What could Colts QB Daniel Jones next contract look like?

gettyimages-2245831229.jpg


According to ESPN’s Jeremy Fowler (subscription), Indianapolis Colts quarterback Daniel Jones is projected to be in line for a lucrative multi-year contract extension—to the tune of $100 million:

Daniel Jones, QB​


Current team: Indianapolis Colts
2025 salary: $14 million
Age entering 2026 season: 29

What he brings: Jones has elevated his level of play and poise under coach Shane Steichen in Indianapolis. Through 10 games, Jones’ 66.8 QBR ranks ninth in the league, and he is throwing with a much stronger sense of timing. He fits in an offense that features a good run game, which allows him to operate as a facilitator. — Bowen

What we’re hearing: Jones has a chance to become the biggest earner in the free agency class. The Colts appear all-in on keeping Jones long term, and they have comps for former top-10 picks who thrived when quarterbacking a new team: Baker Mayfield and Sam Darnold, who each earned three-year deals worth around $100 million. Jones would totally be justified asking for that … with interest. — Fowler

To his credit, Jones left the Minnesota Vikings this offseason in free agency to pursue a potential better opportunity to win an NFL QB1 job and bet on himself, signing a a 1-year deal for ‘greener’ pastures ahead.

He’s so far backed it up in Indianapolis, completing 223 of 319 pass attempts (69.9%) for a league-leading 2,659 total passing yards, 15 passing touchdowns, and 7 interceptions during all 10 starts for the NFL’s best offense.

Having traded their next two first round picks recently for former 2x NFL All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner, the Colts appears to be convinced that Jones is their answer at starting quarterback for the foreseeable future. If the money is there, it’s hard to envision why the 28-year-old quarterback would want to be separated anytime soon from head coach Shane Steichen—given the prolific success the pairing has had so far this season.

For what it’s worth, Spotrac projects Jones to earn 4-years, $183.7 million on his next contract, whether it’s with the Colts or elsewhere. However, all current signs point to the Colts committing to Jones for the long-term future.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...colts-qb-daniel-jones-next-contract-look-like
 
AFC Playoff Picture: Colts fall from first to third on Week 11 bye

gettyimages-2245294361.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts are on the bye in Week 11, and while they entered it in first place in the AFC, they have dropped not one but two slots in the playoff picture. The New England Patriots became the first nine-win team in the NFL on Thursday night, defeating the New York Jets, and taking sole possession of first place in the AFC as a result. Then the Denver Broncos took first place from New England with their Week 11 win over the Kansas City Chiefs.

The Pittsburgh Steelers won to stick in fourth place.

In the wild card race, the Buffalo Bills won and the Los Angeles Chargers lost to move the Bills into fifth place and the Chargers to sixth place. The Jacksonville Jaguars stayed in seventh after defeating the Chargers.

At 5-5 there is a logjam outside the playoff spots with the Houston Texans, Kansas City Chiefs, and Baltimore Ravens all out right now.

AFC standings during Week 11​


The Las Vegas Raiders play on Monday night but it won’t impact the standings.

1. Denver Broncos (9-2, 6-2 AFC)
2. New England Patriots (9-2, 5-2 AFC)
3. Indianapolis Colts (8-2)
4. Pittsburgh Steelers (6-4)
5. Buffalo Bills (7-3)
6. Los Angeles Chargers (7-4)
7. Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4)
8. Houston Texans (5-5, 4-2 AFC)
9. Kansas City Chiefs (5-5, 2-4 AFC, win over BAL)
10. Baltimore Ravens (5-5, 3-3 AFC, loss to KC)
11. Miami Dolphins (4-7)
12. Cincinnati Bengals (3-7)
13. Las Vegas Raiders (2-7)
14. New York Jets (2-8)
15. Cleveland Browns (2-8)
16. Tennessee Titans (1-9)

AFC South standings after Week 11​


The Jaguars won and so did the Houston Texans. It’s staying crowded in the AFC South. The Titans were eliminated from the AFC South race.

1. Indianapolis Colts (8-2)
2. Jacksonville Jaguars (6-4)
3. Houston Texans (5-5)
4. Tennessee Titans (1-9)

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...colts-fall-from-first-to-third-on-week-11-bye
 
Colts-Chiefs opening odds: Colts have another shot a statement win

imagn-26906606.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts and Kansas City Chiefs have been running in different NFL social circles over the last seven or so years. The Chiefs have made many deep playoff runs and hoisted three Lombardi trophies over that time. Meanwhile, the Colts have been treading water and searching for an identity. Just like all pendulums, this one appears to be swinging back in the other direction as these teams are nearing each other again. The Chiefs are extremely formidable still, and FanDuel Sportsbook sees it that way as well. The Colts are solid underdogs in this one with a +3.5-point spread.

The money line comes in at +168 while the over/under is 49.5.

The Colts are coming off a huge win in Berlin. Having lost to Pittsburgh the week before, staring down the barrel of a loss to the less than stellar Falcons would have been devastating. Luckily, the Colts rode the horse they came in on with Jonathan Taylor putting up a career highlight performance. Nearly 300-yards, three touchdowns, and a franchise leading rushing title were enough to put the Colts over the top in overtime. The bye week came at a great time. The hope is that it allows Charvarius Ward to get healthy, provides more time for Sauce Gardner to get acclimated, and gets fresh bodies on that defensive front.

The Chiefs faced a tough outing against the Broncos on the road. It was a slugfest as neither team could pull away and both struggled to find the endzone early on. Tied 6-6 at the half, both offenses picked things up and the score was knotted once again late in the fourth. Bo Nix got his team into field goal position and the 35-yard make from Wil Lutz moved the Broncos to 9-2. The Chiefs now find themselves in uncharted territory at 5-5. The AFC West is slipping from their grasp as this gives the Broncos a stranglehold on the division. To maintain any pace in the West and AFC overall, the Chiefs have to find a way to win on Sunday against the Colts.

If the playoffs started today, the Chiefs would be on the outside looking in as they sit in ninth. A win could vault them to or near the seventh seed, but it would still be a long road. With a loss on Sunday their playoff chances could be done. For the Colts, they are trying to maintain their control over the top spot in the conference. With wins from the Patriots and Broncos, they have now technically fallen behind and need the win to retake first place. It would also send a strong signal to the league that the Colts can beat good teams on the road. A lot is at stake for both teams. Expect it to be a good one.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-odds-colts-have-another-shot-a-statement-win
 
Colts injury update: Status quo still remains same for key players—for now

gettyimages-2238321072.jpg


According to Indianapolis Colts head coach Shane Steichen, he didn’t have a specific injury update for a pair of veterans, defensive tackle DeForest Buckner (neck) and cornerback Charvarius Ward (concussion), as well as for quarterback Anthony Richardson (orbital fracture) on Monday (via The Athletic’s James Boyd):

#Colts HC Shane Steichen didn't have updates on DT DeForest Buckner (neck/IR), CB Charvarius Ward (concussion/IR) or QB Anthony Richardson (orbital fracture/IR).

