The Indianapolis Colts find themselves in win-now mode under the current Chris Ballard-Shane Steichen regime. After an 8-9 season in 2024, the Colts have now missed out on the playoffs in four consecutive seasons and haven’t won the AFC South since 2014.
So in order for the Colts to get over that elusive playoff hump this season, what are three things that have to be fixed this season?
Let’s dive in.
Improved quarterback play
As we know, the play from the quarterback position last season, whether it was Anthony Richardson or Joe Flacco, was inconsistent, and made moving the ball with any sort of regularity a tall task.
Around the Colts’ quarterback this season is a very well put-together offense. This includes an offensive line unit that PFF believes is one of the best in the NFL. The Colts also have what ESPN called an “underrated” trio of wide receivers, along with adding Tyler Warren to the mix at tight end. Then at running back is Jonathan Taylor, who was fourth in rushing yards last season.
The Colts don’t exactly need elite play from the quarterback spot to be effective, but they do need stability.
More pressure on opposing quarterbacks
The name of the game is affecting the quarterback, and the Colts struggled to do that consistently last season. The Colts’ defense would finish the year ranked 22nd in pressure rate, they were 23rd in total pressures, 26th in sacks, and 21st in ESPN’s pass rush win rate metric.
The defensive front is a unit that has been heavily invested in over the years, both in cap space and in draft capital, so the pieces to this puzzle should already be on the roster.
Helping the defensive front cause more chaos should be Lou Anarumo’s defensive scheme, which will be more aggressive and disguise-heavy, which should buy the defensive line additional time to get home, a luxury they didn’t often have in 2024 with opponents picking apart the secondary with the quick game.
We should see more movement up front as well to help create mismatches and more blitzing to cause some confusion.
More plays on the ball from the secondary
The Colts were sixth in interceptions last season, and while turnovers are obviously important, that doesn’t necessarily mean that consistency is there either.
Despite the interception success, the Colts still ranked in the bottom third of the NFL last season in completion rate allowed, opponent passer rating, pass deflections, and yards per pass attempt surrendered.
More plays on the ball means the potential for even more interceptions, but just as important, it means fewer pass breakups, more incompletions, and getting off the field with regularity.
To improve the play on the back end this season, Ballard signed Charvarius Ward and Cam Bynum in free agency, not to mention that Anarumo’s scheme with varying coverages can keep quarterbacks off balance, and the more aggressive play style can have defenders in a better position to make plays.
This article originally appeared on Colts Wire: What Colts must fix this season to return to postseason