement Board, which operated the Hoosier Dome. Two
days later, 20,000 new Colts fans cheered as Mayor Hudnut
proclaimed March 29, 1984, "one of the greatest days in the history
of this city.".
Baltimore moves on
Understandably, fans in Baltimore were heartbroken. In elections
that year, city voters repealed Question P by a measure of 62
percent to 38 percent. However, the amendment's author Hyman
Pressman remained as an elected City Comptroller for 28 years (7
terms in a row) until retiring in 1991. The team's move triggered a
flurry of legal activity, which ultimately reached the U.S. Supreme
Court and bills were filed in both the U.S. House and Senate
seeking to block the move. In December 1985, a U.S. District Court
judge threw out the lawsuit which sought to return the team to
Maryland. Later, representatives of Baltimore and the Colts
organization reached a settlement in March 1986 in which all
lawsuits regarding the relocation were dismissed, and the Colts
would endorse a new NFL team for Baltimore. Unfortunately, the
Irsay family refused to adhere to the deal and during the 1993 NFL
expansion the Irsays endorsed Jacksonville and Carolina for
expansion franchises. Due to the manner in which the Irsay family
treated the City of Baltimore, all of the Hall of Fame Baltimore
Colts chose to cut all ties to the relocated Colts team . Most
notable and vocal among them was
Johnny
Unitas, who declared himself solely as a player for the
Baltimore Colts until the day he died, with his estate
defending that stance to this day . However, the NFL officially
recognizes his achievements and records as the history of the Colts
organization and as such are attributed to the current Colts
organization and not any subsequent NFL team in Baltimore.
On November 6, 1995, Cleveland Browns owner
Art Modell announced his intention to move the
Browns team to Baltimore after a stadium dispute. The decision,
which involved secret discussions with the state of Maryland, also
triggered a flurry of legal activity. Ironically, Modell had
previously been staunchly against the relocation of sports teams,
having heavily criticized Irsay's move in 1986.
As part of the agreement to end all litigation between Modell and
Cleveland, Modell leftthe Browns' name, colors, and history of the
franchise in Cleveland. Modell was allowed to take his players and
organization to Baltimore, but it would be technically regarded as
an expansion team. After Modell moved his franchise he offered
Irsay $5 million dollars to return the Colts history to Baltimore .
Irsay requested $50 million dollars so the new Baltimore team was
named the
Ravens after a fan
vote.
The Colts' final game in Baltimore was played on December 18, 1983
against the
Houston Oilers. The Colts
won 20-10.
The Oilers would thirteen years later, play
their final game before moving to Tennessee
against the Baltimore Ravens at Memorial
Stadium
(the now-Tennessee
Titans are currently one of the Colts' division rivals).
The Colts would not play a game in Baltimore until 1998, and were
booed as they took the field. Since then, the Colts have played in
Baltimore several more times during the regular season (most
recently in
2009).
The team's only playoff matchup during that time has also taken
place in Baltimore, where in
2006-07 playoffs the Ravens hosted the
Colts in an AFC Divisional Playoff game. The Colts won the game en
route to their first
Super Bowl win
since moving to Indianapolis. The current rivalry between the two
teams is predominantly one-sided , meaning much more to the fans
and players of the city of Baltimore . In Indianapolis, a game
against the Ravens is viewed as nothing more than a non-divisional
game. When the Colts play a game in Baltimore the name Colts is not
used.The Colts are introuduced as the Indianapolis professional
football team and referred to as Indy on the stadium scoreboards,
the only team the Ravens don't use the nickname for.
The Indianapolis Colts
1984–1995
In 1984, the Colts' first season in Indianapolis,
Jim Irsay was named general manager of the team.
Frank Kush was head coach—until the final
game when he was replaced by
Hal Hunter.
Prior to the start of the season the team received 143,000 requests
in two weeks for season tickets. The Colts had two first-round
draft picks in 1984. They chose
Leonard
Coleman and
Ron Solt. Coleman could not
reach an agreement with the Colts until early in 1985, and spent
1984 playing in the U.S. Football League. Other notable picks that
year included
Kevin Call in the 5th round
and
Eugene Daniel in the 8th. The
Colts finished the 1984 season with 4 wins and 12 losses.
Rod Dowhower was named head coach in 1985, but
after two losing seasons, Dowhower was replaced by
Ron Meyer in December 1986.
