Colts power rankings roundup Week 10: A new rock bottom

Here’s a roundup of where the Colts sit in the power rankings entering Week 10.

The Indianapolis Colts (3-5-1) may not be on their way to a playoff berth, but they are doing everything they can to make sure the rest of the season provides entertainment and unpredictable moves.

After owner Jim Irsay gave in to his impulses, firing Frank Reich and hiring Jeff Saturday essentially on a whim, the Colts have become the laughingstock of the league.

It’s reflected in the power rankings going into Week 10 as most publications have the Colts sitting in the tier among the worst teams in the NFL.

They can only go up from here, but that doesn’t mean they have to go up.

Here’s a roundup of the power rankings entering Week 10 of the season:

Frank Reich speaks on firing: ‘There’s disappointment and hurt’

Frank Reich opens up about being fired by the Colts.

Former Indianapolis Colts head coach Frank Reich opened up about being fired Monday, a move that was followed up by owner Jim Irsay doing something unprecedented by naming Jeff Saturday the interim head coach.

Though it’s understandable that the Colts parted ways with Reich, it was a bit of a shock they didn’t wait until after the season. It clearly was an impulsive move by Irsay, whose only candidate to replace Reich was Saturday.

Reich opened up about the firing in an interview with Mike Chappell of Fox59, and in true Reich fashion, he took the high road despite expressing his disappointment.

“There’s disappointment and hurt. “It hurts. It hurts to have it happen in the middle of the season,” Reich told Chappell. “But I understand the business side of things. I have a tremendous amount of respect for Mr. Irsay and I’ve come to trust his instincts and his knowledge of the game. I just know he’s doing what he thinks is best for the team.”

Reich deserved plenty of blame for the shortcomings of the offense this season, but he also survived much longer than most coaches would considering the circumstances he was under throughout his tenure. The retirement of Andrew Luck set in motion a path that was probably impossible to come back from with the benefit of hindsight.

However, Reich still feels proud of his time in the Circle City and what the team was able to accomplish during his tenure.

“I gave my heart and soul to the job, to the guys, to everything I did there. I didn’t take anything for granted,” Reich said.

The quarterback carousel is going to be what most point to as the downfall for Reich. But the mismanagement of the roster construction on Chris Ballard’s part deserves, at the least, equal blame for the recent struggles.

Make no mistake, Reich doesn’t see this being the end of his coaching career.

“I think you keep all your options open,’’ Reich said. “Obviously my desire is to be a head coach. I love the game. I love everything about the game, so you keep all of your options open.’’

We’ll see what the future holds for Reich and whether he’ll get another chance to be a head coach in the NFL.

And it’s no surprise to see a man known for his character take the high road despite the sudden fallout.

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Jim Irsay and the Colts are an absolute joke for hiring Jeff Saturday as their new coach

This could be one of the dumbest moves in NFL history.

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The Colts didn’t shock anyone on Monday when they fired head coach Frank Reich a little less than 24 hours after a humiliating loss to the Patriots. That was expected and absolutely the right move for the franchise that continues to get in its own way.

Speaking of getting in their own way, Colts owner Jim Irsay waited until shortly after the firing of Reich to announce a move that had everyone laughing at them while saying such things out loud as “they can’t be serious!” or “you have to be kidding me!” or “what are they doing!?” and many other sayings with words that I can’t type here or I’d lose my job.

Seriously, even the anchors on SportsCenter couldn’t believe what they were reporting live on air.

You never want to become a laughingstock in life because when you are a laughingstock people aren’t laughing with you, they are laughing at you and this morning everyone is laughing at Irsay and the Colts.

If you missed it – Irsay and the Colts hired Jeff Saturday to be their new interim head coach. Saturday played center for them back in the Peyton Manning days and has his name in the Colts Ring of Honor. He was a very good player during his years in the league and that honor was vey well deserved.

What is not very well deserved is his new job title. Saturday has never coached at the college for NFL level. He has only coached a high school team. Now he’s in charge of a professional football team and it’s all such a bad joke that will most likely go horribly wrong for Irsay and the Colts.

Irsay defended his decision during a bizarre press conference Monday night in which he said Saturday could be in charge of the team for more than this year and that he actually liked that he didn’t have any coaching experience in college football or the NFL because he lacks the fear or leaning on analytics.

