5 takeaways from Colts’ preseason win over Panthers

Takeaways from the Colts’ preseason win over the Panthers.

It was sloppy, there were turnovers and too many yellow flags, but it doesn’t matter because football is back.

The Indianapolis Colts kicked off the 2021 season with their only home preseason matchup against the Carolina Panthers. While a majority of the starters didn’t play, there were some familiar veterans that were able to get some snaps in and some new faces that were making their debut to Colts fans.

It is important to not overreact to the first preseason game but there are some takeaways that stood out in the first action of the season.

12 things we learned from first week of Colts training camp

Here are 12 things we learned from the first week of Colts training camp.

The Indianapolis Colts completed their first week of training camp at the Grand Park Sports Campus in Westfield with four padless practices.

It is still very early in camp so we shouldn’t be jumping to conclusions when it comes to position battles or production, but there are storylines taking place surrounding the team. Some are bigger than others, and we got plenty of information from the first week.

Here are 12 things we learned from the first week of Colts training camp:

Colts’ Marlon Mack without limitations at training camp

Colts RB Marlon Mack is expected to be a full-go at training camp.

Indianapolis Colts running back Marlon Mack missed all but two quarters of the 2020 season due to a torn Achilles, but general manager Chris Ballard said he’s expected to be 100% when training camp starts this week.

Mack, who re-signed with the Colts on a one-year deal this offseason, has been working hard to return to football activities. Ballard said they will be smart with Mack when it comes to his workload at training camp but other than that, there won’t be any limitations.

Mack’s injury is a bit concerning because of the history that the running back position has when it comes Achilles injuries. The Colts obviously feel comfortable with the future outlook of the injury given that they re-signed Mack and also added Eric Fisher and Dayo Odeyingbo this offseason, both of which are recovering from a torn Achilles.

Even with Mack returning to full capacity for training camp, the backfield should still belong to Jonathan Taylor following his second-half breakout in 2020. Along with Nyheim Hines, Mack should be in for a handful of carries each week.

It will be interesting to see the dynamic in the backfield when it comes to the distribution of touches during training camp, but this is a good sign for Mack’s career that he’s able to return without any complications thus far.

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9 things we learned from Week 1 of Colts’ OTAs

Week 1 of OTAs is in the books.

The Indianapolis Colts revised their offseason training program and will be holding two weeks of voluntary workouts. The first week of those workouts came to an end Friday.

The Colts won’t hold mandatory minicamp as they typically would in an offseason but instead opted to get all of their OTA sessions in before the month of June arrives. This will give them two full months of rest before arriving back for training camp.

The Colts aren’t doing much at this point in the offseason but there are some takeaways from the team’s media pool.

Here are nine things we learned from Week 1 of Colts’ OTAs:

Colts officially re-sign RB Marlon Mack

Mack is back on a one-year deal.

The Indianapolis Colts re-signed running back Marlon Mack to a one-year deal, the team announced Tuesday.

The re-signing of Mack was reported late last week but with this announcement, the move becomes official.

Coming off of a torn Achilles during the Week 1 opener against the Jacksonville Jaguars in 2020, Mack got a one-year deal to get back into the game and potentially get another contract after the 2021 season.

The Achilles injury isn’t a great one, especially for running backs. It seems to be an injury that is difficult for running backs to return to the same level of explosiveness and change of direction.

With Jonathan Taylor back to lead the backfield after a strong rookie campaign and Nyheim Hines returning in a contract year to be the pass-catcher, Mack is likely to work in the rotation as a depth piece.

Mack’s contract is a simple and straightforward deal. He gets $1 million in base salary and a $1 million signing bonus, both of which are guaranteed.

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Contract details for Marlon Mack’s one-year deal with Colts

Marlon Mack’s contract details.

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The Indianapolis Colts brought back running back Marlon Mack on a one-year deal, giving him the chance to work his way back into the mix after missing all but one game in 2020.

A torn Achilles in Week 1 kept Mack from cashing in big in free agency this offseason but the Colts are seemingly doing right by him. Bringing Mack back will provide some depth behind starter Jonathan Taylor while giving the former a chance to earn a bigger deal after the 2021 season.

The contract details for Mack are as straightforward as they get. It’s a one-year deal worth $2 million. Mack gets a $1 million signing bonus and $1 million in base salary. He carries a $2 million cap hit.

There were some options the Colts could have explored to lower his cap hit if they wanted but it seems they weren’t too concerned about that.

