Sunday could count for everything or nothing at all for the Colts

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The entire fate of the Indianapolis Colts could be decided around 7:30 EST on Saturday in a game they don’t even play. The Colts lost their say in what happens to them a few weeks back when their slide became overwhelmingly long. Now, their season hangs in the balance, and the Houston Texans have a firm grip on it. Anything the Colts want to accomplish regarding a postseason birth revolves around their division rival.

The Jaguars come to town absolutely red hot to take on the Colts in week seventeen. That by itself is a daunting task. Jacksonville has plenty to play for as they jockey for conference positioning. Unique circumstances sank the Colts the last time they faced off, but it was still a bloodbath. Since then, the Jaguars have beaten up the competition in addition to smacking the Broncos on the road. This game might not matter at all for the Colts, however, if the Texans take care of business tonight.

The Texans travel to Los Angeles to meet the Chargers who are very much alive for playoff positioning themselves. They won’t be backing down which is great news for the Colts. The Texans won’t have it easy, but if they win, it’s all over for the Colts. Lose, and Sunday becomes must watch t.v. for the Indiana area. If the Colts can pull off the win, they will set up another showdown against the Texans in the last week of the season. Last time, it was for the division and at Lucas Oil. This time it would be the for the seventh seed and Houston gets the advantage at home.

The Colts can worry about that next week. Two things must happens for week eighteen to matter: a Texans’ loss and a Colts’ win. Money would be on the Texans losing over the Colts winning, but both could happen. Then again, neither could. Sunday won’t matter at all if the Texans down the Chargers tonight. The look and feel of Sunday will be much more somber in Indianapolis if they do, but the Colts have no one to blame but themselves.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...or-everything-or-nothing-at-all-for-the-colts
 
Indianapolis Colts playoffs: Updated elimination scenario, AFC standings, playoff picture for Week 17

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Saturday update: The Colts were officially eliminated from playoff contention when the Houston Texans beat the Los Angeles Chargers 20-16 on Saturday evening.



The Indianapolis Colts may or may not be in a do-or-die situation in Week 17 when they host the Jacksonville Jaguars on Sunday. Their playoff picture could be settled on Saturday afternoon when the Houston Texans travel to face the Los Angeles Chargers. The Colts are a 5.5-point home underdog against the Jaguars while the Texans are a 1.5-point road underdog against the Chargers.

AFC South standings​


The Colts eliminated themselves from AFC South contention in Week 16 when they lost to the 49ers on Monday Night Football. That race is down to the Jaguars and Texans.

  1. Jacksonville Jaguars: 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
  2. Houston Texans: 10-5
  3. Indianapolis Colts: 8-7
  4. Tennessee Titans: 3-12

Updated AFC playoff picture​


The Colts only chance at a playoff berth requires them winning their final two games and the Texans losing their final two games. This would move the Colts into seventh place and they would hold the final wild card spot. In Week 17, the Texans face the Chargers on Saturday at 4:30 p.m. ET. If the Texans win or tie against the Chargers, the Colts are eliminated. Additionally, if the Colts lose or tie against the Jaguars on Sunday, Indianapolis is eliminated.

  1. Denver Broncos 13-3 (clinched playoff berth)
  2. New England Patriots 12-3 (clinched playoff berth)
  3. Jacksonville Jaguars 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
  4. Pittsburgh Steelers 9-6
  5. Los Angeles Chargers 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
  6. Buffalo Bills 11-4 (clinched playoff berth)
  7. Houston Texans 10-5
  8. Indianapolis Colts 8-7
  9. Baltimore Ravens 7-8

AFC teams eliminated from the playoffs​

  • Miami Dolphins
  • Kansas City Chiefs
  • Cincinnati Bengals
  • New York Jets
  • Cleveland Browns
  • Tennessee Titans
  • Las Vegas Raiders

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...f-picture-afc-south-standings-updated-week-17
 
Colts free fall out of playoff race with 6 straight losses down home stretch

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INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA - DECEMBER 28: Indianapolis Colts quarterback Philip Rivers #17 signals to his offense during the fourth quarter of the game against the Jacksonville Jaguars at Lucas Oil Stadium — December 28, 2025 in Indianapolis, Indiana. (Photo by Michael Hickey/Getty Images)

With Sunday’s 23-17 loss to the Jacksonville Jaguars, the Indianapolis Colts left the home finale with a familiar sting that has defined how each season is destined to end. The Colts winless drought reached six straight games down the home stretch and they will miss the playoffs for the fifth straight season following another late collapse of epic proportions.