Two weeks into the 1987 regular season the players went on a 24-day
strike. One week of games was cancelled, and for three weeks the
teams played with replacement players. On October 31, the Colts
obtained running back
Eric Dickerson
from the Los Angeles Rams for six draft picks and two players. The
deal also involved Buffalo, sending
Cornelius Bennett from the Colts to the
Bills while
Chuck Banks came to
Indianapolis from the Houston Oilers. The Colts finished the season
9-6 and clinched the AFC East title but lost to the
Cleveland Browns in the divisional playoff
game. Due to the Dickerson trade the Colts had no draft pick until
the third round in the
1988 NFL Draft
when they took quarterback
Chris
Chandler. In the Colts' first Monday Night Football appearance
they defeated Denver 55-23 before a
Halloween night crowd. Dickerson became the first
Colt since
Alan Ameche in 1955 to win
the NFL rushing title. The Colts finished the season 9-7, and did
not make the playoffs.
In 1990, the Colts traded
Chris Hinton,
1989 first-round pick
Andre Rison and
draft picks to the
Atlanta Falcons
for the first pick of the 1990 draft so they could choose
Indianapolis native and quarterback
Jeff
George. Eric Dickerson, after boycotting training camp and
refusing to take physicals, was placed on the non-football injury
list for six weeks. He was subsequently suspended four weeks for
conduct detrimental to the team and forfeited $750,000 in wages and
fines. The team finished the season 7-9. The team further declined
into 1991 and Meyer was fired on October 1 and replaced by
Rick Venturi, his defensive coordinator. The
Colts only won once in the 1991 season, only scoring a total of 146
points. Their lone win came against the playoff-bound
New York Jets in Week 11. The
Colts became the third consecutive team to finish a season at 1-15
(joining the
1989 Cowboys
and
1990
Patriots).
On January 28, 1992, the Colts hired Ted Marchibroda, who had been
serving as an assistant with the
Buffalo
Bills for the past five seasons, for his second stint as the
team's head coach. In April, the Colts traded Eric Dickerson to the
Los Angeles Raiders, ending his
sometimes rocky 4 1/2 years with the team. On May 3, 1992,
second-year defensive end
Shane Curry
was shot to death outside a Cincinnati nightclub in a dispute over
a car blocking the nightclub's driveway. The Colts finished the
season 9-7, marking the second time that Marchibroda led the Colts
to an eight-game turnaround in his first year as their coach. It
wasn't enough, however, for the Colts to make the playoffs as they
finished one game behind two of the AFC wild card teams.
Following a 4-12 season in 1993, running back
Marshall Faulk was drafted second overall and
linebacker
Trev Alberts fifth overall
in the
1994 NFL Draft. In March, Jeff
George was traded to the Atlanta Falcons. Despite going undefeated
in the preseason the Colts opened the regular season with an
all-time low attendance of 47,372. The Colts, behind starting
quarterback
Jim Harbaugh, improved to
8-8, which was good enough for second place in the AFC East but not
good enough to advance to the playoffs.
For the 1995 season the Colts acquired Tampa Bay Buccaneers
starting quarterback
Craig Erickson
in a trade and signed him to a long term deal, but after three
weeks Harbaugh regained the starting quarterback position. The move
paid off as Harbaugh ended the season as the NFL's top-rated
passer. The Colts advanced to the playoffs with a 9-7 record and
earned the nickname "Cardiac Colts" thanks to their four come from
behind victories and close games.
The Colts surprised many when they defeated the defending AFC
Champion
San Diego Chargers in
their first playoff game 35-20. They then came from behind to
defeat the
Kansas City Chiefs,
who finished the season with the NFL's best record, the following
week. This advanced the Colts to their first conference
championship game since 1972, when they still played in Baltimore.
Having defeated the AFC's #1 seed in the Chiefs, the Colts then
traveled to Pittsburgh to face the AFC's #2 seed, the
Steelers. Harbaugh and the Colts again
were involved in a close game and held the lead three separate
times in the game, but lost 20-16 after Harbaugh's attempted
29-yard Hail Mary pass on the final play of the game was dropped by
Aaron Bailey in the end zone.
