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Bruce Arians implores the Colts to run it back: “Be patient”

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Indianapolis, IN — Former Super Bowl-winning head coach Bruce Arians recently shared his thoughts on the state of the Indianapolis Colts, emphasizing the importance of patience as a reason to remain calm during challenging times.

Arians has regularly appeared on The Pat McAfee Show for the 2025-26 NFL season, providing his insight and knowledge of the game in a more casual setting. On Tuesday’s show, McAfee, Arians, and Co. began talking about the Atlanta Falcons and teams that have ended the season on a comparable trajectory. Inevitably, the Indianapolis Colts and Tampa Bay Buccaneers came up.

While the Falcons earned the upward trajectory descriptor, the Colts earned the opposite. Atlanta is stringing together some solid wins down the stretch, while Indianapolis has (once again in the Ballard era) found itself back at square one.

Bruce Arians, the NFL’s 2012 coach of the year as an interim with the Colts, then pivoted to the state of Indianapolis, offering a plea of patience to the fanbase as he cited various reasons to not give up just yet:

“I hope the Colts don’t make a change, because I think they’re close…be patient, you’re very, very close,” Arians explained. “Don’t let one or two injuries run you out of the whole damn thing and start all over again.”

Arians would continue adding to his perspective, citing things like an 8-1 start as well as injuries, but while those reasons are objectively valid, there almost seems to be a curse of sorts latched onto W. 56th St., and Pat McAfee made sure that Arians heard him out.

“There’s something in that building,” McAfee retorted. “Every year, there’s valid excuses for why the team is ass.”

Often regarded as the quarterback whisperer, Arians knows a thing or two about the game, so while most may disagree with his take, hearing him out is the least one could do. The issue, however, is that, while Arians’ explanation makes perfect sense, there simply shouldn’t be enough of the leash left to allow Chris Ballard and Co. to run it back.

Head coach Shane Steichen is also part of this equation, though in a smaller capacity, given that he’s only played a small part in the overall dysfunction. In reality, a lame-duck season with Steichen leading the charge suggests much more hypothetical success than retaining just Ballard or both in tandem. The discussion in question addressed a bigger talking point altogether, namely, the front office and the subsequent culture it birthed.

Daniel Jones was undoubtedly playing like the Colts’ franchise quarterback during their strong start, but coming back from an Achilles tear in sports rarely sees a return to form, especially so immediately — aka for the ‘one more year’ in question. Although he’s expected to be ready for the 2026-27 regular season, putting all your eggs in one rehabilitated basket feels uninspired, to say the least.

Bruce Arians’s opinion should be valued. There’s no denying that he’s earned our right to listen to his perspective. At the end of the day, this is a big-picture decision, and Carlie Irsay-Gordon and Co. are the ones with the power and foresight to make the executive decision. With that being said, I have one last question to pose to Irsay-Gordon as this dilemma nears a decision:

Do you want to Band-Aid it, or fix it for the long term?

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...s-impores-the-colts-to-run-it-back-be-patient
 
Does Shane Steichen survive “Black Monday” and stay as Colts coach?

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Garfield hates Mondays. If he was the coach of a struggling NFL team, he would absolutely despise this upcoming one. “Black Monday” is the day after the regular season in which NFL coaches learn their fate. Every year, there are surprises. Some coaches who should be fired somehow skate by while others who get released don’t appear to have gotten a fair shot. Shane Steichen has had a go for three years now. The results are inescapable. Will it be enough to keep his job?

Steichen is on the verge of turning in his second straight season of 8-9. Not only is that below .500, it also marks a complete free fall this season as the Colts have lost six straight. The best season turned in was his first in which he successfully pivoted from Anthony Richardson to Gardner Minshew and got the team to within a few plays of a division title. Things were looking solid his first year, and there was reason for optimism. The man who helped develop Jalen Hurts into a Super Bowl champion quarterback had a similar lump of clay in front of him in Richardson. He just had to mold it.

The Richardson experiment appears to have been a severe miscalculation by Chris Ballard, however, as Steichen threw in the towel with a season’s worth of games from which to evaluate. Speculation points to more than on the field reasons for Steichen’s decision, but nevertheless, he couldn’t make it work. What’s even more concerning is how the Colts will end this season. Losing in Houston, as they are expected to do, would drop them below .500 on a seven game losing streak after being on top in the AFC. There weren’t sufficient adjustments after the bye and throughout the season, questionable decisions were made from a game management perspective.

It could be argued that Steichen hasn’t been dealt the best hand during his three year stint, and Carlie Irsay-Gordon might recognize that. She and her sisters just inherited the team. There is a solid chance they want things to settle before making major moves. While Steichen isn’t a bottom feeder coach, new ownership seems to be his best chance at retaining his position. Then again, Irsay-Gordon didn’t hire him, so she might not be too attached.

Shane Steichen’s future is truly up in the air. Most people won’t be surprised or overly hurt if it goes either way. The current prediction is that he survives this round of “Black Monday”. Steichen’s fourth year won’t be without question marks as the roster could see some turnover, but this will be a make or break year. A “make” season sees the Colts make the playoffs at the very least. A “break” season will see Steichen fall victim to “Black Monday” if he even makes it that far.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-survive-black-monday-and-stay-as-colts-coach
 
Report: Colts defensive line coach Charlie Partridge joining Notre Dame staff

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According to ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg, Indianapolis Colts veteran defensive line coach Charlie Partridge will be joining Notre Dame football head coach Marcus Freeman’s defensive coaching staff next year:

Sources: Notre Dame is set to hire Indianapolis Colts defensive line coach Charlie Partridge for the same role. An accomplished college assistant and former FAU head coach, Partridge was at Pitt from 2017-2023. Worked with ND coordinator Chris Ash at Wisconsin, Arkansas, Drake. pic.twitter.com/0uxr58KoxO

— Adam Rittenberg (@ESPNRittenberg) January 2, 2026

Partridge had just finished his second season as Colts’ defensive line coach.

However, having come over from the University of Pittsburgh in 2023, where he had previously been since 2018, it’s possible the veteran college defensive line coach—with over 26 years of collegiate experience, wanted to get back to coaching college football again—and at one of the nation’s premier football programs at that.

On the other hand, given the Colts’ lack of defensive line pass rushing production this year, it’s possible that Indianapolis may have been looking to make an imminent change under veteran defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo regardless. That is, if Anarumo and his defensive coaching staff remain in Indianapolis past 2025.

Partridge was in his current Colts role prior to Anarumo’s arrival, so he wasn’t exactly hand-picked by him by any means. Coupled with the lack of defensive line production, and a break-up may have been coming in Indianapolis regardless. Partridge leaving for Notre Dame before any formal decision is made means he gets to leave on his own terms, and it’s a cleaner split in Indianapolis for both sides.

It’s worth noting that Matt Raich currently serves as senior assistant defensive line coach alongside Partridge, which he has for the past two seasons.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ch-charlie-partridge-joining-notre-dame-staff
 
To surprise of no one, Colts QB Philip Rivers will retire again following close of 2025 campaign

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On ‘The Kay Adams Show,‘ Indianapolis Colts unretired longtime veteran quarterback Philip Rivers recently announced *drum roll* that he’ll retire again following the close of the 2025 campaign:

Philip Rivers is done with the NFL. 🥹

Thank you Philip! 🙏 pic.twitter.com/fXYchblV3X

— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) January 1, 2026

With injuries to their top two starting quarterbacks, the 44-year-old Rivers shockingly came out of retirement after a pure desperation call by the Colts, despite having not played since the 2020 season in Indianapolis.