It felt more like a senior day operation inside Lucas Oil Stadium than an actual game that had any relevance to the future of the franchise as the Colts were held to a season-low 204 total Net yards in the final home game. Colts quarterback Philip Rivers completed 17 of 30 passes for 147 passing yards and one touchdown, but the 44-year-old signal caller was sacked twice and threw another fourth-quarter interception. It was his third turnover in three starts that ultimately became the decisive play to shift the momentum to the Jags.

Indianapolis’ special teams unit was the lone bright spot, igniting the home crowd on the opening kickoff with a 53-yard return by Ashton Dulin to set up the offense in a favorable field position. The Colts marched deep into Jaguars territory before settling for a 33-yard field goal made by kicker Blake Grupe, who has delivered on all eight field goal attempts in four games since making his Colts debut in Jacksonville.

The Colts caught a huge break after a botched hook-and-ladder trick play resulted in a fumble recovery by Samson Ebukam to terminate the Jaguars’ opening drive inside the red zone. The stampede sporting blue carried that momentum with a punishing marathon drive as running back Jonathan Taylor capped a 15-play, 83-yard march with a 3-yard touchdown run to put Indianapolis ahead 10-0. The Colts’ three-time Pro Bowl tailback finished with 70 rushing yards on 21 carries and matched a career-high with his 20th touchdown of the season.

JT TUDDY ‼️

📺 FOX pic.twitter.com/u4og02ay1p

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) December 28, 2025

Quarterback Trevor Lawrence leaned on his legs to score both touchdowns to lift the Jaguars to an imperative win over the Colts. Jacksonville sits at 12-4, set to host a playoff game and claim the AFC South title with a win over the last place Titans in Week 18.

Jacksonville stormed back behind Lawrence, who repeatedly burned the Colts with his arm and his legs. The Jaguars retaliated as Lawrence scrambled into the end zone for a 4-yard rushing touchdown to finish a 12-play drive and get Jacksonville on the scoreboard. After Lawrence hit receiver Parker Washington with a 37-yard bomb in the third quarter, the longest play of the game, he scored a 6-yard touchdown run that gave the Jaguars their first lead at 14-10.

The Colts responded quickly as Rivers hit receiver Josh Downs for an 18-yard catch on third down. After a defensive pass interference call moved the ball inside the Jacksonville 10, Rivers found veteran tight end Mo Ali-Cox for a 5-yard touchdown to reclaim a 17-14 lead. Rivers’ lone touchdown pass was the 425th passing TD of his 18-year career, which is the sixth-most in NFL history.

Mo enters the chat 🙌

📺 FOX pic.twitter.com/sbdjcFcI8e

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) December 28, 2025

The Jaguars tied the game late in the third quarter with a 34-yard field goal after Lawrence converted multiple third downs, including a 19-yard completion to tight end Brenton Strange. Jacksonville then capitalized on a Rivers interception midway through the fourth quarter, turning a short field into a Little 42-yarder to take the lead. Lawrence finished with 263 total passing yards and two rushing touchdowns, while Washington led all receivers with 115 receiving yards, including the 37-yard strike that flipped momentum in the third quarter.

It would be tough to find a more epic collapse from any Colts season in the Indianapolis era after starting the 2025 season 7-1, only to lose six straight games and fall out of playoff contention to spoil the holiday weekend. The Colts became just the sixth team since the AFL-NFL merger in 1970 to win seven of their first eight games and miss the playoffs.

Teams to start a season 7-1 and miss the playoffs:
*2025 Colts
*2012 Bears
*1996 Redskins
*1988 Saints
*1987 Chargers
*1975 Dolphins

— Mike Chappell (@mchappell51) December 28, 2025

Instead of an inspirational send-off, the home finale became yet another chapter in the frustrating finishes with this core. If Sunday was the final curtain call of the farewell tour for Grandpa Phil, it proved that he can still compete among the NFL’s best players despite a five-year absence. Enough so that head coach Shane Steichen chose him to command the troops with nothing to play for.

The Colts hit the road for the regular season finale against the rival Houston Texans next Sunday.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ce-with-six-straight-losses-down-home-stretch
 
Colts-Texans opening odds: One more for the road

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Another season of Opening Odds is in the books. While it isn’t the way any of us would like to see the season end, I hope you enjoyed it. The Indianapolis Colts are set to conclude their season with a rather meaningless road contest against the Houston Texans who ended the Colts’ season Saturday night. It was one of the biggest up and down seasons we have seen, and FanDuel Sportsbook sees the Colts going out with a whimper. The losing streak is predicted to continue with the Colts at +10.5 in the spread.

