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Colts Early Season report card

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Daniel Jones: A –​


Jones is giving the Colts exactly what they needed, and even more, from the quarterback position. He is completing a high percentage of his passes, with a 71.3% completion rate, keeping the ball moving, taking excellent care of the football with just a turnover-worthy play rate of 2.8%, and constantly hitting the open guy. Indiana Jones is enjoying a career resurgence with an excellent supporting cast around him, and away from the blinding New York spotlight. The Colts’ front office should already start figuring out a contract that keeps him here.

Jonathan Taylor: A +​


Leading the league in total touchdowns and rushing yards, Jonathan Taylor is enjoying the best start to a season in his entire career. He is an MVP candidate at this point, and the biggest reason why the Colts offense is dominating. He has also improved a lot in both pass protection, posting an 84.9 pass-blocking grade according to PFF.com, and catching balls out of the backfield, adding 16 receptions for 133 yards and a touchdown, already equaling what he did last season. There is nothing more you could ask from a running back that Taylor is not already excellent at.

Wide receivers / Tight ends: B +​


Michael Pittman Jr. is also enjoying the best start to a season in his career, especially regarding the scoring area, where, through just five games, he is two touchdowns away from his career high. MPJ is a much better fit with a quarterback like Daniel Jones, and he has established himself as his favourite red zone target. Alec Pierce has missed two games with a concussion, but before that he was still being used as the deep threat in the offense, averaging 19 yards per catch. Josh Downs had his best game against the Raiders, and is amazing at moving the chains, always an important quality for a receiver. The one disappointment in this group has been Adonai Mitchell, who in the game against the Rams cost the team the win after inexplicably dropping a ball before scoring, and then drawing a holding flag that negated what would have been a 53-yard touchdown run by JT.

Tyler Warren leads all NFL tight ends in receiving yards, is second in first downs, and ranks 8th in run-blocking for tight ends with more than 50% of possible snaps. There is not much more you can ask from him, especially keeping in mind that tight ends usually struggle a bit coming out of college. For comparisons sake, Colston Loveland through three games has just amassed 3 receptions for 43 yards.

Offensive line: B +​


The offensive line has been solid for the Colts once again, with two new starters in Tanor Bortolini and Matt Goncalves. From left to right, Bernhard Raimann has continued his emergence as a top left tackle in the NFL, though he did struggle against the Rams but overall has had a really good year. Quenton Nelson has missed a step in pass-blocking, but is still an elite run blocker and the Colts use him in creative ways getting him in space against cornerbacks. Tanor Bortolini has been unspectacular but mistake free. His smaller frame means he sometimes gets overpowered in pass-protection, but he has been among the best centers run blocking. Matt Goncalves has been the biggest surprise this season, perhaps the best offensive lineman of the team thus far, and his importance was highlighted on the game he missed against the Rams. Braden Smith has been average, which is okay.


Defensive line: B +​


The biggest beneficiaries from Lou Anarumo as the defensive coordinator, the defensive line has been much more productive rushing the passer. Laiatu Latu has been playing well, and has now two interceptions along with 16 total pressures through just four games. Stewart and Buckner have been as good as they have been the past three seasons, no surprises there. The problem perhaps has been the opposing end. Kwity Paye is an okay run-defender, but a non-factor against the pass, with just 6 total pressures on 110 pass rushing reps. Samson Ebukam is still getting his rythm back after an Achilles tear last season, and rookie J.T. Tuimoloau has been a healthy scratch more than half the games.

Neville Gallimore and Adetomiwa Adebawore have both been surprisingly productive this season, and Tyquan Lewis continues being an underrated rotational linemen that consistently contributes, leading the team in sacks thus far.

Linebackers: C​


I have been very critical of him, but Zaire Franklin has adjusted well to Anarumo’s scheme. I thought he was going to get exposed a lot, but he has been solid against the run, while not a complete liability covering tight ends and running backs. He is still a step slow in pass-coverage, and does not create turnovers, but he is not the reason why the Colts’ linebacker group gets such a low grade. That is on Joe Bachie, who was brought in because of his experience with Anarumo. He has been sub-par in pass coverage, a liability against the run, and no explosive plays (no forced fumbles, fumble recoveries, sacks, interceptions, or tackles for loss). Bachie has been the definition of Just a Guy, and the Colts have to be looking at upgrades here if they are serious about contending.

