Hold the coronation of the Indianapolis Colts. The two-time defending AFC South champions might have something to say in the matter.
Houston hits Indiana’s capital city with a three-game winning streak and a healthy quarterback, momentum the Texans plot to put to good use in closing the gap in the AFC South division. The Colts (8-3) are back in their comfort zone in Indianapolis on Sunday with two losses — at Pittsburgh and at Kansas City — that dented their lofty conference standing following a 7-1 start.
The Texans (6-5) have taken three consecutive meetings from the Colts by a combined nine points. Houston began the season 0-3, but has its season back on track thanks to a toothy defense.
With C.J. Stroud (concussion) out, the Texans took down Buffalo (23-19), Tennessee (16-13) and Jacksonville (36-29) the past three weeks with backup Davis Mills at quarterback. Even with the November to remember in progress for Houston, the Jaguars (7-4) separate the Colts and Texans in the South standings.
Indianapolis, which last won the division in 2014 behind third-year quarterback Andrew Luck, is in Jacksonville next week.
“As we stand, they’re still in concussion protocol,” Texans coach DeMeco Ryans said Wednesday of the progress of Stroud and nickel Jalen Pitre.
Stroud was a full participant in Wednesday’s practice. Barring a setback before Sunday, he’ll be on the field for a fifth time opposite Indianapolis. Stroud is 3-1 in four games against the Colts.
“Picking up where we left off,” Texans wide receiver Nico Collins said of Stroud returning to the lead of the QB rotation in Wednesday’s practice. “Going out there and being himself. He looked good out there. Excited to get back.”
Mills had five total TD passes and one turnover during the run of three consecutive wins that brought playoff conversation back into the realm of reality. The Sunday game will be the first of two meetings between these teams, who also square off in the regular-season finale Jan. 4 in Houston.
The Texans lead the NFL in total defense (264.3 yards per game) and rank second in scoring defense (16.5 points per game). But Buffalo averaged 4.9 yards per carry and rushed for 143 yards last week, when Bills quarterback Josh Allen completed 70.5 percent of his passes but was sacked eight times.
Ryans said the Bills went away from the script most teams follow to block the Texans’ attacking front seven with a seven-man blocking scheme — incorporating multiple tight ends or a fullback — and rolled the dice with one-on-one matchups across the field.
This is the first look for Ryans and the Texans at the Daniel Jones-led Indianapolis offense, one with a functional run-pass option foundation designed to isolate second-level defenders and freeze linemen committed to contain. The former Giants’ first-round pick supplanted the purported QB of the future — Anthony Richardson, drafted two picks after Stroud in 2023 — and has accounted for 22 of the Colts’ 40 touchdowns this season. He also has 10 turnovers in 11 games.
Even at home, it’s a high-stakes, high-pressure environment for Jones against the Houston edge rushing duo of defensive ends Danielle Hunter (11 sacks) and Will Anderson Jr. (10.5), the player drafted between Stroud and Richardson. Hunter and Anderson are the first pair of teammates with 10-plus sacks in the first 11 games of a season since 2019.
Jones (fibula) was limited Wednesday, but head coach Shane Steichen said he’s “good to go.” He’ll need protection from his offensive line.
“We have a lot of confidence and trust in our guys up front, our tackles,” Jones said. “Regardless of who you’ve got, you try to chip them, you try to help when you can. It’s my job to get the ball out on time.”
None of the Texans are asking for an introduction to MVP candidate Jonathan Taylor, Jones’ partner in the Colts’ backfield. He leads the NFL with 17 touchdowns (15 rushing scores) and has produced big numbers in eight career matchups with Houston: 1,067 total yards (133.4 per game) and 10 TDs (nine rushing). He registered the NFL’s fastest speed on a scoring play this season — touching 22.38 mph on a 43-yard reception in Week 2 — per Next Gen Stats.
“They have smart players. But they have athletic players,” Taylor said. “If we let that front run wild, it’s going to be a long Sunday.”
Taylor is running for history on Sunday.
With two TDs he can become the fifth running back in NFL history to reach 75 touchdowns from scrimmage — non-passing TDs — in fewer than 80 games. The others to accomplish the feat: Jim Brown and LaDainian Tomlinson (both 72 games), Emmitt Smith (77) and Todd Gurley (78).