Steichen added that he should have more on Mooney come Wednesday (perhaps a good sign).

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) November 17, 2025

All three players are currently on injured reserve, but both Richardson and Ward are eligible to return this weekend in a critical game against the AFC’s reigning champions, Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs—where Ward’s ongoing status is of immense importance for potentially slowing down their passing game.

Ward has recently been doing some work with trainers on the side during team practices, so his return to the football field on Sundays could be potentially imminent. His eventual return would be a big boost to a Colts cornerback trio of Ward, recently added former All-Pro cornerback Sauce Gardner, and Kenny Moore II that is arguably the best in all of football when fully healthy and truly going right.

The Colts designating him to return from injured reserve and begin his 21-day window to be activated could be close though—even against his former team.

Meanwhile, Buckner shared via social media that he traveled to Panama to receive regenerative stem cell treatment for presumably his ailing neck—for what seemingly wasn’t the first time to help recover from a potential football injury.

The earliest that the Colts Pro Bowl veteran defensive tackle can return is during Week 15 on the road against the Seattle Seahawks. Indianapolis will assuredly miss him this weekend at Arrowhead. However, even getting Buckner back healthy for the late season’s stretch run would be a major addition to the Colts defense collectively.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...uo-still-remains-same-for-key-players-for-now
 
The Broncos beating the Chiefs might turn out to be good news for the Colts

imagn-27607883.jpg


If an Indianapolis Colts’ fan watched the Denver Broncos host the Kansas City Chiefs, they may have found themselves rooting for the Chiefs. That makes total sense. A loss by the Broncos would have helped the Colts maintain pace in the AFC and stay in second behind the Patriots. Although the Colts didn’t get a say in the matter being on a bye, a Broncos’ win pushed them into third. That doesn’t look as good as second, but that is a short term view. What about looking further out?

The Colts’ goal is to beat the Chiefs this week. That is obvious. Win this week on the road, and return home to face the Texans. Beat them as well and the Colts will be 10-2. If the Broncos beat a depleted Commanders team, they too would head into their bye 10-2. That would recreate the tie and give the Colts the advantage because of the head-to-head win from week two. That “1/2” game lead would create a sprint to the finish over the last five weeks. Regardless, advantage Colts.

The Chiefs are 5-5, but don’t be fooled by the record. They could very well beat the Colts and are actually favored to do so. If the Chiefs had beaten the Broncos and then beat the Colts, they would be one game back with the tie breaker over the Colts. Two wins against top AFC teams would make them one of the hotter teams in football. Add in a softer schedule than the Broncos and a rematch at home and it wouldn’t be a surprise to see them take the division. That tie breaker over the Colts could be the ultimate difference in seeding.

Without the completion of the season it is impossible to see who the Colts should have preferred in Sunday’s matchup. The point is that just because the Broncos won, it doesn’t mean the Colts lost. That could have been the best case scenario but we might not know until week 18. In the meantime, the Colts only have to do one thing. Win.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/analys...-might-turn-out-to-be-good-news-for-the-colts
 
Colts announce slew of roster moves, including reunion with veteran safety

gettyimages-1182947076.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts announced the signing of defensive end Viliami Fehoko Jr., safety George Odum, wide receiver Eli Pancol, and defensive tackle Chris Wormley to the practice squad, while also releasing defensive end Tanoh Kpassagnon, tight end Maximilian Mang, and cornerback Troy Pride Jr. in corresponding roster moves.

we have signed DE Viliami Fehoko Jr., S George Odum, WR Eli Pancol and DT Chris Wormley to the practice squad.

we have also released DE Tanoh Kpassagnon, TE Maximilian Mang and CB Troy Pride Jr. from the practice squad. pic.twitter.com/txU51WUxgr

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) November 18, 2025

It was reported yesterday by CBS Sports’ Matt Zenitz that Wormley was expected to be signed to the Colts practice squad as veteran interior depth.

However, veteran safety George Odum is a name who may not need any introduction for Colts fans, having signed with Indianapolis originally as an undrafted free agent and played for the franchise from 2018-21, becoming a 2020 NFL First-Team All-Pro on special teams in the process.

He would sign a 3-year contract with the San Francisco 49ers during 2022’s free agency period and became an NFL 2nd-Team All-Pro for them on special teams during that same campaign. He signed a 2-year contract extension during the 2024 offseason, but suffered an elbow injury late that season before being placed on injured reserve and later underwent subsequent elbow surgery this past offseason. He was then released by the 49ers.

Now 32-years-old, it’s possible that Odum could provide his special teams prowess and veteran safety depth to the tail-end of the Colts roster.

Otherwise, Fehoko Jr. was initially a 2023 4th round pick of the Dallas Cowboys out of San Jose State. The 6’4”, 267 pound defensive end would last one season in Dallas before spending time on the Washington Commanders practice squad over the past two years. He has yet to appear in an NFL game. He was formerly Mountain West Player of the Year in 2022 and 3x First-Team All-Mountain West during his prior impressive collegiate career.

Lastly, Pancol is a 6,3”, 205 pound undrafted rookie wideout out of Duke, who has spent time on the Jacksonville Jaguars practice squad so far this season. He was Third-Team All-ACC last season.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...r-moves-including-reunion-with-veteran-safety
 
Starting today, comments and Feed posts on Stampede Blue will have activity notifications

When you post on SB Nation, we don’t want you to miss all the conversations and responses that follow.

So starting today, whenever a user replies to your comment or to your post on the Feed, you’ll see a notification at the top right corner of the page.

And of course, this means that when you engage with other community members, they’ll get an alert too.

Our goal is to create more and better conversations on Stampede Blue and elsewhere across the SB Nation network. Anytime someone engages with your comments or Feed posts on another SB Nation community, you’ll see it in your notifications.

For instance, here’s what your notifications might look like on sbnation.com if you were getting replies across Arrowhead Pride, MMA Fighting, and sbnation.com. You will see the same expandable stack of notifications on any site in the network where you were logged in.

