In the bowels of
what felt like a haunted house, at a defining moment for a city, a team and a
franchise quarterback, the Indianapolis Colts looked to one man for salvation.
As the players sat glumly in their RCA Dome locker room at halftime of the AFC
Championship Game, reeling from a first half in which they'd fallen behind
21--6 to the New England Patriots, coach Tony Dungy strode among them,
delivering a message that even the team's biggest star had trouble swallowing.
"I'm telling you, this is our game," Dungy proclaimed, fixing his eyes
on quarterback Peyton Manning, whose playoff struggles mirrored Dungy's own.
"It's our time."
Dungy had uttered the same words the previous night as the team gathered at its
downtown Indianapolis hotel, but now his optimism seemed unfounded. Manning,
who before Sunday might as well have had CAN'T WIN THE BIG ONE�tattooed on
his forehead, was still obsessing over the 39-yard interception for a touchdown
he'd served up to cornerback Asante Samuel, which had put the Patriots up 21--3
less than six minutes into the second quarter. It's our time? Had these words
come from anyone other than Dungy, Manning would have tuned him out. "But
Tony is one calm customer, no matter what the circumstance," the Pro Bowl
quarterback said later, "and he has a way of making you believe. We're
stressed out, and he's parading back and forth telling us we're going to win.
That rubs off on the younger players, even the older players. It made a
difference."
To credit a
coach's demeanor for inspiring the biggest-ever comeback in a conference
championship game and a historic trip to Super Bowl XLI would be overly
simplistic, for Indy's thrilling, 38--34 victory required every bit of
resourcefulness that this long-tormented team could muster. But it's true that
everything the 51-year-old Dungy did at halftime, from his shrewd strategic
adjustments to the perspective he provided, steeled a group of men who revere
him at a time when abject panic was a couple of bad plays away. In return, with
30 transcendent minutes of football, the Colts claimed a triumph steeped in
significance: They vanquished their archnemesis, a team that had twice humbled
them in the postseason while winning three of the last five Super Bowls;
Manning vaulted closer to the realm of the Pats' Tom Brady, his chief rival for
supremacy at the sport's most glamorous position; and the franchise, which
moved from Baltimore to title-starved Indy in 1984, earned its first Super Bowl
berth in 36 years.
Oh, and this: The
Ultimate Game just got a double dose of overdue diversity. When the Colts meet
the Chicago Bears at Dolphin Stadium in Miami Gardens, Fla., on Feb. 4, Dungy
and Lovie Smith, his close friend and former assistant, will make history as
the first African-American head coaches to stand on a Super Bowl sideline. A
man who appreciates the milestone's importance, Dungy smiled on Sunday as he
watched the Bears take an 18-point lead over the New Orleans Saints in the NFC
title game. Heading to the field for pregame warmups shortly afterward, he
thought, Lovie's done it; now I've got to do my part. Dungy figured an 18-point
deficit was insurmountable--a notion, oddly enough, that his Colts would dispel
a few hours later.
In a league of
ultracompetitive jockeying and ulterior motives, few figures are as widely
admired as Dungy, who despite being one of the most successful coaches of the
postmerger era (a 114--62 regular-season record) had lost eight of 13 playoff
games before Indy entered this postseason as a No. 3 seed. After reviving the
once-pathetic Tampa Bay Buccaneers with an impressive six-season run as their
coach, Dungy was fired before the 2002 season--then saw his replacement, Jon
Gruden, lead the Bucs to a Super Bowl victory. "[Dungy] built that team,
and watching it win after he was gone had to hurt," Colts wideout Reggie
Wayne said last Thursday night as he and 10 Indy defenders dined at an
Indianapolis steak house. "We want to make up for that, and we know that
this can be the first time an African-American coach is in the Super Bowl. We
want to do that for him so bad, because he's like a father figure."
The players also
are painfully aware of what the affable, deeply religious Dungy went through
last season: In December 2005, Tony and wife Lauren's son James committed
suicide at age 18. Tony missed the second-to-last regular-season game but
returned after a weeklong absence. In its playoff opener top-seeded
Indianapolis looked understandably distracted and suffered a 21--18 upset to
the eventual champion Pittsburgh Steelers.
A little more than
a year later Indy seemed to be replaying the Pittsburgh game, as the
fourth-seeded Patriots caught the Colts napping in Naptown. New England took a
7--0 first quarter lead when Patriots guard Logan Mankins dived on the ball in
the end zone after Brady and Laurence Maroney had mishandled an exchange from
the Colts' four. (The football gods would return the favor early in the fourth
quarter on a strangely similar play that bounced Indy's way, with center Jeff
Saturday getting the star turn.) A seven-yard run by Corey Dillon put New
England up 14--3, and two plays later Samuel jumped a sideline pass from
Manning to wideout Marvin Harrison that hit the mute button on 57,433 fans. The
Colts drove to the New England eight late in the half but settled for ex-Pats
kicker Adam Vinatieri's second field goal.
The deficit called
for adjustments, and Dungy and his assistants delivered. New England coach Bill
Belichick, as is his custom, had devised a new wrinkle to throw at Manning,
benching pass-rushing linebacker Tully Banta-Cain, shifting veteran inside
backer Mike Vrabel to Banta-Cain's outside spot and giving third-year
linebacker Eric Alexander his first career start. The move put Alexander, who's
speedier than Vrabel, on tight end Dallas Clark and allowed the Patriots to
disguise some of their zone coverages with man-to-man looks--a ploy that helped
Samuel bait Manning into throwing the interception.
But Dungy proved
that his mind is as robust as his heart. "Belichick gets all the credit for
training smart football players," says San Francisco 49ers backup QB Trent
Dilfer, who played for Dungy in Tampa, "but Tony teaches football IQ as
well as anybody in the NFL." Dungy's first move at halftime was to tweak
Indy's predictable deployment of its Pro Bowl wideouts: Harrison on the right
and Wayne on the left. Instead, the Colts sent Wayne into the slot, with third
wideout Aaron Moorehead or Clark taking his place on the outside. This, said
receivers coach Clyde Christensen, forced the Patriots out of their base 3--4
and into a nickel package that used a Cover Two scheme. With the corners
playing press coverage, Clark and Wayne could exploit openings in the middle of
the field.
Dungy also flashed
back to one of his team's crushing losses to New England: a 38--34 home defeat
in '03, when Indy trailed 31--10 before mounting a comeback that fell a yard
short. "This gap is easier to close," Dungy told his players at the
half. "We get the ball first, and if we score a touchdown on our first
drive, we're only one score down."
Manning and the
offense came out firing; he ended a 14-play, 76-yard drive with a one-yard
sneak to make it 21--13. The Pats went three and out, and Manning mobilized
once again, beginning with a 25-yard pass over the middle to Clark. The drive
ended, improbably, on Manning's one-yard toss to backup defensive lineman and
goal line fullback Dan Klecko. When Harrison made a terrific catch of a
gorgeous Manning fade to the right corner for a two-point conversion to tie the
game with four minutes left in the third quarter, it was time for the world's
two best quarterbacks to step on the gas.