Colts announce 2025 team captains

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The Indianapolis Colts announced their 2025 team captains, which are voted on by their teammates:

  • QB Daniel Jones
  • LB Zaire Franklin
  • DT DeForest Buckner
  • OG Quenton Nelson
  • CB Kenny Moore II

It’s worth noting that Indianapolis 3rd-year head coach Shane Steichen introduced this year’s idea of what it means to be a ‘team captain’ prior to the team vote, after legendary Colts Reggie Wayne and Peyton Manning had made impassioned speeches in the past to the Horseshoe locker room respectively.

It’s worth noting that the Colts had a whopping 8 team captains last year, so they’ve since scaled back.

Last year’s Colts who are no longer team captains include quarterback Anthony Richardson, running back Jonathan Taylor, wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr., and center Ryan Kelly (*signed with Minnesota Vikings).

We can only hope that the Colts shuffled and scaled back team captaincy this upcoming campaign leads to more centralized team leadership atop and perhaps most importantly, a lot more wins on the football field.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indianapolis-colts-news/114026/colts-announce-2025-team-captains
 
How to Watch All-22 Film

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10 years ago an article like this wouldn’t make much sense. NFL All-22 film wasn’t publicly available, and to be quite honest, many fans at the time didn’t care to watch it.

That’s the one thing I love about where sports media is headed. Access to the nuances of football is at a premium. A decade ago, GMs and coaches could hide behind the idea that the public has no idea what they’re watching. But that’s harder to say in 2025.

Former players and coaches have used their platforms to become content creators. And that’s made it possible for the casual fan to learn about the complexities and nuances of football. And football media is leaning into it. The NFL even created a high-level film tool that allows fans to sort through film like they’re a coach or player.

Even I, who’s writing this article in hopes to help someone else, is learning something new everyday. In fact I have so much more to learn about the game of football. I’m trying to do that everyday. The most important thing to recognize is that just watching the game from a different angle doesn’t give you the power to draw new conclusions, but it does give you a chance to see something you might not have seen before.

So as we get ready for the NFL season, I thought I would share my process of how I watch film to create the content I do on @ColtsFilmRoom on X.


What is the situation on the field?​


The first thing you have to know is down & distance, spot on the field, and time on the clock/how many timeouts are available. Context is king. No two snaps of football are the same.

Who is on the field? And WHY are they on the field?​


The first thing I do when loading up any play is to figure out who is on the field. The NFL is a matchup league. Players ultimately mean more than plays.

So if I’m watching the Colts offense or defense, I’ll always start with the offense. The reason for that is because they dictate who comes on the field. It’s the defense’s job is to matchup how they see fit.

You only get 5 eligible players so I want to figure out who those players are. Is it 11P (1RB-1TE-3WRs)? Is it 12P (1 RB-2TE-2Wrs)? Or is it some other combination?

Once I’ve figured that out, I want to see how the defense responds to that look. Do they matchup WRs with corners? Do they match TE’s and RB’s with linebackers? All that is important because that’s what the coaches are tracking on the sideline and in the press box.

This is also how you can get a better idea of where the mismatch is. If the defense is going base to 11 personnel, that means they want to bring in bigger bodies to stop the run and think they can cover your eligibles with those bigger guys.

If they go nickel to 12P that means they probably think they can stop the run with lighter cover guys and don’t think highly of the TE’s blocking ability.

Offenses have to be skilled enough to punish that aggression when it happens.

How are they aligned?​


Alignment is the next key to the puzzle. I start with the offense again. How are they distributing the eligible WR’s on the field. Is it a 2×2 formation or is it a 3×1 formation? Are they lined up in a bunch or a stack?

If it’s a 3×1 formation, the defense has to figure out how they’re going to distribute that space to one side of the field. If it’s a bunch formation or a stack formation the defense has to figure out how they’re going to distribute the routes, since the offense is lining up that way to create traffic and get someone free.

Before I look at the defense, the last thing I want to check for is if there is anything unique. Do they have a WR lined up at RB, do they have an offensive lineman in a weird spot (a tackle-over formation)?

Next I’m looking at the defense, and this is where it get’s more complicated. But I try and look at it as if I’m the QB.

First I start with the front. How many down lineman are there and who are the obvious blitz threats. How many players are on the line of scrimmage? Is there a linebacker mugged up in the A-gap? If there’s a stud rusher, where is he aligned?

The next thing I’ll look for is the safeties. Is it one high safety or is it two high safety? That’s very important because that gives you a lot of answers to what the possible defensive look is going to be. It also tells you if there’s an advantageous look to run the football. You can look at the coverage contour (the shell of the defense) and get a good idea of what the defense is showing.

Football, on first and second down, is all about the box count. The defense can only allocate resources in so many ways. If the defense is in a two high safety look, the math is almost never on their side to defend the run. They don’t have enough guys. That means they need one guy to handle multiple gaps or find a way to eliminate a gap with a stunt.

Sometimes it isn’t always obvious what the defense is doing. Coordinators get paid to make life difficult on the QB, which means it’s even more difficult on the fan at home that hasn’t spent all week watching film.

So the next thing I’ll do is look at the nickel corner. The nickel often times is a great way to get a coverage indicator. If that corner is outside leverage then you’re expecting his safety help to be in the middle of the field. If he’s inside leverage then you can expect him not to have help in the middle of the field, which would mean it’s likely to be 2-hi defense.

If that nickel is pressed and heavy inside leverage than you can expect he’s lining up to pressure, especially if there’s a safety “capping” or lining up directly behind him getting ready to take his responsibility in coverage.

Really smart nickel corners can disguise their leverage, but for the most part, corners are aligning where they don’t want to get beat.

What happens before the snap?​


The next step is to see what happens before the ball is snapped. First offensively, is there a shift or motion? Who is the player that’s shifting or motioning? Is it a “change of strength motion”? are they motioning into the boundary or to the field?

There’s so many reasons why a team is motioning or shifting. Most of the time it’s to force the defense to communicate before the snap and create leverage or matchup advantages.

Defenses have to decide the rules for aligning their nickel corner. For the majority of defenses, it’s to the side of the passing strength. The passing strength is the side of the field with the most receivers.

Take the Colts for an example. In a basic 2×2 formation Michael Pittman and Tyler Warren will be on side of the field, while Josh Downs and Alec Pierce will be on the other side. In other words the Z and the Y will be on one side, the F and the X are on the other. The passing strength would be to the side of Downs and Pierce.

If Josh Downs motions to the other side of the formation, well now the passing strength has changed. This forces the defense to adjust. Most teams will travel their nickel across the formation. So it can look like man-coverage but it’s still zone coverage.

The other option is to play like a college defense and keep your nickel to the field side (wide side) at all times. This can be easier to adjust with motion, but makes it difficult if your best cover guy is away from the boundary and forces a mismatch elsewhere. If you notice the nickel is always aligning to the field, but then suddenly is aligning to the boundary, then you can be sure he’s blitzing or it’s man coverage.

Whatever the rule is, offenses have ways of using motion to take advantage of it— in the run and pass game.

On the defensive side, you want to see if there is any late movement or rotation that could tip off what the defense is going to do at the snap. This is why QBs use different cadences at the line of scrimmage. Is the safety creeping down? Is a corner bailing back and changing his technique?

What’s the final coverage and what’s the final play call?​


This is not always a perfect science. Because we’re never in the meeting rooms, there’s no way for us to know exactly what all 22 players are supposed to do on a play. Defenses have unique concepts where the coverage isn’t really activated unless the pattern distributes a certain way. It’s a grey area, but you can usually get a rough guess.

On the offensive side, it’s usually a bit more clear, but again not a perfect science. There’s so many intricacies between teams. The only way is to identifying patterns. If you see the same play over and over again and the QB looks like he’s reading it the same way, well you can be sure that’s probably how they teach it.

But just because someone is open doesn’t mean the QB is taught to throw it. It doesn’t work like that. In fact teams will teach the same play 20 different ways. It’s about preference. So that’s why you always have to ask why?

Why didn’t he throw that? Why did he hold the ball? Why did check the ball down? In order to evaluate a QB, you have to see where he is looking and why he is looking there.

This is where I’m usually rewinding and replaying the play over and over again. I want to see how the pre-snap read or look affected the post-snap outcome.

Then I’m rewinding and replaying again now that I know what the play call is. Why are they calling this play or what are they trying to accomplish? What were the approximate roles of all 22 defenders on this play and how might it affect a future play in the game?

Identify the trends and ALWAYS ASK WHY.​


The mistake many make when they load up film is to start with the answers, instead of always asking questions.

As I’m going through a game, I’m charting everything I can observe. This is a bit hard-core but it does help you identify the trends easier. What are they trying to do on this down and distance? What’s the mismatch they’re trying to exploit? “They did this last time they were in the Red Zone and the defense did that, what are they going to do this time? Those kind of things.