It became because of his familiarity and fondness of Colts head coach Shane Steichen, as well as his prior positive experience playing for Indianapolis during the 2020 ‘COVID-19’ campaign—which was his sole season in Indy.

While the Colts went 0-3 during Rivers’ three recent starts, he filled in admirably and played about as well as anyone could’ve reasonably expected given the extraordinary circumstances and prolonged layoff from the game.

Even with Rivers’ significantly diminished arm strength, his football IQ, pre-snap recognition, and ability to rapidly process/anticipate through his throwing reads remained about as elite as anyone who’s recently played the game at starting quarterback—both active and retired.

From a football purist perspective, it was both beautiful and incredible to watch ‘Grandpa Phil’ still quickly dissect opposing defenses and rip it out there—especially on primetime a few weeks ago.

With Rivers’ son a senior next year and also having a soon-to-be 9th grader on the team, Rivers will turn back to coaching high school football again at Saint Michael Catholic High School in Fairhope, Alabama, for 2026.

While he wished the game outcomes had been different, Rivers has publicly stated he had a blast playing again these last three weeks for the Colts. He will likely serve as their emergency QB for the regular season finale against the Houston Texans, with Indianapolis already eliminated from playoff contention.

His shocking 3-game ‘unretirement tour’ likely only helped Rivers’ arguably borderline case for becoming an eventual Pro Football Hall of Famer—even if it delayed his candidacy another five years in waiting. Recency bias and leaving on such a surprisingly positive and feel good story note should resonate very well with the NFL general public and perhaps most importantly, the Hall of Fame voters going forward.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...retire-again-following-close-of-2025-campaign
 
Pair of ESPN Insiders believe Colts GM Chris Ballard’s job is safe, but far from certain

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According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano, the initial speculation is that Indianapolis Colts longtime general manager Chris Ballard’s job is safe, but under the differing leadership of new team owner and CEO Carlie Irsay-Gordon, who doesn’t have a track history for her decision-making atop, no one exactly knows for sure right now:

Graziano:

I was in Indianapolis on Sunday, and no one there seems to know for sure where things are headed following the Colts’ late-season collapse. GM Chris Ballard has a good relationship with owner Carlie Irsay-Gordon, from what I am told, and while the Anthony Richardson Sr. pick seems to have been a miss, the Daniel Jones signing was a hit until he got hurt. I think Ballard sticks around, but people are asking about him a lot these days.

Fowler:

Ballard remains a moving target because he drafts well and builds good rosters — but no division titles in nine years is a tough sell. I’ve talked to a few people in the league who wonder whether Ballard would be the first to go over coach Shane Steichen if Irsay-Gordon makes changes at all. But the Colts had a good thing going for 10 games before the injuries, so that factors in, too. Most people I’ve talked to are leaning toward Ballard’s job being safe.

The interesting part of the analysis though is that the pair of ESPN Insiders seem to be weighing Ballard’s future based a lot on this past year alone—which no doubt, the Colts initial success (once sitting at 8-2) was destroyed by critical injuries, including a season-ending Achilles tear to starting quarterback Daniel Jones.

However, it’s been nine years for Colts general manager and what was already expected to be a ‘make-or-break’ season of sorts for Indy’s top leadership, which once again fell short of the sticks for making the playoffs again.

The Colts have not made the playoffs since 2020 (i.e., the COVID-19 season), which was the last time that unretired 44-year-old veteran quarterback Philip Rivers had started for them previously.

Under Ballard’s entire lengthy tenure, Indianapolis has just one playoff win and 0 division titles. Since his arrival in 2017, every other member of the AFC South has won the division at least twice.

So while this year should be part of the consideration, there’s also 8 other years that form part of that evaluation.

It’ll be interesting to see if Irsay-Gordon gives Ballard the benefit of the doubt again, who seems well regarded personally within the Colts organization.

However, there’s also a large contingency of Colts fans who believe that he’s been given more than enough opportunities to right the ship and that the bottom line results simply haven’t been good enough.

As for Colts head coach Shane Steichen, whose job arguably appears to at least be slightly safer than Ballard’s, it would make sense for him to return if the plan is for Indianapolis to also re-sign Daniel Jones (*a pending 2026 free agent)—particularly given the success that the two initially shared to begin the season together.

Even rehabbing from a torn Achilles, Jones appears to be the Colts’ best option at starting quarterback in 2026, at least given this year’s upcoming offseason market at the position (and Indy’s lack of a ‘26 first round pick).

Those two could very well be a ‘package deal’ for Indianapolis going forward, but time will tell this offseason.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ris-ballards-job-is-safe-but-far-from-certain
 
Colts elevate QB2 and backup TE from practice squad ahead of Texans game

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On Saturday, the Indianapolis Colts announced that the team has elevated quarterback Seth Henigan, as well as tight end Sean McKeon from the practice squad to the active roster ahead of Sunday’s road game against the Houston Texans.

Originally signed as an undrafted free agent by the Jacksonville Jaguars out of Memphis, the listed 6’3”, 215 pound rookie quarterback, Henigan, was 2x All-AAC for the Memphis Tigers. However, he has yet to appear in an NFL game, having spent all offseason with the Jaguars and the beginning of the season on their practice squad.

Having signed Henigan earlier this week, Colts head coach Shane Steichen indicated that if he was comfortable enough, the freshly added quarterback would serve as Indianapolis’ QB2 against the Texans behind projected rookie starting quarterback Riley Leonard. Veteran Philip Rivers will serve as the Colts’ emergency QB3, if needed. To recap, Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson (eye) was not activated off injured reserve this week.

Meanwhile, with backup tight end Will Mallory suffering from a lung injury and already ruled out, the Colts have added Sean McKeon for additional positional depth. It’s worth noting that backup tight end Drew Ogletree was already placed on injured reserve with a neck injury two weeks ago.

Regarding McKeon, the 5th-year tight end, who played four prior seasons for the Dallas Cowboys (2020-23), has 6 career receptions for 38 total receiving yards—having appeared in 45 career games (3 starts).

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...p-te-from-practice-squad-ahead-of-texans-game
 
Indianapolis Colts 2026 opponents: Home, away matchups confirmed

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The Indianapolis Colts have been locked into third place in the AFC South for a while, but their opponents for the 2026 season weren’t set until the end of the regular season.

In addition to the regular rotations against the AFC South, the Colts play the NFC East and the AFC North. The same-ranked NFC North opponent is also in the mix.

Indianapolis Colts 2026 opponents​


The Colts will play the Houston Texans, Jacksonville Jaguars, and Tennessee Titans as normal in 2026.

Indianapolis plays the AFC North in 2026 with the Baltimore Ravens and Cincinnati Bengals coming to Indiana and the Colts traveling to the Pittsburgh Steelers and Cleveland Browns.

The NFC East is the cross-conference matchup, so the Dallas Cowboys and New York Giants come to Indianapolis while the Colts go to the Philadelphia Eagles and Washington Commanders.

That brings up to the same-ranked teams in three divisions; the AFC East, the AFC West, and the NFC North. The Miami Dolphins will come to the RCA Dome in Indianapolis while the Colts travel to the AFC West’s Kansas City Chiefs and the NFC North’s Minnesota Vikings.