The money line is set at +480 while the over/under comes in at 39.5

Even though the Colts played Sunday, their season ended on Saturday thanks to the Texans. With something on the line, the results might have been different, but the Colts didn’t appear they would have used the gift from the Texans anyway. It was a solid effort from the Colts that saw them leading late in the third, but serving as a microcosm of the season, when things got tight, no one rose to the occasion. Too many times this team was a play or two away from claiming victory, but the hero it needed never emerged. Thus was the case on Sunday as the Jaguars scored the last nine points and set themselves up nicely to win the AFC South.

The Texans looked the part as they made the Chargers look pedestrian. The Chargers had won seven out of their last eight and had a shot at the AFC West crown. Everything was on the line, and they laid an absolute egg. Give credit to Houston who came out firing, needing seven plays on the first two drives to score fourteen. C.J. Stroud and the offense pretty much shut it down after that, but the defense made sure it was enough. The Chargers were limited to three points in the first half and their normally reliable kicker, Cameron Dicker, missed a 32-yard field goal and an extra point. That proved to be the difference and gave the Texans a playoff berth and a shot at the division.

For a team that had aspirations and looked like it had finally found something, week eighteen leaves more questions than answers. It is difficult rooting against your team, but what does a win really do besides cost draft position? Would it be nice to deny the Texans the AFC South at the hands of the Colts? Maybe. Would it be nice to move up another spot or two in the draft order? Unfortunately, just like too many seasons, the answer is yes.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...lts-texans-opening-odds-one-more-for-the-road
 
Colts’ Monday Morning Awards: Week 17 vs. Jaguars

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8-8, the losing streak continues, and this team keeps finding ways to lose. A cultural reset is clearly needed, starting from the general manager all the way down to the key players. This team is not going anywhere the way it is built, and to top it all off the Colts don’t have their first round picks for the next two drafts.


MVP of the Game: Laiatu Latu​


Latu is in my opinion one of the most underrated edge rushers in the NFL. Playing on a front seven that has no consistent pass-rushers other than him, he still manages to generate pressure, he has improved drastically finishing plays and getting sacks, and has stepped up batting passes and has an absurd three interceptions this year. He has lived up to the hype of the first round pick used on him, and was by far the Colts’ best defensive player this season. Imagine what he could do surrounded with players that opposing offensive lines have to pay attention to.

Dud of the Game (The Ballard): Zaire Franklin / Shane Steichen​


Zaire played much better this season with Anarumo, but his play is still subpar. Take a closer look to the third down conversions of the Jaguars’ offense, and really stare at #44. If I am able to see it I just cannot understand how the coaches don’t, unless there is some sort of explanation for it, but the amount of times he just stands there as the receiver blows past him, allowing an easy completion, is insane. Yes he is solid in the run game, and he has improved his game as a pass-rusher, but in today’s NFL linebackers need to be able to at least be competent in pass-coverage. He is also one of the leaders on a team that has not made the playoffs since he is a starter, and that has suffered several late-season collapses. When everything fails the blame starts at the top, and Franklin has positioned himself as one of the top dogs in the team, for better or worse.

Steichen gets the dud of the game because of one of the most obvious questionable calls I have seen from a head-coach: going for it on 4th & 11 near midfield. It is simple statistic here, the chances of the Colts converting a 4th and 11 with Philip Rivers at quarterback are probably around 1%, give or take. Giving the Jaguars the ball back in that position means that they are in 4th down territory (with a conversion essentially ending the game, which is what happened), or say you turn the ball over and manage to force a 3 and out, then the Jaguars punt the ball and most likely force you to start at your own 10-15 yard line. Now if the Colts had punted the ball then the Jags start at their own 20-yard line (average), too risky to go for it on 4th down in that area of the field, and if the defense holds and forces a 3 and out then the offense gets the ball back at the 40 (again, give or take). The decision to go for it was dumb, and another late game mismanagement by Steichen.

Best play of the Game: First three drives​


Not like it really mattered because the Colts were already eliminated before the game started, but for the first three drives it seemed like the Colts were going to manage to win this one and give the fans some happiness to end the year. First drive: an excellent kickoff return by Dulin, followed by some yards on the ground and a chip shot by Grupe to get the Colts up early. Then the defense allowed the Jags to drive down the field before a fumble recovery on a mishandled lateral, followed by a methodical 15-play drive that finished with a touchdown to put the Colts up 10-0.