Screenshot-2025-11-13-at-1.57.16%E2%80%AFPM.png

If you want to dig into more of how this will work across the network and what’s next, head over to this post on sbnation.com from SB Nation’s Head of Product Ed Clinton.

You can log in or sign up here. Logged in users get fewer ads along with the ability to join the conversation.

Jump into the comment section below or post on The Feed to see notifications in action.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/genera...tampede-blue-will-have-activity-notifications
 
Indianapolis Colts Injury Report: CB Ward and LB Carlies Return To Practice

gettyimages-2242809986.jpg

gettyimages-2236778400.jpg

The Indianapolis Colts today released their Wednesday injury report for Week 12 of the NFL season against the Kansas City Chiefs on Sunday.

wednesday's practice report for #INDvsKC. pic.twitter.com/Sl0NyEaGY8

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) November 19, 2025

Linebacker Jaylon Carlies was a full participant today at practice. Carlies has been on injured reserve all year with an ankle injury. The team announced they were opening the 21 practice window for him today and seeing him already practicing fully is a great sight. Carlies will hopefully join a defense already playing at a high level.

Defensive end Samson Ebukam was a limited participant at practice today with a knee injury. Ebukam has missed several weeks with a knee injury, but it is positive news to see him returning to practice even if it is limited. The Colts are very thin along the defensive line and would welcome back Ebukam at defensive end.

Cornerback Charvarius Ward was a full participant today. Ward was placed on injured reserve several weeks ago due to a second concussion he picked up during a collision with a teammate pre-game. The team announced they had opened his 21 day practice window to return from injured reserve today. Ward returning to practice and being a full participant gives him a great chance to return this Sunday on the road against the Chiefs.

Defensive end Tyquan Lewis missed practice today with a groin injury. Lewis has been dealing with the groin injury for some time now and missed several games before the bye week because of it. The Colts are thin at defensive end and could use a return from Lewis sooner rather than later rotationally.

Wide receiver (special teams returnman) Anthony Gould was a full participant as he works back from a knee injury that sidelined him multiple weeks and veteran slot cornerback Kenny Moore II was rested today.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ort-cb-ward-and-lb-carlies-return-to-practice
 
Colts-Chiefs will go a long way towards shaping the AFC playoff picture

gettyimages-1243512460.jpg


Week twelve in the NFL means a lot of things. By this point, there is a strong sense of who is good, who is not, who is a contender, and who is picking out locations for the 2026 draft party. We already know so much because every team has played at least ten games. Week twelve also means there is plenty of football left. Take a screenshot of the AFC playoff picture because between now and the end of the regular season, a lot will change. Sunday’s monumental contest between the Indianapolis Colts and Kansas City Chiefs will go a long way towards shaping the standings.

The game is slated in the early set but don’t let that fool you to its importance. The AFC is essentially a ten team contest for seven spots. Three teams sit at 5-5 and are on the outside looking in, but that doesn’t mean they are out. The Texans are playing better, and the Ravens are quickly becoming one of the hottest teams in the conference after an abysmal start. The Jaguars and Chargers are literal wildcards because you never know which team will show up in a given week, and teams like the Bills are playing catch up, while the Steelers are trying to hang on. It is possible for all of the current division leaders to be out of the top spot by the end of the season.

The game on Sunday will have a major say in how things turn out. The Chiefs are down from previous years but anyone who willingly wants to take them on at Arrowhead would be a fool. The Colts have no choice in the matter and will do their best to not only maintain their lead in the AFC South but also in the conference overall. They fell behind because of the bye but wins this week and next will move them back to the top. A loss, while not devastating would be a major hit to any dream of capturing the number one overall seed. It would also be another reason for doubt as they would have fallen to three good teams on the road. Tough wins to walk away with, but losing three would be disheartening.

Meanwhile, this game is even more important for the Chiefs. If they lose, their season is in great jeopardy. Falling to 5-6 with six more games to play would make a comeback to make the playoffs difficult and winning the division, thin. It could certainly be done, and just like with Tom Brady and the Patriots, this isn’t a team you can count out until everything is said and done. If they beat the Colts, 6-5 looks a lot better and puts them in prime position to make a late run. While the number one overall seed might prove tough, they could very well win the division and make a deep postseason run.

The Colts are in the catbird seat in this one. It is a huge game, but it won’t be season ending if they fall at Arrowhead. The Chiefs, however, can’t afford to drop this one. It could very well be their season on the line. The Colts need to understand this and come out swinging. The bye week gave them time to prepare and rest. Hopefully, that will be enough to take the win on Sunday. It would be one of the biggest wins in recent years and effectively drive the nail in the Chiefs’ coffin in 2025. Who wouldn’t want to do that?

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...g-way-towards-shaping-the-afc-playoff-picture
 
PFF says Colts Sauce Gardner ‘remains gold standard at starting cornerback’ before Week 12

imagn-27553987.jpg


According to PFF’s John Kosko (subscription), recently acquired Indianapolis Colts All-Pro Sauce Gardner remains ‘the gold standard at starting cornerback’—after his Week 10 debut in Germany for the Horseshoe:

Sauce Gardner remains the gold standard: Gardner’s 28% forced incompletion rate and 44% completion rate allowed both rank third in the NFL. His 13.8% open-target rate is the second best in the league, while his 73.74% lockdown rate leads all cornerbacks.

Further, per PFF, Gardner leads the league in their advanced coverage grade (5.545). For comparison’s sake, the Philadelphia Eagles Cooper DeJean (5.507) ranks 2nd best, while the Colts very own Charvarius Ward (3.379) ranks 16th respectively:

“We grade every coverage defender’s ability to prevent separation, whether they are targeted on the play or not. These rankings utilize play-level normalization and expectation adjustments. After all, matching up with a receiver is more difficult than covering a running back, and playing man coverage is typically more difficult than matching in a zone.”

Obviously, the Colts demonstrated their clear conviction for Gardner’s coverage game already, trading two future first round picks and young wideout AD Mitchell just ahead of the NFL’s trade deadline a few weeks ago.

It’s clear that Indianapolis believes Gardner can not only significantly improve their once depleted cornerback position, but still only 25-years-old, also provide them a lockdown CB1 for the foreseeable future (and over the next two years, at a very cost efficient salary at that).

The Colts are hoping that Gardner can be the ‘Championship move’ this year that can help catapult this upstart AFC squad at 8-2 into surprising Super Bowl contention.

Something that we all would’ve reasonably laughed at to begin the year.

Not to mention, that a change of scenery to a potential deep playoff contender could help him regain his prior NFL First-Team All-Pro form with the New York Jets—although if you ask PFF, maybe he never really lost it at all.