I mean, what could go wrong here, right?!

Well, a lot. A lot could go wrong here.

This isn’t some Pop Warner football team where someone’s father who once played football can jump in and lead a team out on the field. This is the NFL, where professional coaches with years and years of experience as coaches run teams and also work tirelessly on finding ways to beat other teams.

Just last week Saturday was an ESPN analyst tweeting about how bad the Raiders are. Now he’ll be coaching against the Raiders this week and his team will be underdogs on the road.

If you’re a player on the Colts you have to be wondering what in world your franchise is doing. I can’t imagine the confidence level inside the team’s practice facility is very high today. What would you think if your team’s owner treated your team like it was some pickup league where anyone can grab the whistle and be the coach?

Irsay is wild for making this move. And not in a good way. It could end up being one of the dumbest moves in NFL history that could backfire in a way like we’ve never seen before in this league.

And if/when it does everyone will still be laughing at Irsay and the Colts.

Quick hits: New NFL Power Rankings… Mahomes headbutts wall… Fantasy football waiver wire options… And more. 

(AP Photo/Daniel Kucin Jr.)

– Week 9 is in the books and it’s time for our new NFL power rankings, which have Kirk Cousins and the 7-1 Vikings moving up again.

– Patrick Mahomes headbutted the wall after his game-tying 2-point conversion and NFL fans had Gus Frerotte jokes.

– Charles Curtis has 6 players you should be looking at on your fantasy football waiver wire, including Bears TE Cole Kmet.

– Christian D’Andrea ranked the 7 best possible landing spots for Odell Beckham Jr.

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Colts’ Jim Irsay contradicting in defense Jeff Saturday’s lack of experience

Colts’ Jim Irsay gives confusing rationale behind support of Jeff Saturday’s lack of experience.

The Indianapolis Colts held a press conference Monday night introducing Jeff Saturday as the interim head coach for the remainder of the season, and it went about as well as one would think.

Owner Jim Irsay made it clear, both directly and indirectly, that this decision to fire Frank Reich and hire Saturday was made through impulse and the desire to bring 2000s nostalgia back to the Circle City.

One of the biggest questions on everyone’s mind is how Irsay can be comfortable hiring a coach midseason when that coach doesn’t have any experience beyond a few seasons at the high school level.

Irsay told the media he thinks it’s better Saturday doesn’t have coaching experience. His reasoning for that simply leaves us with more question marks about the rationale behind the decision.

“Now, I am glad he doesn’t have any NFL experience. I’m glad he hasn’t learned the fear that’s in this league because it’s tough for all of our coaches,” Irsay said. “They’re afraid. They go to analytics and it gets difficult. I mean, he doesn’t have all that. He doesn’t have that fear and there was no other candidate.”

The shot at analytics doesn’t really make sense. It’s not surprising someone like Irsay, who has been around the game his entire life, isn’t a fan of analytics. The traditionalists and purists often point to analytics when they discuss their issues with the current coaching landscape.

But those issues regarding analytics are typically voiced when a coach is being too aggressive, not fearful or conservative. It’s usually when a coach is often willing to go for it on fourth down or when they lean on historical data to help with a decision that we hear complaints about how “analytics are ruining the game.”

Irsay also made some contradictive statements about how even though Saturday lacks coaching experience, he’s fully qualified to take over this job on a whim.

“He is fully experienced enough. Yes, he is fully capable. He’s extremely smart. He’s extremely competitive. He understands the game,” Irsay said.

What Irsay is likely referring to is Saturday’s experience from playing in the NFL. No one should deny that does have value, and Saturday has been around a lot of winners. But there’s a massive difference between playing and coaching.

That difference in mindset becomes even starker when considering Saturday quite literally has no experience in the coaching realm above the high school level.

When asked why Saturday was the better fit over other coaches on the staff who already have experience, Irsay essentially gave a “because I said so” justification.

“Because he’s a better fit. He’s the best man for the job,” Irsay said. “The last coach I hired as an interim head coach was Bruce Arians. It was the right coach. He was the best guy. That’s why.”

