Luck solid, Colts fall to Steelers

Subscribe Now Choose a package that suits your preferences.
Start Free Account Get access to 7 premium stories every month for FREE!
Already a Subscriber? Current print subscriber? Activate your complimentary Digital account.

PITTSBURGH — Unlike his electric preseason debut, Andrew Luck’s first pass against the Pittsburgh Steelers didn’t result in a touchdown.

PITTSBURGH — Unlike his electric preseason debut, Andrew Luck’s first pass against the Pittsburgh Steelers didn’t result in a touchdown.

His eighth one did. Just not for the Indianapolis Colts.

Standing on the sideline moments after Pittsburgh’s Ike Taylor cut in front of an underthrown pass and raced 49 yards for a score, Luck fumed. But only for a second.

Showing the mental toughness the Colts wanted when they tasked him with helping rebuild a franchise on the fly, the rookie rebounded to help Indianapolis take the halftime lead before falling 26-24 on Sunday night. Pittsburgh rookie kicker Danny Hrapmann kicked four second-half field goals, including the 22-yard winner with 23 seconds remaining.

By then the top overall pick was in a baseball cap after completing 16 of 25 passes for 175 yards. He added a 1-yard touchdown run, and the Colts (1-1) held their own against a perennial Super Bowl contender.

“You never want to throw any interceptions, even if they are tipped, bobbled, whatever,” Luck said. “I’ve got to cut down on those, but I think showing we can bounce back from those mistakes and kind of climb out of that hole was a good sign.”

Luck certainly won over the Steelers (1-1), who let Luck lead the Colts on three second-quarter scoring drives to turn a 14-0 deficit into a 17-14 lead.

“He’s a tough kid,” Pittsburgh defensive end Brett Keisel said. “He’s a good quarterback. I think he’s going to play a long time. (Colts offensive coordinator) Bruce (Arians) is, I’m sure, a happy man.”

Even if Luck wasn’t particularly thrilled after Taylor sprinted into the end zone to put the Steelers up two touchdowns. Luck didn’t expect things to go as easily against the Steelers as they did in a romp over St. Louis last week.

Steelers 26, Colts 24

Indianapolis 0 17 7 0—24

Pittsburgh 14 0 6 6—26

First quarter

Pit—A.Brown 57 pass from Roethlisberger (Suisham kick), 7:44.

Pit—Taylor 49 interception return (Suisham kick), 2:56.

Second quarter

Ind—D.Brown 1 run (Vinatieri kick), 13:08.

Ind—Luck 1 run (Vinatieri kick), 1:56.

Ind—FG Vinatieri 53, :00.

Third quarter

Pit—FG Hrapmann 25, 11:14.

Ind—Whalen 4 pass from Stanton (Vinatieri kick), 8:23.

Pit—FG Hrapmann 39, :11.

Fourth quarter

Pit—FG Hrapmann 43, 10:40.

Pit—FG Hrapmann 22, :20.

A—54,559.

Ind Pit

First downs 20 15

Total Net Yards 369 364

Rushes-yards 24-85 36-146

Passing 284 218

Punt Returns 2-19 2-3

Kickoff Returns 3-76 3-65

Interceptions Ret. 1-6 3-68

Comp-Att-Int 23-47-3 16-24-1

Sacked-Yards Lost 1-5 3-12

Punts 5-36.4 5-44.8

Fumbles-Lost 1-0 1-0

Penalties-Yards 4-26 8-55

Time of Possession 28:53 31:07

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING—Indianapolis, Ballard 10-34, D.Brown 6-30, Evans 6-15, Karim 1-5, Luck 1-1. Pittsburgh, Dwyer 8-43, Ford 8-42, Rainey 6-20, B.Batch 8-19, J.Johnson 3-11, C.Batch 1-9, Roethlisberger 1-2, W.Johnson 1-0.

PASSING—Indianapolis, Luck 16-25-2-175, Stanton 4-13-0-69, Harnish 3-9-1-45. Pittsburgh, C.Batch 7-10-0-84, Roethlisberger 5-9-1-81, J.Johnson 4-5-0-65.

RECEIVING—Indianapolis, Wayne 6-74, Whalen 4-59, Fleener 3-33, Hilton 2-37, Brazill 2-25, Allen 2-18, Ross 1-28, D.Brown 1-9, Adams 1-8, Sambrano 1-2, Harnish 0-(minus 4). Pittsburgh, Gilreath 4-78, A.Brown 2-75, Paulson 2-11, Pope 2-9, Rainey 2-3, Peelle 1-21, Clemons 1-14, Saunders 1-10, B.Batch 1-9.

MISSED FIELD GOALS—None.