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Colts’ DeForest Buckner initially appears poised to return for 2026 season

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Indianapolis Colts former Pro Bowl veteran defensive tackle, DeForest Buckner, who recently had neck surgery, looks like he’s eyeing a return for the 2026 regular season (via his personal Instagram account):

#Colts DT DeForest Buckner, who recently had neck surgery, shared a Bible passage and message via IG:

“Next season I will be complete 🫡pic.twitter.com/QE39vbKDYq

— James Boyd (@RomeovilleKid) January 7, 2026

On Thursday, Colts embattled longtime general manager Chris Ballard also indicated in his end-of-season press conference that, “Buck had surgery it was successful. His mindset is that he’s going to play again.”

The 31-year-old veteran defensive tackle was limited to 10 starts this past season because of a lingering neck injury. After Week 9 at the Pittsburgh Steelers, Buckner was placed on injured reserve with a neck injury. However, after being activated off injured reserve in Week 16, he re-aggravated the injury against the San Francisco 49ers at home and was shut down for the season, being placed on injured reserve again.

This time, for good in 2025.

He finished his 10th season prematurely with 47 tackles (30 solo) and 4.0 sacks during those 10 starts. Per PFF, he was graded as their 16th best interior defender this past regular season with a +74.0 overall grade.

Buckner has one year left on his current Colts contract for 2026 with a cap hit of $20.8M.

In recent seasons, Buckner been arguably the Colts most valuable player collectively and unquestionably their best defensive player consistently since retired All-Pro linebacker Darius Leonard suffered a career-altering back injury. It’ll be interesting to see whether this neck injury limits Buckner or if he can make a full recovery himself.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ally-appears-poised-to-return-for-2026-season
 
Colts LG Quenton Nelson named 2025 NFL 2nd-Team All-Pro

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This past Saturday, the AP announced that Indianapolis Colts stalwart left guard Quenton Nelson was named an NFL 2nd-Team All-Pro—who was the Horseshoe’s lone All-Pro representative this year.

It’s the sixth time that Nelson has been named an NFL All-Pro in his future Hall of Fame career—having been named an NFL First-Team All-Pro during 2018-20 and an NFL 2nd-Team All-Pro in 2021, 2024, and 2025 respectively. He’s also been an NFL Pro Bowler in each of his first eight seasons.

Given injuries to their other stars, the only other Colts player who should’ve been realistically been under consideration this past year was star workhorse Jonathan Taylor, but after he saw his production decline down the season’s final stretch, he was beat out by both the Atlanta Falcons Bijan Robinson (1st-Team) and the Buffalo Bills James Cook (2nd-Team) at his position respectively.

It’s worth noting that the group of Taylor, rookie tight end Tyler Warren, safety Cam Bynum, punter Rigoberto Sanchez, long-snapper Luke Rhodes, and special teamer (wideout) Ashton Dulin all received votes though.

Regarding Nelson though, he made all 17 starts for Indianapolis again this season—which he’s done four seasons in a row becoming a modern day ironman out there. Per PFF, Nelson earned a +84.5 overall grade this past year, which was the 4th highest among all players at offensive guard.

Consistently the catalyst along the Colts offensive line yet again, the 29-year-old offensive guard was instrumental in paving the way for Taylor to rush for 1,585 total rushing yards and 18 rushing touchdowns on 323 total carries. In pass protection, Nelson was equally exceptional—allowing just a single sack, 2 QB hits, and 15 total pressures during 637 total pass blocking snaps this past year.

Obviously, it’s another tip of the cap to Nelson who no doubt appears to be Canton-bound when it’s all said and done. Hopefully, the Colts can finally get him back to the playoffs again because he’s only played in 3 career postseason games, which simply hasn’t been good enough as of late collectively.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...uenton-nelson-named-2025-nfl-2nd-team-all-pro
 
2026 Draft: R Mason Thomas Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘2 Height
  • 249 lb. Weight
R Mason Thomas speed-to-power 🔥🔥🔥 pic.twitter.com/PQVbfmu549

— Trevor Sikkema (@TampaBayTre) September 20, 2025

2025 Stats

  • 28 Pressures (14.6% Pressure Rate)
  • 20.2% Pass Rush Win Rate
  • 3 QB Hits
  • 6.5 Sacks
  • 90.3 Pass Rush Grade
  • 14 Solo Tackles
  • 5 Assist Tackles
  • 4 Missed Tackles (17. 4%)
  • 19 Run Stops
  • 1 Forced Fumble
  • 1 Fumble Recovery
  • 1 Touchdown
  • 5 Penalties
Marshawn Lynch & Greg Jennings would be proud of this R Mason Thomas touchdown🤯pic.twitter.com/Rzp8BS8I5w

— PFF College (@PFF_College) November 2, 2025

Awards/Accolades

  • First Team All SEC (2025)
  • All American Second Team (2025)
  • Bednarik Award Semi-Finalist (2025)
  • Second Team All SEC (2024)

Strengths

  • High Level Athlete. Has impressive speed, agility, bend, and burst combined with surprising upper body strength. Enables the finesse in his game to shine and the power in his game to take tackles off guard for a smaller Edge Rusher.
  • Pass Rush Variety. Thomas displays a variety of moves and paths to the QB on tape. His Speed to Power stands out first with a bull rush, followed by the Duck-Under (Ghost technique) counter if that doesn’t work initially. His spin move inside and outside is nice as well. He is able to use chops and rips well to gain separation from blockers, with some occasional swim moves as well.
  • Motor stands out, constantly driving his legs in bull rushes, playing with physicality in the run, and hustling in pursuit.
R Mason Thomas can RUN run. pic.twitter.com/OmUoa2xPWz

— Lance Zierlein (@LanceZierlein) January 2, 2026
  • Plays with a natural low pad level and uses it to his advantage in pass and run plays, able to get under and around blockers.
R Mason Thomas | EDGE | OU

Explosive rush specialist w/ great 1st step & great high side track. + Ankle flexibility to tilt around the corner & hip bend to change levels. Great at turning speed into power; generates pop at impact.

Fights at PoA & solid backside pursuit vs run pic.twitter.com/JlgSd6ISv1

— Matt Lane (@Matty_KCSN) December 23, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Lower body anchor is below average, limiting his impact on run downs with edge setting against down blockers
  • Lacks length, will consistently not be first to engage against blockers if his hands aren’t quick. Hurts his ability to block shed against the run especially.
  • Injury History, 2 High Ankle Sprains in 2020 (got surgery in 2021) and 2023, affecting both ankles. Torn deltoid in 2020 (got surgery in 2021). Quad and hamstring injury in 2025 during 70+ yard fumble recovery TD (seen earlier), missing several games. Was able to return from injury for last game vs Alabama, getting 3 Pressures on 23 Pass Rush Snaps (13%).
Loved R Mason Thomas during Summer Scouting and still proving me right
-plays contain well when needed to (Chambliss)
-Strength & Explosion is dynamite
-Swipe, Speed to Power, Bull Rush, and Bend is all he needs
-6’1 249 sub 32” arm sub 9” hands is concerning though#Sooners pic.twitter.com/dy6Pghj1m7

— Randall Slifer (@RandallSlifer) November 7, 2025

Draft Projection

Round 1-2 Grade


Do you like undersized speed rushers with elite athleticism, bend, and a strong array of pass rush moves and counters? Many modern names come to mind with this archetype of pass rusher: Micah Parsons, Nik Bonitto, Haason Reddick, Will McDonald IV, Nolan Smith, Josh Uche; many of which I had very highly on my predraft boards (ask my college roommates how upset I was that Reddick went just 2 picks before the Colts in 2017, there is video evidence that haunts our group chat even now). Because for Colts fans this archetype brings one name to mind:

The explosiveness off the snap from R Mason Thomas (#32) is pretty special. It's not Micah Parson's level, but it's up there. pic.twitter.com/TPkSovN3It

— Brian Maafi (@BmaafiNFL) November 8, 2025

Former Alabama A&M Defensive End Robert Mathis, the Colts all time sack leader.

Call me sentimental, but I miss having an edge rusher who jumps off the line at the snap like he’s got a rocket in his posterior, gets low on the outside shoulder, spins around, and has a bull rush that surprises linemen. Yearning for yesteryear aside, the Colts also still need this archetype on their current team.

With just Laiatu Latu (technician who is in between finesse and power builds and tries to win every way) and JT Tuimoloau (power rusher who struggled to earn snaps as a rookie) under contract in 2026, the Colts need some extra juice on the edge. While the position likely will be addressed in Free Agency as well, the need for a young pass rusher who can get to the QB constantly and quickly remains paramount. As far as his weaknesses on the field go, there is a relatively easy way to address it: don’t play him on run downs. Let him be situational, use and edge rusher rotation and let him play the snaps that put him in the best position to succeed. This has the added benefit of keeping both him and the linemen he is rotating with fresh and maintain their stamina throughout a game and a season.