If you have a notepad or a google doc, just jot down your observations. You’ll really be surprised what you can pick up.

For example, you might see a stud rusher always line up over your worst offensive lineman in clear passing situations. Or you might see a team play a lot of man coverage on third down, so the offense adjusts and calls a man-beater in a crucial situation.

You might even see a play caller sequence plays. They might line up in one formation and run the ball, and then later in the game call a play-action off that for a big gain. You might see a WR run a post route and the corner bites so hard on the route, that they call a post-corner later in the game.

But you’ll never be able to figure out what a team is doing if you don’t ask why. Everything is for a reason, some reasons are debatedbly better than others, but it’s for a reason.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/colts-film-analysis/114042/how-to-watch-all-22-film
 
Dust settling on Colts’ initial practice squad

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Following their initial 53-man roster cuts, the Indianapolis Colts 17-man practice squad has now taken shape, although those last few spots may still remain a bit fluid—as other NFL teams continue to fine tune their final active rosters ahead of the regular season’s Week 1:

  • Linebacker Austin Ajiake
  • Running back Ulysses Bentley IV
  • Running back Khalil Herbert
  • Offensive tackle Marcellus Johnson
  • Cornerback Chris Lammons
  • Tight End Maximilian Mang
  • Tight End Sean McKeon
  • Defensive End Durrell Nchami
  • Safety Ben Nikkel
  • Wide Receiver Coleman Owen
  • Wide Receiver Tyler Scott
  • Offensive Guard Josh Sills
  • Defensive Tackle Tim Smith
  • Wide Receiver Laquon Treadwell
  • Defensive Tackle Josh Tupou
  • Center Mose Vavao
  • Safety Trey Washington

The Colts added two players to their taxi-man team, who didn’t spend any of this year’s training camp and/or preseason with them: safety Ben Nikkel (Washington Commanders) and wide receiver Tyler Scott (Chicago Bears).

Nikkel, was signed as an undrafted rookie free agent by the Commanders out of Iowa State in 2024 and had a stint on their practice squad last regular season before spending this offseason with his former club. The 6’1”, 210 pound safety has yet to appear in an NFL game.

Meanwhile, Scott is originally a 2023 4th round pick of the Chicago Bears out of Cincinnati, and of course, current Colts wideout Alec Pierce’s former Bearcats teammate. In his two years with the Bears, he has 18 receptions for 173 total receiving yards (9.6 ypr. avg.) during 28 career games (4 starts). He’s also had some experience as a kick returner at the NFL level, averaging 24.2 yards per kick return on 13 total returns.

Otherwise, there were at least a few Colts that ultimately ended up back on their practice squad who seemed like easy targets to remain within the Colts organization (*assuming they cleared league waivers): linebacker Austin Ajiake, running backs Ulysses Bentley IV and Khalil Herbert, offensive tackle Marcellus Johnson, cornerback Chris Lammons, tight end Maximilian Mang, wide receiver Coleman Owen, and defensive tackle Tim Smith among them.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...dust-settling-on-colts-initial-practice-squad
 
Colts Reacts Survey Results

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The Horseshoe Faithful have spoken on the biggest question that faced the Indianapolis Colts this very late offseason regarding who should be the team’s 2025 Week 1 starting quarterback.

In what was publicly declared as an open offseason competition by the Colts’ top leadership between 3rd-year pro Anthony Richardson and veteran free agent addition Daniel Jones, it was the latter who ultimately won out.

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Somewhat surprisingly, 51% of Colts fans here actually agreed with 3rd-year head coach Shane Steichen’s controversial decision to name Jones as his new starter over Richardson.

Perhaps, those Colts fans have given a lot of credence to the ‘reading between the lines,’ where Richardson doesn’t appear to have mastered this Colts offense nearly enough entering Year 3, and there are still some lingering questions regarding his off-the-field habits.

At any rate, the Colts have to be hoping that Jones finds a career resurgence in Indianapolis, as the latest former first round quarterback ‘reclamation’ project to do so, joining both Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold as of late.

Still, the buck may realistically stop well before that. And no, I’m not talking about Colts All-Pro DeForest Buckner!

Only 37% of Colts fans believe that Indianapolis will make the playoffs this season:

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While this realistically could be closer to a 7-9 total team next year with Jones under center—and falling short of the playoffs sticks again, you never know. For what it’s worth, the Colts have not made the playoffs since 2020, and it’ll be interesting to see whether that playoff drought for Indianapolis only continues in 2025.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/114088/colts-reacts-survey-results
 
Colts scouting well represented among Saturday’s biggest college football games

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The Indianapolis Colts scouting department was well represented during two of Saturday’s biggest college football games, namely #1 Texas at #3 Ohio State and #9 LSU at #4 Clemson:

A total of 22 clubs have at least one scout in attendance for Texas-Ohio State today, source said.

Among those in attendance (amount of reps):

• GB (3)
• IND (3)
• MIN (2)
• SF (2)
• WSH (2)
• CHI (2)
• BUF (2)
• NYG (GM Joe Schoen)
• DEN
• PIT
• NE
• LAC
• JAX

— Ryan Fowler (@_RyanFowler_) August 30, 2025
16 NFL teams that are in attendance at LSU/Clemson:

ATL, BAL, BUF, CLE, DEN, GB, IND, KC, MIA, MIN, NE, NYG, NYJ, PIT, SF, SEA

GMs that are present: Beane (BUF), Schoen (NYG) and Gutekunst (GB)

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) August 30, 2025

Now, NFL teams sending scouts to marquee matchups is nothing new (*or really college football games in general), but all four of these competing top ranked teams have potential highly regarded prospects at positions of need for the Colts as soon as next offseason, among them:

Quarterback

Cade Klubnik, Clemson

Garrett Nussmeier, LSU

Arch Manning, Texas

Wide Receiver

Aaron Anderson, LSU

Carnell Tate, Ohio State

Antonio Williams, Clemson

Interior Offensive Line

Connor Lew, Auburn

Offensive Tackle

Blake Miller, Clemson

Defensive Tackle

Peter Woods, Clemson

Edge Rusher

Kenyatta Jackson, Jr. Ohio State

T.J. Parker, Clemson

Linebacker

Anthony Hill Jr., Texas

Harold Perkins Jr., LSU

Sonny Styles, Ohio State

Whit Weeks, LSU

Cornerback

Mansoor Delane, LSU

Malik Muhammad, Texas

Avieon Terrell, Clemson

Safety

Caleb Downs, Ohio State

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...mong-saturdays-biggest-college-football-games
 
Report: Former Bucs veteran linebacker rejoining Colts on practice squad

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According to Fox Sports Greg Auman, the Indianapolis Colts are reuniting with former Tampa Bay Buccaneers veteran linebacker Anthony Walker Jr.—only this time, on the Horseshoe’s practice squad for now:

Linebacker Anthony Walker, who was unable to practice with the Bucs in training camp due to a knee injury, is signing with the Colts’ practice squad following a workout there.

— Greg Auman (@gregauman) August 29, 2025

The 30-year-old linebacker was originally a 2017 5th round pick of the Colts and made 48 career starts (appearing in 57 career games) over his first four seasons in the league with Indianapolis.

Walker Jr. is coming off a 2024 season for the Miami Dolphins defense, recording 68 tackles (34 solo), an interception, and 2 passes defensed during 14 games (8 starts). Per PFF, he earned just a +48.0 overall grade, but it also included a +69.4 run defense grade.

When he was younger with the Colts, Walker Jr. showed a knack for finding the football and was a sure tackler, but wasn’t as adept in space as when asked to defend in coverage. He’s somewhat similar to former Cincinnati Bengals linebacker Germaine Pratt in that regard, who new Colts defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo just had with his prior Cincinnati defense.

With the Colts having recently placed 2nd-year linebacker on Jaylon Carlies (ankle) on injured reserve with a designation to return, the Colts are in need of additional positional depth.

With 83 career starts with the Colts, Cleveland Browns, and Dolphins, Walker Jr. brings a wealth of experience as a veteran linebacker. The Colts organization already knows him well too, given the prior familiarity there.

With Walker Jr.’s arrival, Colts practice squad currently stands at 18 players (and IPP player Maximilian Mang already counts towards the prior 17 players), so there may be another move coming to free up a spot.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-linebacker-rejoining-colts-on-practice-squad
 
Colts officially reunite with former starting linebacker on practice squad

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The Indianapolis Colts announced on Monday that the team has added veteran linebacker Anthony Walker Jr. to the team’s practice squad and waive defensive tackle Josh Tupou in a corresponding roster move.

Originally a 2017 5th round pick of the Colts out of Northwestern, the 6’1”, 235 pound linebacker played his first four seasons in Indianapolis, making 48 career starts and recording 343 total tackles during that same span.

