Dan Johnson takes you through his preview, prediction, and pick for NFL Week 13’s game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Houston Texans.
The rematch in Indianapolis feels less like a divisional game and more like an exam on how contenders finish. Houston arrives with three straight wins, a defense turning every snap into a stress test, and real playoff leverage. Indianapolis comes home with Jonathan Taylor in full stride but Daniel Jones playing through a fractured fibula after weeks of contact. The Colts still own the cleaner season-long efficiency profile, yet Houston’s rise on defense has shifted where the fear lives. With the Texans’ front hunting and Jones’s leg clearly not at 100%, the margin for error shrinks fast. Below is my prediction for NFL Week 13’s game between the Indianapolis Colts and the Houston Texans.
Here’s how I’ll play it. I’ll be pumping out these predictions for individual games all season, with plenty of coverage here on DraftKings Network. Follow my handle @dansby_edits for more betting plays.
On paper, Indianapolis is the better offense over the full season: 4,224 total yards, 39 touchdowns and +0.16 EPA per play. Houston sits at 3,557 yards, 22 touchdowns and essentially neutral EPA at -0.01. Taylor has 205 carries for 1,197 yards at 5.8 yards per rush with 15 rushing touchdowns, plus 32 catches for 268 yards and two more scores. Daniel Jones has completed 69.1% of his 350 attempts for 2,840 yards with a 17-to-7 touchdown-to-interception line and 5 rushing touchdowns on 43 carries. He has taken 21 sacks and put the ball on the ground eight times, losing three, but his legs have been a real part of the design in the red zone. Playing through a fractured fibula changes that math; if his mobility is closer to a pocket statue than a dual threat, Houston’s 42.5% pressure rate and 13.3% sack rate become a much bigger problem.
The bigger story is on defense. Houston has allowed only 2,907 yards all year versus 3,770 for Indianapolis, with the Texans at -0.14 EPA per play allowed against the Colts at -0.04. They have given up just 2,153 passing yards on 58.9% completions and 1,014 rushing yards on 250 attempts, then layered a 37.1% defensive success rate on top. The front is nasty: 33 sacks, 198 pressures, a 42.5% pressure rate and an outrageous 13.3% sack rate in recent weeks, built around Danielle Hunter’s 11 sacks and Will Anderson Jr.’s 10.5. Over the last three games, that defense is allowing 256 yards per game with 16 sacks and three interceptions, while holding red-zone opponents to 37.5% and third downs to 35.7%. That is exactly the wrong profile for a quarterback whose legs are part of the design.
Texans vs. Colts pick, best bet
The Colts absolutely have a counterpunch. Their recent run game has averaged 199 rushing yards per game, with Taylor ripping 302 yards and 3 touchdowns over his last two. Their passing efficiency still grades as elite at +0.24 pass EPA and +0.20 rush EPA with a 48.4% offensive success rate. Michael Pittman Jr. has 59 catches for 607 yards and 7 touchdowns, Tyler Warren has 55 for 662 and three scores, and Alec Pierce is averaging 21.1 yards per reception on 611 yards as the vertical knife. Season-long, Indianapolis converts red-zone trips into touchdowns at 21.9% and has allowed only 16.1% on the other side, which is quietly one of the stiffest red-zone defenses in the league. The danger to a Texans ticket is obvious: Taylor plays through Houston’s strong run metrics, the red-zone gap reverts to early-season form, and the Colts’ top-end offense shows up for a 31–20 type win.
I still prefer Houston catching points because the matchup tilts toward their strengths and Indianapolis’s weaknesses right now. Even with that early red-zone funk baked in, the Texans’ offense has moved to 40.0% on third down and 58.3% in the red zone over the last three, while Indianapolis has slumped to 28.0% on third down and 44.4% in the red zone. Houston’s defense is creating similar takeaways to the Colts, with 12 interceptions and six fumble recoveries against 11 and six, but is doing it while allowing 136 fewer yards per game lately. Daniel Jones has taken only 21 sacks on the year, yet he has also put the ball on the ground eight times and now may not have the same escape gear that helps those pressures disappear. With Indianapolis laying 3.5 points and the total hovering in the mid-40s, this feels closer to a coin-flip game than one where a full field goal separates these teams.
The script I expect leans on personnel and advantages rather than fireworks. Indianapolis should lean into Taylor and heavier looks to test Houston’s front, trying to live in second-and-5 instead of obvious passing downs where Hunter and Anderson can tee off. Houston should spread the field, let C.J. Stroud or a confident Davis Mills hunt matchups for Nico Collins and Dalton Schultz, and accept that sustained drives are fine against a defense allowing 64.0% completions and 2,905 passing yards. Both defenses have 33 sacks, but only one has a front generating a 13.3% sack rate against a quarterback with a compromised lower body. In a game where Houston’s defense is better, their offense has quietly closed the gap, and the matchup magnifies their pass-rush edge, I expect a tight, lower-scoring finish.
I’m taking Texans +3.5, with a game that lands inside the number: Texans 23, Colts 20.
Best bet: Houston +3.5 (-110) at Colts
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For a prop lean, Jonathan Taylor under 87.5 rushing yards at -115, playable to 84.5 or -125. He is still terrifying in a vacuum with 205 carries for 1,197 yards at 5.8 per rush and 15 rushing touchdowns, plus 302 rushing yards and three scores in his last two games, but Houston is not a normal run matchup. The Texans have allowed 1,014 rushing yards on 250 attempts with negative rush EPA (around -0.11) and a sub-40% success rate, then over the last three weeks they have given up only 256 total yards per game while stacking 16 sacks and a 37.5% red-zone touchdown rate allowed. That profile screams disruption and early-down losses, not easy 5-yard zone plays on repeat. Our whole side handicap rests on Houston’s front compressing early downs, pushing Daniel Jones into more dropbacks on a bad leg and forcing Indianapolis into longer fields rather than 12-play Taylor drives. If the Texans’ run fits hold to their season norms and their pressure rate keeps drives short, Taylor probably needs both heavy volume and an explosive run to clear 87.5. With Houston’s defense in elite recent form and our Texans +3.5 position already banking on that front controlling the night, I’d rather fade Taylor’s rushing peak at this inflated number than bet on him steamrolling one of the league’s best run defenses.
Best prop lean: Jonathan Taylor u87.5 rushing yards (-115)
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