A really poignant answer here from R Mason Thomas, prompted by a question from @johnehoover, as he reflects on his career with the #Sooners.

"How [the coaches have] developed me to get where I am today… is crazy." pic.twitter.com/9c5xpHySjl

— Parker Thune (@ParkerThune) December 20, 2025

R Mason Thomas was ranked 29th on my initial Big Board Top 100 Rankings, with a Round 1-2 Grade. The odds he makes it to the Colts aren’t great, but they aren’t 0 as draft falls can happen. Despite his upside as a pass rusher, the red flags in the run game and his injury history are real enough to give some teams pause. He most likely goes off the board late Round 1 or early Round 2, but if teams are scared off there is a chance he could fall to the 40s. Should the Colts either get extremely lucky or add extra draft capital to trade up with, Thomas is on the short list of players they could look to get aggressive to acquire.

He did accept a Senior Bowl invite and can boost or hurt his stock with his practice performances. In Mobile he needs to prove he is healthy and ready for the pre-draft process to be able to fully show off his explosiveness. If he does so, he can secure his first round status. If he doesn’t, then the questions mount.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...457/2026-draft-r-mason-thomas-scouting-report
 
The NFL playoffs kicked off leaving Colts fans to wonder what could have been

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Wild Card Weekend kicked off in the NFL. As always, there was plenty of drama and intrigue. From the storylines, to the Bears’ dramatic come from behind win, to all of the road teams that found success, the first weekend of the playoffs didn’t disappoint. It was a stress free weekend for someone with a team on the outside looking in though. Outside of rooting against a particular team, there was nothing to cheer for or worry about with the Indianapolis Colts failing to make the playoffs for the fifth straight year.

It didn’t have to be that way. It certainly didn’t look or feel it would be that way through the first ten games of the season. Yes, there was some uneasiness because of who the Colts played over their first ten, but they were blowing teams out and had built a bit of a cushion. After the bye week, things weren’t the same as the Colts never won again. It was quite the fall from grace.

Many fans dreamed about the playoffs and even a division title. Dare I say, more than a few whispered the “S.B.” word when they traded for Sauce Gardner. It was premature, but why not dream? A team that was supposed to be terrible was actually crushing their schedule. Optimism has been so fleeting with this organization the last decade, fans would cling to any bright spot no matter how flawed. It simply wasn’t in the cards this year as things dissolved in an epic way, leaving Colts fans drama free, watching the opening weekend of football with their team firmly eliminated.

Yes, the Colts could have easily hosted a home playoff game at the very least. Going from king of the AFC to being eliminated from contention was a tough way to go out. Teams like the Texans who were in the rear view mirror get a chance to advance tonight while others have punched their ticket to the divisional round. Watching the Colts fall off a cliff was tough, but at least the hard part is over. We can leave the crushing disappointment of a NFL season to those left in the playoffs because only one team can win. The Colts had their chance this year and lost it. Maybe next year will be different.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ing-colts-fans-to-wonder-what-could-have-been
 
2026 Draft: Joshua Josephs Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘3 Height
  • 240 lb. Weight
“Why they not ringing their bells”

Never change Joshua Josephs 💀 pic.twitter.com/n82U65aFtj

— Vol Scoops (@VolScoops) September 28, 2025

2025 Stats

  • 31 Pressures (16.8% Pressure Rate)
  • 4 QB Hits
  • 6 Sacks
  • 20.6% Pass Rush Win Rate
  • 90.5 Pass Rush Grade
  • 20 Solo Tackles
  • 6 Assist Tackles
  • 8 Missed Tackles (23.5% Missed Tackle Rate)
  • 20 Run Stops
  • 3 Forced Fumbles
  • 1 Penalty
Tennessee’s Joshua Josephs has the third highest overall defensive grade for an edge defender in college football according to @PFF_College (minimum 140 snaps).

Joseph’s also ranks as the top run defender for an edge in CFB!

Overall Defensive Grade: 89.8
Run Defense Grade:… pic.twitter.com/aReeeUoehv

— Jordan Moore (@jordanmoore_21) October 24, 2024

Strengths

  • Explosive athlete with quick first step and acceleration. Nice twitchiness and can close in on a QB quick once he wins.
  • Over 34” arms and 80” Wingspan, Josephs has incredible length for a DE and especially for his size. Can win the leverage battle and initiate first contact while not losing the length battle on the Edge.
  • Has a nice Club to swipe away opposing linemen’s punch, a good push pull, and uses his explosiveness and bend well to get around the corner of the outside shoulder. Has also shown a nice bull/rip move at times as well.
  • Physical player against the run, better than his size would indicate. Can also evade pullers or get under blockers arms to get penetration into the backfield on run plays.
  • Frame could add more weight to it, opening up more opportunities in the run and with power moves.
Joshua Josephs | EDGE | TENN

Twitchy EDGE that generates power on initial contact & w/ counter moves. Utilizes push-pull/club/rip to attack OTs base & create a soft corner. +1st step to work high side rush.

Delivers pop at PoA, works to reset LoS. Good range to pop-out contain. pic.twitter.com/E3p9YudZz0

— Matt Lane (@Matty_KCSN) December 30, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Lack of strength and mass hurts his anchor in the run and his ability to execute bull rushes as effectively against bigger linemen. Doesn’t collapse the pocket as well in those matchups.
  • Tight End combo or chip blocks push him inside and open up the outside run.
  • His torso and knee bend are strong points in his flexibility, but needs to be a bit more flexible in his ankles to maximize his bend in speed rushes in the next level.
  • Was a situational player, only 17 starts in college and 626 pass rush snaps over 4 years. Some potential for a larger role, but was matchup dependent on impact in the run game. If he can bulk up a bit in NFL, could have 3 down potential.
If you want physical tools and a high-upside pass rusher, Tennessee EDGE Joshua Josephs is a Day 2 guy to monitor.

Tons of length, first-step explosiveness, and knows how to set up blockers. pic.twitter.com/6b7nodhpcR

— Tyler Brooke (@TylerDBrooke) January 7, 2026

Draft Projection

Round 2 Grade


Josephs ranked 50th on my early December Top 100 Big Board with a Round 2 Grade. His speed, explosion, and length is a terrifying combination, and he was able to utilize them for a very high win rate over the last few years. But his situational usage in college does skew the numbers a bit, and he still has a clear area of improvement needed before being an every down player with more strength needed in his game. Tackles with more of a power profile will give him trouble, and teams with wide zone blocking schemes can exploit his issues in Tight End chip awareness to collapse him inside. When used against other matchups and schemes he thrived as a run defender, especially against pullers in man/gap schemes, so there is still potential there as a run defender.

But for a Colts team in need of a quick winner and situational pass rush, this fit is really strong. Laiatu Latu is a everydown DE with his technical refinement and being able to win with finesse while having the size to generate decent strength in power moves and holds up well against the run. However he wins more on the 2nd or 3rd step with his pass rush moves rather than pure explosiveness of the line. JT Tuimoloau is a power rusher who could step into a larger role in 2026. The Colts likely will add another pass rusher or two through Free Agency, but the need for a situational rusher to rotate in on passing downs and can generate quick wins off the line and help open up clean up opportunities for other rushers when the QB starts moving to try to evade the first rusher remains.

Highest pressure rate, SEC EDGE:

Yhonzae Pierre, Alabama: 21.7%
Damon Wilson II, Missouri: 21.4%
Keyron Crawford, Auburn: 19.7%
Cashius Howell, Texas A&M: 19.5%
Zion Young, Missouri: 19.1%
Princewill Umanmielen, Ole Miss: 18.6%
Joshua Josephs, Tennessee: 17.6%
Malick Sylla,… pic.twitter.com/U3MLh279DF

— Cam Mellor (@CamMellor) November 6, 2025

Joseph’s potential growth into an every down player will be key for his longterm snap counts continuing to grow, but in the short term his pass rushing profile is very appealing for the Colts to add.

Others in the Draft Community have a Round 2-3 or Round 3 grade on Josephs, and others have him at a Early Round 2 pick. There is a decent chance he could be available when the Colts pick at 47th overall in the draft, and if there should be on a short list of players the Colts would want at that spot at Defensive End.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...448/2026-draft-joshua-josephs-scouting-report
 
Colts sign former CFL standout linebacker Devin Veresuk to reserve/future contract

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The Indianapolis Colts announced on Tuesday that the team has signed ex-CFL linebacker Devein Veresuk, formerly of the Hamilton Tiger-Cats to a reserve/future contract:

we have signed LB Devin Veresuk to a reserve/future contract.