Walker Jr. spent last season with the Dolphins where he had 68 tackles (34 solo), a sack, 2 passes defensed, and an interception during 14 games (8 starts). He earned just a +48.0 overall grade, but that included a +69.5 run defense grade. With Indianapolis previously, he was always well regarded as a sure tackler.

The 30-year-old linebacker signed a one-year deal with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers earlier this late offseason, but suffered a knee injury and was unable to practice during training camp, leading to his eventual release.

Having recently placed 2nd-year linebacker Jaylon Carlies (ankle) on injured reserve with a designation to return, the Colts could be looking to bolster their linebacker depth.

With 83 career starts with the Colts, Cleveland Browns, and Miami Dolphins, Walker Jr. obviously has a lot of proven starting experience, and the Indianapolis organization already knows him very well.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-former-starting-linebacker-on-practice-squad
 
Colts reportedly had unsuccessful waiver claim on former local collegiate linebacker

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According to ESPN’s Field Yates, the Indianapolis Colts had their eye on another recently released linebacker that hit the league’s waiver wire following Tuesday’s initial 53-man roster cuts: former Kansas City Chiefs linebacker Cam Jones.

Players who had multiple teams try to claim them yesterday:

Jalyn Armour-Davis: Titans, Saints, Dolphins, Eagles,
Beau Brade: Giants, Jaguars
Jordan Jefferson: 49ers, Bengals
Cam Jones: Jets, Colts
Jaylon Jones: Bears, Patriots
Sam Womack: Titans, Browns

— Field Yates (@FieldYates) August 28, 2025

Despite also claiming Jacksonville Jaguars linebacker Chad Muma, the Colts placed another waiver claim (*albeit unsuccessfully), on the former Indiana Hoosiers’ standout Jones—who was claimed by the New York Jets instead based upon their superior waiver priority (after finishing with a worse record than Indianapolis last season).

The 2023 undrafted free agent out of Indiana signed with Kansas City back in 2023 and later became a Super Bowl LVIII Champion with the Chiefs. Last season, he had 19 tackles (12 solo) during 17 games (1 start).

Even after adding Muma, the Colts have been performing their due diligence on adding extra linebacker depth, having also brought in a pair of veterans, Anthony Walker Jr. and Kyzir White, for workouts on Thursday.

The team is down one key linebacker already, as 2nd-year pro Jaylon Carlies (ankle) was placed on injured reserve with a designation to return—meaning he’ll miss at least the team’s first four games.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...l-claim-on-former-local-collegiate-linebacker
 
No spotlight in Indy as zero Colts players make NFL’s Top 100

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Respect is earned.

For the first time since 2018, zero Indianapolis Colts players cracked the NFL’s annual top 100 players list. It’s the 15th edition of the NFL Network countdown in which players voted on their peers to rank the league’s 100 best players ahead of the 2025 season. There were several snubs who could justifiably feel underrated, but it’s downright disrespectful to omit the cornerstone leaders on the Colts.

Is Jonathan Taylor not a top 10 running back? Despite missing three games last season with a high ankle sprain, Taylor (102.2) was one of three tailbacks to average over 100 rushing yards per game. Taylor produced eight games with over 100 rushing yards, which was the third most in the league behind Eagles’ Saquon Barkley (11) and Ravens’ Derrick Henry (9). Taylor earned AFC Offensive Player of the Week after his 218-yard outburst with three rushing touchdowns against the Titans in Week 16, which was the second-best performance of the 2024 season by a running back.

Jonathan Taylor vs Titans a week after his costly fumbled touchdown:

29 carries for 218 rushing yards (7.5 ypc) and 3 rushing TDs pic.twitter.com/xMIneAwF74

— Noah Compton (@nerlens_) December 22, 2024

To make matters worse, ten different RBs made the top 100 list, including Barkley (No. 1 – Eagles), Henry (No. 7 – Ravens), Jahmyr Gibbs (No. 27 – Lions), Josh Jacobs (No. 33 – Packers), Joe Mixon (No. 58 – Texans), Bijan Robinson (No. 62 – Falcons), Christian McCaffrey (No. 73 – 49ers), Kyren Williams (No. 85 – Rams), James Cook (No. 89 – Bills), and Aaron Jones Sr. (No. 98 – Vikings). Ten members of the Super Bowl LIX champion Philadelphia Eagles made the cut, which is the most by a single team since the list debuted in 2011.

Jonathan Taylor in 14 games last year:

• 1,431 rushing yards (4th)
• 11 20+ yard runs (4th)
• 303 carries (5th)
• 12 TDs (T-12th)

Unless he somehow lands in the Top 10 of the @NFL’s top 100 players list hes been left off both their list and @PFSN365’s Top 100 list. Comical. pic.twitter.com/eibCS5tFX7

— SleeperColts (@SleeperColts) August 31, 2025

Either the perception of Taylor has shifted dramatically or perhaps it’s the perception of the running back position entirely. Taylor has been absent from the list since 2022, when he was last ranked at fifth overall behind wide receiver Cooper Kupp at No. 4, followed by quarterback Aaron Rodgers at No. 3 in his last season with the Packers, plus two future first-ballot inductees headed for Canton in Aaron Donald at No. 2 and Tom Brady at No. 1. Taylor has proven he can flip games on its head when healthy and his combination of burst and vision still makes him one of the league’s most dynamic skill players.

Year 6 loading for Colts running back Jonathan Taylor pic.twitter.com/9REHxS1CEv

⚾️TBG🏅 (@TBGofficial_) August 11, 2025

Two Colts captains who earned 2024 Associated Press Second-Team All-Pro honors were among the biggest snubs, including left guard Quenton Nelson and linebacker Zaire Franklin. Sure, every player has a different criterion when there are so many positions, but coming off an All-Pro campaign should be an automatic bid to being recognized in the annual top 100 list. Zero guards made the list, but it’s still surprising why an underrated, worthy candidate like Quenton Nelson was omitted in each of the last two seasons. Big Q is one of three offensive linemen in league history to be named to the Pro Bowl in each of his first seven seasons. Nelson last made the list in 2022, coming in at No. 28 overall, and has not missed a game in the last three seasons.

“the heartbeat of our team.” pic.twitter.com/29IdiEsn0C

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) August 29, 2025

Zaire Franklin is certainly the vocal leader both on the field and inside the locker room. Franklin was honorably mentioned as a notable snub following Monday’s season finale. Last year, Franklin was the first player listed when he made his debut ranked at No. 100 in 2024, then backed it up with a Second-Team All-Pro campaign. Franklin led the league with 173 total tackles and his five forced fumbles were the second-most behind Cardinals’ safety Budda Baker. No NFL player has more tackles than Franklin over the course of the last three seasons and no Colts player has more 10-plus tackle performances in franchise history. It must be frustrating for the league-leader in tackles to be left off when 13 different linebackers made this year’s list (15 if you include Packers’ Micah Parsons and Cardinals’ Josh Sweat).

We outside with Z. 😤 pic.twitter.com/f8PghO7N11

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) August 15, 2025

Defensive tackle DeForest Buckner enters his tenth NFL season after playing a career-low 11 games while dealing with a high ankle sprain last season. If the three-time pro bowler was disrupting opponents in a bigger market, there’s no doubt Buckner would be a perennial member of the top 100 list. The 6-foot-7, 295-pound, defensive tackle anchors Indy’s defensive front and continues to pose a significant threat by collapsing the pocket against the pass or stuffing the run at the line of scrimmage. Buckner last appeared on the list in 2023 at No. 71, which marked his fourth straight appearance on the list.

Although no Colts players saw their name flash across the NFL Network’s countdown, the snub actually underscores the reality of Indianapolis’ roster, a collection of underrated, undervalued, but talented football players. In a league where respect is earned on the gridiron, not just in preseason rankings, don’t be surprised if the Colts core four forces their way back onto the radar. The absence from the top 100 list may reflect a roster still seeking national recognition after suffering through the last decade of irrelevance, but within Indianapolis, the four cornerstone players such as Buckner, Franklin, Nelson and Taylor are more focused on returning the Colts back into AFC contention.

Listed below are the top 10 offensive/defensive opposing players coming to Lucas Oil Stadium in 2025.

OFFENSE​

  • 24. Brock Bowers TE – Las Vegas Raiders
  • 31. George Kittle TE – San Francisco 49ers
  • 32. Nico Collins WR – Houston Texans
  • 39. CJ Stroud QB – Houston Texans
  • 45. Trent Williams T – San Francisco 49ers
  • 47. Tyreek Hill WR – Miami Dolphins
  • 58. Joe Mixon RB – Houston Texans
  • 61. Brian Thomas Jr. WR – Jacksonville Jaguars
  • 64. Bo Nix QB – Denver Broncos
  • 65. Trey McBride TE – Arizona Cardinals

DEFENSE​

  • 9. Patrick Surtain II CB – Denver Broncos
  • 16. Fred Warner LB – San Francisco 49ers
  • 18. Derek Stingley Jr. CB – Houston Texans
  • 22. Maxx Crosby DE Las Vegas Raiders
  • 25. Danielle Hunter DE – Houston Texans
  • 34. Budda Baker S – Arizona Cardinals
  • 38. Nick Bonitto DE – Denver Broncos
  • 46. Will Anderson Jr. DE – Houston Texans
  • 57. Nick Bosa DE – San Francisco 49ers
  • 63. Josh Hines-Allen DE – Jacksonville Jaguars

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/roundt...-indy-as-zero-colts-players-make-nfls-top-100
 
Colts head coach Shane Steichen is still held in high regards as offensive play caller league-wide

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According to The Athletic’s Ted Nguyen (subscription), Indianapolis Colts head coach Shane Steichen has been somewhat surprisingly ranked in the Top 10 of NFL offensive play callers headed into the 2025 campaign.