Secondary: B +​


Camryn Bynum and Charvarius “Mooney” Ward have both been impeccable additions to the secondary, with both being as good as advertised, Ward perhaps even more. Along with them, young safety Nick Cross took another step forward after a breakout season last year, slot cornerback Kenny Moore was his usual self before an Achilles injury forced him to miss some games.

Speaking of injuries, that has been a big part of the Colts’ secondary this season. Rookie Justin Walley will miss the entire season, #2 corner Jaylon Jones was placed on IR dealing with a hamstring injury, and Moore’s replacement Mike Hilton is now on the injury report dealing with a shoulder issue. Xavien Howard, who was brought in after Jones went down, was so bad that he retired after just four starts. In Mekhi Blackmon and UDFA Johnathan Edwards the Colts are hoping to find at least something serviceable until Jones is ready to return.


Special teams: B​


Spencer Shrader’s injury sucks because he was exactly what the Colts needed from their kicker: automatic under 50 yards. He was even coming off the longest make of his career, and kicked a game-winner against the Broncos. There is not much we can say about Rigoberto Sanchez, because he has just 7 punts, the least in the NFL. Kickoff coverage has been average.

Coaching staff: A –​


Steichen’s seat was among the hottest in the NFL to kick off the season, and when he made the decision to start Daniel Jones over Richardson I’ll admit I was fuming. The Colts are #1 in the NFL, but it is not only their record, is how they got there: dominating the “bad” opponents (Dolphins, Titans, Raiders), while also playing better than solid opposition (Broncos, Rams). The reason for the A – is because of two issues I have with the coaching staff. The first was the conservative play-calling against the Broncos on the final drive of the game, where the Colts were forced to kick a field goal over 60 yards, way out of Shrader’s range, after Steichen ran the ball three consecutive times, gaining no yards. The 15-yard flag ended up giving the Colts another chance, which Shrader ended up making, bailing out Steichen. The second one is how Anarumo handled Puka Nacua against the Rams. Even taking into account that certain players like Nacua you can only hope to contain, having Xavien Howard, who retired after the game, on an island several times against a receiver of that caliber was a disaster waiting to happen.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analysis/115857/colts-early-season-report-card
 
Week 5 Film Review: Colts Dominate the Las Vegas Raiders

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After a heartbreaking loss to the Rams, the Colts got back on track in a big way on Sunday. When you look at the box score you’re almost surprised it was 40-6, but it was as convincing a win as you can have in the National Football League.

The Colts were decisively better in all three phases and it wasn’t close. There’s a lot of very good football being played right now, and if everyone stays healthy, it’s very hard to see how that will change.


Obviously, since it was the first pass of the game, this is a play the Raiders teed up all week.

I'm not entirely sure it's bad defense, though. pic.twitter.com/uFzwIKwkve

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

The first couple drives for the Colts did not go as smoothly as the following three quarters did, so lets start there. Chip Kelly had a surgical opening script that marched the Raiders down the field early in this game.

This is the first pass of the game, so you know that the Raiders have been practicing this all week. As soon as Geno sees the Colts align in man coverage, he checks to to a very popular downfield pick play.

This is a really nice throw from Geno under pressure, but the details of the play are what make it tough on a defense.

You can see Jakobi Myers line up on the outside edge of the numbers. That is extremely important on this concept. The reason for that is because Ward will be head-up or inside leverage from that split. If you line up any tighter to the numbers you’re risking that DB playing off and outside, which would let him make a play on the Rail.

When Myers goes to set the pick on Bachie, watch him track his near shoulder which makes him go underneath. That’s huge because it makes it really hard for Bachie to recover.

DeForest Buckner wins his 1-on-1 and gets a hit on the QB, but even when you get blown out, you’re bound to make a few plays.


These are some of the mistakes in the run game that are to be expected as your transitioning into a new system.

The Colts run defense has steadily improved by EPA over the first month and the hope is that less of these mistakes pop up as we get into more meaningful football. pic.twitter.com/QIs4jp5jPz

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

When Lou Anarumo was hired, some struggles early in the season were to be expected. The Colts went from one of the league’s most basic systems, to a much more complex system that was in line with the league’s current trends.

Learning, communicating, and practicing that system takes time. It doesn’t happen right away, especially with how the CBA limits practice time in the offseason.