Mack is coming off of a torn Achilles, which isn’t great for running backs. But he’s expected to be ready for training camp and could be working back into the mix early in the season.

As Chris Ballard said he could envision a backfield with Mack alongside Taylor and Nyheim Hines, he got that wish by bringing the former fourth-round pick back on a one-year deal.

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Colts re-sign RB Marlon Mack to one-year deal

Marlon Mack is back for another year.

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The Indianapolis Colts are signing running back Marlon Mack to a one-year deal, first reported by Tom Pelissero of NFL Network.

Even though the Colts drafted Jonathan Taylor in the second round in 2020, Mack was the lead rusher in the backfield until he tore his Achilles halfway through the Week 1 opener. He is still expected to be ready for training camp in 2021.

Now, he gets a short deal to work in the backfield again with one of the strongest units in the NFL.

The former fourth-round pick carved out a starting role in 2018 despite missing a good chunk of the start of that campaign. He followed that up in 2019 by taking 247 carries for 1,091 yards and eight rushing touchdowns.

Now Mack will be working in a rotation behind starting running back Jonathan Taylor and likely alongside Nyheim Hines and Jordan Wilkins. How this will impact the rotation isn’t all that clear, especially since we don’t know what kind of back Mack is after Achilles surgery.

Regardless, this was likely the best possible situation for Mack. The Colts add some depth to the backfield while he gets a bit more money than what he would have gotten on the market.

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Report: Marlon Mack expected to be ready for training camp

Mack is currently working back from a torn Achilles.

Indianapolis Colts running back Marlon Mack is currently progressing through his rehab from a torn Achilles and is expected to be ready for training camp in 2021, per Jeremy Fowler of ESPN.

Mack faces a few big questions coming off of this injury but the biggest right now is which team he will play with in 2021. The former fourth-round pick is expected to hit free agency after the Colts saw Jonathan Taylor take over the backfield for the majority of 2020.

A team could take a chance on Mack and give him a prove-it deal in free agency, hoping that the injury didn’t take away too much of his explosiveness. If he can return to form without issue, he will be a steal for one team.

But an Achilles injury isn’t a great sign for a running back. So it is likely that Mack will get a low-cost prove-it deal with another team and try to earn a multi-year contract after that.

Mack has been a great asset for the Colts. He was the starting running back in 2018 and 2019, leading the way in the backfield alongside Nyheim Hines, who has turned into a strong pass-catcher.

Some team will take a chance on Mack and while it likely isn’t the Colts, that team could get upside if he’s good to go by training camp.

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Fantasy football free agency roundup

NFL free agency will drastically help reshape the fantasy football landscape as the new league year begins.

Now that NFL free agency is upon us, here is where we’ll run through the fantasy football outlooks for trades, re-signings, midrange players, and tag recipients.

This analysis will be updated as players sign/re-sign in free agency, so be sure to check back regularly.

Signed with new team or traded

RB Mark Ingram, Houston Texans: The 31-year-old inked a one-year, $2.5 million deal in Houston to pair with fellow well-aged runner David Johnson. The duo will create a one-two punch, so long as what we saw from Baltimore making Ingram a healthy scratch late last year wasn’t foreshadowing. Some of that was due to him not playing special teams and the team wanting to get a closer look at rookie J.K. Dobbins. Presuming quarterback Deshaun Watson returns, Ingram still has a dicey outlook. The Texans’ porous defense has so many needs that it’s tough to see the offense being able to consistently run the ball if the other side cannot contain opposing offenses. Ingram needs bulk to make a mark in fantasy lineups, which rarely will be the case, unless he finds regular success around the goal line, consider the veteran merely roster depth or a handcuff to Johnson.

Re-signed/extensions

QB Dak Prescott, Dallas Cowboys: There’s no surprise associated with the four-year, $160 million extension Prescott signed prior to free agency opening. He wasn’t ever going to be allowed to leave the building, as evidenced by a formality of being tagged again. As long as his ankle rehab goes according to plan, this potential No. 1 overall fantasy quarterback has the tools to pick up where he left off.

QB Ben Roethlisberger, Pittsburgh Steelers:While it’s technically an extension, Big Ben’s deal was reworked to provide cap relief for the Steelers and keep him in a black-and-yellow uni for one last go of it. Roethlisberger will almost assuredly be without WR JuJu Smith-Schuster, and Pittsburgh has a new offensive coordinator in Matt Canada, but there’s still enough to like about the situation for Roethlisberger to be in the conversation of a low-tier rotational starter.