1996
A month after the Colts' loss in the AFC Championship Game, trouble
began brewing. Team owner
Robert Irsay
had suffered a stroke during the season that left him
incapacitated, and while he convalesced a battle ensued for control
of the team between Irsay's wife Nancy and his son, Colts general
manager
Jim Irsay. To further complicate
matters, the Colts were forced to search for a new coach after Ted
Marchibroda resigned following a contract dispute with the team,
who had only offered him a one year extension. The team ended up
promoting offensive coordinator
Lindy
Infante to the position while keeping him on as
coordinator.
With the draft pick the Colts obtained in the Jeff George trade,
the team selected
Wide receiver
Marvin Harrison with the 19th pick
in the
1996 NFL Draft. The Colts
continued their winning ways from the previous year, starting at
4-0. However, injuries began to plague the team and they went 5-7
following that. Their 9-7 record was enough to get them into the
playoffs for the second consecutive year, and they faced the
Steelers in the opening round. The Colts lost again, however, as
Pittsburgh throttled them 42-14.
In the offseason prior to the Colts' 1997 season, Jim Irsay won his
legal battle and became sole owner of the team. Irsay, who was 37
at the time, became the youngest owner of an NFL team in history.
He had been working with the team since 1982, and has become known
as "The best small-market owner in the NFL." After his father died,
Jim immediately began to put his own seal on the team. Other NFL
team owners "credit his work as an owner and his personality as a
significant reason for awarding Indianapolis the 2012 Super Bowl, a
rare honor for a cold-weather city." Patriots Owner Robert Kraft:
"I voted for Indianapolis because of Jim, because I like him and
respect what he's done there."
Irsay's first year as sole owner did not go well, however, as the
Colts finished with the worst record in the NFL. The Colts only won
three times in the 1997 season (although all three of those wins
came against teams with winning records, including the defending
Super Bowl champion
Green Bay
Packers), and wholesale changes were made following the season.
Irsay hired
Carolina Panthers
general manager
Bill Polian, who had won
NFL Executive of the Year four times with the Panthers and
Buffalo Bills, as the team's president and
general manager. Polian promptly fired Infante as coach, released
Harbaugh, and hired
Jim Mora, Sr. as the
team's new head coach.
The Peyton Manning Era
Polian employed a strategy of rebuilding the Colts through the
draft, and his first two first round picks as GM proved to be keys
in the Colts' rise to their current status in the NFL.
In 1998, Polian used the first pick in the draft
to select University of Tennessee
quarterback Peyton
Manning, son of former NFL quarterback Archie Manning. While the Colts
finished their first season under Polian at 3-13 again, success
would come quickly after that.
The Colts
traded Marshall Faulk to St. Louis
two days before the draft and used their first-round draft pick in
the 1999 NFL Draft to select running
back Edgerrin James out of Miami
, a surprise to many who thought they would take
Texas
running back Ricky
Williams, the Heisman Trophy
winner who was available. James caught on quickly and
Manning and Marvin Harrison clicked as a potent passing
combination. In what was the greatest one-year turnaround in NFL
history, the Colts went 13-3, tying a franchise record for most
wins in a season, and won the AFC East. They finished tied for the
second best record in the conference with the
Tennessee Titans (who did not win their
division), the second best record in the NFL with the Titans and
St. Louis Rams, and earned a
first-round bye. In the first ever playoff game in Indianapolis,
however, the Colts fell 19-16 to the eventual AFC Champion Titans.
Manning, James and Harrison earned Pro Bowl honors, while kicker
Mike Vanderjagt won the NFL scoring
title and James took home the
Offensive Rookie of the Year
award.
Both the team and their fans entered the 2000 season with high
expectations after winning the AFC East with a 13-3 record in 1999.
Eight games into the season the Colts were 6-2, though some of the
wins had been heart-stoppers with last-minute heroics overcoming
earlier mistakes. Then they lost four of the next five games, and
suddenly even making it into playoffs was in doubt. With three
games left in the season the Colts only chance was to win all
three, which they did. The back-to-back 10-plus victory seasons
were a first for the club since 1976-77. Manning (4,413) and James
(1,709, 2,303) won the NFL passing, rushing and scrimmage yards
titles. They earned a wildcard spot in the playoffs, but lost the
game 23-17 to the
Miami Dolphins. The
organization entered the off-season knowing the area most in need
of attention was the defense.
