Sorry Colts fans – Andrew Luck’s spot in the Ring of Honor is secure

Many feel Andrew Luck forfeited his right to a spot in the team’s Ring of Honor on the night he retired. I beg to differ.

Want to make a Colts fan mad?  Suggest Andrew Luck belongs in the franchise’s Ring of Honor.

Fans don’t like that Luck retired at age 29, just 15 days prior to the regular season opener.  They don’t like that he was paid millions by the Colts after retiring.  They don’t like that his best season was his last season.  And they especially don’t like that his retirement cost the Colts a shot at perennial playoff appearances and an annual shot at a Super Bowl.

But a here’s a grim truth about the Ring of Honor – it is filled with flawed players.  Looking at the names and resume’s, it’s impossible to not include Luck among them.

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I’m not talking about retiring his number.  That is a privilege reserved for the best of the best.  Peyton Manning is the only Colt to have his number retired since the move from Baltimore in 1984.  Rightly so.  Manning is a first ballot Hall of Famer who will forever be remembered as a an all-time great, despite the team releasing him after 2011 when his health was frail.  Manning has a statue – statue guys get their number retired.

Andrew Luck is not a candidate for that honor.  He never won an MVP, never went to a Super Bowl, and never achieved the cult of personality Manning earned.  He could have been next in the Johnny Unitas and Manning lineage, but chose another path.  The Colts should not reward Luck for what could have been.  He is what he is – a successful quarterback who left potential accomplishments on the table in order to enjoy to avoid the pain and risk the NFL requires of its players.

The Ring of Honor recognizes a different level of accomplishment.  Here is a sample of the qualifications of three of its current members:

Jim Harbaugh is in the Ring of Honor.  In four seasons in Indianapolis, Harbaugh cobbled together a 20-26 record as a starter.  Sure, Harbaugh was oddly spectacular in 1995, leading the Colts back from 21-point deficits twice.  His work was directly responsible for the Colts almost winning the AFC Championship Game in Pittsburgh that season, but overall he was ordinary at best.

Wide receiver Bill Brooks is in the Ring of Honor too.  He was good during seven years with the Colts, making a playoff appearance during the 1987 strike season.  Ranked the 177th wide receiver in NFL history by Pro Football Reference, Brooks was never invited to a Pro Bowl.  Great guy who has worked for the organization for many years.

Left tackle Chris Hinton is in the Ring of Honor.  As a Colt for seven seasons, Hinton was invited to six Pro Bowls, but he is best known for being a key piece in two huge trades.  The Colts acquired Hinton from the Denver Broncos for the draft rights to John Elway, and was sent to the Falcons along with Andre Rison for the #1 pick in the 1989 Draft, which was used to select Jeff George.  Hinton was outstanding as a person and tackle, but team success was lacking during his Colts career.

If the Colts weren’t (mostly) a back marker in their first 15 years in Indy, these guys would never have been feted.  But if a team is going to have a Ring of Honor, they need players in it!

Luck played six seasons for the Colts, missing the entire 2017 season with a shoulder injury.  His record as a starter is 53-33, and his teams went to the playoffs four times.  He won four and lost four in the playoffs and was a four-time pro bowler.  There were brain fart throws, but Luck had the ability to overcome them, like the insane 28-point comeback win against the Chiefs in the wild card round of the 2013 playoffs.  This was Luck at his worst and then best – down 38-10 early in the third quarter, Good Luck and the Colts scored 35 points in a wild 23 minutes.

I’m not willing to absolve Luck of all guilt in letting down the Colts and their fans, but as long as Harbaugh, Brooks, and Hinton are in the Ring of Honor, Luck should be there too.

2 thoughts on “Sorry Colts fans – Andrew Luck’s spot in the Ring of Honor is secure

  1. Kevin

    Colts fan here, does not upset me that he would be in ring of honor. Was bitter immediately following his retirement but time changes how you feel about things. If anything we miss Andrew, we definitely don’t rag on him for doing what he wanted to do, which was stop playing football. The fact that there is a perception that Colts fans are still mad at Andrew is ridiculous. You aren’t making any Colts fans mad by saying he should be in the Ring of Honor, your making Colts fans mad because you misrepresent them.

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  2. gregory scott garner

    What mystifies so many of us is the fact that Luck’s exit flew in the face of EVERYTHING we had seen of him prior to this. The reason I loved the guy was that he played a man’s game…he was a legitimate football player(something that neither Manning or Brady EVER were)…He didn’t cry when he got hit…he just called the next play…Those people who criticize him for taking unnecessary hits don’t know anything about football…that’s the nature of the sport, and the reason I have always regarded Peyton as an affront(no 6 ‘5 man should EVER assume the fetal position). Back when there was actual hitting in football, players like Elway and Favre absorbed trainwreck-style punishment and rarely missed any games. Luck had a similar style, and just wasn’t as fortunate with regard to his health. In football, most players will miss time with injuries. Once you take that physicality out of it, you no longer have football. Modern qbs like Brady and Manning should be in a separate wing in Canton…what they have played is most assuredly NOT football. As for Luck, he should have kept rehabbing, and played when he COULD. The team was certainly not going to cut him.

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