Key things to know about Chargers’ Week 16 opponent: Colts

Here are some key things to know about the Los Angeles Chargers’ opponent ahead of the Week 16 matchup.

After winning their last two games, the Chargers meet with the Colts on Monday night as they look to stay hot and land a spot in the playoffs.

To get you prepped for the Week 16 bout, here are some key things to know about Los Angeles’ opponent ahead of the matchup.

Change at quarterback

Indianapolis’ interim head coach Jeff Saturday announced that Nick Foles will be the starter over Matt Ryan. The decision to bench Ryan in favor of Foles came after the Colts found themselves as the victim of the biggest comeback in NFL history in their 39-33 loss to the Vikings in Week 15. In his 11-year career, Foles has thrown for 14,003 yards with 82 touchdowns to 43 interceptions and a completion percentage of 62.4.

Star running back out

Jonathan Taylor’s 2022 season is over. The Colts placed him on the injured reserve with an ankle injury. Taylor missed time throughout the year because of the issue and posted 861 yards, four touchdowns, and 28 catches for 143 yards in 11 games. This was trending nowhere near his 2021 campaign, which saw him amass a league-high 332 carries for 1,811 yards and 18 touchdowns. In Taylor’s absence, Indianapolis will likely lean on Deon Jackson and Zack Moss.

One-man show

Despite the change at quarterback, the Colts’ passing offense will likely still revolve around wide receiver Michael Pittman. Pittman is the team leader in receptions (86), targets (121) and receiving yards (815). Behind Pittman are Parris Campbell and rookie Alec Pierce, who each have 510 receiving yards.

Gus’ group

The Chargers will play a familiar face in former defensive coordinator Gus Bradley, who now serves in the same role after overseeing the Raiders’ defense two years prior. Statistically, the Colts rank 11th in defensive DVOA, 14th in passing defense DVOA and 13th in rushing defense DVOA. Bradley’s scheme is still heavily predicated on Cover 3, a coverage that has given Justin Herbert some problems.

Other notes

  • Defensive tackles DeForest Buckner and Grover Stewart are elite against the run, both with 36 run stops and in the top 15 among interior defensive linemen in run-stop percentage.
  • Edge defenders Yannick Ngakoue and Kwity Paye have 41 and 25 pressures, respectively. Ngakoue leads the team in sacks (12), while Paye is third with six.
  • The Colts offensive line is 26th in pass-blocking efficiency. They have allowed the third-most sacks (29).

Six points with David Dorey

Friday’s quick look at six fantasy items to know

Week 10 finally saw all the forces of nature converge and hand the Eagles their first loss – at home to the Commanders, no less. The Bills lost their second in a row and now are tied for No. 2 in the AFC East. The Chiefs, for the moment, look like the newest “team to beat” in the AFC while the Vikings are on a seven-game winning streak and tied for the No. 1 spot in the NFC with the Eagles – who beat them back in Week 2.

While teams are tinkering with lineups much less overall, we’re entering the phase of the season that will see the bottom feeders switching around starters if only to show management that they are still trying to win and do not need to be fired during the season. One or two probably still will.

The Browns-Bills game is moved to Detroit at 1 p.m. Sunday because this new crop of players cannot handle six feet of snow like we all used to walk through to school. While it would decrease almost all fantasy points from the game, how great would that have been to watch? Maybe not fans in the stands, but at home it would have been a must-watch. Maybe tie those bicycle poles with the little flags at top onto each player.

As we hurdle towards the fantasy playoffs, remember that Week 14 has six teams on bye (ATL, CHI, GB, IND, NO, WAS). Those contain enough fantasy must-starts to matter in a very important week. There is only one other week more important and that is the perpetual “this week.”

Six items to watch for this weekend:

1.) The Broncos – At 3-6, their season is already over but the offense that was supposed to take the next step forward this year tumbled backward. The backfield is a mess between Melvin Gordon, Latavius Murray, and now Chase Edmonds.  Last week versus the Titans, all three played, but the Broncos never had time to get into a rhythm and shared just 18 carries. Against the Raiders, there should be more work to split up, so it will be worth tracking as to what the sharing is and if a dominant receiver emerges.

The Broncos are likely without Jerry Jeudy and KJ Hamler, both of whom missed practices Wednesday and Thursday. Last Sunday, Kendall Hinton caught four passes for 62 yards while Jalen Virgil scored on a 66-yard catch as his first NFL reception. Virgil was the only undrafted free agent to make the 53-man roster and Week 10 was his debut. He replaced Hamler in the lineup. Hinton did not practice on Thursday and could miss this week.

Also notable is the growing sentiment that new HC Nathaniel Hackett may not make it to the end of the season. If that were to happen, it could change the backfield rotation and possibly see more use of players like Virgil.