Wide receiver
Reggie Wayne was selected
with the 30th pick in the
2001 NFL
Draft. In 2001,. Manning passed for 4,131 yards and Harrison
caught 109 passes. However, despite starting the year with two
wins, the Colts finished the season 6-10 and Manning was plagued by
turnovers. The team was also hurt by injuries throughout the
season, the most serious occurring on October 25, when running back
Edgerrin James tore his ACL in the sixth game of the 2001 season.
Further, the Colts' defense ranked at or near the bottom in yards
allowed (30th), takeaways (26th), and points allowed (31st). While
backup
Dominic Rhodes proved a
capable starter in becoming the first undrafted rookie to rush for
over 1000 yards the loss of James, a lack of special teams
coherence, and the defense's shortcomings proved to be too much for
Indianapolis to overcome. Mora was fired with one year remaining on
his contract, reportedly due to a disagreement with general manager
Bill Polian over defensive coordinator
Vic
Fangio (although others point to his infamous rant concerning
the Colts' playoff chances following a Week 11 loss to
San Francisco where the offense turned
the ball over five times including four interceptions by
Manning).
2002–present
Shortly after Mora's firing,
Tony Dungy,
who had been coaching for the
Tampa
Bay Buccaneers, became available after he was fired for failing
to advance the Buccaneers to the Super Bowl. Irsay was so committed
to bringing Dungy aboard that he, not Polian, initiated the
contact. Late on January 19, 2002, Irsay phoned Dungy at his home
in Tampa: "I just wanted him to know from the start that there was
no other coach on the planet I wanted to coach my football team,"
Irsay said. "Not
Steve Spurrier. Not
Bill Parcells."
In the draft that year the Colts selected
Dwight Freeney, a defensive end from
Syracuse, at number 11 overall. In a continuation of Polian's
building through the draft philosophy that he had employed so well
with Manning, James, and Wayne, Freeney became a defensive leader
for the Colts and made an immediate impact. Due to realignment of
the NFL that took place following the addition of the
Houston Texans to the league, the Colts moved
from their longtime place in the AFC East to the AFC South. Marvin
Harrison had a stellar year, breaking several club and NFL records,
but Edgerrin James was hampered by injuries again. Freeney set an
NFL rookie record in 2002 with 9 forced fumbles, three of which
occurred in a single game against former Syracuse football
teammate,
Donovan McNabb. However,
despite all this not all the news was positive- Manning threw 19
interceptions, most of them in games the Colts went on to lose, and
in a troubling pattern, the Colts repeatedly squandered the first
half of a game, often falling so far behind that despite second
half rallies, they could not overcome the deficit. Still, at 10-6
the Colts qualified for the playoffs and faced their former
division rivals, the AFC East champion
New
York Jets, in their first game. Although the Colts were favored
in the game the Jets blew out the Colts 41-0, with Manning still
having yet to win a playoff game in what was now his fifth
season.
The Colts finished the 2003 season 14–5 - and won the AFC South
with a regular season record of 12-4. Manning was named co-MVP of
the NFL, along with
Tennessee
Titans quarterback
Steve McNair. In
the playoffs, Manning and the Colts defeated the
Denver Broncos 41–10, for their first playoff
win since 1995 and Manning's first ever. They then defeated the
Kansas City Chiefs in Kansas City the next week in a high-scoring
affair, 38–31. However, the Colts were unable to defeat the
eventual Super Bowl champion
New
England Patriots in the AFC Championship game. The Patriots won
the game 24–14 putting an end to the hopes of the team and the fans
that this was the season the Colts would go all the way.
Safety
Bob Sanders was selected in the
2nd round (44th overall) of the
2004 NFL
Draft. The 2004 season saw the Colts win the AFC South again
with a 12-4 record, but as in 2003 the Colts' season ended at the
hands of the Patriots. After a year in which the offense broke
numerous team and league records, the Colts could manage to score
only one field goal in their final game, losing 20-3 in the
Divisional Playoffs. For the second year in a row, Manning was
named the league's MVP and his 49 regular-season touchdowns broke a
record that
Dan Marino had held since
1984. The wide receiving trio of Marvin Harrison,
Reggie Wayne and
Brandon Stokley each had at least 10
touchdowns and more than 1,000 yards for the season—also a league
first. Edgerrin James ended the season ranked fourth in the NFL
with 1,548 yards, an average of 4.6 yards per carry. And although
questions continued to surround the defense, Freeney led the league
with 16 sacks.