Indianapolis Colts 2026 home game schedule​

  • Houston Texans
  • Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Tennessee Titans
  • Baltimore Ravens
  • Cincinnati Bengals
  • Dallas Cowboys
  • New York Giants
  • Miami Dolphins

Indianapolis Colts 2026 away game schedule​


There are nine games away since the NFC has the extra home game in 2026.

  • Houston Texans
  • Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Tennessee Titans
  • Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Cleveland Browns
  • Washington Commanders
  • Philadelphia Eagles
  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Minnesota Vikings

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ponents-2026-nfl-afc-south-home-away-matchups
 
Colts’ immediate season reactions and future outlook: Ballard & Steichen confirmed for one more year

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This cursed season is finally over. Perhaps the one that hurt the most because of how it started, and how certain I was at 7-1 that this was the season it was going to be different. We can keep talking about that first 8 weeks and how perfect everything was back then, but there is no point in that, now we can take a look at what the Colts did during the entirety of the year, and how the team looks for the future. This is supposed to be a hot analysis, taking advantage that the feelings of the season are still on Colts’ fans skins, and is also made before all the off-season moves, even though technically the first (and most important) move was retaining both general manager Chris Ballard and head-coach Shane Steichen for another year.

Let’s kick things off discussing that very move. Last year I was already on team “Fire CB & SS”, and once this season ended I thought it was going to be done, given how the Colts finished the season on an eight game losing streak. Instead, new owner Carlie Irsay-Gordon went the same route her father did and gave them another year. This is going to be Chris Ballard’s 10th offseason with the team. TEN. That is a double-digit number! For a general manager that has consistently missed on the two most important positions on the football field: quarterback and pass-rusher. This roster has not improved consistently year over year. He keeps repeating mistakes. He has not won a single division title! When was the last time a general manager got so much time and opportunities despite not winning a single thing? There is absolutely no accountability. One might argue that after trading away their first round picks for the next two years it just made sense to run it back one more season with this leadership, and I understand that point, it is just that when you set a standard that you can tolerate complete mediocrity for 10 years, it reflects on your entire organization. There is no need to push yourself to be great when everyone gets just so much slack. It shows on the football team that steps up on the field every Sunday. The only players that show some heart are the ones that still need to prove themselves for that second contract (Daniel Jones, Alec Pierce, Laiatu Latu), Grover Stewart, and Quenton Nelson. The 1-tech and the left guard. I mean, this team gave Zaire Franklin a captain patch. A terrible linebacker that could not cover a tight end even if the tight end had both his legs tied up together. A player that cannot help himself from talking, and talking, and never backing things up. A player that antagonized the franchise most recognizable current media voice.

As for Steichen, he had his ups. He was really close to making the playoffs with Gardner Minshew in his first year, he was really close to making an improbable run before JT dropped the ball at the one-yard line the season after that, and he was really close this season before Daniel Jones injured his Achilles. My question is: what sample size is large enough before “Really close” becomes “You are just a bad leader that cannot get his teams to finish”? Through three years as the Colts’ head-coach, Steichen has a 25-26 record, and an absurd 8-24 record against teams that finished the season above .500.



Going over the offense, and most important of it all, the quarterback situation. I honestly have no idea what the team should do with AR. I believe that he is a young player with tons of potential that really needs a fresh start someplace else in order to blossom, but will the team trade him at his lowest, running the danger of him erupting elsewhere and making them look even worse? Daniel Jones was really good for the first 8 weeks, but the wheels started falling off before the injuries. The Steelers figured out the Colts’ offense and laid out the blueprint for how to stop them. Oh, and the injury concerns are a real issue with him, now adding a torn Achilles to the mix. Riley Leonard looked really good against a tough Texans’ defense for two quarters, but is that really enough for the Colts to trust him?

Jonathan Taylor came crashing down to Earth once opposing defenses did not need to worry about the passing game, which is understandable and not JT’s fault. Just by looking at the games it was obvious that over the final eight games Taylor was dancing, not running, behind the line of scrimmage. No matter how talented you are, if you have two guys trying to tackle you as soon as you get the football, you are not going to produce much.

#Colts WR Michael Pittman Jr.:

“I’m hoping it’s not, but if this was my last (season), then I’ve really had a great time playing here.”

“Every player is self-aware. I know I didn’t cut it. … Hopefully they bring me back, but whatever happens … I’ll always be a Colt.” pic.twitter.com/IYG72c52fo

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) January 4, 2026

The receiver and tight end group is in a better state, though the Colts will have some tough questions to ask with Michael Pittman Jr., and his massive cap hit next season. Pittman even acknowledged that himself. He is being paid like a true No. 1 receiver, yet has no games where he stepped up and took control of the offense. He is a good player, just nowhere close worth that kind of money. Alec Pierce is a free agent, and he was really productive this season, but how much is he worth is up in the air. Josh Downs is a good slot receiver that has a knack for keeping the chains moving. A great luxury to have, but not particularly a player that will keep opposing defenses on their toes. The only young player the Colts have with potential under contract is tight end Tyler Warren, who is a darn good football player and most likely the team’s starting tight end for the next decade.

The offensive line is okay. Bortolini and Goncalves should continue improving, Quenton Nelson still plays at an All-Pro level, and Bernhard Raimann was above-average. The only question is what to do with Braden Smith and the right tackle position. Jalen Travis looked decent in limited playing time, but there is no telling whether he will be the long term answer.



On the defensive side of the ball things do not get any better for this team. Again, the most important position here is edge rusher (albeit less important than quarterback). Laitu Latu played much better this season, especially taking into account the fact that the edge-rusher playing opposite him was a complete waste of space this season. Kwity Paye, I do not understand what sort of blackmail you have on the Colts to keep playing so many snaps despite generating no pressure and not stopping the run. DeForest Buckner missed plenty of time dealing with complicated injuries that could end his career, and Grover Stewart is not getting any younger. Adetomiwa Adebawore was a pleasant surprise this season, but nothing spectacular to give the Colts much hope in him becoming a starter.

When a player you manage to sign off the street after five games starts off right away and ends up playing much better than your team captain, eight year player, then there is a problem. I have made the case for Zaire Franklin to be cut last year, and I am still pounding that table. Leadership issues asside, Zaire is just not a good football player in today’s NFL. The only positive he contributes is some delayed blitzes where he can get a free look at the quarterback, but other than that he is a liability in pass-coverage that teams love to target, especially on third down, and not great against the run, ranking outside the top 30 in stops, and with a 10.7% missed tackle rate. (Zaire said last season that the high missed tackle numbers were because he all his tackling attempts. I am using a percentage here. Using percentages normalizes the effect of a high sample size).

Now finally we reach the secondary, the Colts crown jewel. The place where they invested the most, both in money and in resources. Charvarius Ward is an amazing football player, and I see the vision there. Problem is he had three concussions, including a severe one where he collided with backup tight end Drew Ogletree in warmups. Sauce Gardner luckily avoided a torn Achilles, but played just two games in a Colts’ uniform because of a calf strain. Kenny Moore is okay, age is starting to get to him and he does not have the same explosiveness he used to have, that allowed him to compensate for his size. Camryn Bynum and Nick Cross were a solid safety duo, and I liked what the Colts were doing with Cross putting him closer to the box.


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This is a harder schedule than what the Colts had this season. Before offseason moves, and free-agency, this looks like a 5-6 win season to me. On the bright side it might be finally enough to get Steichen and Ballard both out of Indianapolis, but if recent history is going to repeat itself, this team is somehow going to manage to get around .500, miss the playoffs once again, and the franchise will run it back because of insert excuse for next year here.