So while Saturday seems like a genuine person and eventually could turn into a good coach, the rationale behind the move is far gone. It’s clear this move was made out of impulse because there’s a natural progression to becoming a head coach.

Chris Ballard even admitted to their past attempts to hire Saturday as the offensive line coach. Hiring him for that role and then promoting him would have made more sense. It wouldn’t have made a ton of sense, but at least Saturday would have some experience of the coaching life before running an entire team.

Instead, Irsay is seemingly forcing this move to be made because he was fed up with the direction of the team.

The issue, though, is that Monday night’s press conference constructed a perception that this situation could very well become more of a trainwreck than it already is.

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The most bizarre parts of the Colts’ Jim Irsay/Chris Ballard/Jeff Saturday press conference

Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay, general manager Chris Ballard, and interim head coach Jeff Saturday had quite the presser. Here are the highlights.

On Monday evening, Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay, general manager Chris Ballard, and interim head coach Jeff Saturday held a press conference announcing the hire of Saturday — the former Colts center and ESPN analyst — who had never coached at any level of college or professional football before. Irsay had fired head coach Frank Reich on Monday morning, and the Saturday hire shocked just about everybody throughout the league.

As did the press conference, in which Irsay was at his Irsayest, Ballard was prickly as hell, and Saturday looked like he didn’t know what the light in the tunnel meant. Which would be an understandable reaction. It’s how a lot of us felt watching it.

Yeah, it was something else. Here are some of the most “remarkable” snippets from the event.

Jim Irsay tops Commanders owner Daniel Snyder

Jim Irsay pulled a move Monday that not even Dan Snyder has done.

Dan Snyder has driven us crazy for much of his 23 years as owner of the Redskins, Football Team and now Commanders.

However, might Jim Irsay have topped Snyder by what he pulled Monday?

Yes, Snyder and Bruce Allen summoned Jay Gruden to the facility at 5 a.m. to fire him. However, that team was winless after five games, Gruden had lost the team, and Bill Callahan was promoted to head coach because Callahan had head coaching experience with the Raiders in 2002-03 and Nebraska 2004-2007.

There was the time Snyder fired Norv Turner after agonizing home losses in consecutive weeks to the Eagles and Giants during the 2000 season. Snyder had spent tons of money on aging veterans and with Turner’s team only being 7-6, Snyder elevated one of Turner’s assistants, Terry Robiskie (passing game coordinator) to interim head coach for the final three weeks.

Monday, Irsay did nothing to help NFL fans form a perception of him as a reasonable and wise NFL owner. Washington in 2019 was 0-5, and the Colts are 3-5-1. Reich is respected by many around the league as both a coach and man, but Irsay fired him.

Even more, unlike Snyder, Irsay pulled a move we believe never done before in the Super Bowl era of the NFL. Irsay named Jeff Saturday as the Colts interim coach, though Saturday has no experience coaching in the NFL or in college, none.

What would possess an owner to give over his team to a former player (in the middle of a season no less), bypassing all of the men on the current staff who certainly know what has transpired in minicamp, training camp, preseason and regular season?  Why bypass the very men who have persevered through it all themselves?

Might the owner be wanting full control himself? If this is the case, wouldn’t such an owner want someone “in charge” that he feels he can control, rather than one of those men who have put in years on the staff and all of those laborious hours of meetings and practices this season?

Irsay unbelievably was quoted as saying, “We were lucky that he (Saturday) was available.” Why wouldn’t Saturday be available, Jim? Did any other NFL team have him on the payroll this season on one of their “coaching” staffs?

Does Irsay have a clue regarding staffs working together, meriting their positions, and earning the right to be heard? Does he understand staff members earn the respect of their peers by working hard throughout the offseason and regular season, laboring the voluminous hours?

What will be the morale of the Colts staff and players, suddenly having someone brought in from the outside to “call the shots” who has not been in the trenches with any of them the last four months?

Not even Daniel Snyder pulled a move like this one.

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Chris Ballard expected back as Colts GM in 2023

Jim Irsay said he expects Chris Ballard to return as Colts GM in 2023.

Following the firing of former Indianapolis Colts head coach Frank Reich, many wondered if general manager Chris Ballard would find the same fate.

During the press conference Monday night, owner Jim Irsay expressed his belief that Ballard will remain the general manager going into the 2023 season.

