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Sunday, Oct. 13
The Indiana Daily Student

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Manning, Colts recover from slow start to beat Panthers 31-7, move to 7-0

Colts Panthers Football

CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Peyton Manning set another record, and the Indianapolis Colts are 7-0 again.\nNow, everybody can look ahead to the showdown with New England.\nManning shook off a slow start to throw for 254 yards and two touchdowns and broke Johnny Unitas’ team record for career scoring passes in the Colts’ 31-7 win over the injury-plagued Carolina Panthers on Sunday.\nJoseph Addai rushed for 100 yards and two touchdowns and caught a touchdown pass from Manning, who was outplayed early by 43-year-old Vinny Testaverde.\nBut when Testaverde left at halftime with tendinitis in his right Achilles’ tendon, Manning made sure the Colts’ much-anticipated matchup with Tom Brady and the Patriots wouldn’t be tarnished by dominating the second half.\n“Everybody’s been talking about it for a long time, except us,” Manning said. “I guess now it’s safe to talk about it.”\nManning was worried early. It took him nearly the entire first quarter to get on the field. He didn’t complete a pass until early in the second quarter and started 2-for-9.\n“When we’ve had halves like that in the past, there would be a little frustration,” said coach Tony Dungy, who passed Don Shula for the most wins in Colts’ history with 74. “But we’ve been there, and our guys do have a lot of confidence in our coaching staff.”\nThe Panthers (4-3) took a 7-0 lead behind Testaverde, who turns 44 in two weeks.\nGetting the starting nod for the second straight game ahead of David Carr, who’s still recovering from a back injury, Testaverde led the Panthers on an opening 80-yard touchdown drive. It lasted a team record-tying 18 plays and more than 11 minutes, the longest by time in the NFL this season\nBut Testaverde was intercepted by Antoine Bethea in the end zone in the second quarter, and aggravated an existing Achilles’ tendon injury when guard Mike Wahle stepped on his foot.\n“There are days when it doesn’t bother me at all, and days like today,” Testaverde said. “We just have to be smart with it, and hopefully it will clear up.”\nBefore Carr could replace him, the Colts had taken a 17-7 lead on Manning’s 4-yard touchdown pass to Addai on the first drive of the half.\nManning completed just 14 of 30 passes, but shook off early problems to eclipse another one of Unitas’ records. His second TD, a perfectly thrown 59-yard pass to Reggie Wayne late in the third quarter, was the 288th of his career, one more than Unitas.\n“I’m a little uncomfortable talking about the same records that he had, but certainly it is an honor,” Manning said.\nCarr was the quarterback for Houston the last time the Colts lost – on Christmas Eve – but the Panthers were overmatched in the second half.\nAnd it didn’t sit well with Carolina receiver Steve Smith. Held without a catch after the opening drive, Smith was seen screaming at Carr on the sidelines late in the game.\n“He just wants our team to be better,” Carr said of Smith. “I just went up to him and said, ‘If there’s anything I can do that you see from the wide receiver position that can make us a better team, then let me know.’ We just got talking because we’re too old to keep secrets from each other. And he’s not like that at all. He’ll tell you straight up.”\nSmith, held to two catches for 18 yards, did not speak to reporters after the game.\nColts cornerback Marlin Jackson was lost to a neck injury in the second half, but Dungy hoped he’d be ready for the Patriots.\n“I think it’ll be a circus,” Dungy said, laughing. “I think it’ll be a very, very much-hyped game.”

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