Nguyen surveyed six current NFL defensive coordinators and defensive assistant coaches. The results were then compiled, and the Colts’ 3rd-year coach came in at the 10th and final spot listed:

10. Shane Steichen, Colts​


Steichen has had a couple of down years with Gardner Minshew and navigating the development of Anthony Richardson, but he’s had success with several different types of quarterbacks throughout his career, including helping Justin Herbert have one of the best rookie seasons of all time. He went from running a play-action-heavy, downfield passing attack to architecting the Eagles’ quarterback-run, RPO-style attack they still use.

“I think he’s caused more panic timeouts by defenses and opposing head coaches than almost anybody. He’s stolen more plays than a lot of people have,” an AFC defensive coach said.

From a play design standpoint, he’s one of the more creative coaches in the league, and some coaches believe the Colts offense would be one of the best if he had just good quarterback play. It’s understandable why he went with Daniel Jones if he believes he can “play the game through Jones” similarly to how McVay did with Goff in his early years with the Rams.

Honorable mentions: Kliff Kingsbury, Commanders; Mike McDaniel, Dolphins; Arthur Smith, Steelers; Drew Petzing, Cardinals; Greg Roman, Chargers; Joe Brady, Bills.

It’s not that Steichen isn’t widely regarded as a gifted offensive play caller, having called the offensive plays for the NFC Champion Philadelphia Eagles along the sidelines.

It’s just that after a promising rookie head coaching season in 2023, when the Steichen-led Colts ranked 10th best in total ppg [23.3 avg. ppg] (and backup quarterback Gardner Minshew made his first career Pro Bowl appearance), despite losing their starting quarterback Anthony Richardson for 13 games and their star workhorse Jonathan Taylor was limited to just 7 starts, he arguably took a step back last season until late down the stretch.

He seemed to dial up the right play more often than not during his debut head coaching campaign; however, in 2024, he, similarly to his starting quarterback, endured a sophomore slump of sorts.

The 2024 Colts ranked 17th in points per game (22.2 avg. ppg.), so they slid into being more of a league average offense. While he definitely shares in the blame for his own quarterback struggles, 2nd-year pro Anthony Richardson didn’t look comfortable in a pocket passing offense that didn’t initially utilize his mobility nearly enough and required him to hold onto the football for far too long.

It’s very possible that Steichen could regain his prior 2023 form, at least if veteran addition Daniel Jones can provide a consistently solid presence as the Colts new starting quarterback. That could mean a return to the playoffs for the Colts, who haven’t been in the postseason since the COVID-19 2020 season.

If not, Steichen could find himself as part of a sweeping house cleaning at year-end, as the Colts turnover their top leadership under transitioning ownership—following yet another season of mediocre results.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-regards-as-offensive-play-caller-league-wide
 
How important is it for the Colts to get out to a fast start?

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The goal for every team is to get out to a hot start. It builds confidence and sets the tone early. Things can always change because a fast start isn’t everything as some teams fade and others come on strong late. While ultimately desired, how important will it be for the Indianapolis Colts to start out on the right foot and string together wins from the beginning? It isn’t something they have done often over the last decade plus, and the answer to the question is two-fold.

The first way to look at this question is from a scheduling perspective. Evaluating a schedule is unscientific because last year’s studs can be this year’s duds and vice versa, but we can try to glean what we can. Always a mixed bag, there are some tough games and some winnable ones, but overall, the schedule plays out nicely for the Colts. They start with two at home, and while they do meet playoff teams from last year, it isn’t overloaded with juggernauts. Road games against the Rams, Chargers, Steelers, Texans, and Chiefs stand out the most. They have owned the Chiefs as of late, and other than the Steelers being an automatic loss based on historical data, the others, while tough, aren’t jumping out as impossible. While they face the Broncos at home in week two, they also get the Titans, Jaguars, Raiders, Cardinals, Forty-Niners, Dolphins, and technically, Falcons at home. Those are all winnable games. That means even if the Colts don’t get out to a 4-0 start, it doesn’t mean they will be left clinging for dear life as the schedule remains balanced and is certainly not the toughest one in the league.

Switching gears, here is why a fast start will be important, and it has nothing to do with the opponent. With a slow start comes intense inward focus on the GM, coach, and overall roster. Two games to start at home create the ideal setting to get out early, but it also generates pressure. Fail to win at home and two road games await. As stated above, the road games are winnable, but it is always easier to win in the friendly confines of your own stadium. The seat for Shane Steichen will become hot quickly, and Chris Ballard’s may become an ejector seat if the Colts go 1-3 or 2-5 start. It will indicate that Ballard couldn’t draft or sign a quarterback, and Steichen couldn’t correctly evaluate talent on the roster. The Colts will have blown a fortuitous opportunity to keep pace in the AFC South. That may be too much for new ownership to swallow. Both men and their quarterback could be out of work, and it could signal a complete overhaul of the roster in 2026.

So, is it important to start out fast? In a world with a different GM and coach, a slower start would be more forgiving because the team would have plenty of time and opportunity across the schedule to make up ground. That isn’t the reality facing the 2025 Colts, however. A fast or at least semi-fast start appears to be essential. The Colts cannot fall into a crater sized hole and believe patience will be afforded. They have to strike early and be above .500 as the calendar turns to late October. Fail to do that and the headlines will read of major shakeups in the organization. This season could prove as a tipping point, and it all depends on whether the Colts race out of the gate.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...s-it-for-the-colts-to-get-out-to-a-fast-start
 
Stampede Blue Staff Roundtable: NFL season predictions

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The 2025-26 NFL season is here and members of the Stampede Blue writing team decided to come together to offer their predictions for the season.



Andrew Aziz

Colts Record
: 7-10

Division Winners: Ravens, Bills, Texans, Chiefs | Lions, Eagles, Buccaneers, 49ers

Wild-Card Spots: Bengals, Broncos, Chargers | Packers, Commanders, Rams

NFL MVP: Joe Burrow

Super Bowl Matchup: Detroit Lions vs Baltimore Ravens

Super Bowl Winner: Detroit Lions

It would be silly to dismiss the Colts’ recent history when projecting their record. The overall team is strong but lack a quality quarterback, which has been the case the last few years. Over the past 4 seasons, the Colts have essentially been a 500 team, so I expect more of the same this season.
Regarding MVP, Joe Burrow could’ve been MVP last year if he had made the playoffs and I see their offense being stronger this season, so he could have a historic season.
Regarding the Super Bowl matchup, the Ravens might have the most well balanced and deepest team in the NFL, with their one weakness last year (their secondary) being fixed this offseason. The Lions still have a great team and will get a ton of players returning from injury. It’s always a crapshoot, but I’m rolling with two deep, well balanced and well coached teams with the Lions finally winning a Super Bowl.



Thomas Butler-Guerrero

Colts Record
: 9-8

Division Winners: Ravens, Bills, Texans, Chiefs | Packers, Commanders, Buccaneers, 49ers

NFL MVP: Lamar Jackson

Super Bowl Matchup: Green Bay Packers vs Baltimore Ravens

Super Bowl Winner: Baltimore Ravens

The Colts enter 2025 with more uncertainty under center as Daniel Jones is set to become the eighth different Week 1 starter over the last 9 season openers. There are some must-win matchups that are more than favorable on the schedule, but the first step in the right direction would be to beat the Dolphins at Lucas Oil Stadium Sunday to break the league’s longest winless drought in Week 1. For the Colts to get over .500, it’s vital to win the season opener, have a solid October against the Raiders, Cardinals, and Chargers, plus it will help if they sweep the season series against the last place Titans, beat the last place Raiders, while at least earning a split against the Jaguars and Texans.
Lamar Jackson is the best football player on Earth and I’m predicting another phenomenal campaign, which will result in his third NFL MVP Award. Last season, Jackson threw 43 TD passes against just 4 INTs, while becoming the first QB in NFL history to throw for over 4,000 passing yards with 900 rushing yards.
As a Cowboys diehard, it’s more painful than ever for me to suggest the Packers acquisition of All-Pro edge rusher Micah Parsons may have propelled Green Bay over the hump. It should be mentioned Brett Favre and Aaron Rodgers were both 27 at the time of their first Super Bowl appearance. Ever since Lamarvelous took over as Baltimore’s franchise QB in the middle of the 2018 season, the Ravens have posted a 70-24 when he starts, which is the second-best record in the league. The Ravens will finally get over the hump to dethrone the Chiefs, who have claimed the AFC title in five of the last six seasons. Baltimore claims its third Super Bowl title, while Jackson becomes the eighth player in league history (second active player along with Mahomes) to claim both league MVP and SB MVP in the same season.