My opinion on this is that some fans might be happy with winning games against terrible teams and remaining somewhat competitive, and losing most of the time against teams above .500, but I have a hard time staying behind a franchise that continues to support and encourage mediocrity. Thats what this franchise is right now: mediocre. In the meantime, look at the rest of the AFC. The Jags got themselves a new head-coach that revitalized their franchise and revived Trevor Lawrence. The Patriots got a leader at head-coach and are playing their best football, looking once again like Super Bowl contenders. The Texans did what Ballard could never and built a stonewall defense that allows their offense plenty of possesions to score. I don’t think there is a single team in the AFC whose future looks more mediocre than us. I understand taking risks and failing, I understand that sometimes in the life-cycle of today’s NFL you have to suck a few years before you manage to put together a winning product once again, but what I cannot understand is how this franchise’s leadership can be so happy and give so many chances to mediocre leaders.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-ballard-steichen-confirmed-for-one-more-year
 
Colts’ Carlie Irsay-Gordon on embattled team leadership: ‘The sense of urgency has never been higher’

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According to new team owner and CEO Carlie Irsay-Gordon, the sense of urgency for the Indianapolis Colts “has never been higher” following another late season collapse that saw her franchise lose 7 straight games and be eliminated from playoff contention yet again—after such a promising 8-2 start.

As you may likely recall, the Colts have not made the playoffs since 2020, which was the COVID-19 year.

That added pressure will fall squarely on the shoulders of her top leadership, longtime general manager Chris Ballard, who’s entering Year 10 with the franchise, and soon-to-be 4th-year head coach Shane Steichen—both of whom Irsay-Gordon announced will return for at least the 2026 campaign.

Ballard is entering the last year of his current contract, which Irsay-Gordon remains undecided on a potential extension, while Steichen is signed with the Colts through 2028 on his rookie head coaching deal.

Regarding newfound optimism for Ballard, despite a lack of consistent meaningful results to-date, with just 1 playoff win and 0 division titles in his lengthy tenure, she commended him for adapting and adjusting his approach —presumably hinting at his rare aggressiveness in the first tiers of free agency last offseason.

Irsay-Gordon opened by thanking the fans for their continued support, and that she and her sisters were ‘pissed off’ at the results, which simply weren’t good enough this season.

She noted that it was a tale of two halves of the 2025 season, after injuries obliterated the Colts’ playoff hopes, but that there were a lot of encouraging signs prior to the franchise’s latest second half, late season collapse.

She reiterated that the Colts losing 7 straight games was unacceptable, and that the team will need to find a better way to finish games late and overcome adversity—turning to both Ballard and Steichen this offseason to fix the re-occurring critical issues that plagued the team later in the season and their frustrating inability to close out games.

Irsay-Gordon noted that injured starting quarterback Daniel Jones came in with a chip on his shoulder and had something to prove, giving his teammates hope in the process, before suffering his season-ending Achilles injury—which she answered that it wouldn’t be appropriate to comment on further.

She reportedly had no hesitancy on the prior Sauce Gardner deal just ahead of the NFL’s trade deadline.

In the end though, while stopping short of saying ‘playoffs or bust,‘ last year was already publicly postured as a ‘make-or-break’ season for the Colts top leadership—including Ballard, Steichen, and 3rd-year quarterback Anthony Richardson.

Why the sense of urgency wasn’t as high as it purportedly is now remains admittedly a bit peculiar?

Even though it wasn’t explicitly stated, it seems to me as though ownership is providing both Ballard and Steichen a ‘mulligan’ because of the critical second half injuries to key players that decimated the Colts’ once very promising playoff hopes to begin the year.

However, those same injuries won’t necessarily absolve Richardson, who was injured himself, and who many speculate could be on his way out of Indianapolis via an offseason trade. For the record, Irsay-Gordon said she would ‘stay in her lane’ regarding any potential evaluation of Richardson and his continued status with the team. Only saying that she was saddened by his injuries and “that both Shane and Chris are going to do the right thing” regarding the oft-injured former 2023 4th overall pick of Indianapolis.

As it stands though, Irsay-Gordon issued both Ballard and Steichen a declaration that they’ll be back for at least next season—although it’s shaping up be ‘playoffs-or-bust’ AGAIN, even if no one actually explicitly stated it. However, one would have to reasonably believe that it’s actually (and hopefully) for real this time.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ip-the-sense-of-urgency-has-never-been-higher
 
2026 Draft: Jake Golday Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘4 Height
  • 240 lb. Weight
Cincinnati LB Jake Golday (6-4, 237) signed w/Central Arkansas as a zero-star

2023 switch to LB from DL
Parents & bro played college🏀
100+ tackles, 3.5 sacks in '25

Feldman’s Freak
♦️4.24 shuttle, 10-ft 7 broad jump; recorded 22-mph; 365lb bench
♦️9.4% missed tackle rate

🎥https://t.co/nmQjyl6lCt pic.twitter.com/ec0BbjNkMJ

— Clint Goss (@NFLDraftDome) December 22, 2025

2025 Stats

  • 70 Solo Tackles
  • 31 Assist Tackles
  • 9 Missed Tackles (8.2%)
  • 43 Run Stops
  • 26/36 Catches Allowed (72.2%)
  • 227 Receiving Yards Allowed (8.7 per Catch)
  • 121 Yards After Catch Allowed (4.7 per Catch)
  • 2 TDs Allowed
  • 0 INTs
  • 3 Pass Break Ups
  • 107.1 Passer Rating Allowed
  • 76.7 Coverage Grade
  • 18 Pressures (80 Pass Rush Snaps)
  • 5 QB Hits
  • 4 Sacks
  • 1 Forced Fumble
Jake Golday continues to stand out in a really strong LB class. I think there are 3 future Pro Bowl LBs playing college football in Ohio right now.

He’s an elite athlete compared to most sub-LBs, but at 6’3”/240 you aren’t making any tradeoffs in run support. Plays blocks as… pic.twitter.com/109TUv4meX

— James Foster (@NoFlagsFilm) October 7, 2025

Awards/Accolades

  • First Team All-Big 12
  • Butkus Award Semi-Finalist
UC LB Jake Golday has had a bunch of "wow" reps through two weeks. Type of rangey, jumbo LB (6-4, 240) that everyone in the NFL is looking for. Trending towards a top-100 pick pic.twitter.com/UHhnyqNabG

— Mike Renner (@mikerenner_) September 7, 2025

Strengths

  • Bigger Linebacker but possesses excellent pursuit speed and explosiveness. Motor always runs hot and flies to the ball quickly. Was listed as # 48 on the Bruce Feldman Freaks List from the Athletic with reported 22.16 mph speed, 24 reps of 225 lbs. on the bench press, and a 4.24 second shuttle time that would have been the fastest in the 2025 Combine.
  • Can lay the Hammer on his hits, powerful at contact. Reliable tackler with very rare misses and good technique to wrap up ball carriers.
  • In Zone coverage he’s very reactive and strong acceleration to disrupt at catch point or stop underneath targets quickly.
  • Fluid hips in man coverage, can get deep into his drops with a lot of speed and matches up well against tight ends.
  • Sheds blockers well with his power profile and length. Tight ends blockers especially struggle to contain him, sheds them quickly.
  • Versatile player, lined up as an Edge Rusher at Central Arkansas before shifting to hybrid role as offball LB, Nickel Corner, and Edge in Cincinnati’s defense.
Idk if there will be a stronger position group than LB in the 2026 draft. We haven't seen more than 3 LBs taken in the top-75 since 2022, but that's going to change with

Arvell Reese, OSU
CJ Allen, Georgia
Jake Golday, UC
Sonny Styles, OSU
Anthony Hill Jr., Texas

— Mike Renner (@mikerenner_) October 13, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Can drift in his zone too much in coverage.
  • Can be faked out by QB’s eyes and pump fakes.
  • Needs to learn to adjust to routes in coverage rather than just cover assigned zone.
  • Needs to be a tick quicker in diagnosis, keeps his eyes in the backfield too long and can be caught on play action/misdirection on which hole to attack in the run game. Inexperience at Linebacker shows up in this regard.
  • Biggest OL can give him problems in block shedding, needs to learn how to evade them or improve his lower leg strength for anchor against them.