The Colts fit the run completely different than how they did with Gus Bradley. With Gus, it was a gap control system where each player had a gap in the run game and flew off the ball to fit that gap. With Lou it’s more about block control. It takes a level of discipline that is easier said than done.

Here the Colts are in a Bear look. Bear just means both the center and the guards are covered.

The reason I know this is a missed assignment is because Zaire Franklin and Grover Stewart end up in the same gap. My guess is that this is a run stunt, and one of the two did not get the call correct. Someone has to be in the frontside A gap, whether that’s Zaire or Grover. So either Zaire pressured the wrong gap or Grover is supposed work into that frontside A.

These mistakes happen, but you expect over time that they will pop up less and less.


Colts put Josh Downs into the boundary as the de facto Z to get him matched up on Devin White.

I like the Tyreek Hill motion from the TE because it creates space for this choice if Downs wanted to break this outside. pic.twitter.com/Bv46Bq3bXc

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) October 6, 2025

Ok now let’s get into the good stuff. Here the Colts are getting Josh Downs into the boundary to run what I am going to assume is a choice route. The Colts have a “Swap” tag onto their formation which just tells Pittman and Downs to switch spots from where they normally line up.

That’s really important because the Raiders are in Cover 2 and Josh Downs is now matched up on Devin White. That is a big win for the Colts. Watch Downs stick his foot in the ground to really influence White before breaking inside.

Most LB’s just cannot cover that. Pretty simple, but wanted to point it out because Josh Downs does not often line up in this spot.


A good portion of the gameplan for Indy was to lift coverage and then make the Raiders make a tackle in space. pic.twitter.com/KhHd4g5OR0

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) October 6, 2025

Josh Downs had a great day working the underneath zones of the field. The Colts thought they could lift the coverage by running verticals, it could create space underneath for Downs to move the chains.


I've broken down Duo Wrap before.

I'm definitely wrong on this, but the only team I've seen calling this on the goalline is the Detroit Lions. pic.twitter.com/szqodxMf7t

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) October 7, 2025

This is a play called Duo Wrap. Like a WWE wrestler, this has been the Colts finishing move. They wait until your defense is tired in the fourth quarter and your corners no longer want to tackle. If you remember the 2023 Steelers game, this is the same call to close that one out.

Here the Colts called it in a down and distance I’ve never seen them use before. Running this play by the goalline is tough because the DL is covering more horizontal space with the natural roof behind them. That can make it difficult because your guard has no room for error. He has to go.

Duo Wrap is a counter to the traditional Duo run. I’ve broken the play down on the website before, but for those who are new, I’ll run through it again.

Duo is downhill run that tries to maximize double teams at the point of attack. The way the blocking scheme is set up, there’s always going to be one unblocked corner. As a counter, instead of a downhill penetrating run, coaches wanted to create a wrinkle that forced that corner to have to make a play in the run game.

A lot of teams motion a WR and run this play, but when you have one of the best guards to ever play the position, you can run this play with ease. The idea is that the backside guard will “wrap” for that playside corner, while the RB has automatic bounce read. Meaning that his job is to just follow that puller.

Michigan, Ohio State, and the Detroit Lions are some of the teams that I’ve seen run this as often as the Colts.


Colts running 13P Duo and motioning Tyler Warren to get 6 hands on Maxx Crosby pic.twitter.com/MevosVQSug

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) October 6, 2025

We’re working backwards here, but this is typical Duo. The Colts needed to have a plan for Maxx Crosby. Here they motioned Tyler Warren into the formation in order to get an extra body on Maxx. The Raiders are light in the box which makes this easy. It’s just good football, man.


The Mekhi Blackmon INT was on a Creeper with 2-Trap behind it.

Mehki is in a 1×8 alignment and his job is to key the #2 receiver and jump anything into the flat. pic.twitter.com/bhq4b5ss0M

— Colts Film Room (@ColtsFilmRoom) October 7, 2025

Let’s talk about trap coverage. 2-Trap is an aggressive form of Cover 2 that punishes teams for trying to get anything quick into the flat. Mekhi Blackmon’s job is to key the #2 WR. If there’s anything quick, his job is to jump it fast. He can do that because he knows the safety will be over the top to cover anything deep from the #1 WR.

This is a really nice coverage to pair with slot pressure because some teams will run something quick vs. slot pressure to attack the void the slot CB is leaving by pressuring. It’s a good call and good execution.