Mateo Caliz

Colts Record
: 6-11

Division Winners: Bengals, Bills, Texans, Chiefs | Lions, Eagles, Bucs, Rams

NFL MVP: Patrick Mahomes

Super Bowl Matchup: Philadelphia Eagles vs. Buffalo Bills

Super Bowl Winner: Buffalo Bills

Let’s go by parts here. First of all I am not high at all on the Colts this season, which seems to be the overall consensus along the media, fanbase, and experts. I think that no team, no matter how good the rest of the squad is, can survive a quarterback situation where Daniel Jones wins the starting gig. It sucks because we have plenty of darn good football players in the prime of their career like Quenton Nelson, DeForest Buckner, Grover Stewart, Jonathan Taylor, Kenny Moore, and some others, but this is a quarterback driven league, and until we find the next guy, we are stuck in this weird purgatory. The Texans win the division because, you guessed it, their quarterback. C.J. Stroud is far and away the best signal-caller in the division (we were just a pick away… damn), and the rest of the team is good enough for them to make the playoffs once again in a historically weak division. I believe that Mahomes’ legacy, and status as the GOAT contender, is in serious jeopardy after such a lopsided Super Bowl loss, and he will be back with a vengeance, earning MVP honors in the process. That will not be enough however, as I predict this is the year the Bills finally get over the hurdle and make it to the Super Bowl, where they will manage to beat the Eagles and Josh Allen will get his first ring.



Elliot Denton-Singh

Colts Record
: 7-10

Division Winners: Ravens, Bills, Jaguars, Chiefs | Packers, Eagles, Buccaneers, Rams

NFL MVP: Josh Allen

Super Bowl Matchup: Green Bay Packers vs Buffalo Bills

Super Bowl Winner: Buffalo Bills

Colts will regress this year with their overall record, falling to 7-10 on the year. Daniel Jones isn’t a QB1 and will show just that when he is at the helm of the Colts offense. The offense might look slightly better but the big plays and excitement will be drained away instead. The defense will improve but not even a top 15 defense will be able to overcome the shortcomings of a Daniel Jones led offense.
Josh Allen takes his game to this next level this year, leading his team to another division title and deep into the playoffs again.
Unexpected Super Bowl matchup by most but the Packers look all in for a big year and the Bills have been patiently building a juggernaut team for years. Allen tops off an MVP year with his first ring and even snags Super Bowl MVP too.



Jay Robins

Colts Record
: 9-8

Division Winners: Ravens, Bills, Texans, Chiefs | Vikings, Eagles, Buccaneers, Seahawks

NFL MVP: Joe Burrow

Super Bowl Matchup: Philadelphia Eagles vs Baltimore Ravens

Super Bowl Winner: Baltimore Ravens

Colts have another season in the middle of the NFL field of teams. After looking at the schedule, I see the Colts having a very similar season to 2023, having 9 wins and having a chance at the playoffs with a matchup against Texans to potentially decide the division. Texans have the home field advantage, so I give them the edge there. Still too many questions with this new defense and what level of QB play the Colts can expect out of Daniel Jones and potentially Anthony Richardson this year.
I see the Lions losing their top spot in the NFC North to Vikings, which was a close battle last year. Losing both of their coordinators, especially Ben Johnson on Offense, takes a hit to their record.
Seahawks also see a rise to division champs in the NFC West. Swapping out Geno Smith & Tyler Lockett for Sam Darnold and Cooper Kupp might be lateral moves to slight upgrades at this portion of each’s careers, but the Seahawks upgraded elsewhere via the draft. Keeping their stout Defensive unit together, I could see the unit grow into a top end Defense led by a young secondary of Witherspoon, Woolen, and rookie Emmanwori & a good veteran pass rush. With Stafford’s injury concerns, the Rams could be a vulnerable 2024 division winner.
Seahawks also see a rise to division champs in the NFC West. Swapping out Geno Smith & Tyler Lockett for Sam Darnold and Cooper Kupp might be lateral moves to slight upgrades at this portion of each’s careers, but the Seahawks upgraded elsewhere via the draft. Adding Arroyo at TE, Horton at WR, and Zabel to the OL (along with a healthy Abraham Lucas) should be solid upgrades to the Offense. Keeping their stout Defensive unit together, I could see the unit grow into a top end Defense led by a young secondary of Witherspoon, Woolen, and rookie Emmanwori & a good veteran pass rush as well. With Stafford’s injury concerns, the Rams could be a vulnerable 2024 division winner.
The MVP race is a tight race between several elite AFC QBs. Lamar Jackson & Josh Allen have been the top vote getters and won each of the last 2 MVPs, and if Mahomes ups his passing stats again while leading the contender Chiefs he will get consideration too. But if Joe Burrow can carry the Bengals talent-deprived team (outside of offensive skill talent) to the playoffs, he will likely get the nod with his staggering passing stats paired with the emphasis on the word VALUABLE in the award. He got 0 1st place MVP votes despite over 70% comp%, 4,900+ passing yards, and 43 TDs to 9 INTs in large part due to just missing the playoffs in 2024 at 9-8. That should change come 2025 if the Bengals return to the playoffs.
The Super Bowl of Ravens vs Eagles might be a battle of avians, but the winner would be determined by the matchup on the ground. Lamar & Henry vs Hurts & Saquon. A spectacular showdown of Run Pass Options, Play Actions, QB Designed runs and Scrambles, and even a Tush Push or two.
The Ravens have been so close to making the Super Bowl for years with Lamar, and after surviving the gauntlet of QBs in the AFC they have to maximize this opportunity. They get to Levi Stadium this year in large part due to their rebuilt secondary of Malaki Starks at Safety from the draft and Jaire Alexander and Chidobe Awuzie at CB (if either are healthy) paired with incumbents Kyle Hamilton, Marlon Humphrey, Nate Wiggins, & TJ Tampa forming a dynamic and versatile secondary that can cause havoc to opposing passing attacks. Even in a lower volume passing attack game vs the Eagles, they will have a chance to make a key impact. Should that secondary be opportunistic enough to take the ball away from Hurts or limit AJ Brown and DeVonta Smith, the Ravens likely hoist their 3rd Lombardi Trophy and 1st in the Lamar era.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/nflgeneral/114187/stampede-blue-staff-roundtable-nfl-season-predictions
 
Colts fanbase ranked ‘least optimistic’ in annual poll

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The Indianapolis Colts enter the 2025-26 NFL season in pole position for low expectations from its fanbase. After half a decade of band-aids thrown at the sport’s most important position from a lame duck regime to the recent abrupt passing of longtime philanthropist and Colts owner, Jim Irsay, fans far and wide are ready for a changing of the guard.

The Athletic’s annual NFL Hope-O-Meter article series polled fans of all 32 franchises on how they’re feeling heading into the season. In dead last for the least optimistic fanbase leaguewide, the Colts sit at 6.8% optimism and join the New Orleans Saints (9%) as the only two fanbases to poll under 10 percent.

Each voter was also provided the opportunity to share some explanatory thoughts on their reasoning. Here are some of the more notable entries.

“Daniel Jones is our starting QB. Chris Ballard is our GM. This team has been a mess for years. I’m just excited for a reset … unfortunately, we have to wade through this quagmire of a season to get there,” one detested Colts fan explained.

“The team has given up on its first-round quarterback in favor of a player that offers no clear upside,” another pessimistic poller added. “The front office and coaching staff will be gone and the only hope is losing enough to have a chance at a good QB prospect paired with the right GM and head coach. So basically the three most important things in the NFL all being right in the same offseason. No big deal.”

There will always be two sides to a coin; thus, the vast minority of optimistic fans will stick out like a sore thumb and may even be viewed as a contrarian’s take. However, there are still some Colts fans who believe they’ll shock the world this fall.

“Colts made good additions to the defense and Daniel Jones has a good supporting cast of skill players. I think the Colts will surprise the pundits,” one brave soul added. Most may be out on the reclamation project that is Daniel Jones leading the charge, but some aren’t ready to close his book thanks to his strongest supporting cast yet.

