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Will Colts surprisingly no longer be the NFL’s only Indiana based team?

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Feb 2, 2007; Miami Beach, FL, USA; The Chicago Bears and Indianapolis Colts helmets sit beside the Lombardi Trophy during the head coaches press conference for Super Bowl XLI at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida. Mandatory Credit: Matthew Emmons-Imagn Images Copyright © 2007 Matthew Emmons

One of the major sports stories of Thursday was that Indiana lawmakers unanimously approved an Indiana Senate Bill, by a vote of 24-0, for a planned proposal that paves the way for the Chicago Bears to potentially have a brand new domed stadium built near Wolf Lake in Hammond, Indiana.

Wolf Lake is roughly 22 miles from downtown Chicago, but again, Windy City traffic has to be factored in.

While this one hasn’t been finally decided yet by any means, as Illinois lawmakers will likely at least propose a rebuttal, this appears to be further down the tracks than just purely posturing and leverage by Bears ownership.

If you ask the governor of Illinois, JB Pritzker, Illinois lawmakers and Bears ownership “mostly agreed on a deal” yesterday before the franchise suddenly hit pause and released a shocking team statement regarding the progressing stadium construction plan development for Northwest Indiana.

However, Pritzker also indicated that Bears officials told him that the recent team statement isn’t confirmation that the Bears are necessarily Hoosier-bound. However, the added pressure is on.

This actually has a real chance of happening though, and barring meaningful action by Illinois lawmakers (i.e., regarding providing more tax money for new stadium construction), is no longer out of the realm of realistic possibility:

In speaking to sources close to the situation, this Bears moving to Indiana thing is not just gaining momentum, it feels like an inevitability barring a major change of course from the state of Illinois. This is wild. More on @SInow soon…

— Conor Orr (@ConorOrr) February 19, 2026

Per The IndyStar’s Joel Erickson, the Colts stance on the Bears joining them in the State of Indiana so far remains unchanged—simply wishing them the best going forward.

By NFL rule, Hammond is within a 75 mile radius of downtown Chicago, meaning that the Bears already hold the marketing rights because it’s in their exclusive jurisdiction regardless:

“The Colts do not purchase advertisements in the area, do not hold events in the area and do not send team marketing representatives to the area,” writes Erickson.

While it seems unlikely that they’ll be called the Indiana Bears or Hammond Bears anytime soon for fear of revolt by the always passionate Chicago Bears faithful, it does mean that there could potentially be a 2nd NFL team with both its domed stadium and team headquarters based in the State of Indiana.

The two squads that faced off in Super Bowl XLI could possibly find themselves as in-state neighbors soon.

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indian...no-longer-be-the-nfls-only-indiana-based-team
 
Position Mastery: Evaluating Tight Ends

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Jan 4, 2026; Houston, Texas, USA; Indianapolis Colts tight end Tyler Warren (84) makes the catch against the Houston Texans during the first half at NRG Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Thomas Shea-Imagn Images | Thomas Shea-Imagn Images

Tight end is the position that looks simple on paper and becomes complicated the moment you turn on the film. At a glance, the evaluation process seems similar to wide receiver: can he catch, can he run routes, can he block? In reality, tight ends live in a completely different world. They’re bigger, slower, more physical, and asked to do far more within the structure of an offense. On one play they’re running seams against safeties. On the next, they’re blocking defensive ends in the run game. Few positions in football demand such a wide and conflicting skill set.

At the college level, many tight ends are featured almost exclusively as oversized receivers, winning against mismatches in space. Others are used primarily as extra tackles, rarely asked to stretch the field. Very few are developed as complete players. That’s why projecting tight ends to the NFL is so difficult. Dominating smaller defenders on Saturdays doesn’t guarantee success against professional athletes who are just as strong, faster, and better coached.

For this installment, the goal is to separate “college production” from “NFL utility.” What traits actually carry over? What allows a tight end to stay on the field in every situation instead of becoming a situational player? This framework is built around how teams evaluate the position internally: can he be trusted as a receiver, relied on as a blocker, and deployed in multiple roles without tipping the offense’s hand.