Of course, this should be taken with a MASSIVE grain of salt. Irsay said Matt Ryan was going to be the starter for two years, maybe even more. That lasted seven games. Irsay also said Frank Reich was safe through the regular season. That last a whopping two weeks before he was fired.

So while Irsay is currently giving his support behind Ballard returning in 2023, he clearly has been making impulsive decisions when it comes to personnel—the latest example being the hiring of Jeff Saturday as interim head coach.

Ballard has been on the hot seat for constructing a roster that is in a deep decline. He invested high-end money in an offensive line that is the worst in the NFL and his refusal to take a shot on a young quarterback has set this franchise back incredibly.

Monday night’s press conference just showed there is more dysfunction going on within the organization than we initially thought and that things are likely to get much worse before they get better.

For now, though, it seems we should prepare for Ballard to take the organization through another offseason.

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Colts hire Jeff Saturday: Takeaways from introductory press conference

The Colts held a press conference introducing interim HC Jeff Saturday. Here are the highlights from Monday night:

The Indianapolis Colts held a press conference Monday night introducing Jeff Saturday as the interim head coach, taking over for Frank Reich, who was fired earlier in the day.

The press conference, which was moved back twice after its initial announcement, featured owner Jim Irsay, general manager Chris Ballard and Saturday himself.

It was certainly an entertaining presser. Irsay essentially threw Reich under the bus while pumping up Saturday with stories from yesteryear and comparing Ballard to Michael Jordan. Yeah.

Here are the takeaways from the introductory press conference:

Colts’ Jim Irsay once offered Jeff Saturday a front-office job

Despite the shocking news, this isn’t the first time Jim Irsay tried to get Jeff Saturday involved in the Colts organization.

The Indianapolis Colts’ hiring of Jeff Saturday as interim head coach came as a surprise to just about everyone. Of course, that excludes owner Jim Irsay, who once offered Saturday a front office job a decade ago.

After Saturday’s tenure with the Colts ended following the 2011 season, he joined the Green Bay Packers for the final campaign of his career. But before that happened, Irsay offered Saturday a role in the Colts’ front office.

In an article from 10 years ago by NFL Network’s Marc Sessler, Saturday was quoted that Irsay offered him a job in the front office and that it was an opportunity he strongly considered.

Here’s what Saturday said at the time to Ian Rapoport of NFL Network (h/t @VeveJones007):

“I know Jim has made it very clear that the opportunity would be there,” Saturday said. “I’ll look at it. I strongly considered it this time. He made it an option before I even came back and played football.”

Saturday went on to become an analyst for ESPN in 2013 immediately after his playing career ended. He’s been one of their top NFL analysts for roughly a decade.

Sessler’s final paragraph of that article 10 years ago might just give Colts fans some hope for the future even if there’s a good chance this entire situation flops. Here’s what Sessler said:

“This one feels imminent, and we already know Saturday’s a wise one based on the work he did during the lockout. He spent 13 seasons with Peyton Manning and currently snaps the ball to Aaron Rodgers, so we’d also trust his ability to scout and zero in on a quality quarterback.”

Even as much of a shock as it is that Saturday will be the interim head coach of the Colts moving forward in 2022, it appears this is a development that’s had legs before.

This doesn’t really have an impact on what the Colts are going through right now, but it’s a neat find that offers a bit of backstory to the entire situation.


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Former Eagles OC Frank Reich fired by the Colts

Frank Reich is out in Indianapolis as the Colts have relieved the head coach of his duties ahead of the Week 10 matchup against the Raiders and Week 11 matchup against the Eagles

Frank Reich is out as head coach of the Colts just days before their Week 10 matchup against the Raiders and two weeks ahead of their Week 11 game against the undefeated Eagles.

Reich compiled a 40-33 record as the Colts’ head coach, a job he took in 2018 after leading Philadelphia’s offense to a Super Bowl upset over the favored New England Patriots.

Indianapolis was 3-5-1 this season before Irsay made a move.

Eagles head coach Nick Sirianni has always spoken glowingly about his former boss.

Reich will likely be the first person called if Philadelphia offensive coordinator Shane Steichen lands a head coaching job.

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