Perhaps the ultimate example of the current state of the Colts as an organization is that irony has finally brought the Colts fanbase together under Chris Ballard’s tenure in Indianapolis. After years of turmoil, there seems to be light at the end of the tunnel. Although a full-blown rehaul may require one more season, the togetherness that, although birthed from disgust, has finally brought Colts fans on the same page is a sight to see. It may have taken too many headaches and failed visions to achieve, but a reality where the dog days are over is beginning to take shape.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/114225/colts-fanbase-ranked-least-optimistic-in-annual-poll
 
Meet The New Guy: Joining the Stampede Blue Colts Writing Crew!

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Greetings to all Stampede Blue members!

A while back, Luke Shultheis announced on a Fan Post, that Stampede Blue would be hiring another contributor. He essentially asked if there were any members who had an interest in filling this position. I was beyond interested, but what came next was a total shock to me. Seeing fellow members go to the effort to suggest to Luke that “Clydesdales” would be a good candidate for the position, really brought a smile to my face and a bit of sense that I had connected with some of you. For that, please accept my heartfelt gratitude.

Your support continued as Stampede Blue sorted through what I believe to be a good amount of qualified candidates. I know that some of you became a bit impatient, but rest assured that there was a process and it needed to be completed. Actually, I may have been announced sooner, but giving me the ability to access and create content, needed to see me be able to authenticate, which my old flip phone does not have the ability to do. We are still actually using a work-around to complete this process.

So, don’t believe that this was a lengthy contract negotiation involving salary or artistic control. I’m doing this for beer money and I am happy to share my thoughts with all of you, as I have for 10 plus years. My hope is that I continue to connect with many of you and that you find relevance and a bit of humor in what I present. I also promise to do my level best to respond to your responses to my articles. Maybe not all of them, but if there is a question in there, I’ll get you a response.

Quickly about me. Clydedales is a name I have used for everything from bowling, softball, and fantasy sports teams, to dating profiles and forum handles. It’s a simple connection in that I was quite the Budweiser fan for much of my youth. Bear in mind that I consider my 30’s and 40’s as part of my youth these days, at the ripe old age of 64. I am currently a high school Drafting and Computer Science teacher, but I am hoping to be able to retire at the end of this school year.

I was a Colts season ticket holder for 26 years, starting in year two in Indy. My disposable income conveniently took a hit the same year that Peyton’s neck did, which ended my run. I moved away from Muncie, going on 10 years ago, so I have gone through an array of ways to watch the Colts. The first was to go to a Sports Bar. This only lasted a season as I found myself spending 40 bucks on beer and wings and only occasionally being able to hear the broadcast. I was fortunate enough to have the NFL Sunday Ticket for free for two years by choosing the Dish Network as my provider.

Since then, I have had NFL Plus. I get to stream the games about five minutes after they are completed. Because of this, I don’t see a ton of other teams, because I do not watch the other games while the Colts are playing, for fear of getting spoiler alerts. It does allow me to have the “All 22”, which I hope to be able to use in the occasional article.

The articles will be centered around the “Pulse” of the fans. I’m not 100% sure of the format, but I will be offering an article or two each week. I expect to have greater details on the format of my articles as we all transition to the new login format. I hope you can have a little patience with me as I grow into this role.

Lastly, thanks again to those who were in my corner during this process. You all have given me the green light to respond to my wife’s queries about why I am spending so much time on the computer with an, “I’m working here!” response.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-joining-the-stampede-blue-colts-writing-crew
 
Report: Colts QB Anthony Richardson’s agent ‘broached’ idea of trade with GM Chris Ballard

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According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler and Dan Graziano, Indianapolis Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson’s agent representation, Deiric Jackson, ‘broached’ the idea of a possible trade with team general manager Chris Ballard when the pairing met in person last week:

The Anthony Richardson situation is one I will watch closely throughout the season. Richardson’s agent, Deiric Jackson — who publicly questioned trust in the Colts to our Stephen Holder after Richardson lost the QB battle to Jones — met in person last week with Colts general manager Chris Ballard to clear the air. Jackson called the meeting “very constructive,” and just a chance for sides to “let feelings be known.” Though a trade was not requested, the topic was broached in this meeting. Ballard reinforced that Indy has no plans to trade Richardson and still believes in the quarterback.

Richardson isn’t making any waves — he will remain professional, backing up Jones and maintaining his readiness. But part of his camp’s frustration is that all parties acknowledge patience would be required when Richardson was drafted. He entered the league with one year as a full-time high school starter and one year as a starter at Florida. He has admitted publicly that his leadership and maturity were not up to par in 2024, which contributed to his in-season benching. But despite that, Richardson is 8-7 as an NFL starter, including two fourth-quarter comebacks late last season. He also worked on improving his regimen, leadership, mechanics, diet and ability to layer short-to-intermediate throws, resulting in improvement in camp that ultimately wasn’t enough to win the job. But the Colts know Richardson has a chance to play this season. This situation feels far from settled — and raises questions about how franchises fail young quarterbacks along the way.

It’s worth noting that as the ESPN dynamic reporting duo indicates, Ballard has even since publicly noted that he is not trading his demoted 3rd-year quarterback, who was the former 4th overall pick of the 2023 NFL Draft and has been limited to just 15 starts through his first two seasons in Indianapolis.

Whether that would hold up if the Colts actually received a ‘king’s ransom’ for Richardson remains to be seen (I’m guessing not!), but it’s realistically highly unlikely right now that Indianapolis would get more than a 4th round pick, especially when looking at the recent Trey Lance trade from San Francisco to Dallas.

Given newly named starter Daniel Jones’ own struggles with consistency, turnovers, and injuries, and Richardson is arguably more valuable than that as a top backup quarterback option right now—and having one more year with a cap hit of $10.8M left on his current rookie deal (unless Indianapolis picks up his first round 5th-year club option) gives Indianapolis some added future flexibility.

The young quarterback’s early career has so far been a roller coaster ride both on-and-off the field. There’s been flashes of greatness, only to see some fairly deep lows, and the Colts can’t seem to make up their minds on whether they actually want to definitively sit or start him going forward—having yanked him both back-and-forth between starting and sitting.

It’s a fair question of whether they gave him a legitimate shot to compete this offseason or whether 3rd-year head coach Shane Steichen’s mind was already reasonably well made up after signing Jones to a 1-year, $14.5M deal.

This offseason, despite Richardson arguably outplaying him on the practice fields, Jones (at least publicly) won the job because of his consistency, reliability, and command of the Colts offense—along with his reported pristine practice and off-the-field work and study habits.

However, for a Colts organization that once preached continued patience and the need for obtaining meaningful experience regarding Richardson’s early career development, it’s strange for them to do perform a 180, especially to sit him for Jones of all potential starting quarterback options for 2025.

While Richardson showed signs of growth and maturity following his 2-game midseason benching last season—after demonstrating too much naivety and not taking the QB1 leadership role seriously enough, it leads me to wonder whether there’s more to this story behind the scenes professionally, that we simply do not know publicly yet.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-broached-idea-of-trade-with-gm-chris-ballard
 
Expectations for the 2025 Colts

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The regular season has arrived. The Super Bowl champion Philadelphia Eagles are set to take on the Dallas Cowboys to kick things off. There is a lot of excitement that comes with a new season as each team and fanbase have their own set of expectations. If a poll was taken to gauge expectations for the 2025 Indianapolis Colts, the results would most likely be all over the board. Some fans see this season being one for the drain and already have eyes for a new Manning in town. Others hope Daniel Jones reinvents himself in Naptown, while many more see something hovering closer to the middle.

This season could run off the rails. Completely. Jones has struggled during his NFL career to produce consistent results, and could find himself under a high level of pressure behind a revamped offensive line. Additionally, while all the talk is about Anthony Richardson and his injuries, Jones has his own list of ailments. A big hit from his blindside or getting crunched while taking off on a run could result in time on the shelf. Even if he manages to stay healthy, his dink and dunk strategy might prove futile. He isn’t as equipped as Richardson to sling it down the field, and the preseason didn’t calm nerves after watching his inability to sustain and finish drives. That applies more pressure on the defense. If they fail to get off the field and become warn out from defending short fields because of Jones’ turnovers, the score will rise too high to maintain contact. The secondary, while improved, could prove fragile and depth issues could be exposed, while the defensive front could also face injuries like it did in 2024. All of that would mark a disastrous season.

That is the worst case scenario. On the flip side, the Colts could take advantage of their schedule. A soft home schedule could net 8-9 wins. The road schedule is more challenging based on opponent alone, but the Colts could pick up 3-4 there as well. Jones could be this year’s Sam Darnold or Baker Mayfield. Shane Steichen’s system could be just what he needs. Tyler Warren joins the rookie of the year discussion as he becomes an X-factor on offense, and Michael Pittman Jr. returns to form, while Josh Downs and Adonai Mitchell make leaps. The key free agents in the backfield look like steals as Chris Ballard shows he finally found a crucial piece with Charvarius Ward, and Laiatu Latu shows the power of an offseason as he looks like the most improved player on the team, wreaking havoc on the defensive line. Lou Anarumo’s new scheme which thrives on deceptiveness and pressure, ushers in a new era of Colts football in which the defense is the foundation on which everything is built.

