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Philip Rivers’ Past Success vs. Jaguars Catches the Eye
Indianapolis Colts quarterback Philip Rivers (17) yells from behind the line of scrimmage Monday, Dec. 22, 2025, during a game against the San Francisco 49ers at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis. Grace Hollars/IndyStar / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images

Philip Rivers has never needed extra motivation against Jacksonville, but Sunday’s context raises the stakes for the Indianapolis Colts.

With Indy hosting the Jaguars in a must-win Week 17 matchup at Lucas Oil Stadium, the Colts are once again leaning on a quarterback who has spent his career thriving in these exact situations.

Rivers’ résumé against Jacksonville is quietly dominant, spanning eras, rosters, and defensive schemes. Across 11 career meetings, the veteran owns an 8–3 record against the Jaguars, consistently delivering efficient performances.

Rivers has totaled 3,195 passing yards, 26 touchdowns, and just eight interceptions against Jacksonville, good for a 112.1 passer rating that shows how comfortable he has historically been in these matchups.

That familiarity stretches back to his Chargers days and carried over into his 2020 season with Indianapolis, where he split games against Jacksonville but still posted one of his most efficient outings of the year. In that contest, Rivers threw for 363 yards while completing 78.3 percent of his passes, carving up the Jacksonville secondary.

The Colts now need that version of Philip Rivers to resurface at a critical moment. At 8–7, Indianapolis enters Week 17 with its playoff margin reduced to zero, needing both a win and outside help to keep the season alive.

Even with Rivers’ familiarity with the Jaguars, Indianapolis’ defense has been trending in the opposite direction — spiraling into one of the most concerning stretches of play all season. The margin for error has vanished on both sides of the ball.

In Week 16 against the San Francisco 49ers, the Colts failed to force a single punt, marking the first time the franchise had gone without a defensive stop of that kind since Dec. 2, 2007 — an 18-year stretch and 293 games between such occurrences.

While the defense clearly needs help, Rivers’ understanding of Jacksonville’s defensive DNA — even as personnel has changed — remains a tangible advantage in this matchup.

“I’ve seen their schemes evolve, but the fundamentals remain — it’s about execution,” Rivers said when referring to the Jaguars' defense. That mindset has defined his best outings against Jacksonville, where patience has consistently beaten pressure.

The matchup also aligns with Indianapolis’ preferred offensive structure. Paired with Jonathan Taylor’s ground attack, Rivers’ poise under pressure could stress a Jacksonville secondary that has allowed the ninth-most passing yards in the league this season.

For Indianapolis, this isn’t about nostalgia or narrative-building. It’s about trusting a quarterback who has repeatedly delivered against a familiar opponent.

A win Sunday doesn’t just keep the Colts alive with help elsewhere. It adds another chapter to Rivers’ late-career résumé — one built on timing, toughness, and an uncanny ability to rise when the opponent across the field looks familiar.

This article first appeared on Indianapolis Colts on SI and was syndicated with permission.

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