It’s interesting though because while Gardner currently ranks as PFF’s 15th best cornerback with a +72.4 overall grade, he also has their highest advanced coverage grade—so the two don’t exactly coincide in their positional rankings.

For perspective, even despite his second concussion and missing extended time, Ward still ranks as their 2nd highest graded cornerback with a +83.4 overall grade respectively.

At any rate, Gardner appears poised to be a lockdown cornerback in Indianapolis for many years to come.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...tandard-at-starting-cornerback-before-week-12
 
What is the backup plan if Daniel Jones can’t go for the Colts?

gettyimages-2245862240.jpg


Let’s make this a quick article. There is no backup plan if Daniel Jones gets injured. Zero.

The backup plan, as flawed as it may be, is currently healing a broken orbital bone after being smacked in the face during pregame warmups. That was it. That was the whole plan if Jones went down at any point in the season. The Indianapolis Colts put all their eggs in Jones’ basket and slated an incredibly unlucky and oft-injured backup to take over if he went down. With Jones on the injury report as limited with a calf injury, fans are starting to squirm a little in their seats.

Let’s make two things clear to start. Obviously there is a backup. Riley Leonard would take over and make his first NFL start against the 2025 Super Bowl runner-ups and three time champion Patrick Mahomes and the Kansas City Chiefs on the road in one of the tougher places to play in the league. No biggie. The second thing is that Jones is not Peyton Manning, but the Colts are following a similar path they took when he was under center. There isn’t much need for a backup plan because if he goes down, the whole operation is upside down. Before you eat me alive, once again, Jones is not Manning, but Jones is playing well enough to consider that things don’t go the same way with another available quarterback simply stepping in to assume the role. As good as Jonathan Taylor has been, we saw what he was with Anthony Richardson back there. Injured or not, he couldn’t find as many holes or break free as often because teams didn’t respect the quarterback’s ability to pass and would load the box.

Good news is that this could all be for nothing. Players pop up on the injury report and out of an abundance of caution are limited in practice. The areas of concern are that it is a calf and the history of this organization and injuries. Something that is supposed to be minor all of a sudden lands someone on IR for half the season. We saw it with Andrew Luck, Shaquille Leonard, Jelani Woods, and the aforementioned Taylor . “Minor” injuries or ones that are close to healed seemingly drag out. Here’s hoping this is just a tweak and no big deal. Maybe the Colts are playing mind games with the Chiefs. Maybe they are playing mind games with fans.

Regardless of the severity of the injury, there is no plan B. For this season, Daniel Jones is plan A-Z if the Colts are ultimately going to have success. This seems like an odd statement given the take many had back in August, myself included, but here we are. Jones is the present and looking like the future. He has a history of injuries, so the Colts need to do a better job this offseason putting someone behind him who can come in and cover if needed. Maybe Riley Leonard is that guy. No clue. At this point, however, most fans don’t want to find out.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...up-plan-if-daniel-jones-cant-go-for-the-colts
 
Indianapolis Colts Injury Report: LB Carlies Ruled OUT, CB Ward Is QUESTIONABLE

gettyimages-2233917356.jpg

gettyimages-2238321072.jpg

The Indianapolis Colts today released their Friday injury report for Week 12 of the NFL season against the Kansas City Chiefs on the road for Sunday.

friday’s practice report for #INDvsKC. pic.twitter.com/QhhoLSP8DK

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) November 21, 2025

Linebacker Jaylon Carlies has been ruled OUT of Sunday’s game against the Chiefs with an ankle injury. Carlies had his 21 day practice window opened and even managed a week of full practice, but it appears he is not ready to make a full return just yet. The Colts will continue with their current linebacker rotation for now with Zaire Franklin and Germaine Pratt leading the way as starters.

Defensive end Tyquan Lewis has been designated as QUESTIONABLE for this Sunday’s game against the Chiefs due to a groin injury. Lewis had missed several games pre-bye week due to the groin injury. Lewis has managed a limited and a full practice this week and appears to have a chance to be able to play this Sunday. Samson Ebukam looks set to play this Sunday, so his return should boost the defensive line depth regardless of Lewis’s availability.

Cornerback Charvarius Ward has been designated as QUESTIONABLE for this Sunday’s game against the Chiefs due to a concussion. Ward had been on injured reserve the past 4 weeks due to a second concussion, but looks set to return this week after having his 21-day practice window earlier in the week. Having Ward rejoin a secondary of newly acquired Sauce Gardner, as well as holdovers Kenny Moore II, Cam Bynum, and Nick Cross provides the Colts defense an excellent group on the back end.

Quarterback Daniel Jones has no injury designation for Sunday’s game against the Chiefs. Jones was limited at Thursday’s practice with a calf injury but managed a full practice Friday and will be ready to play Sunday.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-lb-carlies-ruled-out-cb-ward-is-questionable
 
Mahomes vs Anarumo: Game 7

gettyimages-2243359428.jpg


The most anticipated Game 7 since the NBA Finals some months back, Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes is set to face off against defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo. This rendition of an unstoppable force versus an immovable object features a book with six juicy chapters published already, with the series’ conclusion set to end this Sunday as the Indianapolis Colts travel to Arrowhead Stadium to take on the Kansas City Chiefs.

Of course, there’s a chance these two face off sometime down the road, but as far as this season goes, meeting again in the playoffs feels unlikely, although it’s possible; therefore, the series between them can effectively end this season and start anew in another. With that being said, football will forever be a team sport first and foremost, so shrinking this matchup between the Colts and Chiefs to being nothing more than a quarterback versus a coordinator seems sacrilegious, but there’s too much history here to not revisit once more.

Chiefs head coach Andy Reid is naturally a part of this equation, and so is Lou Anarumo’s stable of horses. Anarumo has seemingly had Mahomes and Reid’s collective number over the years, especially after climbing out to a 3-0 record against the two, but the Chiefs have rebounded in recent memory to tie up the series and force a Game 7.

There needs to be an asterisk next to Mahomes and Co.’s win streak, however, given the resources that Anarumo was afforded during said stretch. An excuse, potentially, but also added context.

This isn’t to suggest that Lou Anarumo is Patrick Mahomes or Andy Reid’s Kryptonite, so long as he is afforded the resources necessary to get the job done, but Anarumo was unjustly scapegoated out of Cincinnati after not being able to do more with less. The Bengals let their defensive core walk and attempted to replace them with lesser moves entirely, oftentimes players on rookie contracts.

