News Colts Team Notes

Colts Training Camp ‘Day 10’ Takeaways

gettyimages-2228533907.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts traveled to the Under Armour Performance Center in Owings Mills, Maryland, for a joint training camp practice against the Baltimore Ravens ahead of the two teams’ preseason opening matchup.

We had some web site updating today that delayed this latest takeaway rendition, so without further ado:


2227221442.jpg

AD Mitchell Steals the Show​

Colts WR AD Mitchell is dominating today’s joint practice w the Ravens.

During 1 on 1s, he caught a deep ball from Richardson, then turned to @RomeovilleKid and me and said, “I told you!”

That was a reference to what he said after the previous play, which I can’t repeat 😂😂😂

— Stephen Holder (@HolderStephen) August 5, 2025
AD Mitchell was fantastic. Like, incredible. I still don't know if it'll carry over to the regular season, because he failed to do that after a strong camp last year. But if this is a preview of what he can be someday, he is on track to be this team's best WR in the future. 2/

— Stephen Holder (@HolderStephen) August 5, 2025
#Colts WR AD Mitchell was cooking in 1-on-1s.

QB Anthony Richardson is now first up with the 1s in team period.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 5, 2025
#Colts WR AD Mitchell just burned #Ravens CB Nate Wiggins in a deep ball during 11-on-11. QB Anthony Richardson threw it on the money, and Mitchell readjusted to snatch it near the sideline and keep his feet inbound. Incredible body control.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 5, 2025

gettyimages-2219084009.jpg

Rookie Hunter Wohler Has a Day​

#Colts rookie Hunter Wohler, playing LB, just intercepted #Ravens QB Lamar Jackson in 11-on-11.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 5, 2025
Hunter Wohler had two interceptions in the final portion of practice — one on a tipped pass and the other on a forced pass from Lamar Jackson over the middle.

Defensive star of the day.

— Nate Atkins (@NateAtkins_) August 5, 2025

gettyimages-2227221219.jpg

Impressive Rookie CB Justin Walley Goes Down with Injury​

Colts rookie CB Justin Walley, one of the breakout players of camp, suffered a knee injury in today's practice. He sat out the second half with an ice pack on it.

Indy's secondary is hurting with Jaylon Jones and JuJu Brents nursing hamstrings and Charvarius Ward limited.

— Nate Atkins (@NateAtkins_) August 5, 2025

gettyimages-2225848168.jpg

Annual Joint Training Camp Skirmish​

#Colts RB Tyler Goodson was actually *not* ejected from practice, per sources. He remained in practice but just didn’t participate in any more drills. https://t.co/SiH0BFQSbS

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 6, 2025
Benches just cleared as a brawl broke out in punt drill. Nate Wiggins was throwing some punches.

— Jeff Zrebiec (@jeffzrebiec) August 5, 2025

gettyimages-2226485092.jpg

Colts Offense Collectively Shines​

My approach w training camp is to always keep things in perspective and not overhype.

That being said: What I saw today from the Colts offense vs the Ravens D was super impressive. Extremely efficient passing game w both QBs, explosive plays fr Richardson and some solid runs. 1/

— Stephen Holder (@HolderStephen) August 5, 2025

gettyimages-2226484866.jpg

No Practice for Returning LB Zaire Franklin​

#Colts LB Zaire Franklin (left ankle rehab) is not practicing today.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 5, 2025

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...amp/86138/colts-training-camp-day-10-takeaway
 
The Colts defense could turn into a major strength

gettyimages-2226484823.jpg


Recently, the defensive unit for the Indianapolis Colts has made a habit out of making pedestrian wide receivers look like studs. A lack of penetration from the front helped expose a secondary that couldn’t seem to limit huge areas of open field for the opposing offense to camp out in and wait for the ball. There was a glimmer of hope in 2023 when the defensive front set a franchise record for sacks, but that glimmer vanished in 2024. With a slew of new, improved, and healthy players, could the much maligned defense actually be a strength for the team?

It all starts at the top. Lou Anarumo is a breath of fresh air as fans had grown tired of Gus Bradley’s sit back and wait approach. There appeared to be little to no aggression or masking of coverage. A plain and uninspiring scheme left little for the opposing offense to figure out. Anarumo seeks to fix that with a much more aggressive and deceptive approach. He can do that through key free agent additions that will shore up the defense. Adding Ward and Bynum will go a long way towards allowing the Colts to be aggressive knowing they have skilled players in the backfield.

Latu appears to be a name who is benefiting from the new look and a year of experience under his belt. He is wreaking havoc at practice while the front overall appears to be having an excellent camp. A healthy Buckner and Ebukam will work wonders towards bringing the Colts back to 2023 form.

While health remains a concern, the second cornerback position could see improvement as well. Jones, Brents, and Walley are dueling it out, but having multiple options and depth will be key. Walley is turning heads and could be a good find for Ballard and his crew in last year’s draft. The linebacker corps. seems like a potential area of weakness, but having Franklin back at camp should provide a boost.

Watching the defense get shredded over the years has been tough to watch. The bottoming out moment was the Giants’ game in which they looked absolutely helpless and lost. The lack of toughness and aptitude was apparent. Change was needed and change was provided. The defense could be a major strength for the team as this unit appears to be making a jump. The proof will be on the field, but signs are that things are trending upwards.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/94606/the-colts-defense-could-turn-into-a-major-strength
 
Injuries could change the landscape for the Colts

The first preseason game is fun, at least for a little while for the average fan. Finally seeing Indianapolis Colts football on television after a long offseason is exciting. Fans eagerly awaited the return of Anthony Richardson anticipating improved quarterback play. What started off well with some on target throws fell off the rails the first time he got hit, as it knocked him out for the rest of the game. Richardson is shrugging the dislocated pinky off as nothing much, but it could shape things to come. Unfortunately, for the Colts, it wasn’t Thursday’s only bad news.

Before diving further into Richardson, the Colts released disappointing news regarding rookie Justin Walley. He will miss the entire season with a torn ACL. He was looking like a sneaky candidate to take the second starting cornerback position with both Jaylon Jones and JuJu Brents sidelined with hamstring injuries. Although the injury to Jones is being reported as more severe than Brents, there is no official timetable to return for either man. That made Walley that much more important. Now, the weakened depth took yet another hit as he will be on the sideline for all of 2025.