Worst play of the Game: Lawrence 9-yard completion to Meyers on 3rd and 10, followed by 4th down conversion on QB sneak.​


That was rough. First of all Lawrence places a perfect ball to Meyers, who was blanketed by Moore, but still managed to make an amazing catch near the sideline to set up a 4th and 1 instead of 3rd and 10. That was an amazing play by both the quarterback and the wide receiver, one of those plays where the defense cannot do anything to stop it. What came after that was bad though, with the Jaguars in clear sneak situation the Colts’ defense inexplicably left the left side wide open resulting in perhaps the easiest QB sneak conversion this season for Lawrence.

Unsung hero: Germaine Pratt​


For a linebacker picked off the street in Week 6, Pratt has been solid. Against the Jags he got an interception in the redzone, and finished the game with 7 tackles. He is not starting linebacker material because very much like Franklin he is a liability in coverage, but as for depth and veteran leadership he is worth keeping around next year.

Rookie of the Week: Tyler Warren​


Once again, not because of any particular merit by Warren but because the only other rookie with significant playing time was Jalen Travis and he struggled dealing with JHA and Travon Walker. Warren caught all five of his targets for 43 yards, a solid outing.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...olts-monday-morning-awards-week-17-vs-jaguars
 
The Colts face a major decision with Michael Pittman Jr.’s contract

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There are certain conversations NFL teams don’t want to have, but are forced into anyway. The Colts’ situation with Michael Pittman Jr. is one of them. Pittman is a good player, a respected leader, and someone who has done everything asked of him since arriving in Indianapolis. This isn’t about questioning his toughness or professionalism. It’s about timing, money, and where the franchise is headed. As the Colts approach the 2026 offseason, Pittman’s contract has quietly become one of the most consequential levers they can pull — and ignoring it may be more damaging than making an uncomfortable decision.

When Pittman signed his extension, it made sense. He was the clear No. 1 receiver, the offense lacked proven pass-catching depth, and stability mattered. But contracts don’t exist in a vacuum. By 2026, Pittman’s cap number balloons into territory that demands justification, not sentiment. Cutting or trading him would free up roughly $24 million in cap space. That’s not marginal flexibility — that’s the difference between reshaping a roster and being boxed into tough compromises elsewhere. The structure of the deal gives the Colts an exit, and exits exist for a reason.

That money matters even more when you zoom out and look at the Colts’ broader cap picture. While Indianapolis isn’t in immediate cap hell, their flexibility is far more fragile than it appears. Quarterback uncertainty still looms. Several veterans are aging into more expensive phases of their careers. Extensions for younger players are coming and they are not optional. The idea that the Colts can simply keep every high-priced piece together ignores how quickly cap space evaporates once you start accounting for future years instead of just the next one. Pittman’s contract sits right at the intersection of affordability and opportunity cost.

Alec Pierce is the pressure point that makes this conversation unavoidable. Pierce is entering the phase of his career where second contracts happen, and based on the market and his trajectory, something in the range of four years and $80 million is a realistic projection. At roughly $20 million per year, Pierce won’t be cheap — but he’s younger, ascending, and stylistically better aligned with where the offense is going. He stretches the field, dictates coverage, and creates space for others. Paying Pierce is a forward-looking investment. Paying Pittman at his current number is a backward-looking one.

Trying to justify both contracts at once is where the math breaks down. This isn’t a pass-heavy offense built around two high-volume receivers. It’s a system that values efficiency, spacing, and flexibility. Allocating top-of-market money to two receivers only works if both are consistently tilting defenses. Right now, only one of them is.

That becomes even clearer when you look at Pittman’s recent production. Over the last seven games, he’s totaled 26 catches for 212 yards and one touchdown. That’s barely over 30 yards per game, on nearly 40 targets, with fewer than six yards per target. Those aren’t empty snaps — he’s still involved — but they’re low-impact ones. Meanwhile, Josh Downs has become the most reliable chain-mover in the offense, and Pierce has emerged as the primary vertical threat. Over this stretch, Pittman hasn’t been the engine or the finisher. He’s been, at best, the third-most impactful wide receiver on the team, and fourth if you include Tyler Warren in the receiving picture.

That doesn’t mean Pittman suddenly forgot how to play football. It does mean the offense has evolved in a way that doesn’t maximize his strengths. He’s not a burner and he’s not consistently creating explosive plays after the catch; he’s no longer dominating at the catch point the way he once did. When opportunity remains but production declines, teams have to ask whether the role still justifies the cost. In this case, it’s hard to argue that it does.