Lou Anarumo’s 2024-25 Bengals defense was certainly a step back from recent years, but the personnel that he was provided proved to be unfit. Even if said defense rebounded late in the year, the absence of a true nose tackle and a youthful defensive backfield resulted in missed tackles galore — something fans and analysts alike were afraid would happen after letting key players like DT D.J. Reader and S Jessie Bates walk in recent years prior.

Perhaps the Bengals were right in their assessment that the key players from Cincinnati’s Super Bowl run — something Anarumo was instrumental in — had begun to decline, but their succession plan, plus the subsequent firing of Anarumo, were not the right calls, hindsight bias or not.

Even the Kelce brothers took to their podcast post-firing to air out their disagreements. “I don’t know what the f–k is going on over there,” said Chiefs TE Travis Kelce. “I don’t think they had the horses on defense that they’ve had in the past, and Lou got handcuffed…He’s proven how good of a DC he is with good players,” his brother Jason followed.

Now that the history of how the final installment of the current Mahomes/Reid vs. Anarumo series will be the first not played between the Chiefs and Bengals, let’s briefly recap the results of those highly regarded matchups. The modern-day chess match, if you will — and ironically enough, Shane Steichen vs. Steve Spagnuola should be equally as enthralling.

2021 Week 17: Bengals 34, Chiefs 31

2021 AFC Championship: Bengals 27, Chiefs 24 (OT)

2022 Week 13: Bengals 27, Chiefs 24

2022 AFC Championship: Chiefs 23, Bengals 20

2023 Week 17: Chiefs 25, Bengals 17

2024 Week 2: Chiefs 26, Bengals 25

Clearly, these aforementioned chess matches are as intense as suggested. Pulling no punches on either side, whether it’s Andy Reid’s playcalling, Patrick Mahomes’ magic, or Lou Anarumo’s mad science, these matchups will forever be a treat.

The most referenced matchup between them was also their first of back-to-back AFC Championship bouts, a showing that saw Mahomes and Co. dominate the first half before Anarumo’s antics helped shut the door completely, resulting in Cincinnati’s first Super Bowl appearance since 1989.

According to Next Gen Stats, the Bengals had dropped 8+ defenders in coverage on a season-high 35% of pass plays, reaffirming Anarumo’s main goal to keep the offense, and more specifically, elite quarterbacks, guessing. Patrick Mahomes struggled against 8+ defenders in coverage, completing just 7 of 13 passes for 59 yards & an INT with 2 sacks (-14.4 pass EPA, career-low).

Down 21-10 at halftime, Anarumo’s in-game pivot resulted in just 3 points scored by the Chiefs during the second half. Forcing overtime before ultimately winning the contest in question, Anarumo’s coverage-agnostic ways were, for the first time, put on display for the entire football world to see. His genius had always been apparent, especially since his Bengals players declared him to be The Mad Scientist in their first matchup against the Chiefs earlier that season, but this was when he’d been exposed nationally, before quickly being deemed the then-potent Chiefs offense’s Kryptonite.

Fast forward to the current day, and the main actors have been cast, but their trajectories are undecided. The Kansas City Chiefs’ dynasty is currently amidst washed allegations as they face a sub-.500 record for the first time in the Mahomes era (outside of a Week 1 loss to Detroit in 2023). They’re aware of the stakes at hand, and Patrick Mahomes is understanding of what a Lou Anarumo defense is capable of:

“They definitely do some of the stuff [they used to do in Cincinnati]. Coach Anarumo is a great defensive coordinator and coach,” Mahomes proclaimed.

“He has his stuff, but I think what makes him such a great defensive coordinator is that he kind of tailors his scheme to the team he’s playing with. He wants to go with their strengths, so getting their guys in the best position to succeed. Even with some of the trades they’ve made, they’ve adjusted their defense as well. That’s something that makes him a great coach is that he’s not stuck in ways of how he calls a game, he adjusts his scheme to the team that’s around him, and obviously they’ve done a bunch of great things this year.”

There’s so much mutual respect between Lou Anarumo and Patrick Mahomes, and their chess matches feel like something that both parties get excited about. To be the best, you’ve got to beat the best, and Mahomes certainly welcomes the challenge, and Anarumo welcomes it right back. Anarumo understands the game and its roots, but he’s also recognized the sport’s ever-changing ways and has, in chameleon-esque fashion, shapeshifted to make life hell for all quarterbacks.

“Whether it’s in college or now in the NFL, [when] you play elite quarterbacks, you just can’t give them the same picture,” Anarumo told ESPN back in 2023. “You just gotta keep changing it and just attempt to keep those guys off balance.”

Although rattling off three straight wins over the then-dominant Patrick Mahomes-led Chiefs seemed like enough to deem Anarumo as the answer against the game’s best, the aforementioned decline in Cincinnati was far more nuanced than one person shielding the blame. Regardless, Anarumo took his punch on the way out and landed in Indianapolis for a perfect fit. Now, entering Week 12 of the 2025-26 season, Mahomes vs. Anarumo: Game 7 should feed families.

Patrick Mahomes vs Lou Anarumo (6 games):

136-198 (68.7%), 246.5 passing yards per game, 10TDs, 4INTs, 13 sacks

Half of the league is ready to declare the Chiefs’ dynasty dead, while the other half has deemed this the greatest 5-5 football team of all-time. On the flip side, the Colts are entering one of the toughest second-half stretches (4th-toughest via Tankathon) that the league has to offer, inciting fear in Indy’s validity as contenders.

With all that said, Lou Anarumo has never had a defensive backfield that features such star power on paper (Sauce Gardner, Charvarius Ward, Kenny Moore II, Camryn Bynum, and Nick Cross). The Colts will be without superstar DT DeForest Buckner on Sunday, but Anarumo’s DB-centric philosophy should serve as an intriguing canvas for the artists to paint on.

I am expecting just one thing from this matchup between Patrick Mahomes, Andy Reid, and Lou Anarumo, which is that it will be a movie, as Camryn Bynum likes to say.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indianapolis-colts-analysis/118104/mahomes-vs-anarumo-game-7
 
Report: Colts recently worked out two wideouts ahead of KC game

gettyimages-2229131979.jpg


According to LockedOnColts’ (and former Stampede Blue contributor) Jake Arthur, the Indianapolis Colts worked out two wideouts ahead of Sunday’s road game against the Kansas City Chiefs: Cole Burgess and Jaylen Johnson.

The #Colts had a couple of tryout players today:

WR Cole Burgess
WR Jaylen Johnson

— Jake Arthur (@JakeArthurNFL) November 21, 2025

The 6,0”, 200 pound Burgess was signed by the Cincinnati Bengals as an undrafted rookie free agent back in 2024, but has yet to appear in an NFL game and was waived as part of this year’s final 53-man roster cuts.

