28 players seeing playoffs for first time

Jitters concern for young Colts

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Andrew Luck (12) is one of 28 Colts on the roster for Sunday's game against the Ravens that have never played in an NFL playoff game. (AP)
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INDIANAPOLIS – The playoffs can't start soon enough for Donnie Avery.

Five years after being the first receiver taken in the 2008 NFL draft, he will finally make his postseason debut at Baltimore.

It's about time.

"It's great, it's like starting the season all over again," the Colts receiver said Friday with a smile. "It's got my juices flowing again."

The veterans who have been there before will explain this is the way the playoffs are – exciting and nerve-racking all the same time.

And this week, at least, Avery isn't the only one in the Colts' locker room going through this experience for the first time. Of the 53 players on this year's roster, 28 have never played in an NFL playoff game.

Perhaps that should be expected from a team that has relied on rookie quarterback Andrew Luck, piled up more combined rushing and receiving yards by rookies than any team since the 1970 AFL-NFL merger and endured the most thorough housecleaning project of any team in the league after last years' 2-14 debacle.

More than a half-dozen key players from the Colts' 2009 Super Bowl team, including Peyton Manning, were let go.

But the truth is only nine rookies are on that first-timer list as the surprising Colts (11-5) visit AFC North champion Baltimore (10-6) in Sunday's wild-card round game.

The other names include linebacker Jerrell Freeman, who had a team-high 203 tackles after arriving from Canada; Cassius Vaughn, who spent the last two seasons in Denver but didn't get to play in either of the Broncos' postseason games last year; and cornerback Vontae Davis, the reigning AFC defensive player of the week who spent his first 3 years in Miami.

"It's a special moment. I've never been to the playoffs being in Miami. My brother, Vernon Davis of San Francisco, he went to this first playoffs last year. He said it's a great feeling, a great experience," Vontae Davis said. "I asked him for any tips and he just said 'play harder.'"

If Davis or the others have additional questions, they won't have to look too far.

Outside linebackers Dwight Freeney and Robert Mathis, safety Antoine Bethea, kicker Adam Vinatieri and receiver Reggie Wayne all own Super Bowl rings.

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