— Indianapolis Colts (@Colts) January 13, 2026

The listed 6,’2”, 240 pound linebacker out of Windsor was originally the 2nd overall pick of the 2025 CFL Draft. He recorded 66 tackles, 2.0 sacks, an interception, and 2 forced fumbles during 18 games played during his debut season North of the border.

He also had an interception and a recovery on a blocked punt for a defensive touchdown respectively.

Veresuk was the recipient of the Frank M. Gibson Trophy, which is given annually to the East division’s most outstanding rookie each season.

He was recently released from his contract on January 12th, to pursue an opportunity within the NFL this year—presumably with Indianapolis.

The Colts have been active at linebacker this early offseason, already signing Veresuk, as well as fellow linebackers John Bullock and Joseph Vaughn to initial contracts.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...ker-devin-veresuk-to-reserve-futures-contract
 
8 Free Agents the Colts should target

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While it is still early to tell who will hit the open market in Free Agency, there are plenty of teams that need to focus on gaining cap space before the League New Year in March. 10 such teams are anywhere from $5.4 million over the cap to to $58.1 million over their allotted cap room. As such, they are the most likely teams to lose their upcoming Free Agents to the open market, as they need to focus their energy on cap manipulation (restructures, extensions on current contracts, cuts/trades) to even entertain retaining players.

Most of the Free Agents listed are from some of these teams in the red, others have openly expressed frustrations with the current management of their teams with their contract negotiations, and could be difficult to retain if relations have soured.

Trey Hendrickson, DE, Cincinnati Bengals​


Stop me if you’ve heard this before.

Hendrickson reuniting with his longtime coordinator Lou Anarumo in Indianapolis would be an excellent fit. The Colts should pursue a trade signing with him to add to the pass rush and pair him with the young and growing Laiatu Latu.

There was earlier smoke with Hendrickson to the Colts trade rumors, as the Colts were interested and engaged the Bengals in trade talks while contract renegotiations broke down between them and their star pass rusher. However they wanted too much (premium draft capital and Grover Stewart) for Hendrickson who was on the last year of his deal and was 30 years old at the time (turned 31 in December).

Bengals wanted “High-End” Draft Pick and Grover Stewart for Trey Hendrickson https://t.co/aERd5KfcxN

— Stampede Blue (@StampedeBlue) October 17, 2025

Instead Hendrickson played out the final year of his deal without being traded, but his last year with the Bengals didn’t go to plan for him. He racked up 4 sacks and 21 pressures in the first 5 games before suffering what was initially diagnosed as a hip/pelvis injury in Week 6. He tried to play through it in Week 8 and reaggravated what was later diagnosed as a core muscle injury (hernia). Hendrickson ended the season with a core muscle surgery in December and being placed on IR. Thus the Bengals missed their opportunity to trade him once their season was fully derailed as he was injured leading up to the trade deadline and he wouldn’t have been able to pass the required physical at the time to be traded.

#Bengals star DE Trey Hendrickson is set to visit Dr. William Meyers in Philadelphia’s Vincera Institute as he weighs likely core muscle surgery, per me and @TomPelissero.

Surgery would knock Hendrickson, battling what is called a hip injury, out for the season. pic.twitter.com/JahhLSO2zx

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) December 8, 2025

Assuming the Bengals don’t reach a new deal with Hendrickson, expect the Colts to be first in line in March to sign the pass rushing dynamo. Even with his age and his recent injury, the opportunity to sign a pass rusher of his caliber while having staff that can help lure him and be the perfect fit for him is rare.

“Beginning with free agent All-Pro pass rusher Trey Hendrickson, it appears there will be no turning back this time, as both sides are currently viewed as being ready to move on.” https://t.co/aQ6QN7InsG

— BENGALS TALK 🗣 (@BengalsTalk) January 6, 2026

Hendrickson was able to get $30 million in his final season with the Bengals, but per Spotrac his market value post injury has regressed to $25.4 million. If the Colts can nab Hendrickson at this lower cost, the move could provide a lot of value if he stays healthy. With Lou Anarumo from 2021-2024, Hendrickson sacked passer 57 times (14.25 sacks a season) along with 323 pressures (80.75 a season). In 2025 he was on pace for a 13.5 sack season with 71 pressures, marks that would still be around Top 10 in the NFL among all Defenders.

For a Colts team with 3 players hitting Free Agency and desperate for a pass rushing boost at Defensive End opposite of Laiatu Latu, the risk is certainly worth the reward to invest in one of the best pass rushers of the 2020s.

Leo Chenal, LB, Kansas City Chiefs​


The Chiefs are the team most in the red in 2026, as no team is even within $14 million of their $58.1 million spending above the cap. As such, they are likely going to have some tough decisions on how to rework the cap before the season let alone to have enough to afford retaining key pieces.

Missed tackles by Chiefs LBs (300+ snaps) vs the rest of the NFL 👀⬇️

🔥 Leo Chenal — 4 (T-1st)
🔥 Drue Tranquill — 4 (T-1st)
😬 Nick Bolton — 21 (T-77th)

Only 84 LBs qualified.

Oh… and Leo Chenal is a FA in exactly 2 months from today ⏳💰 pic.twitter.com/jZCBG23aC8

— The Daily Chief (@The_Daily_Chief) January 11, 2026

Chenal is one such player who is likely to hit the market. He had 58 tackles in his 14 games in 2025 (12 starts) and has been a reliable tackler with only 6.3% – 8.2% missed tackle rate in each of the last 3 seasons. The 25 year old former Wisconsin Badger had his highest Coverage Grade of his career at 72.6 and provided 11 pressures and 2 sacks as a blitzer, showing strong utility in passing downs.

Leo Chenal (#54) making a mess of the Colts pin-pull run and gets the stuff. pic.twitter.com/Blkn6GhlRK

— Nate Tice (@Nate_Tice) November 24, 2025

However Chenal’s season ended with a shoulder injury in Week 15, likely being the last time he suited up for the Chiefs. While he is another player dealing with an injury, unlike Hendrickson he is a young player who is still growing as a pro and could very well have his best football ahead of him. With the Colts potentially needing to add a new MIKE Linebacker and definitely needing to add the the WILL Linebacker position, Chenal’s experience at both could be a boon and help begin to rebuild the Colts defense in a younger and faster direction that Ballard said he wanted in his end of season press conference.

Alontae Taylor, CB, New Orleans Saints​


Another player the Colts expressed interest in adding in 2025, the Colts engaged the Saints in trade talks at the deadline to acquire Cornerback Alontae Taylor. However they ended up pivoting to All Pro Sauce Gardner instead. Taylor on an expiring deal would have been more affordable, but didn’t come with the same pedigree as a top WR shadower at an All Pro level like Gardner.

Colts *Almost* got a different CB at the trade deadline.

The Colts were in the mix for Alontae Taylor and had reached out to the Saints, but their home run swing connected instead and they landed Sauce Gardner from the Jets.https://t.co/EeQR5A2h0N

— Jay Robins (@TheJayRobins) November 4, 2025

Still Taylor does bring a lot to the table. He has split his snaps nearly 50-50 in his 4 year pro career with the Saints inside covering the slot and outside guarding the perimeter, giving the Colts simultaneously a potential succession plan for slot Kenny Moore II as he plays in his 30s and providing an outside partner to pair with Sauce Gardner.

Taylor is an aggressive corner, thriving in the press-man that Lou Anarumo loves to run with his corners and bump and run Cover 3. His physicality also shows up in the run, with 6-7 Tackles for loss in each of the last 3 seasons; as well as a blitzer with 16 pressures in 73 blitzes over the last 2 seasons. When the ball is in the air he is highly disruptive as well, with 11-16 Pass Deflections every year of his career. Due to these skills, he received All Pro Votes in 2025; albeit didn’t make either team.

If the Colts want a Saints CB…

Kool-Aid McKinstry would be a dream pickup, but not likely as a 2024 Rd2 pick.

The more likely target would be Alontae Taylor.
– Last year of his deal
– can play inside/outside
– Physical & athletic press corner
– 4 sacks in 2024
– 26 years old https://t.co/v1whNo5q1e

— Jay Robins (@TheJayRobins) October 25, 2025

The downside with Taylor is he isn’t the most fluid and agile corner, instead thriving in straight line speed and attacking downhill while disrupting the route early. In off coverage he has struggled, resulting in 20 Touchdowns allowed in his career. He is a very boom-bust player, able to make both high impact plays consistently but also allow too much successful plays in coverage more often than preferred if he wants to be in the upper echelon of Corners. He certainly can cause HAVOC plays and headaches for opposing defenses, which for a Colts team in need of finding support across from Sauce Gardner could very well be needed.

The Saints are also in a rough cap situation once again with $19.6m over the cap. They have routinely been in these situations since the Drew Brees days, though they are experienced in navigating it and finding ways to free up cap space in time for free agency.