Here’s his NFL.com draft profile.

Meanwhile, Johnson is listed at 6’2”, 194 pounds and is formerly of the Los Angeles Chargers, where he spent the last two seasons after signing as an undrafted rookie free agent. He appeared in 1 career NFL game back in 2024 with the Bolts.

Backout wideout (special teams returnman) Anthony Gould (knee) was a full participant at this week’s practice, and no new injuries have been reported at the position.

The Colts did add Eli Pancol to their practice squad earlier this week.

This one appears as though Colts general manager Chris Ballard may just be performing his ‘due diligence’ at the wide receiver position, should injuries arise there down the road—or possibly to even uncover a potential diamond in the rough.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ntly-worked-out-two-wideouts-ahead-of-kc-game
 
Colts announce inactives for Week 12 against the Chiefs

imagn-26802482.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts announced their inactives for Week 12 on the road against the Kansas City Chiefs, with no real surprises ahead of this critical AFC clash among potential conference contenders:

our inactives for #INDvsKC. pic.twitter.com/vjY1ZBdZYj

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) November 23, 2025

It looks as though undrafted rookie Jonathan Edwards, who’s made 3 starts for Indianapolis this season, is currently the ‘odd man out’ in the Colts cornerback room with the return of former All-Pro veteran cornerback Charvarius Ward from a second concussion—who may be on a bit of an initial pitch count.

However, it was cornerback Cameron Mitchell, who was actually waived from the 53-man roster upon Ward’s much anticipated weekend activation off of injured reserve (within the 21-day period).

Meanwhile, Colts rookie 5th round running back D.J. Giddens has seen his role significantly diminish throughout the course of the season, going from star workhorse Jonathan Taylor’s primary backup for ‘between-the-tackles’ work to now being a healthy scratch with the return of backup Tyler Goodson and the additional signing of veteran back Ameer Abdullah. Both of those players are more scat-back, pass catching options.

On TV broadcasts, it’s been pointed out that Giddens has missed a few assignments/reads as a rookie, so there’s been a bit of an initial learning curve to overcome—which isn’t all that unexpected for a first-year pro.

Otherwise, safety Reuben Lowery III, tight end Will Mallory, and offensive tackle Luke Tenuta have been healthy scratches before at their respective positions so far this season.

Outside of veteran defensive tackle DeForest Buckner’s absence (neck), Indianapolis is only missing linebacker Jaylon Carlies (ankle), so this is about as healthy as the Colts have been this year among projected starters.

Versatile rotational backup defensive lineman Tyquan Lewis (groin) had his questionable injury designation removed over the weekend, and former veteran starter Samson Ebukam (knee) is also a full go for today’s game.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...unce-inactives-for-week-12-against-the-chiefs
 
Colts’ Jones, Steichen share blame for late offensive ineptitude in tough OT road loss to Chiefs

gettyimages-2248109849.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts were up 20-9 against the Kansas City Chiefs, and their defense had just recovered a timely Kareem Hunt fumble with 14:48 left in the 4th quarter near their own 17-yard line—thwarting yet another potential KC touchdown scoring drive.

It appeared as though the Colts were poised to deny Patrick Mahomes yet another win versus the Horseshoe—and remain the only NFL franchise that he has yet to beat in his future potentially GOAT career.

Armed with a double-digit lead, the best running back in football, and around a quarter left boasting a Colts defense that’s theoretically built to defend the pass (with two former All-Pros now at outside cornerback), you’d have to realistically like Indy’s chances against a struggling .500 Chiefs team entering the afternoon.

Yes, the Hall of Fame pairing of Mahomes and all-time great head coach Andy Reid is still plenty dangerous, but prime Travis Kelce and Tyreek Hill aren’t coming through that door for Kansas City anymore. The reeling Chiefs were ripe for the picking at Arrowhead late in this one, with the sun beginning to set.

It’s not as though the Colts league-leading offense wouldn’t score again either, until well, they didn’t the rest of the way.

Colts went three-and-out on their last four possessions:

Run for -2 yds
Incomplete pass
Incomplete pass, punt

Incomplete pass
7-yd completion
Incomplete pass, punt

Incomplete pass
Incomplete pass
6-yd completion, punt

4-yd completion
Run for 5 yds
Run for -2 yds, punt

— Bill Barnwell (@billbarnwell) November 23, 2025

The Colts offense beginning early in that 4th quarter and overtime went three and out on their last four straight possessions, and during that surprising offensive drought, star workhorse Jonathan Taylor only ran the ball one time in regulation (excluding the last drive in overtime, which it should’ve never gotten to that point quite frankly).

Now don’t get me wrong, Chiefs veteran defensive coordinator Steve Spagnulo clearly made it a top priority to stop Taylor, who was largely kept in check, rushing for 58 total rushing yards on 16 carries—and he was really only able to break off a 27-yard run with around 5 minutes left in the 3rd quarter to set up a converted Colts’ 23-yard field goal, which made up a large chunk of that rather pedestrian rushing output.

However, the Colts offense runs through Indianapolis’ bona fide NFL MVP candidate at running back. The Colts run the ball to set up the pass, and everything plays off Taylor and the offensive line’s success up front for what Jones and Co. otherwise do offensively. More often than not, it’s been a recipe for success so far this season.

Not only do you have to run the ball to give your best offensive player touches and keep him within the rhythm and flow of the offense—and force the opposing defensive coordinator to guess and refrain from being one dimensional, but also because we’ve seen time and time again this year, Taylor deliver routine body shots to the opposing defense through repetitive carries over the course of the game—only to finally deliver a TKO blow and break one off late in the game to win the game. He wears teams down, and he only needs a sliver of daylight to take the ball to the house at any given moment with his elite breakaway speed and deliver the ‘back-breaker.’

Plus, you also have a lead late, and you’re trying to burn clock. Did the Atlanta Falcons blowing a 28-3 lead to the New England Patriots in Super Bowl LI, when they abandoned their running game, not teach us anything?

Instead, the Colts inexplicably abandoned the running game in the 4th quarter (despite Taylor breaking one off in the 3rd and the running game finally showing some signs of life) and turned to Jones to solely win the game. The problem was Jones was pressured all afternoon in the passing game, and the Colts passing attack couldn’t muster anything with four straight three and outs when it mattered most late in the game.