This is where the trade conversation becomes just as important as the cut discussion. Cutting Pittman saves $24 million, but it turns a valuable asset into nothing. Trading him accomplishes the same cap relief while recouping draft capital, even if the return isn’t glamorous. A mid-round pick still matters for a team that may need to inject youth cheaply and efficiently. Pittman’s skill set has value around the league — particularly for contenders looking for a physical possession receiver or teams with young quarterbacks who need a reliable target. The Colts don’t need to dump him; they just need to be willing to listen and probably settle for something cheap.

Whether they do says a lot about the franchise’s direction. Keeping Pittman suggests a commitment to continuity and a belief that this core is still close. Moving on — via trade or cut — suggests flexibility, discipline, and a willingness to recalibrate. That decision becomes even more meaningful if Chris Ballard’s job security comes into question. A general manager fighting to survive may prefer stability. A new general manager, unburdened by past decisions, would almost certainly view Pittman’s contract as one of the easiest ways to reset the books and reshape the roster.

This doesn’t have to signal a full teardown. It can just as easily be the start of a retool — reallocating resources toward younger players, cleaner cap sheets, and a more coherent offensive identity. The Colts don’t have to move on from Michael Pittman Jr. But choosing not to comes with a real cost, one that shows up not just on the balance sheet, but in who they’re able to keep, who they’re able to add, and how flexible they remain when the next decision arrives.

Pittman is a good player. His contract is not disastrous. But football decisions aren’t made in isolation, and timing matters as much as talent. Freeing up $24 million could fund Alec Pierce’s future, create room at quarterback, or give a new front office the flexibility it needs to reshape the roster. The Colts aren’t obligated to pull the lever — but the longer they wait, the more expensive standing still becomes.

In the end, this isn’t about disrespecting a player who has given the franchise everything. It’s about recognizing when a contract no longer aligns with the direction of the team. And this offseason, whether the Colts cut, trade, or keep Michael Pittman Jr. may tell us more about where they’re headed than any press conference ever could.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...r-decision-with-michael-pittman-jr-s-contract
 
Riley Leonard set to make first NFL start, while becoming Colts’ 8th different season finale starter in last 8 seasons

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The final chapter of the Indianapolis Colts 2025 campaign will be written by a 23-year-old rookie making his first NFL start. When rookie quarterback Riley Leonard takes the field on Sunday against the Houston Texans, he will become the Colts’ eighth different season finale starter in the last eight seasons.

The list of eight starters includes Andrew Luck, Jacoby Brissett, Philip Rivers, Carson Wentz, Sam Ehlinger, Gardner Minshew, Joe Flacco and Leonard, in that order. None of the last four players mentioned were granted the starting nod in the season opener. For a franchise that has not been able to solve its QB carousel, the annual instability at the most important position becomes even more noticeable in the final game of the season.

Colts season finale starters over the last 8 seasons. @StampedeBlue

2025: Riley Leonard
2024: Joe Flacco
2023: Gardner Minshew
2022: Sam Ehlinger
2021: Carson Wentz
2020: Philip Rivers
2019: Jacoby Brissett
2018: Andrew Luck

None of the last four QBs started the season opener

⚾️TBG🏅 (@TBGofficial_) December 30, 2025

Indianapolis drafted Leonard in the sixth round of April’s NFL Draft, taking a Day 3 chance on a developmental quarterback known best for his toughness and leadership reputation built at Duke before leading Notre Dame to the National Championship game almost one year ago. Leonard arrived in Indy without ceremony, without generating many headlines, and without expectations of getting immediate action behind the QB battle between Daniel Jones and Anthony Richardson Sr., but the NFL has a way of accelerating timelines.

Jones earned the starting nod over Richardson in the season opener to become the eighth different Week 1 starter over the last nine seasons. What began as a sensational 7-1 start turned into a disastrous situation as both QBs suffered separate injuries — on and off the field — that effectively ended their seasons. In four games, Leonard completed 18 of 33 passes (55%) for 145 passing yards and one rushing touchdown. His first NFL rushing touchdown came after taking over for Jones, who suffered a season-ending right Achilles tear in Jacksonville.

To try and momentarily stabilize the position, the Colts reached out to ask Rivers to come out of retirement at age 44 to play in three critical games. Indianapolis lost all three games with Rivers as the starter, who has likely made his last NFL start after coming out of a near five-year retirement to command the Colts through a tough December stretch.