Mixing the best with the worst seems like the most realistic outcome for the Colts this year. Aspects from both scenarios will most likely be true and produce a result somewhere in the middle. The dream of an incredible season meets limitations of a roster. Could it burn to the ground or be a season to remember? Absolutely. The realistic expectation is that this team should be better overall but will also struggle at times. A new quarterback every year makes predictions difficult until we see them in action. Daniel Jones is the biggest unknown while also being the biggest driving force on the team. As he goes, so too will the Colts. Here’s hoping for the best, preparing for the worst, and expecting something in between.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/114208/expectations-for-the-2025-colts
 
Where to Watch: Dolphins at Colts for 2025 season opener

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The Indianapolis Colts (0-0) (-1.5) host the Miami Dolphins (0-0) for the 2025 regular season opener at 1 PM EST, at Lucas Oil Stadium, which the Horseshoe shockingly hasn’t won a Week 1 game since 2013.

Indianapolis will be looking to snap that embarrassingly long franchise streak, and perhaps they’ll get some help from up above, as late team owner Jim Irsay will be inducted into the franchise’s ring of honor at halftime. Irsay will be the 20th member to join the Colts’ ring of honor.

Colts fans can catch the game on local CBS or via streaming with paid subscription on NFL+, Paramount+, NFL Sunday Ticket, Youtube TV, and Fubo.

On television or streaming, Andrew Catalon (play-by-play), Charles Davis, and Jason McCourty (analysis) will be on the call for the home opener—meaning no CBS’ Spero Dedes for at least this week.

The Horseshoe faithful can also tune in on the local radio to either 93.5 and 107.5 The Fan or 97.1 Hank FM. Matt Taylor will handle play-by-play, Rick Venturi with analysis, and Larra Overton as the sideline reporter. The Colts’ Week 1 game can also be listened to nationally on Sirius XM (Channel 227).

Colts Injury Report:

RB Tyler Goodson (Elbow) – Questionable

Dolphins Injury Report:

CB Ethan Bonner (Hamstring)- Out

TE Darren Waller (Hip) – Out

RB Jaylen Wright (Knee) – Out

OL James Daniels (Ankle) – Questionable

WR Dee Eskridge (Concussion) – Questionable

All-Time Head-to-Head History: 48-29 Dolphins

Last Time Played: 16-10 Colts win at home on 10/20/2024

Broadcast Map

Official Assignment: Brad Allen

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...atch-dolphins-at-colts-for-2025-season-opener
 
Shane Steichen resurrected Daniel Jones in Colts season opener

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Indianapolis, IN — For the first time since Andrew Luck’s second year in the NFL, the Indianapolis Colts start their season with a 1-0 record after besting the Miami Dolphins 33-8 at Lucas Oil Stadium.

It was both an important and monumental day for the organization. Not only has the aforementioned curse finally been lifted, but the franchise honored its late, great owner in Jim Irsay, by inducting him into the Indianapolis Colts Ring of Honor during halftime of the game. Notable Colts players from all eras were in attendance to show their support, from Peyton Manning to Pat McAfee and everyone in between. Emotions were high and expectations low; therefore, the end result was just as shocking as it was impressive.

Not only did Shane Steichen and DC Lou Anarumo have these guys playing as together and inspired as we’ve seen in recent memory, but complementary football was on display. Most importantly, there was down-to-down consistency on the offensive side of the ball. This newfound sense of self resulted in a historical showing from the Colts’ offense, and although expectations need to be proactively tempered, there now lies concrete proof that this offense has a respectable ceiling, and that is thanks to the recent last-ditch effort of a marriage between three parties: GM Chris Ballard, HC Shane Steichen, and QB Daniel Jones.

It sounds laughable to suggest that Daniel Jones could be the missing piece to this impossible puzzle that’s been the Ballard era Colts, but Week 1 suggested, potentially fraudulently due to a subpar opponent in the Dolphins, that Indy may have found something by pairing Jones with Steichen and then meshing them with the respectable offensive weapons littered amongst the Colts offense.

It’s been regurgitated ad nauseam that the recent influx of successful reclamation projects at quarterback across the NFL. From Geno Smith to Sam Darnold and everyone in between, this recent reminder to not give up on young players has allowed faltering organizations to retool as opposed to accepting a full-blown rebuild. As with the case of Daniel Jones in Indianapolis, this marriage of sorts has an asterisk due to the overarching nature of said move. Yes, like the other examples, Jones was to be given a fresh start to right his wrongs, but with a twist. He, too, is responsible for the future(s) of Chris Ballard and Shane Steichen. Given that this season has been regarded as the last year for this regime to figure it out, the clock is ticking for all parties involved.

Since this timeline in Indianapolis had all but run its course heading into the season, skepticism toward the franchise’s uncharacteristic notion of ‘going all-in’ was more than valid. While some masochist fans wanted to see their team historically fail so that this regime in question can receive a fitting end, the majority of the fanbase had checked out entirely, not necessarily hoping for a collapse, but rather expecting one.

Fast forward to the conclusion of Week 1, Steichen and Co. have the boys humming. From start to finish, the Indianapolis Colts dominated the Miami Dolphins and secured their first 1-0 record since 2013. Not only did the offense put on a historic showing, responding to every drive with a score, but the defense played greedily as well, with multiple takeaways coming early and often. The team was firing on all cylinders, but the question(s) begs to be asked: how is such complementary football achieved in such a drastic turnaround? Sure, the basis of a contender remained, but the edge-defining key positions in football evaded them for far too long. Why now?

Perhaps, Chris Ballard was finally afforded the resources to field a worthwhile product. Maybe Shane Steichen is not in over his head as head coach. What if.. Daniel Jones is just another example of how not every quarterback is built the same, and additionally, how the ideal circumstances are necessary to not only succeed but to thrive?

That’s a lot to tackle at once, but one thing is apparent, and that is Daniel Jones has regained his sense of self. Even he, during his post-game press conference, explained that consistency throughout the season is most important, but he looked like the best version of himself during the Colts’ long-awaited Week 1 victory, and that’s beyond noteworthy.

From the very first snap, Jones was dialed in. He was locked in pre-snap as he made checks throughout the opening drive. His dropbacks were in rhythm, and his passes were on time. Jones was smooth sailing throughout this game as if this were a televised walkthrough. If his situation was so bad just a season ago that he requested he be released to continue his story elsewhere, then how, in such a short turnaround, has he mended his otherwise blatant shortcomings? You do so by providing a favorable scheme while instilling faith and confidence in one’s ability to get the job done, and Shane Steichen has done just that.

Anthony Richardson aside, this storyline is quickly blossoming into a powerful one. Not even a calendar year ago, Jones was tossed aside to be soon featured as the next line of ‘bust’ quarterback prospects. Similarly, with the ever-apparent regression of the aforementioned young quarterback, who, unfortunately, has since received that same reputation, Shane Steichen’s days as the man in charge were beginning to be counted. After just one game of the following season, both individuals have breathed new life.

After putting on a clinic of a coaching performance against the Dolphins, Steichen and Jones have fans and analysts alike giving flowers while simultaneously apologizing. As the new signal-caller, Jones put up an impressive stat line to the tune of 22-29 passes completed (76% completion), 272 passing yards, 1 passing TD, 1 sack, 114.7 passer rating, and rushed the ball seven times for 26 rushing yards and 2 rushing TDs.

Schematically, Steichen was throwing so much at the Dolphins defense that he very well could’ve checked his playbook’s index for additional ideas during the second half — and Daniel Jones handled the workload with ease. Most of the time, Jones was throwing shorter routes, but not all were quick-hitters. Of course, he was mostly money on said quick-developing routes, but even on the plays where he worked through his progressions would result in a net positive. Couple his poised decision-making with the favorable matchups thanks to Steichen’s timely and balanced playcalling performance, and it’s clear how and why the Colts offense was able to dominate so seamlessly.

Efficiency and production aside, Jones was truly operating like a savvy veteran in the season opener. He made various checks at the line, utilized his cadence for hard counts and similar tendency-breakers, all while communicating regularly with all ten of his teammates on the offense. It’s an impressive trait that is evident even from the broadcast copy, and furthermore, iz an inside look to how Jones so clearly won the starting job. It shouldn’t be an indictment on any young quarterback who is falling short, but a brief idea as to what’s required from the sport’s most important position at its highest level possible. Steichen proudly discussed this very excellence during his media availability following the win.

“He checked the protection on it. He made a few of those all game. There’s a lot of that stuff that goes on. There was another one on 4th down where they checked it and brought [cover] 0, and he threw it to [Josh] Downs. He makes a lot of plays like that for us,” Steichen went on about a question regarding an opening-drive check call that Jones had made.

