INDIANAPOLIS — Two days after celebrating their biggest win of the season, the Indianapolis Colts dealt with their biggest loss.
Quarterback Andrew Luck is expected to miss two to six weeks with a lacerated kidney and a partially torn abdominal muscle, injuries he sustained late in Sunday’s victory over the previously undefeated Denver Broncos.
“When you take a hit to a franchise quarterback, it is a tough blow,” coach Chuck Pagano said. “We’ve been through a lot in this 2015 season, but I know this will galvanize us even more.”
Pagano said he believed Luck was injured in the first minute of the fourth quarter when he tried to scramble for a first down near the Denver goal line. Inside linebacker Danny Trevathan squared up on Luck from the front while defensive end Vance Walker hit Luck hard on the side of his left shoulder, bending him over awkwardly.
The hit drew immediately drew gasps inside Lucas Oil Stadium, but Luck broke a 17-17 tie on the next play with an eight-yard pass to Ahmad Bradshaw, his second touchdown throw of the game. He never left the game and continued to take big hits.
Afterward, Pagano said, Luck complained of soreness. When he arrived at the team complex on Monday feeling worse, Luck was sent for additional tests that revealed the injuries. Luck is not expected to need surgery. He was not permitted to speak to reporters by the team on Monday and did not mention any potential injury in his postgame news conference.
The six-week timetable could be aggressive because the Colts will be cautious about bringing Luck back.
“We’re going to keep listening to the doctors and evaluating his progress on a week-by-week basis,” Pagano said. “We’ve got all the confidence in the world in Matt Hasselbeck and we’re not going to put Andrew back out there until he’s healed and ready to go.”
The timing couldn’t be worse for Indianapolis (4-5), which was hoping to return form this week’s bye and build momentum with a favorable schedule. Instead, one week after firing offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton and replacing him with Rob Chudzinski, the Colts are now forced into making a quarterback change.
The 40-year-old Hasselbeck takes over, as he did last month when Luck missed two games with an injured right shoulder. Hasselbeck won both.
Indianapolis took another precaution on Tuesday by bringing quarterback Alex Tanney back to the practice squad. He spent three weeks in Indianapolis earlier this season, none of it on the active roster. Luck, Hasselbeck and Tanney are the only quarterbacks on the team after Indianapolis released Matt Blanchard from the practice squad.
“We’ve got all the confidence in the world in Matt,” Pagano said. “Matt will step right in, he will do a great job and we will win football games with Matt.”
Hasselbeck was 48-for-76 with 495 yards and three touchdowns in his only action this season, and having a bye week to work with Chudzinski could help make the transition smoother.
Playing behind a struggling offensive line has taken a toll on the Luck this season.
He missed the first two games of his four-year career after getting hurt on the road against the Tennessee Titans on Sept. 27. When Luck did return, he still didn’t look right. Then last week, he was listed on the injury report with a bad ankle. He started, finished and won Sunday’s game, looking more like the promising young quarterback that people expected.
There has been speculation about possible fractured ribs and a more serious shoulder injury than the Colts first acknowledged.
“We will overcome this and Andrew will make a full recovery and he will be back in the lineup at some point,” Pagano said, “but we will overcome.”
In the AFC South, the league’s worst division, Indianapolis still holds a one-game lead over the Houston Texans and has a capable backup to run the show until Luck returns.
“It is one heck of a blow,” Pagano said. “You don’t want to lose anybody. Our guys will respond, like they always do. We’ve been through a ton already this season and in the past and we’ll get through it.”
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