We and our partners use cookies to understand how you use our site, improve your experience and serve you personalized content and advertising. Read about how we use cookies in our cookie policy and how you can control them by clicking Manage Settings. By continuing to use this site, you accept these cookies.

No ad available

Colts vs. Patriots score, takeaways: Mac Jones benched late after back-breaking pick, Indy wins in Germany

The Indianapolis Colts are .500 on the season and have earned their first international win in franchise history after slugging out a 10-6 victory over the New England Patriots in Frankfurt, Germany. 

Overall, this was a low-scoring affair between these two AFC clubs. Each team put up points on their opening possessions and that ultimately proved to be the key difference. While the Patriots tacked on a field goal, the Colts handed the ball off to Jonathan Taylor on a fourth-down attempt from the 1-yard line and converted for a touchdown. From that point, a fourth-quarter field goal put away New England, which struggled mightily on offense. 

Things did heat up down the stretch after the Patriots brought themselves within a point with a 15-play, 89-yard field goal drive to begin the fourth quarter. Indy responded with a field goal drive of their own to go up by four, which was largely sparked by a 42-yard kickoff return by wideout Isaiah McKenzie. On the next Patriots possession following the Colts' field goal, Mac Jones and the offense brought the ball all the way to the Indianapolis 13-yard line before the quarterback threw a back-breaking interception to Julian Blackmon. Not only did that eliminate the scoring chance, but allowed the Colts to chew off a chunk of clock. 

That turnover then sent Jones to the bench and thrust Bailey Zappe into the game to close it out. Jones finished his game completing 15 of his 20 passes for 170 yards and that crucial pick. On the final drive for New England, Zappe completed three of his six pass attempts and tossed a game-ending interception in triple coverage. 

Meanwhile, Gardner Minshew showed tremendous poise in the pocket, completing 18 of his 28 throws in the win for 194 yards and an interception. Jonathan Taylor rushed for 69 yards and a touchdown while Michael Pittman caught eight of his 12 targets for 84 yards. 

Why the Colts won

Indy's opening-drive touchdown did prove to be the difference in this game and it was a somewhat gutsy call by first-year head coach Shane Steichen to keep his offense on the field on fourth down. He was rewarded by Jonathan Taylor, who bounced out to the right side of the field to barrel in for the score. Against a lowly Patriots offense, that lone touchdown was the necessary cushion en route to victory. Beyond that score, Gardner Minshew's pocket presence was stellar at times in this game. He moved around in the pocket to extend plays and made a number of superb throws in the process. One of them came on that opening touchdown drive where he kept his eyes down the field while running up the pocket to eventually connect with Isaiah McKenzie on third-and-6:

Similar plays continued throughout the contest, including another third-and-6 throw from inside his own 5-yard line where he hit rookie Josh Downs for a diving catch that helped Indy burn more clock: 

Of course, the defense was massive in this winning effort as well. The unit stifled the Patriots offense throughout the matchup, especially in the first half where they sacked Mac Jones five times and stopped New England on five of its third-down situations. While the bulk of the blame for Jones' red zone interception should go on the Patriots quarterback, it was still a heck of an effort by Julian Blackmon to haul in the turnover. 

Why the Patriots lost

No matter which way you slice it, the Patriots failed. The club managed just two field goal drives that sandwiched being shut out in the second and third quarters. The passing game continues to struggle throwing the ball down the field and Mac Jones didn't even connect with a wide receiver until the seven-minute mark of the second quarter. In the second half, Jones overthrew Hunter Henry on what would have been a touchdown, but instead, the unit needed to settle for a field goal and still trailed by a point. On the following possession, the Patriots were again deep in the red zone and Jones again made an ill-advised pass to a tight end, only this target to Mike Gesicki came in short and was picked off by Julian Blackmon. That sent Jones to the bench as the last competitive gasp for the Patriots. 

On defense, the unit was unable to pressure Gardner Minshew, who largely had all day to throw inside the pocket. New England didn't record a single sack in this losing effort and tallied just a single quarterback hit. 

Meanwhile, special teams continue to be an issue for the Patriots. Bill Belichick made a bizarre decision in the first half to have no punt returner back on a second-quarter punt by the Colts. New England was unable to block the punt and the ball was downed at the 18-yard line. That proved to be too daunting of a distance for the offense, which proceeded to go three and out. Chad Ryland also missed a layup 35-yard field goal at the start of the second half, and the coverage team allowed a key 42-yard kickoff return by Isaiah McKenzie, which set up a field goal drive for the Colts in the fourth quarter. 

Outside of the Patriots running game, which played well, this team had breakdowns at essentially every level.

Turning point

The back-breaking moment for the Patriots in this game -- and possibly the career of Jones -- was the quarterback's red zone interception in the fourth quarter. The Patriots were threatening to either take the lead or be down by a mere point when Jones faded back and underthrew an open Gesicki for what would have been the go-ahead touchdown. Instead, the ball was short of the goal line and picked off by Blackmon, which sent Jones to the bench for the remainder of the game and eliminated any realistic shot of the Patriots pulling off the comeback.

Play of the game

A couple of Minshew's scrambles in the pocket that he converted for first downs are worthy to be considered, but let's shine a light on the lone touchdown from this game. Taylor continues to trend in a positive direction and he finished his day with 69 yards on the ground, including the touchdown that proved to be the key score of the matchup. 