Tariq Woolen, CB, Seattle Seahawks​


If the Colts want a freak athlete at Corner, its hard to find freakier than the 6’4 205 lb. corner with 4.26 speed and elite explosion. He was also one of the better cover corners in the NFL with 11 INTs and 41 Passes Deflected in his first 3 seasons prior to 2025. The Seahawks do have a large amount of cap space at $69.9 million, so they can afford to retain Woolen if they wish. So why is he on this list?

Because of the contentious beginning of the season and the questionable fit with Mike MacDonald’s scheme.

Woolen’s 2025 season is a tale of two stretches. Early on the former UTSA Roadrunner star struggled in MacDonald’s zone heavy coverage scheme. He began losing snaps in the corner rotation, even going so far as being benched at the start of games for undisclosed violations of team rules. The relationship looked to be souring and the fit with the Seahawks became questionable.

Tariq Woolen is 6’4, runs a 4.2 40 and is getting burnt by a guy who got shot

— Jaxon Smith-Njigba Enthusiast (@JSN4OPOY) September 7, 2025

Then from Week 7 onward, Woolen turned a corner. His man coverage dominance remained, but his zone coverage grade went from 45.7 to 68.1 as his completion percentage allowed went from 72.2% to 52% overall. The scheme concerns became reduced, though the Seahawks love of zone over man coverage is still suboptimal for Woolen’s strengths.

Let’s all take a second to shout out Tariq Woolen he had a rough start to the year but he didn’t let that affect him and he has since been playing the best football of his career

Shout out Tariq 🙏 pic.twitter.com/Kg4cLAf3dl

— Mac 🦚 (@Spoon4pres) January 4, 2026

Should he want to pursue an opportunity for a scheme that fits him better and if he harbors any grievances for how the beginning of the season played out, Woolen could decide it is time to see what the market has in store for him. The Colts could be a tempting fit with Lou Anarumo embracing man coverage when he had corners he was confident in could play man (Sauce Gardner, Charvarius Ward) outside. The opportunity to play opposite of Sauce Gardner is also very appealing, as Woolen could play against opposing offenses 2nd best Wide Receivers and have more exploitable matchups than if he went elsewhere to be the top Corner for a new team.

If Woolen makes it to Free Agency, expect a strong market for his services.

Malik Willis, QB, Green Bay Packers​


Daniel Jones is firmly in the Colts plans at Quarterback for 2026 and likely a bit beyond. But with his injury history and recovery from an Achilles, Anthony Richardson on the last year of his rookie deal after being plagued with injuries and trying to regain his full sight from his own freak accident injury, and Riley Leonard a promising but still inexperienced backup 6th Round 2025 rookie… depth and potential competition at the starting spot is needed. With Chris Ballard and Shane Steichen on the hot seat, expect the Colts to add at least one more person to the QB room to hedge their bets and try to avoid the season going sideways should injuries strike the position once again.

Still can’t get over this throw by Malik Willis. Look where Wicks is when Willis starts his throwing motion. Incredible anticipation and pinpoint accuracy. pic.twitter.com/6hnWM8Sbr6

— Brandon Carwile (@BCarwile_NFL) September 18, 2024

The Free Agent QB market is admittedly not great. It is filled with aging former starting QBs that are far from their prime, early Round 1 QB draft busts, and career backups. However Malik Willis is the one young QB in the latter category that could be ascending into a starting NFL QB after his highly efficient play in Green Bay.

Willis has just 6 NFL starts to his name in his 4 year career. 3 of them were with the Tennessee Titans, where he struggled mightily as a passer and didn’t look like he belonged in the NFL at all (outside of his dynamic rushing ability). Granted the Titans had little to no support around Willis with porous pass protection, and little to no passing weapons (just Derrick Henry in the backfield to consistently threaten Defenses), but even then the level of play was awful.

But once he got to Green Bay, things changed. Surrounded by a talented core of pass catchers, a solid pass protecting line, still having a good run game, and most importantly going under the wing of Head Coach Matt LaFleur a known strong QB developer and play-caller… things changed.

Titans Malik Willis ➡️ Packers Malik Willis
*3 Starts ➡️ 3 Starts
*35/66 (53%) ➡️ 70/89 (78.7%)
*350 Pass Yards ➡️ 972 Pass Yards
*5.3 YPA ➡️ 10.9
0 Pass TD ➡️ 6 Pass TD
3 INT ➡️ 0 INT
49.4 Passer Rating ➡️ 134.6 Passer Rating

And he’s still a high end athleticism runner. https://t.co/4D7yndCyBM

— Jay Robins (@TheJayRobins) December 30, 2025

Willis developed as a passer, showing much improved accuracy, touch, pre-snap recognition, better pocket movement, quicker processing, and better decision-making post-snap. The scheme around him provided a blueprint for his success, RPO and Play Action concepts with quick reads and room to improvise afterward with scrambles and moving platform throws. Throw in some QB designed run plays and you got a recipe for success so far in his career.

Willis still is highly inexperienced so his market value is at $10.4 million from Spotrac and some have thrown around a $13 million valuation for him per year. However with the lack of Day 1 starting QBs available both in the Draft (Fernando Mendoza, maybe Dante Moore if he declares, then a large tier drop off to inexperienced QBs Ty Simpson and Trinidad Chambliss if his appeal for extended eligibility fails) and in Free Agency, Malik Willis is likely to command well above market valuation by some team with a belief in his flashes.

If the Colts want another QB but don’t want to spend their reduced draft capital on a QB, Malik Willis is their best bet to find a young starting caliber QB in Free Agency. If Willis wants to go to another team with a talented group of pass catchers, a strong Offensive Line, one of the better play callers in the NFL, and have a potential opportunity to start with an actively and oft-injured incumbent QB… the Colts represent one of the better fits for Willis. Steichen has shown the ability to develop QBs in the past and has helped get Justin Herbert, Jalen Hurts, and Daniel Jones to play at their highest levels in the NFL, while also being able to create a scheme that can maximize a dual threat QB’s impact in the run game (Anthony Richardson and Jalen Hurts).

Willis could find other teams with more open starting QB jobs elsewhere, and potentially for more money than the Colts are willing to offer. But if he wants to continue his development in a strong situation and try to become a franchise QB able to make the real big bucks long term, Indianapolis might be the place to be.

The Packers don’t have the cap space to retain Willis ($10.2 million over the cap) and have their starting QB already in Jordan Love. Willis will be on the move in 2026, just a question of where he lands.

Jadeveon Clowney, DE, Dallas Cowboys​


If the Colts want to add a lower cost but high upside pass rusher, bringing Jadeveon Clowney back to the AFC South makes sense. Over the last 3 seasons Clowney has been with the Ravens, Panthers, and Cowboys respectively, Clowney has made an impact at each stop with strong run defense and efficient pass rushing.

2023 | 2024 | 2025 Clowney splits

– 78 | 44 | 40 Pressures
– 14.3% | 12.7% | 17.6% Pressure Rate
– 16.7% | 14.9% | 16.7% Pass Rush Win Rate
– 9.5 | 5.5 | 8.5 Sacks

All while providing stout run Defense. Might be more of a rotational player at age 33, but still a valuable DE.

— Jay Robins (@TheJayRobins) January 13, 2026

The 2014 1st Overall pick still has some production left to squeeze out in his NFL career. This pass rushing mercenary might be tempted to get some revenge on the Texans after a contentious contract negotiations ended on them trading him to the Seahawks.

At soon-to-be age 33 Clowney likely isn’t going to be an every down starter in 2026. His snap counts have decreased in each of the last 3 years from 757, 650, to 372. Still in that span he has been worth just $2.5 million to $6 million in cap space, with age and injuries of yesteryear lowering his cost.

Cowboy’s Jadeveon Clowney had 8.5 sacks in his last 9 games.

He only played 12 games. With a full 17 games he was on pace for 12 sacks and 16 sacks if we take out the transition period.

Jerry Jones needs to sign, draft, or trade for another Edge, but bring back Clowney. pic.twitter.com/EEpAm7pSYU

— Magic Bronson (@MagicsBurner) January 4, 2026

His end of season play likely ups his next contract’s value a good amount. Considering the Colts paid Kwity Paye $13.4 million off of his 3rd year option and kept Samson Ebukam coming off of his Achilles injury and costing $10.9 million, its safe to say the Colts are willing to invest in Edge Rusher based off of potential and in spite of injuries and age (Ebukam was 30 in 2025). Signing an actively health

The Colts could find a potential bargain in Clowney for the short term and it wouldn’t bar them from pursuing other Defensive Ends in the Draft or Free Agency. Establishing a strong rotation of Defensive Ends is often a cornerstone of some of the best pass rushes in the NFL, and Clowney still has enough juice to be part of an ensemble of rushers.