With the second cornerback position now in flux, the quarterback position could be as well. Not to get ahead of things because a dislocated pinky isn’t the end of the world, but it does lend itself to a few thoughts: Richardson got hit once and was knocked out of a game…oh boy, here we go, and what effect will this have moving forward? It’s almost as if someone predicted an injury could open the door for Daniel Jones. This could certainly change things. Will Richardson be back for the Colts second preseason game on August 16th? He most likely will be, but there is no guarantee. How much time is missed in the meantime? How many more first team reps will Jones get because of it? It is imperative to stress that Richardson cannot miss time. He needs every single rep he can get. Even missing a few days of practice at this point is discouraging.

It is also discouraging that he got hurt…on the first hit. This does not help the narrative that Anthony Richardson is injury prone. Being labeled as a glass quarterback is tough but starting to become fair. His injury history reads of a ten year pro, not a player entering his third year. Health will be imperative. Yes, his regular line wasn’t out there but neither was the Ravens’. Richardson understands he blew that play and paid the price for it. The best hope is he will learn from it. The sliver lining is that it is only a dislocated pinky. Next time, however, Richardson might not be so lucky.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/108347/injuries-could-change-the-landscape-for-the-colts
 
Colts Preseason Week 1 Film Breakdown: Offense

gettyimages-2228251565.jpg


It’s always important to remember that preseason is just preseason. There’s no gameplans, there’s no starters, and there’s no real takeaways to be made based strictly off of outcomes.

But there is still a lot to learn from and talk about.

THE INFAMOUS UNBLOCKED SACK


Anthony Richardson unfortunately got sacked early in his debut vs. the Ravens—which resulted in a dislocated pinkie that ended his night.

Let’s breakdown what happened here.

When you design any football play you have to decide how many people are going to be out on a route. The more people you have running routes, the more vulnerable you are to a blitz. The less people you have running routes, the more people you have blocking, so you’re less vulnerable to a blitz.

The Colts here are running a Scat passing concept. Scat refers to the RB, who is free releasing on the play into the flat. He’s running a route from the backfield with zero blocking responsibility. That means the Colts have only have the 5 offensive lineman in to protect.

When you have 5 offensive lineman protecting you are typically going to run a half-slide scheme or Scat protection.

Screenshot-2025-08-08-at-8.46.41%E2%80%AFAM.png

In Scat protection you’ll have a slide side and a man side. Imagine a line drawn down the middle of the center’s helmet that splits the defense in half. Three of the offensive lineman will “slide” to the defenders to one side of that line. They will take the 3 most dangerous guys to that side. The other side will be man on man with the two down lineman on the other side.

The QB is responsible for any player that blitzes that the OL can’t account for. If the defense sends enough guys that the OL can’t block, the QB becomes “hot”. When a QB is hot, it’s his job to get the ball to his hot read which is designed to replace the space a blitzer is coming from.

In the diagram above, you can see on the slide side, it takes two unknown rushers (the Nickel and Mike) for the QB to be hot. That’s because the OL is going three-for-two with the known rushers on that side. If none of the rushers come? Great we can get a double team. If only one comes on a blitz? Also great, because we should be able to pick it up. But if both of them come on a blitz, well now it’s the QBs responsibility.

To the man side it only takes one extra unknown rusher to blitz since the guard and tackle are occupied. The Guard will always be man-to-man with that defensive tackle, while the offensive tackle on that side has a “big dual”. A big dual just means that tackle has the most dangerous of the defensive end or Sam linebacker. Teams have different rules for sorting that out, but most of the time that tackle will “squeeze” so that the guy furthest from the QB is the free runner.

Screenshot-2025-08-08-at-8.42.08%E2%80%AFAM-1.png

Anytime a safety is “capping” a slot corner like this, that is an alert for pressure from that slot corner. Normally that safety will drop down and replace the responsibility of that slot corner who is going to blitz. See how that corner is inside leverage with his eyes on the QB? That’s to try and make it look like he’s going to blitz.

Either the center or Anthony Richardson see this and say, hey let’s get the slide going to the left because that nickel is going to be blitzing.

But the Ravens are bringing pressure from the other side. This creates a 3-over-2 scenario where Richardson is now hot.

He has to be able to either ID this pre snap, OR see that the nickel is not coming on a blitz and get this ball to the flat which is other hot.

This is a good rep to learn from, but one that shouldn’t be overly difficult for a QB in year 3.

TYLER WARREN


The rookie TE looked the part— with some things to clean up, of course.

On this first play they have Tyler running a “Short Cross” or an “Over the Ball” route in some systems. His job is to find space over the ball in between the hashes from 4-6 yards. He has the ability to break away from leverage if he’s matched.

You can see here the safety creeps down to match Warren so he breaks outside to find the space.

This is what they call a "Short Cross" on Inverted Hank.

4-6 Yards find the space in between the hashes. Has the ability to break away from leverage if matched.

It's nothing groundbreaking, but these type of easy throws weren't always available to them in the past. https://t.co/7zpYQtuJxg

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) August 8, 2025

These are the type of throws that were not always available to the Colts last year because they didn’t trust their TE’s in the passing game. Having a TE with a large catch radius that can keep the offense moving will be a major asset for the Colts.

It’s also worth noting this is a good rep from Anthony Richardson. He gets his eyes on the weak safety to see him bail to the middle of the field, and then works toward Warren and puts the ball where it needs to be.

DANIEL JONES


I liked the way Daniel Jones played. That is an unpopular opinion to some, but I thought he was decisive and did a nice job moving the offense up and down the field while executing base concepts.

Beautiful from Danny Dimes.

Great base and lined up to throw the glance, doesn't like it so he progresses to the backside dig right on time. pic.twitter.com/VK3WxpRjt8

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) August 8, 2025

Here the Colts have a play-action concept with a glance on one side, and a in-cut + crosser on the other side.

The play is designed to get the ball to that glance by drawing the LBs in and creating space for Dulin. However the Ravens LBs do a nice job getting depth and for whatever reason Daniel Jones doesn’t like what he sees. This has been a pain point for Daniel Jones in the past. When the picture changes, he has a tendency to make a bad play worse.

But I really like how he kept his base and continued through the progression to the backside dig as the final read. The ball was on time and in rhythm when the initial read wasn’t there.

Post-Wheel-Deep Stick

Would imagine this is a quarters beater.

Either way this is a fantastic play by Daniel Jones. pic.twitter.com/rAOqt9nGke

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) August 8, 2025

I also really liked this far hash throw from Daniel Jones to Tyler Warren. There’s nothing complicated about the read here, but throwing a ball from the far hash on time on a Deep Stick or Out route is what you want to see.



At the end of the day it’s just preseason. Almost all of the Colts backups went against almost all of the Ravens backups. That’s the story here. But we did see some good moments and some teachable ones that are important to.