Draft Projection

Round 2 Grade


Jake Golday is a fascinating ball of traits to work with. His athleticism is outstanding and his flashes of high level coverage play give hope that he can be a 3 down LB in the NFL. Blitz heavy Defensive Coordinators that are open to moving players around in their alignments will love Golday. The ability to have a player who can at any point be a devastating blitzer, a powerful block shedder in the the run game, or a Tight End eraser in coverage and can line up at a variety of spots is highly valuable. On my initial Big Board he was the 49th Ranked Prospect, and could be available for the Colts in the middle of Round 2.

Great clip from Jake Golday (#11) out of Cincy.

He comes firing off the edge and absolutely uproots the LT en route to a very solid pocket pressure. @GoldayJake pic.twitter.com/u5Ctq1IgfQ

— Newt Westen (@NFLDraft_Westen) December 23, 2025

Odds are that Golday can STILL grow into his frame more while maintaining his movement skills, making him even more devastating for blockers in the run game. But the biggest growth for Golday will need to be not physical but mental. He needs to sharpen his instincts with more play at offball Linebacker. But once the game slows down for him, he could be one of the better offball LBs in the NFL. Patience might be required, but until then he is still a highly versatile chess piece coordinators can use. Scouts will be watching him at the Shrine Bowl to see if he can diagnose quicker and see more reps of his man coverage skills, as he was primarily used in a zone heavy scheme at Cincinnati.

For the Colts who have Germaine Pratt as a Free Agent and Zaire Franklin as a possible trade/cut candidate for cap savings, Golday would make a lot of sense. Could lineup as a MIKE or as a WILL Linebacker, as he has started at both in Cincinnati. Most likely if the Colts keep either Pratt or Zaire, Golday would slide in at WILL with his better coverage skills and lack of experience being the green dot Linebacker calling things for the Defense. Still he is a high effort player on the field, and if he attacks the film room with similar intensity it could bode very well for his NFL future at either spot.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...120105/2026-draft-jake-golday-scouting-report
 
Report: Giants request to interview Colts DC Lou Anarumo for head coach vacancy

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According to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, the New York Giants have requested to interview Indianapolis Colts veteran defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo for their open head coaching job:

The #Giants have requested permission to interview #Colts DC Lou Anarumo for their head-coaching job, source says. The Staten Island native and former NYG assistant will interview with the team in the near future.

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) January 6, 2026

The 59-year-old defensive coordinator just completed his debut season for Indianapolis, but has also been requested to interview for the Tennessee Titans open head coaching vacancy this cycle.

Anarumo was reportedly connected to the Giants opening entering this past weekend.

The Colts defense finished allowing the NFL 21st most points (24.2 avg. ppg), but finished around 14th overall in defensive DVOA. Under Anarumo, it was once a Top 10 defensive unit before injuries to its three best players: DeForest Buckner, Sauce Gardner, and Charvarius Ward clearly decimated the unit’s success down the stretch.

To me, it was more of an injury and personnel issue than coaching, as Anarumo wasn’t able to get any sort of consistent outside pass rush and had linebackers that couldn’t consistently cover the opposition. Without his starting outside cornerbacks and his best defensive lineman as well, things snowballed quickly in Indianapolis.

Nicknamed the ‘Mad Scientist,’ Anarumo has been lauded for his ability to tailor his defensive gameplans to his opponents on a weekly basis. However, like most defensive coordinators and defensive minded head coaches, as play callers, his units have slipped when they don’t have the horses or talent to match up and make plays.

In my opinion, Anarumo remains one of the better defensive coordinators in the league, and it’s a shame that we never really got to see him coach the Colts defense at full strength following the much anticipated trade deadline acquisition of former 2x NFL All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner. Maybe that will change in 2026, but we’ll see!

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...w-colts-dc-lou-anarumo-for-head-coach-vacancy
 
While Irsay-Gordon’s letter is appreciated, fans have heard it before from the Colts

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Carlie Irsay-Gordon and her sisters just concluded their first year as owners of the Indianapolis Colts. Overall, they did a good job. Seeing their involvement with the team bodes well for the future. Witnessing Irsay-Gordon swing for the fences by acquiring Sauce Gardner was a welcomed sight because watching an aggressive move not fully come to fruition is much better than always sitting on the sidelines and accepting mediocrity. As the season came to an end, a letter was written expressing disappointment and acknowledging that the franchise’s standard was not met. While appreciated, it is giving a sense of Deja vu.

Let’s get something straight before proceeding. Fans should accept her letter, the accountability, and the reasoning and decision she made to retain Chris Ballard and Shane Steichen. We don’t have to like it, but we can accept it. The problem is that Colts fans have heard it before; like, super recently before. Irsay-Gordon touches on it in her own letter, but Jim Irsay made similar statements and commitments just last offseason. He spoke of disappointment, a standard, and getting back to how it used to be. He acknowledged the frustration of not reaching the playoffs and retaining the same staff. He professed his belief in Ballard and being on the right track, yet here we are.

That wasn’t the first time either. Go back to one of the more dispiriting losses in franchise history when Carson Wentz and the Colts couldn’t beat the lowly Jaguars to make the playoffs. Irsay spoke of “all chips in”. That sounds like a championship move right there. Three years have passed since then with no playoffs or division titles. The Colts must have not had many chips to play with…

At some point, the talk needs to be backed up by results. The aggression this season was huge, both before and during the season. Carlie Irsay-Gordon green lighting the trade was something fans of Indiana sports have begged for in years past. This is not a knock on the letter or her approach. I have plenty of patience left for ownership. When is change justified though? When do the standards need to be reset with a fresh face? Irsay-Gordon is carving her own path which is currently leading her down the road of consistency. Expect consistency from this new ownership, but without results, don’t expect they will continue down the same path forever.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ated-fans-have-heard-it-before-from-the-colts
 
Colts GM Chris Ballard aims to inject youth and speed into defense

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Indianapolis, INIndianapolis Colts general manager Chris Ballard concluded with his most recent end-of-season press conference around lunchtime, fitting for someone who says they’re hungry to right the ship but whose results suggest otherwise.

Making it a decade’s worth of data points as we enter year ten of the Chris Ballard era, there’s little to no faith and/or optimism remaining with this regime. However, Ballard is heading into the final year of his contract without an extension looming for the first time.

Will he grow reckless with his decision-making and, in turn, set the franchise back on his way out?