In 2005, Dungy led the Colts to a franchise-record 14 wins and a
third consecutive divisional title, the fifth for the club in its
22-year Indianapolis era. Manning and
Marvin Harrison broke
Steve Young and
Jerry Rice's NFL record for most touchdowns by a
quarterback-receiver tandem, notching their 86th in a Monday Night
home game against
St. Louis Rams in
week 6. Two weeks later Peyton Manning logged his first victory at
New England against the
Patriots, ending a six game New England
win streak. After defeating Jacksonville in week 14 they became
only the fourth team in NFL history to reach a record of 13–0 and
clinched home field advantage throughout the playoffs. The dream of
a perfect record for the Colts ended the next week however as the
San Diego Chargers defeated the
Colts 26–17. In Week 16, the Colts played without coach
Tony Dungy following the suicide of his son James
earlier in the week. With the team resting most of their key
players, the Colts lost their second straight to the eventual NFC
Champion
Seattle Seahawks. Dungy
returned to the sidelines for the last regular season game as the
Colts beat the
Arizona Cardinals
17–13 while resting most of the team's usual starters. The team's
final record of 14–2 marked the best 16-game season in the
franchise's history.
However, the Colts failed to capitalize on their record-setting
season and lost their first playoff game to the eventual Super Bowl
champion
Pittsburgh Steelers,
21–18. Trailing 21–10 late in the game, the Colts regained
possession and put 8 points on the board to make it 21–18. After a
Jerome Bettis fumble on the goal line,
Nick Harper picked up the fumble and
almost ran it back, but was tackled at the 40 yard line by
Ben Roethlisberger. The Colts then drove
down the field, only to have
Mike
Vanderjagt miss a 46-yard field goal attempt wide right.
After becoming the first team in NFL history to begin two
consecutive seasons by winning nine games to begin 2006, the Colts
proceeded to lose three of the next four, largely due to the
league's worst run defense. However, they still captured their
fourth consecutive
AFC South title by
defeating the Cincinnati Bengals on
Monday Night Football in Week 15 of
the season with, ironically, a strong showing from their defense.
The Colts finished the season with a 12–4 record, giving them the
number three seed in the playoffs. The record also marked their
fifth consecutive
season with ten victories or more. In Week 13 against the
Titans, the quarterback-wide
receiver combination of Manning to Harrison became the all time
leader in touchdowns in NFL history.
In the Colts' first-round playoff game, they defeated the
Kansas City Chiefs 23-8, despite Manning
throwing three interceptions. The Colts defense managed to hold the
Chiefs to 44 yards on the ground and 2 yards passing in the first
half. The Chiefs did not earn a first down until 3:33 remained in
the third quarter. The Colts then defeated the AFC's #2 seed, the
Baltimore Ravens, 15-6 in the
divisional playoff round in Baltimore. Adam Vinatieri kicked five
field goals and the defense did not allow a touchdown.
The Colts advanced to their second AFC Championship Game in three
seasons, and thanks to their arch-rivals, the Patriots, defeating
the AFC's top-seeded
San Diego
Chargers, the Colts would host the game in the RCA Dome. This
marked the first time an AFC Championship game had taken place
inside a domed stadium. After trailing 21–3 late in the first half,
the Colts stormed back, defeating the arch-rival Patriots 38–34.
The 18-point comeback was the largest ever in an NFL conference
championship game, and tied the record for the fourth largest NFL
postseason comeback.
Super Bowl XLI
The Colts
defeated the Chicago Bears 29-17 on February 4, 2007 in Dolphin
Stadium
. Rain fell throughout the game, for the
first time in Super Bowl history, significantly contributing to the
six turnovers committed by both teams in the first half. Manning
was awarded the
Super Bowl MVP after
completing 25 of 38 passes for 247 yards and a touchdown, caught by
Wayne.
Indianapolis became the first "
dome team"
to win a Super Bowl in an outdoor stadium, the first to win in the
rain, and the first to win after having the statistically worst
rushing defense in the league during the regular season.
Tony Dungy became only the third man to have won
the Super Bowl as both a head coach {XLI} and a player
XIII} (along with
Tom
Flores IV-player,
XV and
XVIII-coach} and
Mike
Ditka VI-player,
XX-coach}), as well as the first
African-American Head Coach to win a Super Bowl (a distinction that
would have occurred regardless of which team won, as the Bears were
coached by another African-American coach,
Lovie Smith). With the win the Colts became the
only team to date to win a Super Bowl from the AFC South. Also the
Colts have made it to the Super Bowl three times, all three in
Miami.