I think Daniel Jones played well enough to make the decision to play him Week 1 a bit easier. I know he went 10/21 but I thought there were some muddy RPO reads, double moves that didn’t have a prayer, and some drops that affected that stat line. Completion percentage is not the problem with Daniel Jones. I thought he showed good command of the offense in his outing.

As for Richardson, it’s a shame that he got injured on that sack. I would have loved for him to get the opportunity to showcase any potential growth he’s made this offseason. But unfortunately he wasn’t able to. I don’t think the competition is over, but I do think Anthony Richardson has ground to make up.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/colts-...colts-preseason-week-1-film-breakdown-offense
 
Report: Colts free agent safety Ronnie Harrison Jr. signing with Falcons

gettyimages-1845474259.jpg


According to ESPN’s Adam Schefter, Indianapolis Colts free agent safety Ronnie Harrison Jr. is signing with the Atlanta Falcons:

Falcons are signing former Colts’ free agent safety Ronnie Harrison.

— Adam Schefter (@AdamSchefter) August 9, 2025

Harrison Jr. appeared in 10 games for the Colts last season, recording 2 tackles and a forced fumble.

He had initially been competing last training camp (2024) for one of the starting safety jobs with Nick Cross, who eventually won out. He was a surprising release as part of 2024’s final cuts but was later re-signed to the Indy practice squad before being promoted to the active roster in late October of last year.

Most Colts fans may remember his 2023 season in Indianapolis though, in which the SAF made 3 starts and had 2 interceptions, including one that was returned for a touchdown. He also had 20 tackles (11 solo) and 2 passes defensed during his 7 games that season.

For what it’s worth, while the Colts don’t have proven depth behind projected starters Camryn Bynum and Nick Cross at safety, rookie linebacker/safety Hunter Wohler has initially impressed and would likely be deployed in a similar role as Harrison Jr. otherwise would’ve had, if the Colts actually re-signed him.

At any rate, we wish Harrison Jr. well at his newest NFL stop!

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...afety-ronnie-harrison-jr-signing-with-falcons
 
Colts’ Shane Steichen has playing time plan for competing QBs, starters ahead of preseason Week 2

gettyimages-2229000157.jpg


According to Indianapolis Colts head coach Shane Steichen, he already has a playing time plan for his competing quarterbacks and starters ahead of his team’s Week 2 preseason game hosting the Green Bay Packers next weekend (via TheAthletic’s James Boyd).

#Colts HC Shane Steichen says QB Daniel Jones will start against the #Packers. He’ll play a couple series and then QB Anthony Richardson will replace him for the rest of the half.

The starters will play about a quarter.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) August 10, 2025

Even with 3rd-year pro Anthony Richardson getting knocked out early of last Thursday night’s preseason opener, his competition, Daniel Jones, is still expected to garner the start for Week 2 of preseason—as initially planned.

However, Jones is expected to only see a couple of offensive series, before Richardson takes over the quarterback reins for the remainder of the first half—with Colts starters expected to play around a quarter otherwise.

The encouraging injury news for Richardson is that after dislocating his right throwing hand pinky and not returning to Thursday night’s preseason opener, he was able to successfully return to training camp practice for consecutive days this weekend—and really didn’t show too many ill effects from the finger injury.

The Colts still don’t appear to have a ‘head-and-shoulders’ winner of this starting quarterback competition between Richardson and Jones to-date. Richardson appeared to initially be in the driver’s seat—offering more explosive play ability, albeit with more inconsistency, but Thursday night’s injury and his continued lack of availability because of reoccurring injuries have clouded things a bit since then.

Jones has been a little more steady, but also more unspectacular. This weekend’s home preseason game against the Packers could very well determine the winner of this ongoing Colts’ QB1 battle—especially with a strong showing from either of the two contenders.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...peting-qbs-starters-ahead-of-preseason-week-2
 
No setback for Anthony Richardson amid QB competition, while other injuries to starters pile up

TBG_0557.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts 11th training camp practice featured the longest, most intense team period yet as the scene felt more like a scrimmage during the 25-minute live session to finish Sunday’s workout at Grand Park. The most encouraging sign was witnessing Colts quarterback Anthony Richardson be a full participant in team sessions this weekend after suffering a dislocated pinky just six snaps into the preseason opener against the Baltimore Ravens.

Shane Steichen says the Colts avoided anything serious with Anthony Richardson's finger injury and that Richardson is a "full go" moving forward @heykayadams | @Colts #ForTheShoe pic.twitter.com/LAvX3G0eaJ

— Up & Adams (@UpAndAdamsShow) August 10, 2025

The 23-year-old QB opened the first 11-on-11 team drill by launching a signature missile to receiver Alec Pierce, who had to track back on the underthrown deep shot, but hauled it in regardless for an explosive 50-yard gain that drew a roaring ovation from the audience. Indianapolis’ third-year signal caller finished his reps on another solid note after stepping up in the pocket and firing a dart in the end zone to a sliding Pierce for a touchdown.

Richardson rolled with the starters in the second wave of 11-on-11 drills and started off the competitive session with another bang as he found receiver Michael Pittman Jr. on a crosser for a 28-yard gain. The Colts starting offense ultimately stalled out with goal-to-go after Richardson overthrew rookie Tyler Warren, who was wide open in the end zone. Colts head coach Shane Steichen tried to motivate his unit and instill a sense of urgency by shouting “we’ve got to have it” before the offense broke the huddle on fourth-and-goal from the 10-yard-line, but Richardson chose to throw in the flat to running back Jonathan Taylor, who was stopped short.

“We had some two-minute situations, some sudden-change situations, some got-to-have-it situations where they have got to mentally lock in in those situations because it’s going to happen in a couple weeks from now,” Steichen said. “So, we have got to make sure we are engaged, locked in at every situation, especially when you are tired because that is when you make the most errors. If you want to build that camaraderie and that freaking competitive endurance, it starts out here in training camp.”

Quarterback Daniel Jones tried to match Richardson with a deep shot on his first play with the second-team offense and delivered a strong throw, but his pass was dropped by receiver Anthony Gould. The seventh-year veteran was off-target with his next two deep passes, then took a sack on his fourth snap. Jones started a rough 2-for-7 in Sunday’s initial team period and one of those completions was a designed screen pass that was blown up by the backup safeties.

When Jones got his turn to command the starting offense, he flipped the switch and thrived while orchestrating Steichen’s brilliant play action and run-pass-option scheme. Jones recognized the defense biting on the run and connected with Josh Downs and Warren across the middle for a pair of first downs. Jones finished his reps with the starters strong as he hit Mitchell on an out route for a 10-yard touchdown.