“There’s no doubt. There’s all those little things — the game within the game — those are conversations that happen in offensive staff meetings,” Steichen later added when discussing how Jones utilizes cadence to further his pre-snap manipulation. “Then he brings those [takeaways] to the offensive meetings and he stands up and talks about it like, ‘Hey, here’s what I’m going to do on this one fellas,‘ and guys are locked in and ready to go.”

It’s easy to understand, even outside of the timeline’s crumbling looming overhead, why Shane Steichen would want to pair a veteran quarterback like Jones with a rock-solid roster like the Colts have. The offense’s ceiling in terms of explosives may be lowered without Anthony Richardson’s talents, but its ceiling as far as a sustainable operation goes has undeniably been raised.

As I discussed in a previous article, how we got to this point could’ve been done so in a less stressful way, but as far as the vision for the Colts’ 2025-26 season goes, I get it. Although it seemed at first like the Daniel Jones signing was window dressing to light a fire under Richardson, this regime’s last-ditch effort is a commendable one, even if it’s way past due.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...surrected-daniel-jones-in-colts-season-opener
 
Colts obliterate Dolphins 33-8 to snap decade-long drought in season opener

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The Indianapolis Colts obliterated the Miami Dolphins 33-8 in Sunday’s season opener at Lucas Oil Stadium to snap what was the NFL’s longest Week 1 drought. Indianapolis scored on all seven possessions to become the first NFL team in at least 47 years to score on every possession of a game.

The stampede sporting blue had not witnessed a season opener victory since 2013, but the 2025 Colts played with an edge from the opening kickoff following a tribute to induct late owner Jim Irsay into the Ring of Honor. The Colts emerged victorious with a brutal throttling on all three phases that would have made the franchise owner of 28 years proud.

Daniel Jones wasted no time silencing his doubters with a spectacular performance in his Colts debut. The seventh-year veteran quarterback scored three total touchdowns, including two rushing scores. Jones was an efficient 21-of-29 for 272 passing yards and flawlessly commanded Indy’s offensive unit to convert 7-of-15 on third down.

Danny dimes. pic.twitter.com/MyPDovxpTi

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) September 7, 2025

Jones set the tone from his first throw to rookie tight end Tyler Warren for a solid 14-yard gain and continued to thrive when the Dolphins bit at the play action. Indianapolis’ first-round draft pick caught three passes on the opening drive for 43 receiving yards, highlighted after Jones redesigned the play call with a nice audible to target Warren downfield for 21 yards. Warren caught a game-high seven receptions for 76 receiving yards and added three rushing yards to convert five first downs in his NFL debut.

New defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo delivered the best defensive game plan in recent memory as the Colts sacked Dolphins’ QB Tua Tagovailoa three times and picked him off twice. Miami crossed into Indianapolis territory on its first snap, but the Dolphins’ opening drive was terminated after Tagovailoa sailed a pass over the middle and was picked off by Colts’ safety Camryn Bynum. The fifth-year veteran safety signed with Indy in free agency and made an impact on his fifth snap in a Colts uniform. Bynum is known for his performative celebrations after making game-changing plays and showcased his moves after his interception. The 27-year-old sprinted to the end zone, laid on his back and glided through the blue turf to mimic a “slick back” dancing trend on TikTok, where dancers appear to float or glide in a rhythmic fashion.

INTERCEPTION FOR 0️⃣

📺CBS pic.twitter.com/SUmJgFkd6Z

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) September 7, 2025
Cam's first celly of the season.@budlight | #easytocelebrate pic.twitter.com/LF7wfO3BMs

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) September 7, 2025

The Colts went back to work following the takeaway as Jones orchestrated a 14-play scoring drive that lasted 8:18, which was longer than any drive from the 2024 season. Head coach Shane Steichen often leaned on star running back Jonathan Taylor, who led the Colts with a game-high 71 rushing yards on 18 carries. On the first play of the second frame, Jones recognized Miami’s secondary in Tampa 2 and delivered a strike down the right sideline to receiver Michael Pittman Jr. for a 27-yard passing touchdown to take a 10-0 lead. Pittman led the Colts with 80 receiving yards on six catches, including the first TD of the 2025 season.

Daniel Jones to Michael Pittman Jr. connection!#MIAvsIND on CBS/Paramount+https://t.co/HkKw7uXVnt pic.twitter.com/PYMcl8DT11

— NFL (@NFL) September 7, 2025

The Colts were in relentless pursuit of another takeaway two snaps later as cornerback Kenny Moore II strip-sacked Tagovailoa, which allowed cornerback Xavien Howard to recover the fumble inside the territory of his former team. Anarumo had a field day, mixing in different blitzes and coverages to flummox Tagovailoa and the Dolphins. It was demonstrated best when the Colts new DC used second-year edge rusher Laiatu Latu to drop back in coverage, which allowed Latu to leap in front of a route to grab his first career interception to end the Dolphins first drive of the second half.

It took five aggressive plays for the Colts to march in for another score, starting with a play-action fake to Taylor, which gave Jones enough time to let receiver Adonai Mitchell separate from his defender and reel in a diving snag near the sideline for 18 yards. Jones capped off the drive with his first rushing TD as a Colt, muscling into the end zone from 1-yard out on third-and-goal to extend the lead to 17-0 early in the second quarter. The Colts took their largest lead, 30-0, after Jones added a second sneak into the end zone for the knockout blow in the fourth quarter.

Colts kicker Spencer Shrader was automatic and made four field goals from 24, 35, 28 and 48 yards out. It was a coaching clinic as Indianapolis’ offense produced 10 explosive plays that gained at least 15 yards, while its defense allowed just four, all in the second half. The Colts converted 27 first downs and finished with 418 total yards of offense, averaging 6.0 yards per play.

The Colts (1-0) host the Denver Broncos inside Lucas Oil Stadium next Sunday. The Dolphins (0-1) head back to Miami for the home opener against the New England Patriots.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-to-snap-decade-long-drought-in-season-opener
 
What If He’s Good?

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With games that count on our doorstep, it is really hard to find optimistic prognostications for our Colts. I know that I have seen a reference to an NFL.com poll that had zero of their 31 “experts” predict the Colts to win the AFC South. I heard Michelle Smallmon of the morning Unsportsmanlike broadcast include the Colts among the bottom five teams in the NFL. Even if you just look at mock drafts for next year (you know you have) you won’t find them picking better than last year’s #14.

It is hard to call it irresponsible reporting, but it does indicate that we will see worse play at QB this year, than we have over the past two years. Straight from the Parcells quote list is, “You are what your record says you are.” Most who predict a poor record, are applying Daniel Jones’ losing record of 24 – 44 and saying that that is who he is. I don’t think many are giving him a chance to show better than he has to this point.

Right now, it seems like the best anyone is willing to concede is that he will have a better supporting cast than he had in New York. From what I have read, there seems to be equal parts, “He never had a chance” to “Good Riddance!” I believe that even their ownership said that they had done most everything possible to see him fail. I think that you would have to draw your own conclusion to whether he was the driving force on the 2022 team that made and advanced in the playoffs.

Besides the record, those who are not expecting anything more than average play will point to the average depth for his passes. Quite simply, he does not often let it fly downfield. He’s being labelled a “Check down Charlie”. Personally, I don’t think that a guy of his size would have difficulty getting it downfield, as long as he had protection and felt someone was open enough to send the ball his way.

Now that we have given some of the reasons that many are using to predict our dismal, depressing season, let’s revisit the title of the article’s title. What If He’s Good?

I want to go back to those Giant teams and point out that it is not just a narrative that they were going to be hard for anyone to take over the top. I find five guys who are listed as Pro Bowlers during Jones’ tenure, with Barkley being the only offensive player. I don’t think the lack of talent tells the whole story.

Maybe more than talent, you can look at coaching. Since being drafted and plunged into the starting role, he’s had Shurmer (now in college), Judge (now in college), and Dabol as head coaches. His offensive coordinators have been Shula (now in college), Garrett (unemployed) and Kafka (no prior coordinator experience). Given that Steichen was listed as a top 10 play caller by defensive coordinators and assistant coaches, as recently reported by Luke, I’d say that Jones is in the best position to succeed that he has ever been.

Here is a quick list of things that Jones may be able to do with the Colts that he was not able to do with the Giants.

Have time to throw.

Have reliable, talented receivers

Have a security blanket that gains yards after the catch.

Have a line that allows him to throw downfield.

Have a coach that calls the plays that give him the best chance to succeed.

I’m not even going to point out the recent success stories for QBs who have changed teams and found themselves a little later in their career. I guess I just did?

To finish up here, my role as a contributor on Stampede Blue will be to gain a fan pulse of all things Colts related. So, let me know what you think happens if Daniel Jones is good? Can he elevate us to the playoffs? Can he save jobs? If you think that he can’t be good and have an original idea to help change minds, by all means, share that as well.

Go Colts!

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indianapolis-colts-news/114106/what-if-hes-good
 
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