Redskins Can't Stop Luck, Lose 49-27

Andrew Luck showed everyone how franchise quarterbacks are supposed to play.

Robert Griffin III spent Sunday taking notes.

The long-awaited showdown between the top two draft picks from 2012 was one-sided as Luck threw for 370 yards and a career-high five touchdowns, leading the Indianapolis Colts past Washington 49-27 with Griffin serving as the Redskins' backup.

"We were confident that we could hit some chunk (plays), as we say," Luck said after going 19 of 27. "I think that our tempo helped to get some drives together, but we came in thinking that we had a chance at some big ones."

Luck, who finished second to Griffin in voting for the 2011 Heisman Trophy and 2012 NFL Offensive Rookie of the Year voting, delivered on another milestone day.

He broke Peyton Manning's franchise record for most 300-yard games in one season. Luck has 10.

He also became the fifth NFL player since 1970 to win 30 regular-season games in a player's first three seasons, and joined the short list of players to throw for 4,000 yards in two of their first seasons, a club that previously included only Manning and Dan Marino.

Luck became the first quarterback in Colts history to throw two touchdown passes of 70-plus yards in the same game and the third Colts quarterback with 30 TD passes in a season, joining Manning and the late John Unitas.

And aside from turnovers on Indy's first two series, Luck was virtually flawless. He threw TD passes of 30, 3, 48, 73 and 79 yards, the longest of his career, answering every challenge Colt McCoy, Griffin's replacement, posed.

"I think the beauty of it is if you focus too much on the tight ends, there's wide receivers out there and running backs that are going to make you pay," Luck said after leading Indy (8-4) to its eighth win in 10 games.

McCoy started slowly but finished fast. He was 31 of 47 for a career-best 392 yards. His three TD passes were a career high — and one more than Griffin had thrown all season. But Washington (3-9) still lost its fourth in a row.

Meanwhile, Griffin played loyal teammate.

The No. 2 draft pick in 2012, behind Luck, spent the entire day on the sideline studying plays on his tablet, cheering on teammates, bemoaning mistakes and sometimes getting so close to the field he was instructed to move back. He didn't play and didn't take questions after the game.

Coach Jay Gruden, who made the quarterback switch Wednesday, said the Redskins must play better.

"Players have to start stepping up and taking some accountability at some point," he said. "We've got to do a better job coaching, that's all I can say. To have those guys wide open like that, it's unheard of on simple coverage calls. It's like a different guy, it seems, all the time."

Luck took advantage, and so did the other Colts.

Daniel "Boom" Herron scored on a 49-yard run in the second quarter, and D'Qwell Jackson gave the Colts some breathing room midway through the third when he scooped up McCoy's fourth-down fumble and returned it 35 yards for the second touchdown of his career. That made it 35-17.

McCoy got the second-half shootout started by scrambling away from two tacklers and finding Logan Paulsen for a 16-yard TD pass to cut a 21-10 halftime deficit to 21-17. Three plays later, Luck found Donte Moncrief down the seam for a 48-yard TD.

After Jackson scored off of McCoy's fumble, McCoy answered with a 42-yard TD pass to DeSean Jackson.

Luck then hooked up with Coby Fleener, who broke Everette Brown's tackle and went 73 yards for the score to give Indy a 42-24 lead. Fleener finished with four catches for 127 yards and two TDs.

The Colts sealed it when Moncrief broke free down the middle again, taking Luck's long pass for a 79-yard score. Moncrief caught three passes for 134 yards.

"We have so many great athletes on this team, such a great coach and doing such a good job of making a great call," Herron said. "We have so many weapons on offense, it is tough to get everybody the ball but we work it out."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
Contact Us