It’s fair to say neither QB has separated himself from his counterpart, especially due to Richardson’s small sample size of six snaps in the preseason opener. Steichen reiterated after practice Jones will get the starting nod and “play a couple of series” in next Sunday’s preseason game against the Green Bay Packers, then Richardson is expected to close out the first half. The plan is for both offensive and defensive starters to play one quarter.

Colts head coach Shane Steichen locked in evaluating the QB competition between Anthony Richardson and Daniel Jones. 📸 pic.twitter.com/TMg7jRjfOC

⚾️TBG🏅 (@TBGofficial_) August 11, 2025

Steichen told the team his goal was to “create a competitive edge” and leave camp in tip-top shape. There is tremendous value to have players battle through the veritable finish line with a competitive 25-minute team session at the end of practice. When every single player is forced to give maximum effort, those bubble players dueling to make an NFL roster must find another gear in order to compete.

“I thought, good day of work today,” Steichen told reporters in his opening statement. “Obviously, the heat and stuff, I think it’s really good for our guys. This bulk of training camp, these next three blocks are going to be big for us. Tomorrow is going to be another big day. A whole scrimmage day, and then we will get a day off. But just the competitive endurance we need during the season. We need practices like that to get better.”

Tight end Will Mallory continued to stand out during 7-on-7 drills as he made three catches for nearly 50 yards while working with both quarterbacks on the first and second-team offense. When the Colts addressed their biggest need in the first round of April’s NFL Draft, there was no guaranteed roster spot for Mallory entering his third season with the Colts. Mallory has made the most of his opportunities to work his way up the depth chart and has been a productive, effective target in the passing game.

It has not been smooth sailing as the injuries keep piling up in Indianapolis and Sunday was no different. Pierce left the practice field due to experiencing groin discomfort following a deep shot on the first play of 7-on-7 drills. Indy’s fourth-year deep threat later returned to the field with a trainer to stretch on the adjacent practice field, but left immediately after with the same trainer.

Linebacker Zaire Franklin participated in team drills for the first time this summer after mostly being limited to rehab while he recovers from a cleanup procedure he had on his ankle this offseason. Cornerback Kenny Moore II walked off the practice field after experiencing some intense discomfort in his knee, adding yet another concern to a depleted unit. Steichen did not give timetables for the return of either Jaylon Jones or JuJu Brents, who are out with hamstring injuries. Three other potential defensive starters did not practice Sunday, including safety Nick Cross (hip flexor), edge rusher Kwity Paye (groin), and linebacker Jaylon Carlies (ankle).

The Colts host two more practices at Grand Park, including Monday afternoon before wrapping up training camp with a joint-practice against the Packers on Thursday.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...tion-while-other-injuries-to-starters-pile-up
 
Colts veteran CB Kenny Moore II’s knee injury reportedly ‘not a major injury’

gettyimages-2227221571.jpg


Indianapolis Colts fans may be able to safely exhale, as the right knee injury that veteran cornerback Kenny Moore II suffered in Sunday late afternoon’s training camp practice is reportedly ‘not a major injury’ (via ESPN’s Stephen Holder):

Colts CB Kenny Moore II left practice Sunday with a knee injury that looked concerning. Details are still murky, but the early word is this is not a major injury. No info on timeline etc yet.

— Stephen Holder (@HolderStephen) August 11, 2025

After injuring his right knee during Sunday’s practice, Moore II did not return.

That being said, it doesn’t sound like Moore II is completely ‘out of the woods’ yet and still could potentially miss some time, as avoiding major injury doesn’t necessarily mean that upcoming game days aren’t potentially in jeopardy. We’ll just have to see as soon as we receive a more conclusive update regarding his injury status.

It’s certainly better than the worst case scenario though, especially for an increasingly depleted Colts cornerback room that recently lost promising projected rookie starter Justin Walley to a season-ending torn ACL from training camp practice and has both of its remaining contenders for the starting outside CB2 job, Jaylon Jones and JuJu Brents, currently unavailable nursing hamstring injuries.

While the Colts fortunately still have Samuel Womack III as a capable replacement at starting cornerback, it’s a secondary that cannot afford to lose its longest tenured veteran and team captain for a significant period of time just ahead of the 2025 campaign.

From that standpoint, this latest report regarding Moore II’s ongoing injury status is at least encouraging.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...iis-knee-injury-reportedly-not-a-major-injury
 
Shrader is looking to bring stability to the Colts kicking game

2226485243.jpg


So, the title of the article is slightly misleading because there is no official starting kicker named for the 2025 Indianapolis Colts. There is still a two man battle occurring at camp, but just because two men are still out there, it doesn’t mean one doesn’t have a clear advantage. Spencer Shrader appears to be establishing himself as the kicker for this year and ideally, for years to come. That would be the best case scenario after the Colts went from experiencing incredible consistency over the years to finding themselves hunting for a reliable and permanent replacement for Adam Vinatieri.

Joel Erickson breaks down how Shrader has the advantage from several angles. He is kicking at a better clip throughout camp so far, which is normally the fast track to being named the stater; edging out rookie Maddux Trujillo at a rate of 87% to 78%. Not only is he winning camp, he has NFL experience. That is huge.

An injury to former kicker Matt Gay led to Shrader kicking in the season opener a year ago. Weeks later, Shrader got signed to a spot start by the Jets, and he made both of his field-goal attempts for New York. Two weeks later, Shrader was signed for another spot start by the Chiefs, and he made three field goals, including the game-winner, against the Panthers.

Having played in the NFL and making game winning kicks, Shrader has the advantage over any rookie. Is 87% a perfect percentage? Of course not. Shrader did made three fields goals, but he also missed a 52-yarder in the preseason opener against the Ravens. The coaching staff understands Shrader is not a finished, polished product. He is only a second year player and never really found a home last season, bouncing around the league making spot starts. While he isn’t fully where he needs to be, the experience he gained is incredibly valuable. The confidence fans had in Vinatieri all those years will be hard to replace. That was built on longevity, consistency, and being other worldly clutch. Vinatieris don’t come around every day. If Shrader can provide long term reliability and deliver at a high clip, he could find a permanent home in Indianapolis.

