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Freeney and Mathis each had two sacks.
"We go into every game thinking this is what it is going to be," Freeney said. "I think as a player you have to think that way, that we are going to shut these guys down. It doesn't happen every week, obviously ... it's not surprising."
It clearly wasn't just Peyton over Eli that decided this ballyhooed Week 2 game, however. Indy's ability to run over the Giants was just as crucial.
Joseph Addai, who gained 44 yards at Houston, nearly doubled that in the first half with 80 yards rushing. Donald Brown added 44, and by game's end they accumulated 156.
They keyed an 80-yard drive to open things, getting 33 yards on seven carries, with Brown surging through a huge hole on the left side for 7 yards and a TD.
Indianapolis never backed off as Addai and Brown alternated dominating New York's defense, particularly on a 98-yard march capped by Peyton's perfect lob throw to Dallas Clark.
The Colts were weak against the run last week, surrendering 257 yards overall, 231 to Houston's Arian Foster. The Giants have a far more vaunted ground game than the Texans, yet managed only 120, much of it in garbage time.
"Whenever we can have the game go our way, when we score a lot of points, the way our defense is designed, when we get those leads, we make them one dimensional, and it is playing into our hands," Freeney said. "That's playing into my game and I can kind of make some things happen."
All the while, Eli was looking like a lost younger brother, and he wasn't going to get bailed out by Peyton. He went 3 for 8 for 17 yards in the first half, which included a deep pass into triple coverage that was intercepted by Jerraud Powers. Although he hit the long pass to Manningham in the third quarter and a 31-yard TD to Hakeem Nicks with 1:46 to go, Eli wound up 13 for 24 for 161 yards.
Peyton finished his winning night with a 10-yard TD pass to Reggie Wayne with 9:11 remaining.
Notes: Peyton was 20 for 26 for 255 yards. ... Clark's TD catch was the 43rd such connection with Peyton, tying for second with Sonny Jurgensen and Jerry Smith for quarterback-to-tight end scores. ... Peyton and Wayne have hooked up for 63 TDs since 2001 to tie John Unitas and Raymond Berry for second place in franchise history. Peyton and Marvin Harrison set an NFL record with 112 TDs. ... The Giants forced five turnovers last week and only one against the Colts. ... Giants RB Brandon Jacobs unintentionally threw his helmet into the stands in the third quarter and security had to retrieve it from the fans.
[Associated Press;
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