2.)  The Rams receivers – There’s a two-fold situation in Los Angeles in the wake of Cooper Kupp’s injury and the realization that the 3-6 Rams’ post-Super Bowl record is the worst since the 2006 Steelers. They need to replace Kupp and since the season is over, try out some of the younger talents that hasn’t been afforded much work while Kupp sponged up most of the pass targets.

The disappointing Allen Robinson and unproductive Ben Skowronek are the starters, but Van Jefferson played last week and caught a score on three receptions for 27 yards. He’s not met expectations and his snap share has declined. TuTu Atwell hasn’t played since Week 6 but was a second-round pick in 2021. Lance McCutcheon was an undrafted free agent that made the team and led the receivers in the preseason with 15 catches for 259 yards and a healthy 17.3-yard-average.

It may not matter unless Matt Stafford plays, but the Rams are already forced to start new receivers and Stafford is trending towards returning.

3.)  RB Eno Benjamin, HOU – The Cardinals surprisingly released Benjamin and he was snapped up by the Texans ahead of three other teams that put in claims for him. He was a contributor both as a rusher and a receiver for the Cardinals, and the details as to why he was released has not been disclosed. He averaged 4.3 yards per carry and caught around three passes weekly. The question now is why did the Texans acquire him?

He could be an upgrade to 32-year-old Rex Burkhead who has served as the third-down back for the Texans, and that would make sense. But he’s also a good runner and every Dameon Pierce owner probably doesn’t feel that he needs any resting. But Pierce’s 165 carries ranks No. 3 behind only Saquon Barkley and Derrick Henry. And since Peirce is one of the few positives that came out of 2022, would they want to not overwork him in a season that already is over?

4.) Clyde Edwards-Helaire – The first-round pick in 2020 hasn’t performed to expectations and sank to a new low in Week 10 when he had no carries, failed to catch his two targets, and only had five snaps. Isiah Pacheco commanded 16 runs for 82 yards, and Jerick McKinnon caught six passes for 56 yards despite enter the game as questionable with three injuries. Just to make it all even less certain, the Chiefs tried to pick up Eno Benjamin.

HC Andy Reid said they didn’t have any plan to limit Edwards-Helaire, but that it just worked out that way. The pass-heavy Chiefs may never give a back 20 carries and as of last week, the rushing went to Pacheco, and the receiving belonged to McKinnon. There’s no denying that Edwards-Helaire’s role was dialed back in the rotation, but this week answers if he will end up with more work and limit Pacheco or if he’s just old news on a team that’s moved on from him.

Had the claim for Eno Benjamin been successful, it suggests that Ronald Jones may have been released so he could land elsewhere and might see the field again.

5.)   Colts offense – HC Frank Reich was fired along with OC Marcus Brady the previous week, so the offense of Week 10 was under all new direction. It’s not unusual for a team to win the game following a firing, though the Colts had deconstructed by trading away Nyheim Hines and benching Matt Ryan for the rest of the season. But – after confirming that they were going to stick with Same Ehlinger, the Colts opted to start Ryan last week and won their game over the 2-7 Raiders.

Jonathan Taylor suddenly looked great again, and Michael Pittman (7-53) and Parris Campbell (7-76, TD) came to life. These next two games will indicate if the passing offense is productive again and if Taylor is back to form. The Colts host the Eagles and the Steelers. Taylor, in particular, has been a bust as the first pick in almost every fantasy draft, but ran for 147 yards and a score in Las Vegas.

6.)  RB Najee Harris (PIT) – Along with Jonathan Taylor, the first-round fantasy draft pick Najee Harris disappointed this season after logging more touches (381) than any other running back last year. Here’s the interesting part to that painful reality – he went against one of the worst rushing schedules (No. 31) over the first half of the season. Statistically, only the Ravens had a slightly worst schedule for running backs.

Harris has run so poorly that Jaylen Warren made inroads to a split backfield. Last week, Harris ran for 99 yards on 20 carries against the Saints. Warren gained 37 yards on nine carries and caught three passes for 40 yards. The Steelers have the No. 6 schedule for running backs in the remaining games. This week versus the Bengals is the only time they face a top defense against runners. It’s no guarantee that he will return to 2021 form, but at least the schedule won’t be working against him every week. His performance and the backfield split this week will be worth tracking before his schedule clears up.

Why Michael Pittman will thrive with Matt Ryan for the Colts

Michael Pittman goes from Carson Wentz in 2021 to Matt Ryan in 2022. Few NFL receivers gained a bigger upgrade at QB. This could be a special year for the Colts.

Last season, Michael Pittman Jr. established himself as the No. 1 receiver for the Indiaaplois Colts. In only his second season, Pittman’s emergence was much needed; he was the only receiver on the team to rack up over 500 yards.