The kicking battle continues, but Spencer Shrader is inching closer to assuming the role of opening day starter. Barring an injury, it appears his for the taking. Colts fans should relish the fact that a kicker is creating distance and showing strong ability. His first preseason game wasn’t perfect, but it was solid. Will he need to make more of those 52-yarders than he misses? Absolutely. Give him a chance to show what he can do, though. Only then can we can see if he can be part of the long term vision. Vinatieris don’t come around every day, but once in a blue moon, someone close just might.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...-to-bring-stability-to-the-colts-kicking-game
 
2025 Indianapolis Colts Training Camp Journal: Richardson Rebounds, Jones Provides Steady Hand

imagn-26749360.jpg


Westfield, IN — The Indianapolis Colts concluded their last training camp practice before scrimmaging the Green Bay Packers earlier this afternoon. After a recent slew of injuries to a number of its key players in recent days, staying healthy and executing at a high level was pertinent today, and the Colts did just that.

Particularly from an offensive standpoint, and more specifically regarding quarterback play, Indy slowly but surely stacked a promising performance. Although some mishaps certainly occurred throughout the team period-heavy practice, both quarterbacks had strong showings overall.

It’s important to note that the Colts’ CB room is currently down bad, as everyone atop the depth chart who is not named Charvarius Ward is dealing with various degrees of injury. Zaire Franklin has since returned to the fray, but additional injuries to Kwity Paye and Nick Cross make it difficult to assess quarterback play. Regardless, both quarterbacks showed up today.

It was a massive rebound for third-year QB Anthony Richardson, a near necessity after two subpar showings that came before it. Of course, the revisiting of his injury-prone status after dislocating his pinkie finger on a play that he was responsible for didn’t help his case.

Richardson began the day with a couple of slight misses to Ashton Dulin — a throw behind that could’ve netted a defensive pass interference call and a true overthrown end zone shot. He started to find a groove after checking it down to Jonathan Taylor in the flats and then finding TE Will Mallory twice for big gains. One of the two throws was a textbook example of staying calm in the pocket, climbing, and then rolling right before dropping into Mallory’s hands, whereas the other throw was a 50-50 ball that Mallory mossed the defender for.

That groove continued into his next 11-on-11 session with the backups as Richardson was quick and efficient through the air. Thanks to a couple of option rushes that helped set the tone, Richardson went 3-3 to Dulin and Mallory. Finding both on quick hitches for two of three completions, his other hookup to Dulin was a seamless connection on a wide open corner route.

That momentum quickly came to a screeching halt after DC Lou Anarumo got into his head via exotic pre-snap looks. Even though on the play prior, aka Richardson’s first snap with the starters on the day, Jonathan Taylor broke one for a legitimate 80-yard TD rush after a beautiful jump cut set him free, Richardson let the aforementioned look from Anarumo play him. It looked as if 7-8 defenders were rushing the passer pre-snap, but after Camryn Bynum and Zaire Franklin fell back into coverage post-snap, Charvarius Ward baited Richardson into throwing Michael Pittman Jr.‘s way and came down with the easy interception.

Richardson would find Tyler Warren on a designed TE screen, but a DeForest Buckner sack on the next play rattled the young quarterback. Visibly frustrated, Richardson immediately punted the ball into the Grand Park woods. He would 2-3 on his final two pass attempts of the session, with the lone incompletion being an overthrown deep shot to Josh Downs that was nearly picked off by the nearby defender.

Perhaps the Richardson of new, he and the starters rebounded in a big way during their next team period. He was an efficient 3-4 through the air, with the lone incompletion coming off an impressive PBU by rookie S/LB Hunter Wohler. Tyler Warren was the target receiver and was ligned up as the X receiver with Wohler manned up on him with no safety help. Richardson saw this matchup and took his shot, a solid 50-50 ball that Wohler won — an impressive rookie-on-rookie crime. As for the three completions, Richardson found DJ Giddens on a wide open check down in the middle of the field via a jump pass, hit Michael Pittman Jr. on an intermediate out route before going back to him on an RPO slant concept.

Finally, in his last period of the day, an 11-on-11 drive scenario from just beyond midfield, Richardson arguably had his single-best 11-on-11 session of training camp thus far. I’d have to sift through my notes to be sure, but off the top of my head, it’s hard to remember a camp drive as punctual as this was. Richardson kicked off the session in question with a beautiful find to Tyler Warren up the right sideline. He followed that up with a quick slant to Michael Pittman Jr., and then once again found Warren on a nice connection in the soft spot of the zone coverage. Richardson would run it in himself for the score, and then capped off the strong session by finding Josh Downs in the corner of the end zone for the 2-point conversion.

As the article title suggests, Daniel Jones did what he did best and provided a steady hand for the offense. In his first 11-on-11 session of the day, Jones hit on two slants to Josh Downs and Michael Pittman Jr., found Jonathan Taylor in the flats after a quick DeForest Buckner pressure, was quickly sacked by a trio of Laiatu Latu, DeForest Buckner, and Samson Ebukam, before finishing the period with a nice 15-yard out route to AD Mitchell.

Jones wasn’t as punctual in his next drive with the starters, but still remained constant for the most part. As headliners, an underthrown deep shot to a wide open AD Mitchell was completed after he timed up pivot to contort his body for the grab over Charvarius Ward — a play that was ruled complete from the sideline referee, but was heavily argued by fans and Colts defenders alike. He then found Mitchell again for a much cleaner connection on a 15-yard in-breaking route.

Reverting, Jones found his comfort zone in his next 11-on-11 session with the backups. He pretty much hit on all quick-hitting routes (outside of a Jelani Woods drop), excelled within shorter play-action concepts, and found rookie RB DJ Giddens leaking for a nice chunk gain. Tyler Goodson capped off the drive in question with an untouched wide zone scamper for the score. Jones wasn’t nearly as comfortable in his next session, but did find WR Anthony Gould on numerous occasions, a few times underneath, and once on an impressively layered throw up the left hash. He finished the drive with a QB rush for minimal yardage, found Gould on an aforementioned out-breaker that fell short of the goal line, and had his final pass attempt batted down by S Daniel Scott.

In his last session of the afternoon, Jones put on his worst period of the day, though it sticks out as such after having such a strong showing that preceded it. He started strong with back-to-back connections to Ashton Dulin, a quick slant for several, and a comeback for 10-15 yards. Jones followed that up with three straight off-target throws, though a couple of which could be argued to have been calculated throwaways, with the third incompletion being an underthrown ball caused by pressure. He rebounded to finish the day, hitting Dulin for the TD and taking it himself for the 2-point conversion.