It didn’t just mean that the Colts couldn’t even get the field goal that realistically could’ve iced the game in the 4th quarter, but it also tired out their defense, who actually played really well in this one, with two takeaways and largely holding the Chiefs to field goals instead of touchdowns, but were simply on the field entirely too long because of a stalled Indy offense during the 4th quarter and then overtime.

It showed in OT, when the Colts defense that had seemingly bent but not broken all afternoon, finally snapped from fatigue on a 31-yard Mahomes strike to wideout Xavier Worthy that would set up the Chiefs game-winning field goal in extra regulation.

As for Jones, my thoughts about him over the last few weeks remain unchanged.

He can be an elite “game manager,” which seems to have a negative connotation (but not so much in my eyes), with a strong running game, offensive system, and gifted offensive play-caller surrounding him.

From that stance, he reminds me a bit of the Detroit Lions Jared Goff or the San Francisco 49ers Brock Purdy in that regard. Not necessarily elite quarterbacks, but pretty good ones, who are capable of leading a team to a Super Bowl if they get hot offensively and when things are going right.

The question though is can they actually win one?

Jones can run this Colts offense masterfully at times, has shown uncanny accuracy, and efficient progression in his passing reads, but I’ve had questions on whether he can win a big game outright through the air when the opposing defense takes away Jonathan Taylor and the ground game—which was bound to happen at some point down the season’s final stretch run against some of the league’s best defenses.

I mean if you were an opposing defensive coordinator, why wouldn’t you, if you could from a defensive personnel and play-calling stance, and then force Jones to beat you through the air?

On Sunday afternoon, when Steichen turned the reins over to Jones and the passing game, he couldn’t do it.

When the Colts start entering these late season games with AFC opponents who are fighting for playoff spots and/or positioning, much less compete for a deep postseason run, Jones is going to have to make big throws, plays, and carry the Indy offense at times as a starting quarterback for a legitimate Super Bowl contender.

That’s what separates the good starting quarterbacks, who can just effectively run an offense as a game manager, from the really good to even great ones.

Just off the cuff, Peyton Manning had the 32-yard pass to tight end Bryan Fletcher on the game-winning drive in the 2006 AFC Title Game, as well as the 53-yard touchdown pass to Reggie Wayne with a Chicago Bears defender draped all over him in Super Bowl XLI, during the first quarter en route to victory.

Former franchise quarterback Andrew Luck arguably had the greatest throw in his entirely too short-lived, yet prolific playing career during the Colts 2015 wild card win hosting the Cincinnati Bengals.

Look, we know that Jones is neither Manning nor Luck, and the hope is that the Colts have enough of a well-rounded roster where he doesn’t necessarily have to be, but he’s going to have to elevate his teammates at times in these big games against better competition late in this year’s season—or to potentially make a deep AFC playoff push.

It’s not just on him though, as Steichen shares in that blame this afternoon with his offensive play-calling. He has to put Jones in a position for better success, and that generally has been with Taylor and the ground game backing him.

Something that Steichen already acknowledged post-game following his team’s tough road loss, but it’s not the first time this has happened to the Colts gifted offensive play-caller. Hopefully, this time he finally learns from it.

#Colts HC Shane Steichen repeatedly states that he has to better for the team with his play-calling.

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) November 23, 2025

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ve-ineptitude-in-tough-ot-road-loss-to-chiefs
 
Colts-Texans opening odds: This one got a lot more interesting

gettyimages-2190867010.jpg


Just a few short weeks ago the Indianapolis Colts were riding high and the Houston Texans were being left for dead by many. After losing two out of three and watching the Texans surge, this week’s matchup just got a lot more interesting. The Jaguars refuse to go away, and the Texans are catching up. The Colts need to win this one to maintain their lead in the AFC South and keep this season from completely going off the rails. A welcomed return to Lucas Oil could be the remedy after being gone for over a month. FanDuel Sportsbook sees the Colts as the favorites with a 3.5-point spread advantage.

The money line comes in at -200 with the over/under at 44.5.

The Colts went into Arrowhead to face the Chiefs and had a great opportunity to leave with a major win. Up 20-9 in the fourth, the Colts offense completely shut down. Getting a first down proved impossible as the Colts chose to not use the workhorse that had gotten them to this point. The abandonment of Jonathan Taylor proved costly as the Chiefs got the ball back late in the fourth and forced overtime. The Colts received the first possession of overtime, but the same inefficient offense carried over. A three and out was deadly as the Chiefs marched down the field and kicked a field goal to win.

The Texans played Thursday night and got the best of Josh Allen and the Bills. No C.J. Stroud? No problem when you have the Texans’ defense. Eight sacks and three turnovers were enough for the Texans to pull off the upset. After falling behind early, the Texans fought back to take the lead at halftime. The game could have ended there as neither team was able to do much in the second half with a total of six points scored. This unlikely win now puts Houston in a great spot to make a playoff push as they are in a logjam with one game separating six teams.

Yes, this one got a lot more important for both teams. The Colts are looking to find their way back after a few rough outings. Unfortunately, the Texans might not be the team they were looking for. That front could make for a long day for Daniel Jones and this offense. Whatever has ailed them, the Colts need to figure it out quickly. There are no breaks or time left to play around.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ning-odds-this-one-got-a-lot-more-interesting
 
Colts’ head coach Shane Steichen explains decision to take ball first in overtime

gettyimages-2248103547.jpg


Indianapolis Colts head coach Shane Steichen explained his controversial late game decision to take possession of the football first in overtime offensively after the Kansas City Chiefs tied it up 20-20 at the end of regulation (via 1075 The Fan’s Kevin Bowen):

Steichen on taking the ball in overtime: https://t.co/2KOj2Vg4NT pic.twitter.com/Gwlvib8sl0

— Kevin Bowen (@KBowen1070) November 24, 2025

To be fair too, there is at least some debate on whether the better school of thought is take possession first offensively or defer respectively.

With the NFL’s current overtimes rule, with an additional 10 minutes of extended regulation, each team has the opportunity to have possession of the football offensively (unless there’s a safety or pick six), regardless of whether the team who has possession first offensively scores a touchdown.

For the Colts, and in Steichen’s eyes, it meant that they didn’t have the pressure of the scoreboard to maintain and could theoretically get a 2nd offensive possession—should they fail to score and subsequently stop the Chiefs.

It’s also fair to point out that with the Colts offense having three straight 3 and outs heading into overtime, that the Indy defense was presumably gassed and could use a bit of a breather—having been on the field a long time.

On the flip side, the Chiefs knew exactly what they needed to score, between a touchdown or field goal, and also had the luxury of potentially utilizing an extra down (4th down) to do it, if needed, on each set of downs.