Bryan Cook, S, Kansas City Chiefs​


As previously mentioned, the Kansas City Chiefs are in the worst cap situation in the NFL right now. Expect several departures from the former champions this offseason barring a dramatic and aggressive cap restructuring, which isn’t likely with star QB Patrick Mahomes sidelined and his 2026 season in doubt.

Another such player is Bryan Cook, a versatile Safety who Chiefs Defensive Coordinator Steve Spagnuolo has used in a variety of ways. He can lineup as a Single High Free Safety, load up the box as a Strong Safety, or at times cover the slot.

Highest-graded #Chiefs players this season, via @PFF:

🥇C, Creed Humphrey (88.8)
🥈S, Bryan Cook (83.5)
🥉LB, Nick Bolton (78.9)
4) CB, Christian Roland-Wallace (78.8)
5) WR, Rashee Rice (76.4)
6) DE, George Karlaftis (76.2)
7) LB, Drue Tranquill (76.2)

*minimum 150 snaps* pic.twitter.com/nWg449MMZz

— KC Sports Network (@KCSportsNetwork) January 11, 2026

Cook is a high IQ player who was able to fit in multiple schemes in college as well, displaying strong coverage instincts and range. He reacts quickly to the ball in the air and has improved his hip fluidity over time to improve his coverage abilities in man. He can fly to the ball and is a physical hitter. Overall his tackling has improved a lot in the pros going from a 15.6% missed tackle rate in 2023 to a 5.6% in 2025. His biggest issues are mostly in ball skills, as he doesn’t rack up INTs but more so deflections.

I wonder if folks realize how good Bryan Cook has been this season.

— Nate Taylor (@ByNateTaylor) December 26, 2025

Still only 26 years old and showing a lot of desirable traits, Cook should be a well sought after player in Free Agency. If the Colts want to move in a different direction from the highly athletic and strong run supporter but still fine tuning his coverage instincts Nick Cross to a more polished and developed safety to pair with Cam Bynum in Lou Anarumo’s scheme which asks a lot from it’s safeties mentally, Cook could be a natural replacement.

He won’t come cheap as his Spotrac Market Value is projected at $14.6 million and at his age he will likely be looking for a longer term deal. If the Colts want to complete their Defensive Backfield remodel with another investment, Cook is potentially the best one on the market to pursue.

Al-Quadin Muhammad, DE, Detroit Lions​


Another veteran pass rusher, Al-Quadin Muhammad is a name Colts fans should remember. Previously he played for the Colts under Matt Eberflus’ scheme, filling the role of a run stopping Defensive End who didn’t offer much in pass downs (11 sacks in 4 years, 7.3% Pressure Rate). Despite this, Muhammad earned major snaps in Eberflus’ Defense, from as low as 483 in 2019 to as much as 800 in 2021 when he started the entire season, much to the frustration of Colts fans and analysts who wanted to see more snaps for Kemoko Turay (when healthy), Denico Autry, Justin Houston, and later Kwity Paye and Dayo Odeyingbo.

But the funny thing about development is, it doesn’t always happen in the timeframe you expect.

Colts potential FA DE options

Old/injured was a stud before: Mack, Hendrickson, Joey Bosa, Reddick

2021-2022 Draft Class looking for new contracts: Odafe Oweh, Boye Mafe, Malcolm Koonce, Joseph Ossai, Joe Tyron, Azeez Ojulari, David Ojabo, Arnold Ebiketie

Surprise Reunion: AQM https://t.co/IrMthDJVw4

— Jay Robins (@TheJayRobins) December 24, 2025

At age 30, he is now the 2nd leading sacker for the Detroit Lions in 2025 behind only Aidan Hutchinson with 11 sacks. His pressure rate is 15%. He is doing all of this pass rush production coming off the bench without starting a single game for the Lions.

EDGE Al-Quadin Muhammad on his Free Agency market, via @burchie_kid:

“I will go where I’m valued at… I would love to be back here, but you ultimately go where you’re valued.” pic.twitter.com/Yq4Fpqws1x

— 𝔗𝔥𝔢 𝔇𝔢𝔱𝔯𝔬𝔦𝔱 𝔗𝔦𝔪𝔢𝔰 📰 (@the_det_times) January 6, 2026

Suddenly a reunion in Indianapolis sounds nice.

Was 2025 a one year wonder for AQM? Or did Dan Campbell do a strong job at developing the veteran Defensive End into a pass rushing force going forward in his career? Did Aidan Hutchinson open things up for him with his double teams

AQM delivers a Christmas sack of his own#DETvsMIN 📺 Netflix pic.twitter.com/UhDqUvzEr0

— Detroit Lions (@Lions) December 25, 2025

Because of the small sample size of effective pass rushing at his age, teams will have hesitation to back up the brinks truck for Al-Quadin Muhammad, making him another opportunity for the Colts to add to their pass rushing rotation without breaking the bank. He still wants to be rewarded for his breakout season naturally, but this hesitation has his Spotrac valuation at $8.2 million, a real bargain for teams looking to get a potential 10+ sack Edge. Expect him to get a short term deal somewhere for roughly that amount per year (maybe more if a bidding war develops).

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian.../120575/8-free-agents-the-colts-should-target
 
2026 Draft: CJ Allen Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘1 Height
  • 235 lb. Weight

2025 Stats

  • 71 Solo Tackles
  • 23 Assisted Tackles
  • 8 Missed Tackles (7.8%)
  • 39 Run Stops
  • 2 Forced Fumbles
  • 29 Receptions Allowed / 43 Targets = 67.4%
  • 288 Yards Allowed
  • 9.9 Yards Per Reception
  • 217 Yards After Catch Allowed
  • 7.5 Yards After Catch Allowed/Catch
  • 1 TD Allowed
  • 0 INTs
  • 3 Pass Break Ups
  • 93.9 Passer Rating Allowed
  • 13 Pressures / 86 Pass Rush Snaps = 15.1% Pressure Rate
  • 0 QB Hits
  • 3.5 Sacks
It's a great year to need a LB. Sonny Styles is still LB1 for me, but Georgia’s CJ Allen isn’t far behind.

The run game instincts, physicality, and athleticism are all there, and at just 20 years old, he’s just tapping into what he can be. I’d bet he finishes as a top 30 player… pic.twitter.com/AvS1J3ZTTt

— Steve Letizia (@CFCBears) December 8, 2025

Awards/Accolades

  • Consensus All American (2025, Sporting News and Associated Press First Team)
  • First Team All SEC (2025, Coaches & AP)
  • Butkus Award Finalist (2025, nation’s top linebacker)
  • Lott IMPACT Trophy Finalist (top defensive player with IMPACT: Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community, Tenacity)
CJ Allen has been named a @sportingnews First-Team All-American 🇺🇸#GoDawgs pic.twitter.com/3dbh9ueii3

— Georgia Football (@GeorgiaFootball) December 18, 2025

Strengths

  • Going to test very well at the Combine. Fast and rangy on tape with smooth hip flips and quick agility paired with explosive high jumps to contest catches. His track background is apparent immediately in his running form and speed in pursuit.
  • Very reliable tackler, missed tackle rate throughout his career at Georgia was 6% (2024) to 8.9% (2023) range. Uses nice technique and wraps up well. Both can bring down both powerbacks and scatbacks.
  • Strong run game instincts, can sift through blockers to find the hole and meet the back there. High Football IQ in IDing run plays and knowing where to go downhill.
  • Has some pop behind his pads in his hits, will fly to the ball and delivers a big hit to dislodge the ball.
  • Can take on blocks well with good leverage and anchor.
  • High Effort, plays through the whistle and doesn’t give up on the play in pursuit.
  • Praised for Leadership and commitment to helping the community off the field. Leads by example. Team Captain.
#Georgia LB CJ Allen was terrific vs. Florida pic.twitter.com/rekEX0OkEC

— Jordan Reid (@Jordan_Reid) November 2, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Mental mistakes in coverage, while he can do well in shadowing Tight Ends and Running Backs in Man and has range to follow Wide Receivers in Zone, there are issues of missed assignments and leaving zone open.
  • Play Action causes hesitation in getting to his dropbacks, creating openings in the middle of the field.
  • Can over pursue to try to meet the back, opening up cutback lanes.
  • Could get bigger to improve power in block shedding, relies on finesse and low pad level.
CJ Allen (#3) out of Georgia is probably the best down-hill, run thumping LB in this class.

He may be a little one dimensional in that regard, but he’s so damn good in run defense, it will put him in that Top 50 conversation. pic.twitter.com/463gi9uuux

— Newt Westen (@NFLDraft_Westen) December 15, 2025

Draft Projection

Round 1-2 Grade


In my initial Big Board Top 100, I gave Allen a Round 1-2 Grade and he was #39 Overall. The consensus is that Allen will likely be taken toward the end of Round 1 or beginning of Round 2. The odds of him reaching the Colts at pick 47 aren’t great according to most, but with crowded and talented Linebacker class slips can happen.

