SEATTLE -- Jacoby Brissett and the rest of the Indianapolis Colts played well enough in the first half to hear the home team being booed off the field at halftime.
Those boos didn't last long. It took just a short series of plays in the second half by the Seattle Seahawks to see a potential stunning win for the Colts spiral into a blowout loss.
Tied at 18 late in the third quarter, the Seahawks went on a 28-0 scoring blitz to roll to a 46-18 win over the Colts on Sunday night. After 2 1/2 quarters of staying with one of the elite teams in the NFC, the Colts were run over by the Seahawks in the closing minutes.
"They just outplayed us big time in the second half," Colts coach Chuck Pagano said. "We didn't do a good job of adjusting. That's on me. We're a lot better than that, but it's going to be the same old song and dance if we don't get things cleaned up and if we don't find a way to quit shooting ourselves in the foot, and put a complete game together."
The Coltsdid nearly everything right in the first half. They controlled possession. They kept theSeattle offense from finding any rhythm. And they did enough on offense to hold a 15-10 lead at the break, thanks in part to Brissett's 18-yard touchdown pass to Donte Moncrief in the final minute of the half.
The only mistake of the first half was Brissett underthrowing a pass that Justin Coleman undercut and returned 28 yards for a touchdown.
"(I) felt like we did what we needed to do to start the game," Pagano said. "But you've got to play 60 minutes."
Indianapolis could barely stay on the field offensively in the second half. The Colts ran just 19 plays for 32 yards in the second half. They had less than 8 minutes of possession after having the ball for nearly 20 minutes of the first half.
Brissett's fumble that Bobby Wagner returned for a touchdown to give Seattle a 32-18 lead will get most of the attention. Making his third start since being acquired by the Colts, Brissett was 16 of 29 passing for 157 yards.
"I put us at risk. They scored 14 points off turnovers, because of my turnovers. I've just got to be better," Brissett said. "They scored 14 points without them really doing anything. It's all because of my bad plays."
While Brissett was critical of his performance, the Colts' inability to get off the field defensively was just as important. Seattle had four touchdown drives of six plays or longer in the second half, all of them at least 74 yards. Seattle had 337 yards of offense in the second half.
"When you go into the locker room at halftime, you make adjustments. They made a lot of good adjustments -- that's a good football team, so hats off to them," Indianapolis cornerback Rashaan Melvin said. "But we've got to get back into the lab and fix up the mistakes we made. Like I said, we've got to put four quarters together."