In 2007,
the Colts finished 13-3, winning a club-record fifth straight
division title and becoming the first NFL team with five
consecutive seasons with 12+ victories and became one of four NFL
teams to open three consecutive seasons with 5-0 starts in topping
Tampa
Bay
, 33-14. Indianapolis
joined Green Bay
(1929-31), Minnesota
(1973-75) and St. Louis
(1999-2001) with three straight 5-0 starts.
And then becoming the first team in 76 years to start three
consecutive seasons with 7-0 starts.
Peyton Manning (288) broke the club record
for career touchdown passes held by
Johnny
Unitas (287), while
Tony Dungy
notched his 74th win to break the franchise record he had shared
with
Don Shula (73) and
Ted Marchibroda (73). The club fell in the
Divisional Playoffs to the San Diego Chargers, 28-24. Dungy became
the only coach in Colts history to post 10+ wins and earn playoff
appearances in six straight seasons.
The 2008
season was the Colts' inaugural season playing at the
newly-completed Lucas Oil
Stadium
. It was the first season that the Colts did
not win the AFC South title since 2002. After a 3-4 start on the
season, the Colts went on a nine-game winning streak and finished
the season at 12-4 and earned a wild card berth in the playoffs.
They extended their league mark with six consecutive 12+ victory
seasons. The club became the first in NFL history to win at least
seven consecutive games in five consecutive seasons. Manning won
his third NFL MVP award, but Indianapolis fell in the Wild Card
Playoffs in overtime at San Diego, 23-17.
Tony Dungy retired on January 12, 2009
and on January 13,
Jim
Caldwell who had been named his successor previously, was
formally announced as the new head coach.
Season-by-season records
Rivalries
New England Patriots
The rivalry between the Indianapolis Colts and
New England Patriots is one of the
NFL's newest rivalries. fueled by the quarterback comparison
between
Peyton Manning and
Tom Brady, and both are noted for their
organizational excellence. The Patriots owned the beginning of the
series, defeating the Colts in six consecutive contests, including
the 2003 AFC Championship game and a 2004 AFC Divisional game. The
Colts won the next three matches, notching two regular season
victories and a win in the 2006 AFC Championship game on the way to
their win in
Super Bowl XLI. On
November 4, 2007 the Patriots defeated the Colts 24-20; in the next
matchup, on November 2, 2008, the Colts won 18-15 in a game that
was one of the reasons the Patriots failed to make the playoffs; in
the most recent game, on November 15, 2009, the Colts staged a
spirited comeback to beat the Patriots 35-34.The nature of this
rivalry is coincidental because while the Colts and Patriots were
division rivals from 1970 to 2001, it did not become prominent in
league circles until after Indianapolis left for the
AFC South.
Kansas City Chiefs
During the late 1990s, the Kansas City Chiefs were a de facto rival
for Indianapolis, despite the teams belonging to different
divisions.
The rivalry started in the 1995–96 NFL playoffs when the
fifth-seeded Colts advanced to meet top-ranked KC in the Divisional
Playoffs, and stunned them in a defensive 10–7 upset at Arrowhead
Stadium
. Three missed field goal attempts embittered
the Chiefs, who were clear favorites to advance to
Super Bowl XXX before the game. In 1996 the
Colts defeated the Chiefs late in the season once again on the road
by a 24–19 score in a game with playoff significance as the teams
posted identical 9–7 records. The Colts therefore qualified despite
both of them having lost their last games. In
2004 Indianapolis once again
advanced from the wild card to play second-seeded KC at Arrowhead,
and the teams played a very offensive game, with Indianapolis
coming out on top 38–31 before advancing to New England and losing
the conference championship to New England. In
2007 Indianapolis, now in a
more favorable position as the AFC South champions, faced the
sixth-seeded Chiefs in the wild-card round, and ended up winning
23–8 with a surprisingly stable run defense against the
ground-oriented Kansas City offense.
Earliest rivalries
In the
years 1953-66 the Colts played in the NFL Western Conference (also
known as division), but were never known to have a significant
rivalry with any of the other franchises in that alignment, seeing
as they were the eastern-most team and the rest of the division
included the Great
Lakes
franchises Green Bay, Detroit Lions, Chicago Bears, and after 1961 the Minnesota
Vikings. The closest team to Baltimore was the
Washington Redskins, but they were not
in the same division, and neither were very competitive.