1. LAR: QB Fernando Mendoza, Indiana
32. DEN: LB CJ Allen, Georgia

PFF’s Latest 2026 1st Round Mock Draft⬇️https://t.co/G4eUZNT7uE

— PFF College (@PFF_College) December 9, 2025

CJ Allen has flashes of being a 3 down impact Linebacker. His combination of top end athleticism, fluidity, downhill anticipation, and tackling prowess is covetable immediately and he has some impressive coverage reps to boot. Tack on clear leadership traits and constant high effort and you got a MIKE Linebacker to lead a defense.

But there is still things to work on, with coverage instincts and play fake recognition being the core ones.

These are coachable, but until corrected are exposable. Aggressive Blitz Scheme Defenses will love CJ Allen as they won’t put him in coverage situations as often or try to keep his assignments simple in coverage. But the warts are there that keep him from being a Round 1 Grade or even blue chip Linebacker prospect in this talented class.

He is still only 20 (turn 21 in March) and was a 30 game starter in Kirby Smart’s Georgia Defense over the last 3 years. Allen might not have even reached his athletic peak yet (a terrifying prospect for opposing offenses) and has time to continue to fine tune his dropback instincts. The flashes are there, and teams will take CJ Allen expecting the best is yet to come.

For the Colts, Allen wouldn’t fulfill their coverage needs for the middle of the field at first. If the Colts added him, it would be to replace Zaire Franklin as the starting MIKE Linebacker, become a new young leader of the defense, and attack downhill early on his career. Allen would provide a major boost in athleticism, tackling, and hustle in the middle of the defense, helping set the tone for a likely retooled front. More additions would still be needed to find his partner on the weak side at WILL Linebacker for more coverage ability in the short term, but under Lou Anarumo’s tutelage the hope would be that Allen would hone his coverage instincts over time to pair with his athletic gifts for a big leap in his drop back abilities.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...al/120024/2026-draft-cj-allen-scouting-report
 
After the bye, the Colts simply said “bye” to winning

gettyimages-2245332585.jpg


I have never really seen anything like it. Given that it has been thirty years since a team started 8-2 and missed the playoffs and I am thirty-seven, it stands to reason why. That is a long time ago, and seven-year-old me wasn’t watching much football. We all know the story at this point, but what are the “why’s” we can point to in order for us to properly digest the massive fall from grace the Indianapolis Colts experienced in the second half? Here are a few thoughts.

One of the most obvious reasons is that the competition stiffened: Chiefs, Texans and Jaguars twice, Seahawks, and 49ers. With the exception of the Chiefs, all of those teams made the playoffs. Now, with the exception of the Jaguars, all of those teams are in the divisional round. Beating up on the Titans twice and the Raiders made fans feel good, but it inflated team stats and skewed the optics of how good they really were.

Anytime a team loses its starting quarterback, it hurts. No matter how serviceable Philip Rivers was, swapping him for Daniel Jones was a downgrade. That isn’t to say Jones wouldn’t have gone winless too, but let’s be honest when talking about a five-year-retired player making a comeback versus an established and active player. Injuries to other players had an impact, but which team didn’t suffer injuries? Outside of quarterback, other arguments seem moot.

Going back to the argument of higher quality opponents, the offense wasn’t nearly as efficient in the second half. In the wins, the Colts averaged over 35 points. It started with Pittsburgh but carried over post-bye in which their average sank to 20.7. While understanding a good offense helps the defense, all the blame can’t be placed on one side of the ball. In the wins, the defense gave up 19, but after the bye, that rose to 29.4. Like two ships passing in the night but in the wrong direction, the second half of the season was doomed.

I am sure there are more X’s and O’s others can point to, but the big picture remains clear: a tough schedule meets losing your quarterback which turns into a lack of efficiency on both sides of the ball. It is as simple as that. Does that mean the Colts had to go and lose every game after the bye? Of course not, but it is plain to see why it happened. Expectations were low this season, and the Colts overperformed early on. The law of averages came back around and brought them back to reality. Regardless of the reason, it is still remarkable that the Colts took a break and literally said “bye” to winning.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...-the-bye-the-colts-simply-said-bye-to-winning
 
2026 Draft: Gabe Jacas Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘3 Height
  • 270 lb. Weight

2025 Stats

  • 41 Pressures (14%)
  • 7 QB Hits
  • 11 Sacks
  • 14.9% Pass Rush Win Rate
  • 88.5 Pass Rush Grade
  • 18 Solo Tackles
  • 8 Assist Tackles
  • 7 Missed Tackles (21.2%)
  • 28 Run Stops
  • 3 Forced Fumbles
  • 2 Penalties
#Illini Gabe Jacas Last Season:

🔹️8.0 Sacks
🔸️44 QB Pressures
🔹️83.3 Pass Rush Grade
🔸️18% Win Rate#famILLy #HTTO pic.twitter.com/fOeoLQdJsQ

— Chief Oskee (@ChiefOskee) August 27, 2025

Awards/Accolades

  • All Big Ten First Team (2025, Media Vote)
  • All-Big Ten Third Team (2024)
  • Freshman All American 2022 (First true freshman Illini to receive this)
  • Illinois Freshman of the Year (2022-2023, Football)
  • All-Big Ten Honorable Mention (2022)
We are sleeping on Illinois ED Gabe Jacas.

🔸Led the Big Ten with 11 sacks
🔸Ends his Illinois career #2 in program history in career sacks with 27
🔸Solid athlete makes up for it with a hot motor & a sound technical rush moves https://t.co/I6dRrcr71c pic.twitter.com/xQy3JA3kVG

— Clint Goss (@NFLDraftDome) December 14, 2025

Strengths

  • Strength, Agility, And Short Area Quickness. Jacas has a frame that has little to no bad weight and it enables his strength and agility to open up interesting paths and methods to get to the QB that most at his size can’t.
  • Good First Step. Can Jump off the line at times.
  • Has a Nice Speed to Power Bull Rush, Euro Steps, Feign a swipe then attack inside, Rips, and Inside Spin. Relies on Power Moves to get to the QB
  • Solid Stunter, has experience with attacking the line in different ways and can be used as the crasher or the looper well.
  • Doesn’t use it often, but there are glimpses of high end finesse with strong bend around the corner outside.
  • Nice Pass Rush motor. Maintains pursuit to get coverage sacks.
  • Can leverage himself well to get low against blockers in pass or run plays.
#Illinois EDGE Gabe Jacas is a player I’m going to be higher on than consensus in the 2026 draft.

19 sacks over the past 2 seasons with 11 this season. Converts speed-to-power at a very good rate, and a super aggressive player with good technical refinement. pic.twitter.com/HI8TYIEaEb

— Andy (@AndyyNFL) December 29, 2025

Weaknesses

  • Lacks any one true elite athletic trait, but good in all of them.
  • Strength is negated somewhat by lack of physicality in run game. Doesn’t have a strong anchor due to some bad habits of staying too upright at times and can lose the length battle with only average length.
  • First Step Inconsistency limits finesse and speed moves. Could be partially athletic limitations, partially snap count hesitation.
  • While he can execute a good amount of power moves, his hands still need work. Can be late to initiate and it hurts the odds of him beating a tackle. Has flashes of impressive sequencing of moves but that can be negated if the first one is too far into the rush. Needs more strike accuracy.

Draft Projection

Round 2 Grade


Gabe Jacas has been a highly productive pass rusher in the Big10 since he entered college, and his final year was a nice culmination of this. His final 4 games he had 21 Pressures for a 22% Pressure Rate, converting them to 6.5 Sacks and a Forced Fumble. He knows how to win at a nice rate, and has been a staple of the Illinois Defense for years.

The #Cowboys are absolutely going to love EDGE Gabe Jacas (6-3, 279).

He fits the strong side defensive end mold that can even play inside in the rush package.

Jacas would be another Day 2 type, similar to DeMarcus Lawrence, Sam Williams, Chauncey Golston, and Marshawn… pic.twitter.com/cm7V7ChSc0

— Dominic White (@DomWWhite) January 3, 2026

Jacas still needs work to refine his game to be well rounded, especially against the run and using his finesse moves better. Still he could earn a nice role as a situational Bull Rusher early on to help collapse the pocket and attack lines from a variety of angles. Not being asked to drop back into coverage as often or rush with only 2 other Lineman will help as well, as the Illinois Defensive Coordinator didn’t always put Jacas in the best position to succeed.

