Colts Refuse to Blame Officials After 20–16 Loss to Texans — Even as Controversial Calls Ignite Outrage Across Indianapolis
Indianapolis, Indiana – 12/01/2025
Lucas Oil Stadium shook with frustration after the Indianapolis Colts fell 20–16 to the Houston Texans — a loss fans immediately pinned on several controversial officiating decisions. But while social media exploded with anger and highlight clips of questionable flags went viral, the message inside the Colts’ locker room was strikingly different: no excuses, and no blaming the refs.
The Colts entered the fourth quarter with a 13–10 lead before the momentum flipped on a single sequence. Facing 3rd & 15, Kenny Moore II was flagged for a 28-yard defensive pass interference that moved Houston into the red zone. One play later, the Texans punched in the go-ahead touchdown to make it 20–13. Moments earlier, fans were already furious over what appeared to be an uncalled delay of game. Combined, those moments swung the game and erupted the crowd into chants of protest.
Yet as Colts Nation demanded answers, head coach Shane Steichen stepped to the podium and delivered a calm but firm message — one that instantly set the tone for the entire franchise.

And in the biggest moment of his postgame remarks, Steichen said:
“We may not agree with every whistle, but relying on the officials has never been how great teams win. If we truly want to finish games, we have to create those moments ourselves — not wait for someone else to decide them. And if today ended in a loss, then that responsibility is ours.”
It was a powerful declaration from a coach who knows his team had opportunities to put the game away long before any flag came into play. The Colts went just 3-for-12 on third down, failed to close the door on a final offensive drive, and saw quarterback Daniel Jones — battling through a painful fractured fibula — fight through visible discomfort in a desperate attempt to keep the team alive.
Losing Sauce Gardner after just two defensive snaps due to a calf strain further complicated matters, stretching a man-coverage-heavy defense already thin. But even that wasn’t offered as an explanation for the loss.
What Steichen wanted was clear: accountability above controversy.
And perhaps that’s why, despite a crushing result that cost Indianapolis its grip atop the AFC South, the locker room refused to dwell on officiating drama or trending hashtags.
The Colts were angry. They were disappointed. But they were not pointing fingers.
They were preparing for Week 14.
Because for this team, blaming the refs isn’t the standard — responding like a contender is.