The jury is still out on what Leonard brings to the table, but it would have been easy to guess the rookie would get at least one start this season. With the Colts officially eliminated from playoff contention for the fifth straight campaign, head coach Shane Steichen chose to give Leonard his first NFL start in the final game of the season. Rivers has supported the decision and maintains that he has no regrets about coming back, even calling his unexpected stint “an absolute blast” and expressing gratitude for the opportunity.

Leonard shares a special connection with the 44-year-old Rivers, who lives in Fairhope Ala., which is where Leonard went to high school and where his parents still reside. When the Notre Dame product was training for the NFL combine, Leonard would train with his mentor Rivers. The pair would work on throwing routes as Rivers would help refine footwork and basic fundamentals. Leonard has publicly spoken about Rivers being a mentor and friend, praising his leadership and football intelligence. That relationship came full circle in December as the rookie learning the rhythms of the NFL stood in the room alongside the same quarterback who helped him prepare to enter the spotlight of a professional QB.

Now, the baton is being passed from an 18-year veteran to a rookie getting his opportunity. It’s a familiar finish for Indianapolis, even if the name on the back of the jersey keeps changing.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...erent-season-finale-starter-in-last-8-seasons
 
Reggie Wayne, Adam Vinatieri named finalists for Pro Football HoF’s 2026 class

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Indianapolis, IN — A pair of former Indianapolis Colts legends — wide receiver Reggie Wayne and kicker Adam Vinatieriwere announced as finalists for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s 2026 Class.

With fifteen total modern-era finalists in the equation, there are caveats and rules in place to ensure a seamless operation. Below is some brief context to the process, as provided by the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s press release:

Included on the list are four players — Willie Anderson, Torry Holt, Luke Kuechly and Adam Vinatieri — who advanced to this stage automatically due to each candidate reaching the Final 7 for election with the Class of 2025. Joining them are six other Finalists from a year ago, four first-year eligible candidates and one player in his sixth year of eligibility who is a Finalist for the first time.

Adam Vinatieri needs no introduction, despite playing a position often scoffed at by some of the more hardcore fans of the sport. Earning the title of the NFL’s all-time leading scorer after 24 years in the league, Vinatieri garnered 2,673 total career points—having made 599 of 715 field goal attempts (83.8%) and 874 of 898 extra points (97.3%) during his 24 seasons (365 games).

Spending at least a decade in both New England and Indianapolis, Vinatieri was around for the big moments, often being the proverbial final nail in the coffin as he’d become known for his game-winning kicks. In total, Vinatieri was a 4x Super Bowl Champion (Patriots 3x, Colts 1x), a 3x First-Team NFL All-Pro, a 3x NFL Pro Bowler, and was a member of the NFL’s 2000s All-Decade and 100th Anniversary All-Time teams.

Reggie Wayne, however, has had a tough time earning his gold jacket. Serving as the Colts’ wide receivers coach for the past four seasons (2025-26 included), Wayne has spent even longer waiting to hear his name immortalized forever — he has been a finalist in each of his seven years on the ballot.

His greatness is rather undeniable. Reggie Wayne himself served as the torch passed between franchise quarterbacks, producing every step of the way throughout his fourteen seasons with the Indianapolis Colts. He sits near the top of most major statistical categories, while his postseason production is often mentioned first on account of consistently showing up when it mattered most.

Here’s where Wayne ranks all-time in the following categories:

10th in receiving yards (14,345)

10th in receptions (1,070)

30th in touchdown receptions (82)

Postseason:

7th in playoff receiving yards (1,254)

6th in playoff receptions (93)

T-10th in playoff touchdown receptions (9)

Accolade-wise, Wayne is no stranger. He became a Super Bowl XLI Champion, 6x Pro Bowler, First-Team NFL All-Pro, 2x 2nd-Team NFL All-Pro, NFL receiving yards leader, and Colts Ring of Honor member across his fourteen seasons with the Indianapolis Colts.

The Class of 2026 will be unveiled publicly during the ‘NFL Honors’ broadcast on February 5th, 2026. The program will air on NBC and NFL Network and will be streamed on Peacock and NFL+.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ed-finalists-for-pro-football-hofs-2026-class
 
Can we see anything in week 18 to give the Colts hope for next season?

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I am going to look at this question from the thought process that we will be signing Daniel Jones to a contract for some yet to be determined length and dollar amount. I may lose some of you with that declaration, but I struggle to endorse a different route. Of course the DJ injury brings a lot of variables to the process. How long is the contract? How much will you pay him? Will he be ready to go week 1? How does this effect Anthony Richardson? Who makes the decision? Who coaches him?