He suggested and even nearly promised at times that he’d do right by the Irsay sisters and this organization, treating this upcoming year with the same sense of urgency that he always has, though he explicitly laid out this offseason’s blueprint, one that included a heavy emphasis on defense:

“I think our defensive front, we’ve gotta add some fuel, and we’ve gotta get younger. We’ve gotta get faster, unequivocally on defense.”

Ballard would continue mentioning the goal to get faster and younger on defense throughout the remainder of the presser. Although both would inevitably overlap, he specified that youth will be prioritized on the defensive line, whereas added speed was more generally mentioned and is to be injected throughout the entire defense.

Here’s how the Colts’ defensive line fared in 2025-26, according to Next Gen Stats:

39 sacks (T-15th)

34.3% pressure rate (16th)

2.76 sec avg time to pressure (24th)

0.88 sec avg get-off (T-23rd)

2.91 sec avg time to throw (28th)

18.3% run stuff rate (7th)

Chris Ballard did somewhat acknowledge that most of the draft capital he has used on edge rushers over the years has resulted in little to nothing. He’d go on to say, “We’ve gotta address the front and make sure we have enough,” after spending most of his response propping up 2024 first-round pick DE Laiatu Latu, who is fresh off a sophomore campaign that totaled a team-high 8.5 sacks to pair with 3 interceptions.

The youngest avenue possible is by way of the NFL Draft, but since time is running out, look for Ballard and Co. to hit the open market for an ascending player with plenty of tread left on his tires. This could very well serve as an obvious smokescreen to then pair star pass rusher Trey Hendrickson with Laiatu Latu, reuniting him with defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo, but at least there are a handful of options set to become free agents.

Star defenders DT DeForest Buckner (neck surgery) and CB Charvarius Ward (concussions) are in a bit of limbo as far as their futures go. Buckner has indicated that he plans to return for the 2026-27 season, whereas Ward has recently admitted that retirement is being contemplated after suffering three concussions this past season.

Colts defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo is set to return to the fold as of now, though head coach interviews with the Tennessee Titans and New York Giants are set. Chris Ballard and Co. did attempt to give Anarumo his best defensive roster in years with big-time acquisitions across the defensive backfield, but the cookie didn’t crumble in their favor. Lacking in the personnel department is ultimately what led to Anarumo being let go from Cincinnati, but if the stars can finally align for the Colts under Chris Ballard, an adequate stable of horses can help aid Anarumo and Co. to a deep run in the playoffs.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...d-aims-to-inject-youth-and-speed-into-defense
 
Once competing to start, Colts have two QBs with contrasting team futures in Indianapolis

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Indianapolis Colts embattled longtime general manager Chris Ballard appears as though he already knows his starting quarterback for the 2026 regular season—even if he’s not currently under contract with his club.

Further, that quarterback may not even be ready for next year’s opener, although time will tell.

Of course, that quarterback referenced by Ballard is a familiar face: Daniel Jones, who is currently recovering from a season-ending torn Achilles suffered in Week 14, and is expected to be one of the Colts’ top priorities for retaining this offseason—along with breakout starting wideout Alec Pierce.

Ballard didn’t shy away when reiterating his franchise’s commitment regarding hopefully continuing with Jones:

"I think Daniel Jones has got a really bring future here."#Colts general manager on the free agent quarterback: pic.twitter.com/DS9ccjx4ZP

— WISH-TV News (@WISHNews8) January 8, 2026

When fully healthy, Jones was on pace to be a legitimate Pro Bowler—and was still named a Pro Bowl alternate, despite being hurt late in the season and missing the Colts’ last 4 starts.

Leading the league’s most prolific offense (and a historically elite one at that) before his injuries, Jones completed 261 of 384 pass attempts (68%) for 3,101 total passing yards, 19 passing touchdowns, and 8 interceptions during 13 starts in his debut campaign in Indianapolis.

The pairing of him and head coach Shane Steichen was highly productive, and with the latter announced as returning by team owner and CEO Carlie Irsay-Gordon, it only makes sense that Jones does too for 2026.

Especially, when considering the Colts lack of clear upgrades as readily available options. The 2026 free agent quarterback market either has well past their prime veterans or inferior replacements to Jones. Regarding the draft, the Colts are without their 2026 first round pick as a result of the trade deadline Sauce Gardner deal.

Bringing back Jones on a short-term deal, even recovering from the Achilles tear, makes a lot of sense.

On the other hand, the young quarterback who lost last year’s offseason quarterback competition with Jones, soon-to-be 4th-year quarterback Anthony Richardson, was lauded by general manager Chris Ballard for being a great teammate this past year and making strides, but having had a myriad of injuries (the latest being sheer terrible luck) and speculated earlier maturity issues, could be on his way out of Indianapolis this offseason:

Chris Ballard on the future of Anthony Richardson:

“I was really happy with Anthony even after we named Daniel the starter. Unfortunately for Anthony he’s had some really bad luck… He’s made some really good strides. He’s a great teammate” pic.twitter.com/RHUfQs6HCQ

— SleeperColts (@SleeperColts) January 8, 2026

Ballard added that Richardson still has to work through his vision limitations, following the fracturing of his orbital bone, and that, “We’ll see what the future holds for him when asked about his role with the franchise in Indianapolis or elsewhere.”

When rookie quarterback Riley Leonard was brought up, who played well in the regular season finale and started in relief of Jones, Ballard commented, “If Anthony doesn’t get to where we think he can be, can Riley be the [QB]2? Every year, I think it’s a position that we have to address in some way, fashion, or form.”

Right now, one quarterback appears to be well on his way to returning as the starter, while the other’s future is murky at best in Indianapolis.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...with-contrasting-team-futures-in-indianapolis
 
Indiana football shows the Colts might not be as far away as you think

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The 2025 season for the Indianapolis Colts ended in disappointing fashion. Let me rephrase that. The 2025 season for the Indianapolis Colts ended disastrously as it was engulfed in flames and left everyone with a sick taste in their mouth. Not only did they make unfortunate history as the last team in thirty years to start 8-2 and miss the playoffs, but they appear to be heading towards next year with no real direction. Here’s the potential silver lining though. If you have watched a second of Indiana University football the last two years, you know the improbable and the hopeless can change in an instant.

I am no college football expert and fully understand the games are very different. NIL and the transfer portal dominate the game now with more than a few saying it is ruining the sport. That may be so, but it is how the “game” is played. No one has played it better than Curt Cignetti who has taken the doormat of the FBS and turned it into a powerhouse. IU football was an afterthought. Sorry, that is unfair to afterthoughts. IU football bordered on joke territory.

Two years later, IU is playing Oregon with a chance of going to the National Championship game to take on Miami. I’ll let you read that sentence as many times as you need because it is truly unbelievable; maybe one of the most unbelievable things in sports. One of the few things that gets remotely close is Tyrese Haliburton’s run though last year’s playoffs. Both were absurd, but IU’s history of losing is so long that what we are witnessing defies logic.

All of that is to say, if IU can turn things around in two short years, why can’t the Colts? Cignetti adapted to a changing landscape. The Colts could too. Instead of playing old school football, they could modernize. Instead of being sucked into a player’s RAS, they could focus on production. Instead of running back the same staff, they could look to Indiana who brought in a winner and changed the landscape of IU football, potentially forever. Is there unlimited money to spend as long as Mark Cuban writes a check? Is there a portal that all NFL players can enter if they want to each year? Of course not. The games are different, but the tenants remain the same.