QB Cam Newton, New England Patriots: The knee-jerk reaction is to scoff at Newton getting a one-year, $14 million deal to re-sign with the Pats. A closer look should elicit a more measured response. Last year, just about everything worked against Cam finding success. He signed late (June 28), there was no offseason program, the offensive system is intricate, New England lost several key players to the opt-out, the offensive line had to shuffle talent several times, no receivers to speak of, zero tight ends of consequence, an erratic rushing attack, and Newton was returning from foot surgery prior to joining New England. Excuses, you may say … perhaps, but all of those factors are undeniable reality. Newton is finally healthy after three straight offseasons of rehabbing from surgery. Wait to see how the Patriots address wide receiver and tight end concerns, but it’s unwise to entirely dismiss a rebound by Newton.

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QB Taylor Heinicke, Washington Football Team: The former Panther parlayed an admirable playoff start into a two-year extension in Washington. He knows the system and the brain trust’s nucleus from his time in Carolina. Alex Smith’s release opens the door for Heinicke to compete for a starting job while having the upper hand against a newcomer who won’t be as familiar with the playbook. It’s unlikely, however, Heinicke is the season-long starter for this offense as an incoming rookie or free-agent acquisition will have that momentum on his side.

Franchise/transition tagged

WR Chris Godwin, Tampa Bay Buccaneers: No one paying attention expected the Buccaneers to allow Godwin to walk into free agency. Look for a stronger showing in 2021 after an injury-pocked season a year ago derailed Godwin’s campaign from nearly the onset. He’s a legit WR2 in all settings, but his upside is capped at that position overall with the bevy of talent around him in the passing game.

WR Allen Robinson, Chicago Bears: It seemed for quite some time that Chicago wouldn’t have the cap space to tag Robinson, but he was indeed slapped with the tender of $17-plus million for 2021. While he would like a long-term deal, and the team may still yet find a way to meet his demands by July 15, there also remains a chance this could get ugly. Robinson doesn’t want to play on the tag, nor must he sign the tender. He then wouldn’t play or get paid, so there’s that, and $17.89 mill is nothing to sneeze at during an offseason in which the salary cap actually goes down. At 27, Robinson could put his John Hancock on the offer sheet and still hit free agency in 2022 young enough to get one last shot at a huge deal when teams will have more money to throw around. Long story short, he mostly is quarterback-proof, but Chicago still needs to put a better product on the field. Whether it is Nick Foles or someone else under center in 2021, A-Rob is a viable PPR WR1 with a hint of downside.

Remains unsigned

  • Quarterbacks: Alex Smith, Mitchell Trubisky, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Jameis Winston, Jacoby Brissett
  • Running backs: Aaron Jones, Chris Carson, Kenyan Drake, Todd Gurley, Duke Johnson, Tevin Coleman, James White, Matt Breida, Brian Hill, Leonard Fournette, Malcolm Brown, Jerick McKinnon, Adrian Peterson, Le’Veon Bell, Kalen Ballage, James Conner, Marlon Mack, Wayne Gallman, Jamaal Williams, Mike Davis
  • Wide receivers: A.J. Green, T.Y. Hilton, Emmanuel Sanders, Larry Fitzgerald, Golden Tate, DeSean Jackson, Adam Humphries, Sammy Watkins, Marvin Jones, John Brown, Breshad Perriman, Corey Davis, Willie Snead, John Ross, Keelan Cole, Kendrick Bourne, Will Fuller, Demarcus Robinson, Antonio Brown, Curtis Samuel, Damiere Byrd, JuJu Smith-Schuster, Nelson Agholor, Rashard Higgins, David Moore, Kenny Golladay
  • Tight ends: Hunter Henry, Rob Gronkowski, Kyle Rudolph, Jared Cook, Tyler Eifert, Gerald Everett, Jordan Reed, Jonnu Smith, Trey Burton

9 prove it deal free agents the Philadelphia Eagles should pursue

With a tight salary cap awaiting and the Carson Wentz dead money weighing the ship down, the Philadelphia Eagles are going to be squeezed this offseason in their bid to add talent.

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With a tight salary cap awaiting and the Carson Wentz dead money weighing the ship down, the Philadelphia Eagles are going to be squeezed this offseason in their bid to add talent.

With free agency set to begin in two weeks, the Eagles will make some big moves and restructure to free up the necessary cap space to make improvements to their roster.

With the Eagles likely to pursuing some free agents looking for a prove-it deal, here are 9 players they should target to upgrade the roster.