It truly does feel like a coin flip for who comes out on top of this QB competition. Anthony Richardson has undeniably improved, even if said progression has been marginal. Daniel Jones slightly takes the nod as the more consistent passer, though his limited playstyle and potential make you question the long-term decision. If I had to predict, I’d say they end up rolling with Anthony Richardson, so long as this trajectory continues. More than anything, I believe Richardson had a natural favor going his way due to this regime living in a ‘you’ve made your bed now sleep in it’ scenario. There’s certainly not a ton of inspiration coming from this room, but both quarterbacks are slowly but surely finding their place within the Colts offense.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ichardson-rebounds-jones-provides-steady-hand
 
Colts’ 2025 Fantasy Outlook

2227569646.jpg


Most fantasy drafts are right around the corner, and if you are like me, you probably want to be as informed as possible before making the decisions that will shape your mood in the upcoming 17 weeks. Contrary to popular opinion, Chat-GPT is nowhere close to being a reliable fantasy tool, so you all are forced to rely on us, the bloggers, to try and get an edge over your competition. I say this because I was running mock drafts and thought about trying AI out, with just the first prompt “Give me some advice for my half-PPR league, drafting from the #6 spot, what are your thoughts on Ashton Jeanty, Tyler Warren, and Xavier Worthy” — Chat told me that Jeanty was probably not getting many touches in a Jags’ offense featuring Travis Hunter, that Tyler Warren played for the Steelers, with quarterback Russell Wilson who likes to target tight ends, and that Xavier Worthy was a rookie. After that I got the idea to make this article, and I took a mental note never to trust AI fantasy football advice.

Anthony Richardson, quarterback​


DO NOT DRAFT Anthony Richardson. Do not make the same mistake I did a year ago. You might be enticed by his rushing ability and potential. You might be thinking that this is finally the year where he puts it all together and becomes a viable fantasy starting quarterback, and that could very well be true, but the risk is just way too high. Not only do you have a concerning injury history, but even when he actually was available it was boom-or-bust. If you can get him in the final round, or as an UDFA as a low-risk high-reward stash in case he breaks out then go for it, but do not draft him thinking you found a gem and potential league winner, because you will be running the risk of being severely disappointed.

Jonathan Taylor, running back​


Taylor offers plenty of value as a bell-cow running back, with no #2 option eating into his snaps or taking away potential red-zone carries. He finished off last season scorching hot, and could be once again the focal point of the Colts’ offense. While the pass-catching upside is not there with Taylor, he still is a running back that can easily erupt for 20+ points, and he is still relatively young for the position. It also helps that the Colts have a really good offensive line in front of him. Keep in mind that last season’s numbers are skewed because of an impressive final three weeks, and that if the Colts’ passing attack once again falters then opposing defenses could easily stack the box against him, limiting his yards. Taylor is an excellent value pick in the late second, early third round.

Tyler Warren, tight end​


An absolute must-draft if you are in a dynasty league, an intriguing option if not. Warren offers plenty of versatility on a position where there are not many good options for fantasy football this season. He was by far the most productive tight end in college, he could be used as a runner and wildcat quarterback, and Shane Steichen loves getting the tight ends involved. The main issue with Warren is that none of that matters if the quarterback cannot hit a pass under 10 yards, which is where tight ends usually make their money. There is also the ever-present risk of drafting rookie tight ends, a position where the learning curve is steep. So far Warren is going as the #11 tight end in most drafts, but his upside is much better than that.

Michael Pittman Jr., wide receiver​


Potential league winner right here. MPJ has a criminally low #50 wide receiver rank so far, and going after names like Jayden Reed, Cooper Kupp, Stefon Diggs, and Chris Godwin. Despite having his worst season so far last year, Pittman still got over 100 catches, and while he never was a productive scorer in the NFL (4.2 touchdowns per season last 4 years), volume itself warrants a higher position. If the Colts’ offense improves then you get a #1 wide receiver on a good offense, and even if the quarterback situation remains a mess Pittman is most likely due a mean-reversal. He is also now fully healthy after a bad back bothered him most of last season.

Josh Downs, wide receiver​


A higher ADP than Michael Pittman Jr., despite getting fewer targets, Downs is an intriguing fantasy option. He has put together two solid seasons, missed just three games, and looks like Richardson’s favourite target. Like MPJ, his stock is limited by the quarterback situation in Indianapolis, but one could make the case that Downs is quarterback-proof because of his ability to generate consistent separation and safe hands. He is a high-floor option that could be available in the 5th or 6th round, and while he will most likely not win you your league, if you are thin at wide receiver he should be a nice security blanket.

Alec Pierce, wide receiver​


Pierce’s last season will be extremely hard to replicate, as the numbers he got on such low volume are just not sustainable: 22.3 yards per reception (5 more than #2), and 7 touchdowns on just 37 receptions. That is already priced in, with an ADP similar to that of AD Mitchell. Pierce is just not worth a draft pick at the moment, but worth keeping an eye on because players on contract years tend to give 110% effort.

D/ST​


New defensive coordinator, several big signings in free-agency, and some reinforcements via draft. The Colts’ defense should at least be better than last year, and an easier schedule certainly helps. Still, this is not an unit worth using a draft pick on right now, and most experts agree with that. Wait the first few weeks and if they actually show signs of improvement then get them at the least as a streaming option.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/fantasyfootball/113471/colts-2025-fantasy-outlook
 
Early returns indicate Colts got it right with Warren

2219083918.jpg


Tyler Warren has yet to take an official snap for the Indianapolis Colts, but already he is looking like a stud pick at 14th overall in this year’s NFL draft. The fact that Warren fell to 14th shocked many. The pre-draft rumors were that he could go as high as 5th, which is extremely high for the tight end position, but any player at any position who looks like a game changer is a justifiable pick at any spot. Produce at a high level and no one will ever care when a player was taken. Yes, it is still extremely early, but everything is coming up roses for the young man out of Penn State to start his professional career.

While it wasn’t the highest hurdle in the world, Warren is already tabbed as the number one tight end on the Colts depth chart. Understanding that tight end was one of, if not the, weakest units on the roster, Warren taking over isn’t unbelievable, but it is highly impressive and encouraging. Fans got a taste of what he can do in the first preseason game against the Ravens. Warren caught three passes for 40-yards and would have had more had a screen not been called back for holding. In short work, Warren showed he is ready for NFL action. Was it against Baltimore’s regular starters? No, but Warren looked comfortable and was finding plenty of open space to operate and move the chains.

Warren is the type of player teams dream about. Can a tight end alter a franchise? Maybe not like a quarterback can, but they can certainly make an impact. Antonio Gates, Tony Gonzalez, and Tavis Kelce were all incredible threats and major parts of prolific offenses. Warren could be that for the Colts. Anthony Richardson already looks incredibly comfortable getting the ball where Warren can turn up field and pick up extra yards. Elite tight end play is something the Colts haven’t seen since Dallas Clark. Clark was an X-factor. Warren could be a bona fide star.

