Dungy savors 10th straight playoff berth
INDIANAPOLIS - Tony Dungy shakes his head in disbelief.
Don Shula, Tom Landry, Chuck Noll, Bill Walsh, Bill Parcells, Bill Belichick - all multiple Super Bowl winners, four of them Hall-of-Famers. The humble Colts coach still thinks he doesn't belong in the same sentence, although the history books now tell a different tale.
Thursday night's victory at Jacksonville not only clinched a playoff spot for the Colts, it also made Dungy the first coach since the 1970 merger to reach the playoffs 10 straight seasons.
"It is a little bit thrilling to me when you see the names in that area, Landry and coach Noll and Walsh," he said Friday. "It's hard to do, so I'm really fortunate to be around two groups of guys who have allowed me to do it."
For Dungy, the journey has been more challenging than those before him.
Unlike Shula, Landry, Walsh or Belichick, Dungy had to make his run with different franchises, Tampa Bay and Indianapolis.
Unlike Shula, Landry, Noll and Walsh, Dungy also had to succeed in the era of free agency, which seemed destined to break up potential dynasties after only a few years.
He won with different styles, too. In Tampa, it was the traditional grind-it-out offense and suffocating defense; in Indianapolis, it's been the more modern high-scoring offense and an opportunistic defense.
Yet nobody can quibble with his results.
Since Dungy arrived in 2002, the Colts have won five AFC South titles and became the second NFL team to win at least 11 games in six straight seasons. Indy is the only team since the 2002 realignment to make the playoffs every year.
Those who once contended Dungy didn't have a creative enough offensive mind to win a Super Bowl, took notice when Dungy led the 2006 Colts to a championship in ways few thought possible - surviving in the rain, winning a playoff game without scoring a touchdown, relying on an overhauled run defense that forced teams to play right into Indy's strengths.
While this has not been a typical Colts season, Indy (11-4) did what it had to.
It strung together 8 straight wins after opening 3-4 - five of those wins by 7 or fewer points.
All of which makes this playoff berth so much sweeter.
"It feels very good," Dungy said. "The win still feels good this morning."