New York Giants
In 1958 Baltimore played its first NFL Championship Game against
the 10-3 (after a tie-breaking playoff against Cleveland) New York
Giants. Having already been defeated by the Giants in the regular
season, Baltimore was not favored to win, yet proceeded to take the
title in sudden death overtime. The Colts then repeated the feat by
posting an identical record and routing the Giants in the 1959
final. Up until the Colts' back-to-back titles, the Giants had been
the premier club in the NFL, and would continue to be post-season
stalwarts the next decade losing three straight finals. The
situation was reversed by the end of the decade, with Baltimore
winning the 1968 NFL title while New York would arrive at
continuously less impressive results.
Miami Dolphins
Baltimores post
NFL-AFL merger
passage to the AFC saw them thrust into a new environment with
little in common with its fellow divisional teams, the
New York Jets, Miami Dolphins,
Buffalo Bills, and
Boston Patriots. Powered by QB
Earl Morrall Baltimore would be the first
non-AFL franchise to win a division title in the conference,
outlasting the Miami Dolphins by one game, and leading the division
since Week 3 of
1970. The two
franchises were denied a playoff confrontation by Miami's
first-round defeat to the
Oakland
Raiders, whereas Baltimore would win its first Super Bowl title
that year.
Yet in 1971 the teams were engaged in a heated race that went down
to the final week of the season, where Miami won its first division
title with a 10-3-1 title compared to the 10-4 Baltimore record
after the Colts won the Week 13 matchup between them at home, but
proceeded to lose the last game of the season to Boston. In the
playoffs Baltimore advanced to the AFC title game after a 20-3 rout
of the Cleveland Browns, whereas Miami survived a double-overtime
nailbiter against the
Kansas City
Chiefs. This set up a title game that was favored for the
defending league champion Colts. Yet Miami won the AFC championship
with a 21-0 shutout and advanced to lose
Super Bowl VI to Dallas. In 1975 Baltimore and
Miami tied with 10-4 records, yet the Colts advanced to the
playoffs based on a head-to-head sweep of their series. In 1977
Baltimore tied for first for the third straight year (in 1976 they
tied with Boston) with Miami, and this time advanced to the
playoffs on even slimmer pretences, with a conference record of 9-3
compared to Miami's 8-4, as they had split the season series. The
rivalry would in the following years be virtually negated by very
poor play of he Colts, including a 0-8-1 record during the NFL's
strike shortened 1982 season. In 1995, now as Indianapolis, the two
both posted borderline 9-7 records to tie for second against
Buffalo, yet the Colts once again reached the post-season having
swept the season series. The following season they edged out Miami
by posting a 9-7 record and winning the ordinarily meaningless 3rd
place position, but qualifying for the wild card. The last
meaningful matchup between the two franchises would be in the 2000
season, when Miami edged out Indianapolis with an 11-5 record for
the division championship. The two then met in the wild-card round
where the Dolphins won 23-17 before being blown out by Oakland
27-0. In 2002 Indianapolis moved to the newly created
AFC South division and the rivalry was effectively
retired. Yet until then the two had had a lively history, based
usually on Indianapolis owning slightly better regular season
records, but Miami winning both post-season meetings.
Lucas Oil Stadium
After 24 years of playing at the RCA Dome, the Colts moved to their
new home Lucas Oil Stadium in the fall of 2008. In December 2004,
the City of Indianapolis and Jim Irsay agreed to a new stadium deal
that would benefit both the city and the team at an estimated cost
of $675 million. In a deal estimated at $122 million, Lucas Oil
Products won the naming rights to the stadium for 20 years.
It is a seven-level stadium which seats 63,000 for football. It can
be reconfigured to seat 70,000 or more for NCAA basketball and
football and concerts. It covers . The stadium features a
retractable roof allowing the Colts to play home games outdoors for
the first time since arriving in Indianapolis. Using
FieldTurf, the playing surface is roughly below
ground level. The new stadium is bigger and better than the RCA
Dome in many ways, including: 58 permanent concession stands, 90
portable concession stands, 13 escalators, 11 passenger elevators,
800 restrooms, high definition scoreboards and replay monitors and
142 luxury suites. Other than being the home of the Colts, the
stadium will host games in both the Men's and Women's
NCAA Basketball Tournaments and
will serve as the back up host for all NCAA
Final Four Tournaments. The stadium will host the
Super Bowl for the 2012 season (
Super
Bowl XLVI) and has a potential economic impact estimated at
$286,000,001. Lucas Oil Stadium will also host the
Drum Corps International World
Championships from 2009 until 2018.
