INDIANAPOLIS -- Jonathan Taylor made a lightning-quick jump cut through the hole and saw nothing but daylight ahead.
Once the Indianapolis Colts running back reached the goal line, some 65 yards later, his run was still not complete. Taylor kept going, running into the tunnel that leads to the Colts' locker room in the southwest corner of Lucas Oil Stadium. It was Taylor's way of sending a message: This time, he would hold onto the football after arriving to the end zone - something he did not do a week ago.
Taylor reached the end zone two more times on Sunday, including on a 70-yard scoring run, during his 218-yard performance in the Colts' historic 38-30 win over the Tennessee Titans. Indianapolis' offense dominated the line of scrimmage, rushing for a franchise record 335 yards in a victory that kept the team's faint playoff hopes alive. The Colts surpassed the previous high established in 1956, nearly three decades before the franchise left Baltimore for the Midwest in 1984.
It was Taylor's second career 200-yard performance behind only his career-high 253-yard game in the final week of the 2020 season. The performance came on the heels of last Sunday's game in which Taylor committed a costly miscue, dropping the ball prematurely as he crossed the goal line on a would-be 41-yard run that could've given Indianapolis a two-touchdown lead.
The Colts went on to lose the critical matchup, dealing a severe blow to their playoff hopes. Taylor wouldn't make the mistake again this week.
"I had already predetermined in my mind that next time, I'm going all the way in the tunnel," Taylor said Sunday.
In fact, Taylor approached the whole situation with levity. He and backup running back Tyler Goodson planned an entire bit ahead of the game. After Taylor emerged from the tunnel, Goodson ran up to him and playfully tried to strip the ball away, with Taylor keeping a tight grip.
"Just trolling, making the crowd laugh a little bit," Goodson said.
In reality, there was nothing funny about the way the Colts pushed the Titans around. Tennessee allowed the most rushing yards of any team this season and the second-most in Titans/Oilers franchise history. The Colts made no pretense about their intentions, either, at one point running on 12 consecutive plays over the span of three possessions in the second quarter.
"That's kind of the exciting part," Taylor said "It's kind of when you start imposing your will, establishing that line of scrimmage. Those are the types of football games as a running back ... you love."
Tight end Mo Alie-Cox added: "By the end of the game... we were still getting 5 yards a pop. They still couldn't really stop it. They were calling it, but they couldn't do nothing about it."
Then, Alie-Cox relayed a story that unfolded before a particular play.
"It's hilarious," he said. "One time, they were like, 'It's a screen. Boom.' And then one of their [defensive] ends was like, 'Man, they're about to give it to Jonathan Taylor. He's about run for 300 [yards] on us.' Once he said that, I was like, 'Yeah, we got him.'"
In light of the rushing success, Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson had a light workload from the pocket. He attempted just 11 pass attempts, completing 7 for 131 yards. But Richardson was a part of the rushing bonanza, running for a career-high 70 yards.
Now, the Colts look to finish with wins over the New York Giants and Jaguars in their remaining two games, along with hoping numerous other dominoes fall their way in their bid to make the postseason.