Yes, yes, yes. It’s understood that it is only preseason, and preseason studs can turn into regular season duds. There is still so much of Tyler Warren’s story to write, so ordaining him as the next Gates or putting him in the Hall of Fame is more than premature. With that said, it doesn’t appear he could look much better or be receiving more praise. The alternative to these things is also an option for young players. He could look lost, out of shape, or even uninterested. So, while things could change, Warren is starting his career off on the right foot. Just keep putting one foot in front of the other and he could have a long and fruitful NFL journey.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/113484/early-returns-indicate-colts-got-it-right-with-warren
 
Mum’s the word on the Colts opening day starter at quarterback

imagn-26851037.jpg


A quarterback competition is raging in Westfield, Indiana. Chris Ballard intended it to be this way. The battle for the number one spot on the depth chart at quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts is shaping up to be just how the general manager saw it from the beginning. Is the competition following the natural course set before it, or is it more of a self-fulfilling prophecy that is sweeping over the head coach? Either way, the man in charge of the franchise in 2025, Shane Steichen, has yet to make a decision regarding who will start on day one.

Neither quarterback has completely awed the coaching staff. Neither man has completely fallen on his face either. It has been a training camp filled with highs and lows, where the only thing that has been consistent is inconsistency. Anthony Richardson has had more flashes, yet Daniel Jones has displayed a steadier hand. Both are needed to be truly successful in the NFL, but neither quarterback can seem to put it all together day in and day out. It is always a question of how much posturing Steichen or any head coach for that matter does when it comes to decisions such as this, but neither player is making it easy on him.

The favorite to start day one has to be Richardson as Jones hasn’t shown enough at this point to upend the incumbent. Steichen was given a quarterback competition and is under no real timeline to name a starter until the last moment, however. While it seems a starter could be named now, the question is, why? Jones will start against the Packers, and Richardson will take over to play the majority of the first half. It follows the script that has been set for a while now. There is no need for Steichen to deviate and no reason for him to preemptively name a starter when he can still collect data and analysis. This is a major decision that could alter the franchise. It could cost people their jobs or make them stars. Get this decision wrong and it could be Steichen’s last as a head coach for the Colts. Get it wrong and he won’t be the only head that rolls.

With zero pressure and plenty of time and opportunity to evaluate, it should be expected, although potentially frustrating at times, that no decision has yet been reached. The game against the Packers on Saturday will be the last big test of the offseason for both players, but it doesn’t mean it will produce an automatic response from Shane Steichen regarding the direction of the franchise at quarterback. There will be ample opportunity to sit back and further evaluate. A starter will be named before the Colts kick off against the Dolphins on September 7th. That much we know. It is just the when, what is taking so long, and the who, we will have to ponder until then.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...-the-colts-opening-day-starter-at-quarterback
 
2025 Indianapolis Colts Training Camp Journal: QB Competition Begins to Take Shape in Finale vs Packers

imagn-26850207.jpg


Westfield, IN — The Indianapolis Colts concluded training camp festivities at Grand Park Sports Campus with a scrimmage-centric joint practice with the Green Bay Packers.

While both teams were gearing up for their preseason matchup at Lucas Oil Stadium this Saturday, the joint practice was an invaluable evaluation period for the Colts’ ongoing quarterback competition. Unfortunately for Colts fans, media, and personnel alike, little to no headway was made in this department. However, reading the tea leaves suggests the starter has already been named, and the competition is just being played out.

As is tradition for any NFL joint practice, the scrimmage-heavy day was split into two fields of work. On one side, the Colts offense scrimmaged against the Packers defense, and vice versa. As a result, I was only able to focus on one phase of the game — I was hyper-focused on the illustrious quarterback competition — though I did catch a few 11-on-11 sessions between the Colts’ starting defense and the Malik Willis-led Packers offense.

It was an honor being able to cover the Colts’ training camp at Grand Park in full, but this marks the last time I’ll be a credentialed media member this season. Without further ado, here are my notes from the Colts’ last training camp practice of the year, a quarterback-focused observation:

To close out training camp, instead of one quarterback separating themself from the competition, we saw more of the same. Not only was it the goal to have someone deemed the winner by this point, but progression was the main objective. That isn’t to suggest that Anthony Richardson hasn’t improved, because he certainly has, even if marginally, but some of his biggest concerns have resurfaced in recent weeks. It’s especially disappointing when you consider how strong a camp he had been having up until the team’s preseason opener. Since sporting a freshly dislocated pinkie finger, Richardson has maintained his newfound footwork and established decisiveness as a passer, but has devolved into lacking consistency with precision while inviting his injury-prone status back into the fray. Regardless, it’s evident that Richardson is more comfortable and subsequently more successful during his run with the starters than he’s been with the second unit.

It’ll inevitably get brought back up, but the slew of inconsistencies from Indy’s offensive line was an additional obstacle for both quarterbacks. From false starts that may or may not have been a byproduct of cadence issues to erratic center snaps and poor pass protection overall, it was an uninspiring showing from what’s been touted as a top unit leaguewide.

Richardson began the day slinging it across 1-on-1s. I have to preface, it is just 1-on-1s, but Richardson’s arm talent was on full display. He had a couple of legit misfires, but was otherwise dotting up the Packers defenders. In particular, Richardson was throwing with great touch and layering on multiple occurrences, most of which were on intermediate to deep throws outside the numbers. To cap off an impressive start, Richardson found Anthony Gould in stride up the right sideline and into the end zone for a strong pitch and catch.

Moving into his first team period of the day, an 11-on-11 session with the starters, Richardson put on a quick and efficient showing. It was a balanced opening game plan (3 rushes, 3 passes), and the starting offense was firing on all cylinders as each of the six plays resulted in positive yardage. Two rushes were solid Jonathan Taylor gap runs with the third being a DJ Giddens wide zone for a decent gain. Through the air, Richardson hit Taylor on a checkdown, found Giddens leaking for several, and connected with Michael Pittman Jr. on a RPO slant.

During his next two team periods, both with the second unit, Richardson’s day slowly bottomed out before an eventual strong finish when returning with the starters. Overall, Richardson was more or less his typical self as he threw at a ~50% clip in 11-on-11 sessions, and the bulk of those incompletions came during his run with the backups. He certainly needs to be a steady hand regardless of the talent level he’s provided, but it’s worth noting.

Richardson wasn’t all bad in his first session with the second unit, even having a couple of strong moments. He was sacked quickly off play-action in the offense’s initial snap and had to throw it away on the play following. Although it ended in a drop, the next play was a strong one from Richardson as he sensed the pressure, stepped up into the pocket, and delivered a strike to his left outside the numbers. On the final play of the session, Richardson took it himself after finding nothing while rolling right and it looked like it may have had an explosive rush in a live game.