In an ironic twist, a company based near Baltimore,
Controlled Demolition, Inc.,
oversaw the demolition of the RCA Dome. "It's a little ironic that
a demolition company from Baltimore had the opportunity to take
down the stadium to where the Colts fled when they left Baltimore,"
said Mark Loizeaux, president of Controlled Demolition and a
Baltimore Ravens fan.
Logos and uniforms
The Colts' logo and uniforms have basically remained the same since
the team's debut in 1953. The helmet is white with a speed blue
horseshoe logo. The blue jerseys have white shoulder stripes while
the white jerseys have blue stripes. The team also wears white
pants with blue stripes along the sides.
From 1982 through 1986, the Colts wore gray pants with their blue
jerseys. The gray pants featured a horseshoe on the top of the
sides with the player's number inside the horseshoe. The Colts
continued to wear white pants with their white jerseys throughout
this period, and in 1987, the gray pants were retired.
The Colts wore blue pants with their white jerseys for the first
three games of the
1995 season, but
then returned to white pants with both the blue and white jerseys.
The team made some minor uniform adjustments before the start of
the
2004 season, including reverting
from blue to the traditional gray face masks, darkening their blue
colors from a royal blue to speed blue, as well as adding two white
stripes to the socks. In 2006, the stripes were removed from the
socks.
In the early 2000s, the Colts made a minor striping pattern change
on their jerseys, having the stripes only on top of the shoulders
then stop completely. Previously, the stripes used to go around to
underneath the jersey sleeves. This was done because the Colts,
like many other football teams, were beginning to manufacture the
jerseys to be tighter to reduce holding calls and reduce the size
of the sleeves, although the reduction of the sleeve length had no
impact on the stripes of the Colts jerseys. Although the white
jerseys of the
Minnesota Vikings
at the time also had a similar striping pattern and continued as
such (as well as the
throwbacks
the
New England Patriots wore
in the
Thanksgiving game
against the
Detroit Lions in
2002), the Colts and most
college teams with this striping pattern
(most notably the
LSU Tigers
football team) didn't make this adjustment. Replica jerseys
sold for retail still have the original striping pattern, though
authentic "game-day worn" jerseys do have the partial striping
pattern of the current jerseys.Image:Indianapolis Colts
logo.svg|Colts logo (1978-present).Image:White facemask.png|Colts
helmet (1978-1994)Image:Blue facemask.png|Colts helmet
(1995-2003)Image:Indianapolis Colts helmet rightface.png|Colts
helmet (1953-1977) (2004-present)
Notable players
Current roster
Pro Football Hall of Famers
- Baltimore
- Indianapolis
Retired numbers
- Baltimore
- Indianapolis
However, the Colts
Ring of Honor includes:
All-time first-round draft picks
Notable coaches
Head coaches
Current staff
Radio and television
The
Colts' flagship station from 1984-1998 and again starting in the
2007 season is WIBC 1070AM (renamed WFNI as
of December 26, 2007); under the new contract, games are simulcast
on WLHK
97.1
FM. From 1998 through 2006, the Colts' flagship
station was WFBQ 94.7FM (with additional
programming on WNDE
1260AM). Bob Lamey is the team's
play-by-play announcer, holding that
title from 1984 to 1991 and again since 1995. Former Colts
offensive lineman Will Wolford serves as color commentator.
Former head coach
Ted Marchibroda of
both Baltimore and Indianapolis Colts franchises, who served as
color commentator from 1999 to 2006, serves as an analyst on their
pre-game show. Mike Jansen serves as the public address announcer
at all Colts home games. Mike has been the public address announcer
since the 1998 season.
Preseason
games not shown on national television are seen locally on WTTV-4
, "Indiana's
4." Indiana Hoosiers
announcer Don Fischer provides play-by-play.
Regular-season
Monday Night and NFL Network games are simulcast on WNDY-23
and WTHR-13
, respectively.
References
External links