This is my fifth film breakdown and I’m really struggling to find negative plays that aren’t nitpicking or just small details. The Colts are playing really good football right now, which I feel like I just keep saying over and over again. It’s been incredible to watch this team.

Everyone deserves credit. Shane Steichen, who many wanted fired a month ago, Chris Ballard, Carly Irsay-Gordon, Daniel Jones, the list just goes on and on. There’s a long way to go, and the “Super Bowl contender” tag is very ambitious for a team that doesn’t have a ton of playoff pedigree, but as I’m typing this article out today… how can you not be impressed, excited, and optimistic?

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/colts-...m-review-colts-dominate-the-las-vegas-raiders
 
Does the Colts recent success ease the pressure on Chris Ballard?

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Ah, winning. Supporting a winning team increases dopamine and pushes fans to seek more input regarding their favorite team: social media, sports talk radio, analysts coverage, and just watching more sports in general. Instead of having to hide from the world for an entire week to forgot about a bad team, winning just makes everything that much better. The Indianapolis Colts have been winning. Being 4-1 to start the year has been an incredible change in direction from previous seasons, and Chris Ballard deserves credit. Has there been enough winning to make him feel comfortable, though?

The start the Colts have had is great, but it doesn’t guarantee them of anything. There is a solid chance they make the playoffs, but there is still a chance they don’t. Everything could fall apart, but right now, things are looking pretty dang good. The recent broadcast mentioned how this roster has been drafted and built as a direct cause for this success. While there are many factors at play, that is simply true. Injuries have played a factor but when healthy, the defense is made up of a lot of homegrown talent, and when turning the mirror around, the offense is even more so. Outside of Daniel Jones and a couple undrafted players, that offense was specifically drafted by Chris Ballard and his team. Ballard has had plenty of misses in his career, but it is looking like his master plan is coming into focus.

Not only are the players he directly drafted paying dividends, but his other shrewd moves are coming into play as well. Look no further than the aforementioned Jones. Is any quarterback playing better than him? That will be left for others to debate but much more couldn’t be asked. Ballard saw the potential and brought him in. He made the biggest trade of his career to acquire DeForest Buckner who has been nothing short of phenomenal in the blue and white. Cam Bynum and “Mooney” Ward have been excellent pick-ups to shore up the secondary. That was one Ballard’s greatest weakness; being unwilling to use free agency to build a roster. His first major venture into that arena has proven to be worthwhile. It has taken years but Ballard seems to be pressing the right buttons now.

The question is whether this success relieves the pressure he had to be feeling as the season approached. The answer is yes. Yes, with a caveat. The pressure is reducing with each win, but that doesn’t mean it is gone or should disappear completely. Chris Ballard has had nine years to get this right and has made plenty of mistakes getting to this point. We are finally seeing some of the fruits of his labor, but that is a long germination period. The other side of the coin is whether it continues, not just this season but into next. Success in 2025 will most likely mean another year of Ballard, and that is fine. If he shows he can build a winning roster, there is zero reason to move on from him. If the Colts dissolve down the stretch or fall back to the mean next year, it might mean bye-bye Ballard, however.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...nt-success-ease-the-pressure-on-chris-ballard
 
Indianapolis Colts Injury Report: DE Lewis Returns To Practice

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The Indianapolis Colts today released their Thursday injury report for Week 6 of the NFL season ahead of their Sunday game against the Arizona Cardinals.

thursday's practice report for #AZvsIND. pic.twitter.com/yynSKpNSHT

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) October 9, 2025

Defensive end Tyquan Lewis was a full participant at practice today after missing yesterday’s practice due to illness. Lewis managing to practice today puts him on track to play in Sundays game against the Cardinals.

Cornerback Kenny Moore missed practice again today due to an Achilles injury. Moore is still struggling with the injury that has sidelined him for multiple weeks now. He is more than likely going to miss another game due to injury this week.

Wide Receiver Alec Pierce was a full participant at practice today as he is dealing with a concussion. Pierce had now practice during both sessions this week but tomorrow will be important to know his game day status. Pierce could miss his third game this week due to the concussion.

Right tackle Braden Smith was a full participant at practice today after missing practice yesterday due to a scheduled restart. Whereas defensive tackle

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ts-injury-report-de-lewis-returns-to-practice
 
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