Curt Cignetti has removed excuses from every other college team. Excuses should be ripped from most NFL teams as well. The Colts appear to be wandering no man’s land. That doesn’t mean they couldn’t turn it around quickly. In a parity league, last place teams can win the division the following year. Cignetti showed that if he can bring Indiana University football onto the grandest of stages, anything, anywhere can be accomplished.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...e-colts-might-not-be-as-far-away-as-you-think
 
Colts Reacts Survey Results: End of Season Blues

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Because of critical injuries down the season’s stretch run, the Indianapolis Colts, once sitting at 8-2 atop the AFC, ended up losing 7 straight games—sliding out of the playoffs for the fifth straight season.

In some regards, the franchise’s latest collapse was shocking.

However, when you consider that the team lost its starting quarterback, its primary backup quarterback, it’s former Pro Bowl veteran defensive tackle, and two former All-Pros at outside cornerback, as well as their starting right tackle and even left tackle for a time, and it may not be at all.

As far as Colts fans confidence that the franchise is headed in the right direction, it’s been a roller coaster ride of a season. In Week 1, that number was a mere 42%, but as the Colts became one of the hottest teams in football—particularly on offense, that number ballooned all the way up to 95% by Week 12.

However, after the Colts season snowballed, that number now sits at a lowly 18% fan confidence percentage.

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However, it may not be that the Colts simply had another lost season.

Rather, it may also be that team ownership announced earlier this week that embattled longtime general manager Chris Ballard would be returning for at least the 2026 campaign.

Under Ballard’s prior 9 years, the Colts have one playoff win and 0 division titles—the latter is pretty surprising, given that every other member of the AFC South has won it at least twice during that same drought.

From that sense, 60% of Colts indicated that they are “disappointed” that the team is deciding to run it back—which isn’t just with Ballard, but also with soon-to-be 4th-year head coach Shane Steichen also returning as well:

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For what it’s worth, Steichen’s seat doesn’t appear to be quite as hot as Ballard, and despite the disappointing ending, he did himself a lot of favors this season, having exceptional success with new starting quarterback Daniel Jones during his debut campaign, before he was limited and eventually lost for the season with injuries.

He also had pretty good, yet surprising success with 44-year-old unretired quarterback Philip Rivers (who hadn’t played professional football in five years) and rookie quarterback Riley Leonard in the regular season finale—given the unique circumstances surrounding each replacement starting quarterback.

Speaking of Jones, the veteran quarterback is a pending free agent and is in the midst of recovering from a season-ending Achilles injury, but is hopeful to be ready by this summer’s training camp. Despite the uncertainty surrounding the Colts starting quarterback this past year, 44% of Colts fans believe he’s the 2026 Week 1 starter:

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Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...lts-reacts-survey-results-end-of-season-blues
 
2026 Draft: Jacob Rodriguez Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘1 Height
  • 235 lb. Weight
"I was lucky my brother went to school there. So I slept on the ground next to his bed for a semester and then earned that scholarship spot later on." @TexasTechFB LB Jacob Rodriguez shares his journey to join the Red Raiders ⬇️ pic.twitter.com/zJcooaaSLL

— Big Noon Kickoff (@BNKonFOX) November 22, 2025

2025 Stats

  • 94 Solo Tackles
  • 30 Assist Tackles
  • 20 Missed Tackles (13.9%)
  • 70 Run Stops
  • 7 Forced Fumbles
  • 54 Receptions Allowed / 66 Targets = 81.8%
  • 523 Yards Allowed (7.9 YPA)
  • 343 Yards After Contact Allowed (6.4 Per Catch)
  • 2 TDs Allowed
  • 4 INTs
  • 3 Pass Break Ups
  • 84.5 Passer Rating Allowed
  • 6 Pressures (15% Pressure Rate)
  • 2 QB Hits
  • 1 Sack
Texas Tech LB Jacob Rodriguez this season:

• 95.4 PFF Run Def. Grade (1st in LBs)
• 92.9 PFF Coverage Grade (1st in LBs)
• 7(!) Forced Fumbles (1st)
• 3 INTs (2rd in LBs)
• 3 PDs (7th in LBs)
• 2 TDs (16th in LBs)
• 88 Tackles (16th)

GENERATIONAL.🌵

Needs Heisman Votes. pic.twitter.com/4gJfgh5lfS

— College Football Report (@CFBReport) November 13, 2025

Awards/Accolades

  • Chuck Bednarik Award Winner (2025, Top Defensive Player)
  • Bronco Nagurski Award Winner (2025, Best Defensive Player)
  • Dick Butkus Award Winner (2025, Best Linebacker)
  • Lombardi Award Winner (2025, Best Collegiate Player)
  • Top Defensive Player Heisman Votes Received (2025)
In the world of snubs, Jacob Rodriguez not being a Heisman Finalist is a pretty darn egregious one.

Rodriguez just had one of the best linebacker seasons we will ever see https://t.co/7QOkxMx2VG pic.twitter.com/YMuBkEIEgw

— Nash (@NashTalksTexas) December 10, 2025

Strengths

  • Rangy Linebacker with sideline to sideline ability.
  • Maniacal in his punchouts, always looking to dislodge the football with fast strikes.
  • Instinctive in Zone Coverage, Eyes are on the QB like a Hawk. Can bait QBs into errant passes. Has a WR background and his hands show it.
  • Flies to the ball for short gains. It’s a combination of strong speed, quick diagnosing, and acceleration.
  • Slippery against blockers, knows how to get around them in the run and pass.
  • Good Tackling technique.
  • Relentless motor, always running full speed in pursuit and in coverage.
Texas Tech fans have been campaigning for linebacker Jacob Rodriguez for Heisman.

Head coach Joey McGuire lined him up at quarterback so he could score a touchdown:

“Everybody is talking about QBs for Heisman, so we put him in at QB.”

pic.twitter.com/vlKwJHCESy

— Front Office Sports (@FOS) November 16, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Undersized and short arms causes most of his on tape problems:
    • Even with Good Tackling Technique his ability to wrap up ball carriers is inconsistent.
    • Lacks power in his hits, which is an issue against bigger backs and ball carriers which creates extra Yards After Contact opportunities.
    • Can Struggle to get free of blockers once they get their mitts on him. Not enough anchor to hold up against them and will get pushed back.
    • Can be thrown over the top of in contested catch situations against bigger TEs or slot WRs.
Texas Tech LB Jacob Rodriguez is in the running for “Every fan base wants this guy” on here for the 2026 Draft class.

Past winners:
2025 CJ West
2024 Javon Baker
2023 John Michael Schmitz

🎥 @Linebackers_U https://t.co/243qxICQtO pic.twitter.com/HIWH4nHWg8

— Clint Goss (@NFLDraftDome) November 20, 2025

Draft Projection

Round 3-4 Grade


In my initial Big Board Top 100, Rodriguez ranked 93rd with a Round 3-4 Grade. Coverage Linebackers are becoming more and more scarce in the NFL, making his skillset all the more coveted.

Jacob Rodriguez is the most decorated defender in the 2026 Draft class with his dominant season this past year at Texas Tech. His signature playmaking abilities on defense aren’t going away, as he can make splash plays with his Peanut punch, his coverage instincts, and ball skills. Colts fans will be reminded of Darius Shaquille Leonard with the way Rodriguez attacks the ball, which has led to many iconic moments in both players careers.