In the end, the Colts stalled offense had a 4th straight three and out, and the Indianapolis defense, which had bent afternoon, finally broke after Patrick Mahomes connected with speedy wideout Xavier Worthy on a 31-yard pass completion on 3rd and 7 in overtime, to put the Chiefs just in the outskirts of field goal territory at the Indianapolis 45-yard line. A few players later, Harrison Butker would convert a game-winning 27-yard field goal.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...lains-decision-to-take-ball-first-in-overtime
 
After three straight subpar performances, is the Colts’ panic meter starting to climb?

gettyimages-2248118357.jpg


If you ask Shane Steichen or any of the players if this is the time to panic, the answer would be a resounding “no”. After starting the season 7-1, the Indianapolis Colts find themselves at 8-3. In a vacuum, 8-3 is pretty good. Considering where this team was projected to be, 8-3 is fantastic. It isn’t always about the record, however. More times than not it, how a team got to that record and where the team is currently is more important. For the Colts, things are on a downward trend over the last three games. The players and coaches would never express outward panic, but that doesn’t mean the meter isn’t starting to rise.

Four weeks ago, Jonathan Taylor was running over people, Daniel Jones was in the MVP conversation, the offensive line looked like world beaters and the skilled positions were making plays all over the field. Not to say the Colts have made a total 180, but there have been regressions. Yes, Taylor still ran roughshod over the Falcons, but games against the Steelers and Chiefs left something to be desired. Is that all on Taylor? Of course not. A lot comes down to the game plan and especially in the Chiefs game, the total lack of running plays called down the stretch. Throw to score, run to win? Didn’t seem like it out there.

The plate for Jones at times is too full. He has shown tremendous growth, but he has limitations. The Colts are here because of Taylor and the complimenting role of Jones. The Colts need to continue to lean on that identity. Over this stretch, the offensive line is getting beaten up and giving up too much pressure. Thus, Jones is forcing the ball and holding it too long. Turnovers have jumped, drives are stalling, and three and outs are piling up. We are seeing no where near the offensive efficiency we witnessed early on in the season. To a degree, that is understandable. This team wasn’t going to maintain historic levels. The drop-off in the dominance is what has been troubling. Steichen needs to use RPO more to keep defenses off balance and lean on Taylor. He is the horse that got them here and the one that will carry the Colts home. Even if the yards aren’t there early, keep him involved. It isn’t a mystery that he can rip a long one and change the game in dramatic fashion.

Win against the Texans and the pressure will subside for at least a moment. It would get this team back on track and maintain distance in the AFC South. Lose, however, and the division becomes a dog fight. The Colts could be looking at a tie with Jacksonville, and the Texans would be one game back with a division clincher. What a depressing place that would be after the start the Colts had. The panic meter may have crept up slightly, but it shouldn’t be a five-alarm fire yet. The Texans’ game could cool tensions. Then again, it could have fans calling for heads as the panic meter burst through the top.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...es-is-the-colts-panic-meter-starting-to-climb
 
Five former Colts named Semifinalists for Pro Football HoF Class of 2026

gettyimages-155469497.jpg


The Indianapolis Colts have five former players named among the 26 modern-era semfinalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Class of 2026: running back Frank Gore, defensive end/outside linebacker Robert Mathis, quarterback Philip Rivers, placekicker Adam Vinatieri, and wide receiver Reggie Wayne.

Both Gore (2015-17) and Rivers (2020) had short stints in Indianapolis, and will be most remembered for their playing days elsewhere where they had the vast peak of their success and spent a much longer period of time. Gore as a workhorse running back for the San Francisco 49ers, and Rivers as the longtime starting quarterback with the Chargers franchise. That being said, both were memorable Colts, even for their limited time in Indy.

In the instance of time here, I will highlight the three players from the five that will be most remembered as Colts:

gettyimages-630809492.jpg

Robert Mathis


Originally a 2003 5th round pick of the Colts, the undersized, yet tenacious 6’2”, 245 pound pass rusher went on to become one of the best hidden gems of Hall of Fame Bill Polian’s distinguished tenure in Indianapolis.

Largely teaming up with Hall of Famer Dwight Freeney, as one of the best pass rushing duos of all-time, Mathis would become a Super Bowl XLI Champion, NFL First-Team All-Pro, 5x NFL Pro Bowl, and member of the Colts Ring of Honor. He finished his 13-year NFL career with 538 tackles (408 solo), 123.0 sacks, 1 interception, 18 passes defensed, 52 forced fumbles, and 17 fumble recoveries (3 returned for a touchdown) during 192 games (121 starts). His 52 forced fumbles are the most recorded in NFL history.


gettyimages-498319100.jpg

Adam Vinatieri


The undisputed greatest kicker in NFL history is a man who needs no introduction, as he was already Canton-bound (with that arch nemesis we won’t mention here) before joining the Indianapolis Colts franchise in 2006.

During his lengthy 24-year NFL career, where he largely aged like a fine wine until he couldn’t physically kick anymore, Vinatieri would become a 4x Super Bowl Champion, 3x NFL First-Team All-Pro, 3x NFL Pro Bowler, member of the NFL 2000s All-Decade Team, and is the NFL’s all-time scoring leader (2,673 total points). He converted 599 of his 715 field goal attempts (83.8%) and 878 of 898 extra point attempts (97.3%). Perhaps most importantly though, he’ll be regarded as the most clutch kicker there ever was and likely ever will be.


73023662.jpg

Reggie Wayne


One of the greatest wideouts in Colts franchise history, Wayne was remarkably consistent featuring smooth route running, incredibly sure-hands, and sometimes, even a flare for the dramatic. Nothing about Wayne was overly spectacular from an elite speed or athleticism standpoint compared to his peers by any means, but the total package of everything was highly impressive and incredibly consistent. He was truly a sum of his parts, much like Jerry Rice in that regard.

He was “Mr. 3rd down” as a popular target for both former franchise quarterbacks Peyton Manning and Andrew Luck to help move the sticks and sustain scoring drives, especially during critical moments. Pairing with Hall of Famer Marvin Harrison, he formed one of the greatest wide receiver pairings in NFL history. He finished his 14-year Colts career with 1,070 receptions for 14,345 receiving yards and 82 touchdown receptions—becoming a Super Bowl XLI Champion, NFL First-Team All-Pro, 2x NFL 2nd-Team All-Pro, 6x NFL Pro Bowler, and Colts Ring of Honor member. He has played the most games in Colts all-time history.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ifinalists-for-pro-football-hof-class-of-2026
 
Back
Top