With DJ in the fold, the possibility exists that he can’t be under center when we start playing games for real next season. Personally, I think he will be ready, but expecting that result would be a neglectful route to take. When the role of the backup QB is discussed, the most likely and best result is to have one that, “can hold down the fort” for a limited amount of games. I think the signing of Rivers took away an opportunity to discover if Leonard was the right person for that role. It would have been the exact thing you hoped to find out in a limited, but impactful stretch of games.

I have no delusions that RL has all the tools in his belt to emerge as QB1 on a team that would make a deep run. I don’t think that he has the arm talent for that. I did see him play his last game of college being completely outmanned. He at minimum, showed moxie. I believe he has all of the tools to be an above average backup, but he needs meaningful game action, which was taken away from him by “The last act of a desperate man”. I know that there is a Blazing Saddles fan who is quoting Howard Johnson and saying “I don’t care if it the first act of Henry the V”, but maybe it is too old of a reference.

To go back and answer the question in the title, I think there are a few things we can watch for, as it pertains to next season. Obviously, if Leonard can show some level of command of the offense against a Houston defense with something to play for, he could establish himself as QB2 and be trusted with the team until it is deemed that DJ is ready. Especially with many #1 reps in training camp. That would allow you to get the failed AR experience off your hands and 10 mil in cap space off your books. Could AR make you look stupid for letting him go? Absolutely, but I am endorsing a new GM and HC, so I would also move on from a player that has sparked more controversy than results.

What else could be seen this week? I’d pull Franklin and put a green do on someone else’s helmet. I’d play Carlies, even if he sucks. It is time to find out if he has any value at all? I’d play JTT for 75% of the snaps and see if he provides a better option than Paye. I’d play and call Dulin’s number more, with an eye towards giving him more money and a more active role. Pittman doesn’t take the field for me at a 29 mil price tag next year, so audition Dulin in that role. I feel Dulin has been the ultimate Colt and deserves to be paid as such.

I know that you can’t do it without announcing a coaching firing, but I’d like to see Cooter calling the plays on offense. I’m promoting Dodds to GM and Lou to HC, so I want to see if JBC calling plays has a positive or negative effect on the offense. Again, I think this is three weeks late in coming, but I’d like a glimpse. Maybe Steichen has a better feel for the game and awareness of the entirety of a game, if he is not calling games? It’s not like he couldn’t have some input on the offense as the HC.

If I were to see those moves on Sunday, I would feel better about the direction from top to bottom.

As for my visit to LOS last week, it was a good time! Some things were different, including borrowing a smart phone to show tickets to get into the game. I ordered a beer and went for my wallet, only to discover that I could not pay with cash. I also have no clue how much I paid for my 25 ounce can of Bud Light? I know that I okayed a 20% tip, but I won’t know the price I paid, until I get the statement. I also thought that the fun that was had on the big screens, during commercial breaks, was an improvement over what I witnessed some 16 years ago.

A couple of things that were not different included my mastery of watching the game. I have never stepped on the field as a kicker, but I was able to add a few missed extra points to my retired record. As someone who used to consume mass quantities, pee breaks were frequent and had to be timed, as to miss the smallest amount of the game. For this reason, I always left for the RR as soon as someone scored a TD. This small maneuver sees you finish your business and be back in your seat, long before the kickoff happens. Only one time in 26 years, did I miss the blocked kick that was returned for two points for the other team. They will still be showing replays of the TD when you get back, so nothing really missed.

You also have to be aware of how much time is left in the quarters and until the 2:00 minute warning. If you are watching the clock, you can leave your seat as a play finishes. You will be at the RR by the time the clock stops. This will see you done with your business and heading back to your seat, as others are coming toward you. I pulled this off at the 2:00 warning of the first half and didn’t miss a play, nor fight the halftime crowd in the concourse. I did the same at the end of the 3rd quarter. I didn’t consume mass quantities, but I did have two of those 25 oz. beers, so I was happy that my muscle memory for RR breaks did kick in.

The crowd had not changed that much. You should not have to be reminded that it is third down and to make more noise than usual. I always subscribed to the mentality that if the crowd made enough noise on first and second down, being extra loud on third down might not even be needed. Yes, I was that guy that many of you might have wished would have shut up. I was always happy to get a “stander” in front of me for a game. I would not put the people behind in a bad position by standing up for an entire game, but I’d sure as hell stand up to see over the person standing in front of me.

I know that we didn’t exactly have a lot to cheer for, following the Texans win on Saturday night, and the people who did come out to the game did cheer it up pretty good, but I have felt being a negative presence for an opponent, and it just doesn’t happen enough. I do not think that Indy is ever going to be mentioned as one of those buildings or venues that you really hate to go to as an opponent. I guess that mediocrity from the team has fostered mediocrity from the crowd. Could it be the other way around?