As with the other positions in this series, the focus isn’t highlights or box scores. It’s patterns on film. Habits. Physical and mental traits that show up week after week. If you want to understand why some tight ends become foundational pieces while others fade into specialized roles, this is where the evaluation starts.


Catching Ability​

  • Reliable hands. Secures the ball cleanly without body catches.
  • Strong through contact. Finishes catches with defenders on him.
  • Wins off-frame. Handles throws high, low, and behind.
  • Minimal drops. Mistakes are rare, not recurring.
  • Transitions quickly. Moves from catch to run without hesitation.

Blocking (Defensive Ends & Outside Linebackers)​

  • Holds the edge. Can seal DEs and OLBs in the run game.
  • Anchors vs power. Doesn’t get walked back into the play.
  • Sustains blocks. Finishes through the whistle. Think of prime Gronk.
  • Proper hand placement. Inside leverage, strong grip. Doesn’t hold or grab outside frame.
  • Moves defenders. Creates lanes, not just “gets in the way.”
  • Works in space. Effective on split-zone, screens, whams and pulls.

Separation & Route Running​

  • Efficient releases. Beats linebackers and safeties cleanly.
  • Explodes out of breaks. Maintains speed through cuts.
  • Sharp on short/intermediate routes. Sticks, outs, seams, crossers.
  • No drifting. Controls depth precisely.
  • Understands leverage. Uses body positioning to get open.
  • Route versatility. Not limited to flats and seams.

YAC Ability​

  • Physical runner. Breaks arm tackles consistently.
  • Falls forward. Maximizes every catch.
  • Wins in tight space. Creates yards in traffic.
  • Drags defenders. Requires multiple tacklers.
  • Threat after catch. Turns routine plays into explosives.

Plays in Traffic & Toughness​

  • Attacks the defense. Be the hammer, not the nail.
  • Absorbs hits. Holds on through contact.
  • Wins contested catches. Reliable in tight windows.
  • Plays through pain. Doesn’t disappear after big hits.
  • Mental toughness. Competes every snap.

Football IQ & Spatial Awareness​

  • Finds soft spots. Sits in zone windows.
  • Understands spacing. Works with QB timing.
  • Knows the sticks. Converts on key downs.
  • Reads coverage. Adjusts routes on the fly.
  • Situational awareness. Smart in two-minute and red zone.

Alignment Versatility​

  • Inline capable. Functions as a true tight end.
  • Slot flexibility. Can operate in space.
  • Wing/backfield usage. Useful in motion and split looks.
  • Out-wide potential. Can punish mismatches.
  • Doesn’t tip plays. Same personnel, multiple looks.

Play Strength & Physicality​

  • Functional strength. Wins with power, not just size.
  • Leverage control. Plays low and balanced.
  • Finishes blocks. Drives through contact.
  • Route physicality. Uses frame to shield defenders.
  • Red-zone presence. Wins and scores.

Special Teams Value (For Depth TEs)​

  • Coverage ability. Willing tackler.
  • Block-and-release skills. Useful on punt/kick teams.
  • Motor. High-effort reps.
  • Coachability. Accepts role without ego.
  • Roster value. Helps earn active status.


In the end, tight end scouting is about finding balance. A player who can only catch is a big slot receiver. A player who can only block is an extra tackle. NFL teams are searching for the rare prospect who can live in both worlds without being a liability in either. When you watch with that in mind, the tape becomes much clearer. Look for dependable hands in traffic, the strength to hold up against defensive ends, the awareness to find space on key downs, and the versatility to line up anywhere without tipping the offense’s intentions. Production matters, but trust matters more. Coaches keep tight ends on the field because they don’t have to protect them with scheme. Use this framework and you’ll quickly see which prospects can become true three-down players and which ones are destined for specialized roles.

Other Instalments:

Quarterbacks

Running Backs

Receivers

Source: https://www.stampedeblue.com/indianapolis-colts-draft/121610/position-mastery-evaluating-tight-ends
 
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