Jacob Rodriguez appreciation post. He did this exact same thing at Arizona to force a fumble and help secure the win. pic.twitter.com/UUprtlLaTA

— Dustin 🌵 (@Dustin3095) November 3, 2024
Texas Tech’s Jacob Rodriguez is a ball magnet. One of the most impactful players in the country and a massive NFL draft riser.

And of course, David Bailey helped force this bad throw pic.twitter.com/54FhQYdsgh

— Bobby Football (@Rob__Paul) November 8, 2025

But unlike Leonard, Rodriguez lacks the length that Chris Ballard has coveted in his linebackers in drafts’ past. While both playmaking LBs had their issues in block shedding due to being undersized, Rodriguez’s lack of length further exacerbates the issue and causes more problems in tackling and pass contesting. He will need a strong combine performance in both speed and explosiveness testing to help lessen some of these concerns, but there might be clear limits to what he can do in his pro career based on his measurables.

Some schemes will value him a lot more, and the Colts seemingly have adjusted their Linebacker specifications as of late with Lou Anarumo at Defensive Coordinator to not value length as much in his first year. The fit with the Colts is interesting, as his range, coverage ability, and playmaking are sorely needed at WILL Linebacker. But if he doesn’t have adequate Defensive Tackles in front of him to free him up from blockers, there can be some issues against the run.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...draft-jacob-rodriguez-scouting-report-outline
 
Interesting roundup of Colts news here. The situation in Indy feels like it's at a real crossroads.

The defensive stats tell the story - that 2.91 second average time to throw ranking 28th is brutal. You can have decent sack numbers but if you're not getting consistent pressure, quarterbacks are going to pick you apart. Ballard's acknowledgment that his edge rusher draft picks haven't panned out is pretty candid for him. Latu looks like the real deal though - 8.5 sacks and 3 picks is a nice sophomore jump.

The QB situation is what fascinates me most. Daniel Jones having a potential Pro Bowl caliber season before the Achilles tear is one of those "what could have been" storylines. The numbers were genuinely impressive - 68% completion, leading the league's top offense. But banking on an Achilles recovery for a guy whose career has been defined by injury concerns is a gamble.

And Anthony Richardson... man. The talent was always evident but between the injuries and the "vision limitations" from the orbital fracture, it sounds like Ballard is preparing everyone for a departure. That 2023 draft pick might just not work out, and sometimes that's how it goes.

The Indiana football comparison is a stretch but I get the sentiment. Cignetti's turnaround is genuinely historic. The difference is the NFL doesn't have a transfer portal letting you completely remake a roster in one offseason. Still, the point about removing excuses has some merit.

That 18% fan confidence number is rough but probably deserved after going 0-7 to close the season. Brutal way to end it.
 
Riley Leonard proves he belongs in the Colts’ long-term plans

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Riley Leonard’s performance against the Texans wasn’t just productive — it was revealing. Against one of the best defenses in football, he showed a blend of traits that translate at the NFL level: arm strength to attack tight windows and stretch defenses, confidence to let it rip without hesitation, poise, and the athleticism to extend plays when they broke down. This wasn’t a quarterback surviving on scheme or easy throws; it was a quarterback actively solving problems in real time. As the clips break down, what stands out isn’t any single throw or run, but how comfortably Leonard operated against speed, pressure, and complexity — the kind of environment that separates backups from legitimate starters.

Riley Leonard with his first pass in his first career start. TOUCHDOWN ALEC PIERCE!#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/YYnQ9dKVsm

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

This is a heck of a way to start your first NFL start! The breakdown in coverage made things easy for him, but he showed off his arm and didn’t hesitate for a second making the throw.

First down Riley Leonard with those wheels.#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/ZxXatqaLWA

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

Leonard is a legitimately fast player who can do a lot of damage with his feet. He can run away from linebackers. This clip showed that he can be used on designed quarterback runs and is a threat through the air and on the ground.

Can't have this from a guy scheduled to count $29 million against the cap next season.#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/4SnAmniYtj

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

Despite the ugly drop, Leonard shows great timing and accuracy on the throw. The timing of the throw is perfect as it finds Pittman right in the middle of a nice big gap and it’s thrown without leading him as leading him could’ve led him too far into the safety, which could’ve gotten him killed.

Big completion to Josh Downs!#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/nb09N2SKyg

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

I love this throw! Leonard does a great job of flipping his hips and setting his feet quickly before ripping a throw 40+ yards down the field without missing a beat. The efficiency of the hip flipping into his feet setting was high level and shows his mechanics are solid.

This would have been a great catch but your QB3 throws a dot to your $29 million man, this has to be six. #Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/YiheqSwm86

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

With the pocket collapsing, Leonard wisely steps up to buy some space and times the throw with his hitch. Oftentimes, throwing while hitching forward leads to an overthrown, but Leonard does a perfect job throwing a great touch throw to a horizontally moving receiver. Pittman needs to make this catch.

Great pass to Alec Pierce for another AP TD.

Riley Leonard looks like a guy…#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/VdOBQTyoUd

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

Leonard looks off and then comes back to Pierce to his right and throws a perfect ball that only Pierce could’ve caught.

Amazing quarterbacking from Riley Leonard!#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/L7OLmC8mSZ

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

The ball is slightly underthrown, but Leonard does a great job again of stepping up in the pocket, which was collapsing from the outside and hits Pierce who is wide open. A ball thrown 2-4 yards further gets Pierce in stride instead of him throwing down, but he was open enough he didn’t need to be perfect.


I love Leonard going through his full drop with a hitch and hitting Downs perfectly on time. It shows the scheme works well as the timing between the quarterback’s footwork and the receiver’s route is in sync. I love the decision and throw from Leonard, who finds the Colts’ best receiver on 3rd downs.


It doesn’t look like anything on paper, but this is a heck of a run to take it outside and then make a defender flat out miss. He’s nimble and shifty enough to make defenders miss in space.

Leonard making good decisions, checking it down and moving the chains. #Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/Q8lo8dHX0c

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

Leonard has time in the pocket here which makes reading a million times easier, but I love him scanning and then hitting his checkdown. This is especially important on 2nd down to get some yards and make 3rd down easier or in this case, get the first down.

Nice gain to Mo to set up 3rd and manageable. #Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/PpAMHZT1uf

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

This isn’t an easy throw with a defender in your face, but he performs an off platform throw and makes the right read to Mo Alie-Cox to make 3rd down a lot easier.

Nice scramble for the first for 15#Colts#ForTheShoe#Texans#INDvsHOU pic.twitter.com/xW0UwnZAr6

— Chris Shepherd (@NFLscheme) January 4, 2026

This last run was like his 1st and 2nd run mixed into one. He showed good niftiness and nimbleness to make the first defender miss and then shows great acceleration and speed to make another one miss and get the first down.

When you step back from the individual throws and runs, what makes Leonard’s performance against Houston matter is how complete it felt. He wasn’t just hitting open receivers or escaping pressure — he was operating the offense with confidence, rhythm, and purpose against a defense built to take that away. That’s the baseline for playing quarterback in the NFL, and Leonard met it. With Daniel Jones coming off a torn Achilles and no guarantee he’ll be himself right away, Leonard has now put real evidence on film that he can at least be part of the starting conversation next season. That doesn’t mean the job should be handed to him, but it does mean he’s earned the right to compete for it. If this game was any indication, Leonard isn’t just a fill-in or a developmental body — he’s a quarterback who can push the room, raise the floor, and make decisions harder for the Colts in the best possible way.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...roves-he-belongs-in-the-colts-long-term-plans
 
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