For the Colts, Jacas could provide some competition with JT Tuimoloau for the power rusher role as both can fill that archetype. Tuimoloau has the edge in run support, but Jacas was a much more productive pass rusher in college. Both could rotate in as help for Laiatu Latu and whichever veteran Defensive End the Colts pursue in Free Agency. Jacas knows how to rush in ways that can be very disruptive to QBs and help either himself or others in cleanup rack up sacks, which could be a welcome addition for Latu and the Colts Defensive Tackles. He is a plus athlete on the field and could still grow into an even more dangerous threat later on by rounding out his game.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian.../120451/2026-draft-gabe-jacas-scouting-report
 
2026 Draft: Dillon Thieneman Scouting Report

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Measurables

  • 6‘0 Height
  • 207 lb. Weight

2025 Stats

  • 18 Receptions Allowed / 27 Targets = 62.1% Completion Percentage Allowed when Targeted
  • 145 Yards Allowed (8.1 Yards per Reception)
  • 42 Yards After Catch Allowed (2.3 YAC per Reception)
  • 3 Touchdowns Allowed
  • 2 Interceptions
  • 4 Pass Break Ups
  • 80.4 Passer Rating Allowed
  • 91.1 Coverage Grade
  • 72 Solo Tackles
  • 27 Assisted Tackles
  • 9 Missed Tackles (8.3% Missed Tackle Rate)
  • 30 Run Stops
  • 4 Pressures / 5 Pass Rush Snaps = 80% Pressure Rate
  • 2 QB Hits
  • 0 Sacks
  • 1 Penalty
The only P4 SAFs since 2015 to reach the following production numbers in at least one college season..

🔘 Coverage grade > 91.0
🔘 Run defense grade > 90.0
🔘 Career pressure rate > 33.3%

Oregon SAF Dillon Thieneman (SAF1-Tier 1/Bluechip) is a high impact player in all three… pic.twitter.com/TvVySFUVwX

— Adam Carter (@impactfbdata) January 11, 2026

Awards/Accolades

  • First Team All American (2025)
  • First Team All Big 10 (2025)
  • Third Team All American (2023)
  • Second-team All-Big Ten (2023)
  • Big 10 Freshman of the Year (2023)
I've been a fan of Oregon SAF Dillon Thieneman since his freshman season at Purdue

High-IQ player who processes quickly, triggers downhill with confidence in the run game and a good feel for coverage in both zone and man. Combine will be big for him to sort out his ultimate… pic.twitter.com/kSH6AjVBJM

— Steve Letizia (@CFCBears) January 15, 2026

Strengths

  • One of the best Coverage Safeties in the Draft. Smart instincts with good vision and quick, fluid hips to change direction and mirror in man or to pursue as a Deep Centerfielder. Smooth backpedal at all depths.
  • Highly versatile, can play at Free Safety in Single High, come down into the Box for extra run support as a Strong Safety, and provide some slot coverage in nickel formations as well. He was predominantly a Free Safety in 2023-2024 with 1,152 snaps there compared to 298 in the Box and did very well (3 TDs allowed, 6 INTs, 7 Passes Deflected, 66.7% Completion Percentage allowed) but in 2025 dominated while shifting as a Strong Safety for most of the season (434 snaps in the Box to 247 as a Free Safety).
Oregon S Dillon Thieneman (#31) was used a ton in single high at Purdue… but did a bit of everything this year with the Ducks.

At 6-0 and 207 pounds, he’s a good blend of size, physicality, and underrated range. Does his best work as a mid hole/short zone robber. Instinctive. pic.twitter.com/ST3nhvMuCD

— Ryan Roberts (@RiseNDraft) January 16, 2026
  • Willing run support, will come up to hit very quickly and wraps up very well.
  • Nice ball skills with 6 career INTs in just 68 targets.
  • Competitive, was a leader on the Oregon Ducks and willing to never give up on a play in coverage or in pursuit.
Dillon Thieneman, hot damn. pic.twitter.com/aZSBTW5bmW

— Ted Leroux (@TedontheDucks) January 4, 2026

Weaknesses

  • Can be fooled by QB’s eyes at times and looked off from other receivers.
  • Not the biggest Safety and can be stuck on blocks if not using good form with active hands to shed blockers. Might need to bulk up a bit to help add mass in anchor and a bit more power in his tackles.
Did Dillon Thieneman escape the state of Indiana to join a commune in Oregon because he knew he couldn’t tackle Omar Cooper Jr.?

People are asking, not us, but some people. #iufb pic.twitter.com/itZAIdzVR2

— Kirkwood & Dunn Podcast (@KirkwoodandDunn) January 3, 2026
  • Bites on Play Action at times getting him out of position.
  • Needs better pursuit angles, can misread the ball carriers’ direction and make tackle attempts harder by being over aggressive.
  • Can be a tick faster in processing certain route combinations and knowing where to go. Usually a strong point but there have been some moments of hesitation on tape.

Draft Projection

Round 2 Grade


Thieneman has shown a lot of high end play over the course of his college career no matter where he has lined up. That versatility will be valuable to any professional team, with his ability to fit on to a lot of schemes in a variety of roles. He is not slacking in the athleticism department either, as he is expected to test very well as a Feldman Freak.

Thieneman was ranked 51st on the initial Top 100 Big Board with a Round 2 Grade and I’m sticking to that grade (though his overall placement is likely to change). He still needs work on a little more consistency in the mental side of the game, but the gaffes aren’t that common. But between his tackling reliability, ball skills, backpedal and smooth hips, high end athleticism for range and pursuit, competitiveness and leadership, all while being able to line up nearly anywhere in the defensive backfield; Thieneman feels like one of the safer picks of the draft.

That isn’t to imply that there isn’t a high ceiling for him either, the potential for him is high as well. Expect this former Boilermaker & Duck to make an impact quickly in the NFL. If he were to land with the Colts, the Westfield High School alum coming home to play for the Colts would likely be a dream come true. Being able to play alongside Cam Bynum would be a wonderful boon, as Bynum also has strong versatility and a high football IQ to help to mentor and fine tune Thieneman’s instincts. The amount of playmaking, interchangeability, reliability, athletic range, and overall strong vibes of fun and leadership that pair could bring to the Colts Defense is very tempting to pair.

DILLON THIENEMAN SEALS IT WITH HIS FIRST INTERCEPTION AS A DUCK.#GoDucks x @DillonThieneman pic.twitter.com/nSB92dc0ZV

— Oregon Football (@oregonfootball) September 28, 2025

While Safety might not be the top need for the Colts to address in 2026, starter Nick Cross and backup Rodney Thomas II are Free Agents with expiring rookie deals. Backups Hunter Wohler and Daniel Scott have had struggles in staying healthy. The position will need to be addressed in someway in the offseason. Should the Colts prioritize addressing other needs in Free Agency or the board doesn’t fall right to address other top needs like Defensive Line or Linebacker, adding Thieneman in Round 2 could be a strong pivot to secure the defensive backfield. Safety is a crucial position in the Lou Anarumo scheme with all of the pre-snap disguises and post snap coverage shifts, so Football IQ and communication are essential on the field in the back end of the Defense. Having a duo of Thieneman and Bynum together could go a long way in the rebuild of the Colts Defense.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...7/2026-draft-dillon-thieneman-scouting-report
 
Colts announce that training camp will be moved to W. 56th street in 2027

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On Friday, the Indianapolis Colts announced that the team’s training camp will be moved from Grand Park in Westfield, Indiana, to franchise headquarters at its W. 56th street, Indiana Farm Bureau Football Center beginning in the 2027 offseason.

The #Colts are coming home for training camp, beginning in 2027. pic.twitter.com/Lkiml7uia4

— Ian Rapoport (@RapSheet) January 16, 2026

This offseason will mark the team’s final training camp at Grand Park, at least as it stands.

As the team announcement notes, the Colts will join the NFL’s 26 other teams who host their team training camp at their own practice facilities—meaning there will be five or fewer clubs who have their training camps off-site in 2027.

Outside of a few aberration seasons (including during the COVID-19 pandemic), the Colts have typically held their team training camps off-site. They had been in Grand Park since 2018, excluding the 2020 COVID year.

The Colts have also hosted training camp at Anderson University and Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

Late team owner Jim Irsay, who passed away last May, always seemed to be a big proponent of hosting training camp off-site for additional exposure and having it open to the general public. It provided Colts fans, particularly families, a unique opportunity to see the team up close and personal, who otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford the typical game day experience during the regular season.

The big loser in this could be Colts fans in that regard.

It’s quite possible that W. 56th Street may still be open to the general public in some regards, but I would have to think that their capacity could be more limited compared to Grand Park going forward. However, we’ll just have to wait and see for sure. Maybe there ultimately won’t be a meaningful capacity difference at all.

