New Haven Register (Sunday) (New Haven, CT)

Colts keeping their focus on the Giants

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— Andrew Luck has a onetrack mind.

With two regular-season games left, the Indianapol­is Colts quarterbac­k insists he’s paying no attention to playoff possibilit­ies, scoreboard­s or other teams’ schedules. Instead, he’s focused on the only thing he considers important this weekend — beating the New York Giants on Sunday.

“I’ve been a part of teams where you sit and say, ‘We need this to happen with this.’ It doesn’t work like that,” Luck said. “You’ve got to handle your own business.”

Few teams can match what the Colts (8-6) have done lately. They’ve rebounded from a 1-5 start to win seven of eight and put themselves back in the postseason hunt. After losing their first two home games, they’ve won five straight at Lucas Oil Stadium, and if they can beat the Giants (5-9), they could control their own playoff path.

Coach Frank Reich doesn’t do business that way, though.

The former NFL quarterbac­k simply asks his players to do their jobs: Keep two-time Super Bowl MVP Eli Manning and Offensive Rookie of the Year contender Saquon Barkley in check; prepare for the possible return of Pro Bowl receiver Odell Beckham Jr.; and expose the holes in New York’s defense.

New York, meanwhile, hopes it can continue a strong second half after starting 1-7. While winning two of three and four of six, the Giants already have knocked off NFC North champion Chicago and playoff hopeful Washington. They will be playing spoiler at Indianapol­is.

“You’re chasing wins,” Manning said. “We’re football players and this is what we do. We play football, that’s our passion, that’s our job, and we’re going to go out there and do it well and be able to celebrate some wins.”

It won’t be easy.

Indy pitched its first shutout in four years while rushing for 178 yards against Dallas’ No. 3-ranked run defense last week. Luck is playing the best football of his career and the defense looks as stout as it has in almost a decade.

The combinatio­n has made Indy a trendy pick as the team nobody wants to play, and if the Colts can win their last two, they could end a three-year playoff absence. But the Colts know they must stick to the plan.

“I’m just very convinced there is no other way to approach it,” Reich said. “I’ve been around a lot of good coaches, a lot of good players (and) that’s just what I have come to believe, experience and learn. There can’t be any wavering from that (focal point).”

SACK-HAPPY

It’s been feast or famine when it comes to sacks for the Giants. They had 14 in the first 11 games, and then picked up five each in the next two weeks against Chicago and Washington.

Indy has allowed just 16 sacks this season, tied for fewest in the league.

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