I think that I will never leave my Southeaster North Carolina home, for a return to the heartland, but if I did, I think I would leave attending games to the young. Of course that is no slam-dunk for crowd noise, as the two guys in their late 20’s or early 30’s who were sitting behind me, we far more interested in the other games streaming on their phone. This wasn’t an option in my day, but the younger version of me, might have reminded them that they were missing a perfectly good game right in front on them. To each their own.

As I sign off, I have a simple question. Does it matter to the coaches, players, brass, or even to us fans, if we have a winning record or not?

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...eek-18-to-give-the-colts-hope-for-next-season
 
As 2025 draws to a close, where do the Colts go from here?

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What a season 2025 was for the Indianapolis Colts. To call it a roller coaster would be a lie because those have ups and downs scattered throughout. The Colts literally made the climb to the first major hill and then plummeted down. The ride was over as quickly as it had begun. This was a tale of two halves with the bye week serving as the clear delineation. 2025 is now in the past as the Colts conclude their season on Sunday. The question is, where do they go from here?

There are a ton of options, some of which could be clear after the conclusion of the season, but all roads have to lead to Chris Ballard’s firing. Thomas Butler-Guerrero of Stampede Blue laid out a major case as to why by helping highlight the fact that eight different starters have concluded the season for this franchise over the last eight years. We can point to injuries, and that would be fair on some level. It wouldn’t be a fair characterization overall, however. Andrew Luck retiring was unfortunate, but there has been no ability to cover the hole in seven seasons. That falls directly on Ballard.

What about the roster? We saw glimpses and flashes, but we also saw some disappointing performances. Alec Pierce is in line for a payday, but Michael Pittman Jr. is regressing. DeForest Buckner and Charvarius Ward sustained substantial injuries. Will both come back? Is this a soft reset type of year in which aging veterans are dangled in trades or released to find better opportunities? Let’s not even get started on the quarterback position. Signs are Daniel Jones could be back in time, but what if he isn’t and what will he even look like?

It seemed there were so many answers when the Colts sat at 7-1 or even 8-2. Now, the Colts have way too many questions. The roster and staff could look completely different, or they could run it back claiming bad luck. New ownership is the wild card, so it is difficult to look to the past for an indication of the future. It is unknown where the Colts will go in 2026, but you have to hope they don’t remain where they are currently.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ws-to-a-close-where-do-the-colts-go-from-here
 
LOL oh man where do I even start with this dumpster fire of a situation in Indy?

Eight different season finale starters in eight years?! EIGHT! You know how many the Bills have had in that same stretch? Basically Josh Allen and that's it. That's what having an actual franchise quarterback looks like. Meanwhile the Colts are out here playing musical chairs with the most important position in sports.

And they brought Philip Rivers out of retirement at 44 years old?! I'm sorry but that's absolutely hilarious and also incredibly sad at the same time. The man was living his best life in Alabama coaching high school football or whatever and Ballard's like "hey Phil, remember when you couldn't beat us in the playoffs? Wanna come lose some regular season games too?" BRUTAL.

The Pittman situation is interesting though. $24 million in cap savings is no joke. Pierce has clearly become the guy and Downs is developing nicely. Sometimes you gotta make the tough call even when a player has done everything right. It's just business. We went through similar stuff with some of our guys over the years.

As for Reggie Wayne and Vinatieri making the HOF finalists - both absolutely deserve to be in. Vinatieri is literally the greatest kicker of all time and Wayne was a monster for over a decade. If Wayne doesn't get in this year after being a finalist SEVEN TIMES that's criminal.

The real question is whether Jim Irsay has the stones to clean house. Ballard's had his chances. Time for new blood. GO BILLS!
 
Bruce Arians implores the Colts to run it back: “Be patient”

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

— Adam Rittenberg (@ESPNRittenberg) January 2, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Philip Rivers is done with the NFL. 🥹

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

— Kay Adams (@heykayadams) January 1, 2026

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Graziano:

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

Fowler:

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Indianapolis Colts 2026 opponents​


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

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

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

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

Indianapolis Colts 2026 home game schedule​

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

Indianapolis Colts 2026 away game schedule​


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

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

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

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

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

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



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

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

#Colts WR Michael Pittman Jr.:

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

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

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) January 4, 2026

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

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



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

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

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ip-the-sense-of-urgency-has-never-been-higher
 
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