Given that this game was on the international stage, let's hear the call in German! 

What's next?

From here, both of these teams will be on the bye in Week 11. After that break, the Colts will host the Buccaneers at Lucas Oil Stadium, while the Patriots will travel to East Rutherford to face the Giants at MetLife Stadium. 

No ad available
Live updates
 

Uhhh. That was ... something? The Patriots put no returner back on that punt and instead sent another player to try and block it. Indy gets the punt off and it's downed at the New England 18-yard line.

 

Patriots say LB Mack Wilson Sr. (head) is questionable to return. 

 

That's back-to-back drives where Jones is sacked on third down, which stalls out the offense. 

 

Scary moment for New England as Hunter Henry fumbled the football after making the catch form Mac Jones. Fortunately for the Pats, center David Andrews jumps on the loose ball to retain possession.

 
 

A very nice response by the Colts after the Patriots field goal to open the game. They answer with a 14-play, 75-yard touchdown drive to go up, 7-3. A gutsy call Indy as they go for it on fourth down from the 1-yard line and it pays off with a Jonathan Taylor rushing score. 

No ad available
 

Somewhere the Eagles are chuckling. Colts try the Tush Push at the 1-yard line, but they can't get Minshew in for the touchdown. 

 

A heavy dose of Jonathan Taylor on this drive and it's hard to blame the Colts for doing so. The Indy back has 30 yards on six carries. 

 

Textbook. 

 

That was a remarkable play by Gardner Minshew. Patriots bring pressure, he's able to move around the pocket and keep his eyes down the field, and eventually connects with McKenzie for a 30-yard gain. 

 

A promising drive where the Patriots go as far as the Indy 14-yard line ends in a bit of disappointment. Mac Jones is sacked on third-and-6, which forces New England to settle for a field goal. They take an early 3-0 lead. 

 

Colts DE Kwity Paye is down on the field and being looked at by trainers. 

 
 

This might be the best opening drive for the offense all season. Nice blend of run/pass, and Zeke has ripped off a couple of chunk plays. New England is now in the red zone. 

 

"The Patriots are reeling and there is talk Bill Belichick could be in trouble. I don't buy it, but that's not a good thing to have hanging over this team. The Colts beat the Panthers last week, thanks to their defense with two touchdowns off picks. The offense didn't do much, but the Patriots don't do much on offense either. This will be a low-scoring game won by the Colts." -- CBS Sports Senior NFL analyst Pete Prisco on why he has the Colts beating the Patriots, 20-14. To see the rest of his Week 10 picks, click here.

 

The Colts call tails and it comes up tails. Indy defers to the second half, so Mac Jones and the Patriots offense will hit the field first from Frankfurt. 

No ad available
 

If Gardner Minshew limits his turnovers, the Colts should win this game rather easily. The veteran quarterback has 20 touchdowns and just one interception as a starter in wins. In losses, he's thrown 27 touchdowns and 17 interceptions. If you expand it to overall giveaways, Minshew has 32 in losses as a starter and just two in wins. Protecting the ball is Football 101, but it's quite jarring when seeing how much Minshew's turnovers impact the result of the games he starts. 

 

On the other side of the field, the Colts offense has been a bright spot for the team even after losing rookie quarterback Anthony Richardson for the season. They are the only club in the NFL to score 20 or more points in every game this year. If they do so again in Frankfurt, they could be well on their way to a win, especially with the Patriots failing to get to 20 points in each of their last two games. 

 

The big question about the Patriots comes on offense. They are averaging just 15 points per game this season (second-worst in the NFL). Mac Jones is logging career-low numbers across the board, which has contributed to the team being tied for the most games this season with 21 or fewer points. If this mark holds, this would be the second time in Belichick's tenure that the Patriots have averaged fewer than 20 points for a season (2000, 17.3 PPG).

 

The Patriots are in the middle of arguably the worst season of Bill Belichick's tenure in Foxborough. The club is 2-7, which is the worst record in the AFC coming into Week 10, and is tied for the worst nine-game start of Belichick's career with the franchise (2000 season). 

 

The Colts snapped its three-game losing streak last week with the win over the Panthers. The big story from that victory was the play of the defense. The unit held Carolina to 13 points after allowing opponents to score 35+ points in each of their previous three games. The defense also created three turnovers, including two pick-sixes. It'll be interesting to see if that was a mere one-off or if the unit is turning a bit of a corner. 

 
 
 

This game was once one of the biggest that the NFL had to offer, particularly when Peyton Manning and Tom Brady were under center for their respective teams. To further note how the times have changed, this is the first Colts-Patriots matchup since Week 2 of the 1998 season where they both entered with an under .500 record. That was Manning's second career game while Pete Carroll and Drew Bledsoe were the coach-quarterback duo in New England. 

 

Historically, the Colts are 0-1 all-time in international games. They lost 30-27 to the Jaguars in 2016 in Wembley Stadium in London. As for the Patriots, they've been dominant outside of the United States. They are 3-0 in international games and have outscored their opponents 113-22 in those matchups. 

 

Hello and welcome to Colts-Patriots! This international head-to-head takes place in Frankfurt and is the second week in a row that the NFL has played a regular season game in Germany.

No ad available
2 of 2
No ad available