There’s probably some reasoning that the Colts are going to do this, along with 26 other NFL teams in the fairly near future, including costs, logistics, efficiency, and likely the quicker medical treatment component. However, let’s hope it’s not the end of what has been a longtime offseason perk of being Colts fans, live and readily accessible team training camp.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...g-camp-will-be-moved-to-w-56th-street-in-2027
 
PFF lists Colts WR Alec Pierce as ‘2026 free agent that they can’t afford to lose’

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According to PFF, Indianapolis Colts pending 2026 free agent Alec Pierce is the player that the Horseshoe can’t afford to lose—which isn’t all that surprising to be fair:

Indianapolis Colts: WR Alec Pierce


The Colts’ 2025 campaign was truly a tale of two halves. The team went from possible Super Bowl contenders to finishing third in the AFC South. Compounding the situation is that Indianapolis doesn’t have its first-round pick, plus has several contributors on expiring contracts. The most valuable of those names is certainly Pierce.

Pierce found his groove this past year, blossoming into one of the better receivers in football. Among receivers with 75 or more targets, he placed 14th in PFF receiving grade (81.0), 14th in yards per route run (2.10) and eighth in passer rating when targeted (113.7). Additionally, his 96.3 deep PFF receiving grade since 2024 ranked second, behind only Jaxon Smith-Njigba.

The Colts have decisions to make on Daniel Jones, Braden Smith, Nick Cross and others, but Pierce was an engine for their improved passing attack. No matter who Indianapolis’ man under center is in 2026, having Pierce back in the fold would be enormous.

Specifically, the only other realistic choice was starting quarterback Daniel Jones, who’s also set to become a free agent this offseason, and is currently rehabbing from a season-ending torn Achilles suffered late during Week 14. The other Colts’ key free agents include safety Nick Cross, offensive tackle Braden Smith, defensive end Kwity Paye, and linebacker Germaine Pratt.

Originally a 2022 2nd round pick of the Colts, the 25-year-old Pierce has emerged as arguably the league’s top deep threat, averaging an NFL leading 21.3 yards per reception average this past season—which he’s led the league two years in a row. Not only that, but Pierce eclipsed 1,000 receiving yards for the first time in his career to go along with his 47 receptions and 6 touchdown receptions this past season as the Colts’ clear new WR1.

Pierce has continued to develop as a more well-rounded route runner collectively, but his ability to separate vertically, high-point the football, and make highly contested, acrobatic catches is an elite NFL receiving skill.

Regardless of who was starting for the Colts at quarterback, Pierce consistently shined as their most explosive receiver—particularly down the field, whether it was Jones, veteran Philip Rivers, or even rookie Riley Leonard.

Armed with a projected $41.7M of available team cap space this early offseason, Pierce should be a top priority re-signing for the Colts—even if it comes at the expense of his Indy teammates, including fellow starting wideout Michael Pittman Jr., who’s due a whopping $29 million cap hit next season.

Simply put, Pierce needs to be back for Indy, no matter the price tag.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...2026-free-agent-that-they-cant-afford-to-lose
 
Colts center Tanor Bortolini was PFF’s most improved player at position after ‘breakout’ 2025

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According to PFF, Indianapolis Colts center Tanor Bortolini was their most improved player at his position league-wide during the 2025 campaign:

Center: Tanor Bortolini, Indianapolis Colts​


The Colts are the NFL’s offensive lineman factory. Their ability to churn out NFL starters at every position across the offensive line is unparalleled. Lost a key starter? Not a problem, it steps the next man up to play sound football.

The player to fill that role for the Colts in 2025 was Tanor Bortolini (82.6 grade; 3rd), the team’s fourth-round pick in 2024. Bortolini spot-started in place of the oft-injured Ryan Kelly in 2024, generating a 65.1 overall PFF grade while playing steady football. Bortolini didn’t look like a star, but showed he could be serviceable, and a potential option if Kelly moved on.

With Kelly leaving in free agency, the Colts showed faith in Bortolini, and their confidence has been justly rewarded. Bortolini had a breakout season and anchored one of the best offensive lines in football in 2025. The Colts finished the year with the second-best PFF pass-blocking grade and fourth-best PFF run-blocking grade in football. Bortolini allowed just 17 pressures and zero sacks, and ended the campaign as one of the NFL’s rising stars in the trenches.

Additionally, per PFF, he was also among their six ‘breakout’ offensive lineman from this past 2025 regular season:

C Tanor Bortolini, Indianapolis Colts​


The Wisconsin product appeared in eight games as a rookie in 2024, logging 351 snaps. He finished that season with a 66.8 PFF overall grade and graded below 66.0 in both pass blocking and run blocking.

In 2025, however, Bortolini took a significant step forward, clearing that threshold in both areas and establishing himself as one of the NFL’s top run-blocking centers. His PFF run-blocking grade of 88.2 ranked third at the position, trailing only Miami’s Aaron Brewer and Kansas City’s Creed Humphrey. He also ranked third among centers in positively graded run-play rate, earning a positive PFF grade on 19.4% of run plays.

Per PFF, the 2nd-year Bortolini, and first-time full-time starting center, earned a +82.6 overall grade, which was the 3rd highest grade at his position—just ahead of the Colts’ longtime veteran Pro Bowl center he replaced, Ryan Kelly (+82.2), who had been Indy’s long-term starter since 2016.

Given that the Minnesota Vikings’ 32-year-old Kelly was limited to 8 starts this past season because of reoccurring concussions (suffering at least two), compared to the 23-year-old Bortolini’s 16 starts in 2025, and the Colts ultimately made the tough, but right move for the franchise going forward.

It was in run blocking where Bortolini particularly shined per PFF, with a +88.2 run blocking grade.

During 566 total pass blocking snaps, Bortolini allowed 0 sacks, 5 QB hits, and 17 total QB pressures this past regular season. If he can continue to make strides as a pass blocker, he could become a top NFL center in time.

While it was another disappointing season in Indianapolis collectively, given the team’s late season collapse, Bort’s emergence was one of the few lasting bright spots—as the Colts appear to have found an interior fixture manning the center of their offensive line for the foreseeable future.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...proved-player-at-position-after-breakout-2025
 
Eagles reportedly request to interview Colts OC Jim Bob Cooter for same coaching role

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According to NFL Network’s Mike Garafolo, the Philadelphia Eagles requested to interview Indianapolis Colts current offensive coordinator Jim Bob Cooter for their same coaching role this early offseason for both teams:

The #Eagles requested an interview with #Colts OC Jim Bob Cooter for their OC job, source says. Cooter was on staff with Nick Sirianni in Philly in 2021 and this year helped guide an Indy offense that was 8th in passing and scoring while Jonathan Taylor ran for 1,585 yards. pic.twitter.com/oEr2bpXANV

— Mike Garafolo (@MikeGarafolo) January 17, 2026

Under head coach Shane Steichen, the 41-year-old Cooter has served as the Colts offensive coordinator since 2023—having previously served as a passing coordinator for the Jacksonville Jaguars (2022) and an offensive consultant for the Eagles (2021) among his other prior pro football coaching roles.

One of Cooter’s first coaching stops in the NFL was actually as an offensive assistant with the Colts back from 2009-2011, so there may be some organizational loyalty with Indianapolis as well.

While at face, this is a lateral move, and it will be interesting to see if Indianapolis grants permission. It could at least be somewhat of a promotion, as Steichen consistently handles the offensive play-calling for the Colts. If that job would go to Cooter in Philadelphia, then it theoretically would be an elevation in offensive coaching duties.

With Cooter’s coaching assistance last season, the Colts ranked 8th in most points per game (27.4 avg. ppg), and that was despite losing starting quarterback (and Pro Bowl alternate) Daniel Jones for the last four starts of the regular season due to a season-ending torn Achilles injury.

Until Jones’s fractured fibula and then torn Achilles after midseason, the Colts were a historically elite NFL offense. Even with the unit’s diminished production down the final stretch, star workhorse Jonathan Taylor still rushed for 1,585 total rushing yards and 18 total rushing touchdowns (*leading the league) on 323 total carries.

Should Cooter join the Eagles revamped offensive coaching staff, who recently dismissed ex-OC Kevin Patullo, one interesting name would be former Colts starting quarterback (and arguably future Hall of Famer) Philip Rivers to fill the theoretical vacancy for Indianapolis.

The 2x starting Colts quarterback (and longtime Chargers passer) just shockingly unretired and came in relief of Jones to make 3 starts, and seems interested in pro coaching down the road.

However, with his one son a rising senior and his other an incoming freshman in 2026, the 44-year-old may want to head coach high school football for at least one more season in Fairhope, Alabama, before “turning the corner.”

If it eventually comes to it, current Colts internal replacement offensive coordinator options could include quarterbacks coach Cam Turner, tight ends coach Tom Manning, or passing game coordinator Alex Tanney.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...olts-oc-jim-bob-cooter-for-same-coaching-role
 
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