Red zone play could’ve been better for Richardson. Starting with low red zone work (starting at the opponent’s 10-yard line) with the second unit, Richardson’s woes were apparent. Running back rushes were thwarted and the passing game was nonexistent. With the starting in high red zone play (opponent’s 30-yard line), however, Richardson found success. He connected with AD Mitchell and Jonathan Taylor on quick out-breakers, Taylor rushed one in for the score, and after missing him earlier in the session, Richardson found Michael Pittman Jr. on a crosser for a touchdown to finish.

Switching back for his last run with the second unit on the day (drive from own 20), Richardson was all-time bad. This is also around the same time the aforementioned offensive line woes hit a crescendo, but the quarterback play alone was near unacceptable. There was no rhythm due to numerous false starts (again, might be due to Richardson’s cadence), Mose Vavao’s erratic snaps jumpstarted plays in a bad way, and Richardson was as off-target as it gets. His worst play of the day came during this period — his lone interception thrown — a wildly off-target deep shot to Anthony Gould. All in all, just a perfect example of how an NFL offense should not look.

When it comes to the last team period of the day, an 11-on-11 2-minute drill situation, Anthony Richardson was a different man entirely. Other than a couple of missed layups at the end, Richardson and Co. put on a seamless showing to ‘win the game.’ Richardson kicked off the session through the air with a quick hitch to Anthony Gould. After quickly hurrying to the line, Richardson would climb the pocket post-snap to find Michael Pittman Jr. in stride for a nice chunk gain. On the play following, Richardson roped one into Tyler Warren up the seam for the body-contorting grab. The next play could’ve easily been the punctuation of an otherwise perfect drive, but after Richardson created an opportunity for the easy layup, a botched flick to an open AD Mitchell in the back of the end zone halted that quickly established momentum. Richardson would overthrow a crossing Ashton Dulin to follow up, but it was Jonathan Taylor who ran it in for the short rushing touchdown and ultimately saved the drive altogether. As a cherry on top, Richardson found Michael Pittman Jr. for an easy 2-point conversion.

As for Daniel Jones, he nearly had the most Daniel Jones day possible. It began in 1-on-1s with perhaps the most predictable outcome of the day. Jones mainly lived underneath on short, quick-hitting routes to the usual suspects like Michael Pittman Jr. and Josh Downs. His only success on intermediate-deep routes came when throwing AD Mitchell’s way. Mitchell completely lost the defender on a comeback route, and Jones hit him on the money out of his break. Their second connection was the flashiest, as a 50-50 ball near the sideline and end zone ended up in Mitchell’s hands.

I could very easily chronicle Jones’ entire team play on the day like I did Richardson, but with the opposite amount of volatility to cover, a summary ought to do the trick. For starters, and as alluded to, both quarterbacks more or less performed like we had grown to expect as left last season. Similar to Richardson today, Jones was the exact quarterback he’s been through six years in the NFL.

Efficiency-wise, Jones was the guy. Explosives-wise, not so much. Jones was strong in the short passing game, even near automatic at times, that is, unless pressure was involved. Aside from two overthrows in the flats to kick off team play, Jones was rhythmic on quick-hitters. Whenever any semblance of pass rush was evident, however, Jones quickly broke down, and inaccuracy followed. He was likely sacked upwards of four to five times throughout 11-on-11 play, and while a couple of those can be attributed to broken down pass protection, the sped-up process of Jones equally, if not more, played a factor in those would-be sacks.

Jones also had trouble pushing the ball down the field as a result. His only success found in this area across all team periods came on two separate intermediate connections to Michael Pittman Jr. and AD Mitchell, as well as a 50-50 ball to Mitchell that netted a defensive pass interference call. The bad wasn’t solely on Jones, though, as two big drops from Jonathan Taylor and AD Mitchell marred an otherwise efficient session through the air. These two mishaps followed the biggest drop of Jones’ day, a dropped touchdown from Anthony Gould to end red zone play. The Mitchell drop came on a deep in-breaker that Mitchell bobbled, dropped, and ended up in the hands of the defender for the walk-in pick six. On the very next play, the recently mentioned intermediate find, Mitchell fumbled to put a blemish on what he’d established as a breakout training camp.

A Daniel Jones blunder ended the Colts’ day offensively. In his 2-minute drill with the second unit, all was going well. Jones and Co. were firing on all cylinders as three quick-hitting routes in the short passing game set up the offense near the opponent’s 35-yard line. It was 1st and 10 with plenty of time and room to work with. The offense had established a momentum, and then the pass rush came. Daniel Jones grew noticeably rattled as the pocket slowly but surely closed in, forcing him to make a decision quickly. What ensued was arguably the worst of the worst when it comes to Jones as an NFL quarterback. His process was sped up to the point of no return, and although a sack would’ve been the result in a live game and thus saved the drive, instead Jones continued out the play as if he evaded the pressure altogether and quite literally handed the game away. He threw up a prayer in the form of a short pass in the middle of the field, and a Packers defender graciously answered it to end the drive.

If anything, Jones may have actually ‘won’ the day when you consider his efficiency overall, but as it stands, for the best long-term option, it’s hard to see how Jones moves the needle. The efficiency disparity between Richardson and Jones is real, but to what extent do the subsequent limitations have when factoring in the longevity of this offense? It’s nearly impossible to accurately assess how a quarterback’s rushing prowess will be considered once the regular season, but even then, the floor and ceiling of each in this area have been established. If I had to guess, I’d say Anthony Richardson is named the Week 1 starter, that is, unless a historic collapse happens between now and then.

So if we haven’t learned anything new about these two quarterbacks and Richardson is named the starter, then what was the point of the Daniel Jones signing? It’s twofold: motivation and injury insurance. The biggest things that Anthony Richardson needed to work on this offseason, outside of honing in on his mechanics to improve his consistency as a passer, were his mindset and approach. His durability concerns a separate uphill battle entirely, such allegations that only time will tell he’s guilty of, but bringing Jones in may have been exactly what Richardson needed. That’s not at all to suggest that it’s worked flawlessly and now Richardson is poised for a breakout because of it, but this does feel the most appropriate last-case scenario. Regardless of whether this season nets an immediate reward, Richardson’s albeit marginal improvements (footwork, decisiveness, mindset) are at least a stepping stone that was previously deemed unachievable. The Chris Ballard-maned ship may finally sink, but at least now this regime can say they did what they could to right it.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ion-begins-to-take-shape-in-finale-vs-packers
 
Back
Top