The Colts have one of the top five offensive lines in the NFL. That line includes Quentin Nelson, who is arguably the best offensive lineman in the league. Jonathan Taylor is arguably the best running back in football. The Colts added future Hall of Fame quarterback Matt Ryan, who had a down season in 2021 with the Falcons but still managed to put up a consistent passer rating of 90.4 with 3,968 yards, 20 touchdowns, and 12 interceptions in 17 games. I expect huge numbers from Matty Ice in 2022 with Pittman as his top target.

Pittman played in all 17 games and caught 88 passes for 1,082 yards and six touchdowns with Carson Wentz last season in Indianapolis. With Ryan now having protection and a run game, I could see Ryan boosting Pittman’s numbers.

Pittman is projected to have 91 catches for 1,127 yards and 6 tocuhdowns in 2022, but with not many red zone threats on the Colts’ roster, I could see big upside in terms of touchdown totals for Pittman.

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Sleepers and Value Picks: Wide Receivers

2022 Sleeper and Value Play Wide Receivers

The Average Draft order shows a general picture of how your draft will unfold and where values/sleepers and bad values/busts likely exist. Any green highlight means the player is a good value that could be taken earlier. A red highlight signifies an overvalued player that is a bad value or just too high of a risk for that spot. No color means the pick is a reasonable value at that spot.

See also:
Sleepers and Value Plays: Quarterbacks
Sleepers and Value Plays: Running Backs
Sleepers and Value Plays: Tight Ends

Average Draft order – Value picks

ADP Tm Wide Receiver
1 LAR Cooper Kupp No.1 WR from last year earns this spot. And he was No. 1 by a mile.
2 MIN Justin Jefferson Two years in and never worse than No. 7. He gets drafted No. 1 on occasion and not hard to argue.
3 CIN Ja’Marr Chase Rookie Phenom. Top-5 when he really only played one big year in college. And that wasn’t even the previous year.
4 LVR Davante Adams Pass sponge leaves frigid Green Bay for sunny Las Vegas. Doesn’t sound all that crazy really.
5 BUF Stefon Diggs The top receiver with the top passer. Lock for a Top-10 if not Top-5.
6 DAL CeeDee Lamb Amari  Cooper gone, Michael Gallup still healing and James Washington out for a month or three. Stage set for a major increase.
7 SF Deebo Samuel He runs, he catches, he wins fantasy games. No surprise this year.
8 MIA Tyreek Hill Trades Patrick Mahomes for Tua Tagovailoa and claims it’s no step down. At this spot, willing to discover the truth. Was No. 6 and No. 2 most recently.
9 TB Mike Evans Perfect spot for a WR that is right around No. 10 every year.
10 LAC Keenan Allen Like Mike Evans, consistently right around No. 10 as well.
11 PHI A.J. Brown Never better than No. 14 and leaves the simpler passing offense of the Titans for   the complex scheme in Philly that already has DeVonta Smith to share targets. He may be fine at this spot, but a bit more risk and there are other safer   options.
12 CIN Tee Higgins This feels high for a wideout that’s been the No. 24 and No. 28 wideouts these   last two seasons. But he’s a lock for 1,000 yards and six scores. Ja’Marr   Chase attracts the secondary so Higgins could see another increase in production.
13 IND Michael Pittman Jr. Posted 88-1082-6 last year playing with Carson Wentz and the No. 29 passing   schedule. Gets Matt Ryan and the No. 6 schedule. That’s worth a bump.
14 SEA D.K. Metcalf Metcalf plenty talented, but was No. 15 last year with Russell Wilson. Now he steps   down. Just a riskier situation and Seattle wants to run more to cover for a decline in passing.
15 PIT Diontae Johnson Johnson exceeded expectations with 107-1161-8 while Ben Roethlisberger practiced free   throws instead of passing downfield. A change in QB certain to impact and the No. 31 pass schedule is no help. This spot assumes he still gets a high   volume of passes that is no longer certain.
16 WAS Terry McLaurin McLaurin has the talent for this production and at least Carson Wentz helped Michael   Pittman to a career year in 2021.  Less upside here, but a safe pick.
17 MIA Jaylen Waddle Rookie was the No. 12 receiver but steps back with the addition of Tyreek Hill.   Plenty of passes for the two to share so a minor decline isn’t a huge deal. Some upside from Hill clearing out the safeties.
18 CAR D.J. Moore He’s been rock solid at this level and topped 1,150 yards in each of the last   three years. If Panthers ever get a top-tier QB, Moore would be Top-10   material. Baker Mayfield is no worse than what Moore has played with in Carolina.
19 ARI DeAndre Hopkins Hopkins was less productive last year even aside from the hamstring injury and   eventual torn MCL. Now he is suspended for the first six games (AKA half of   the fantasy regular season).  He may return to being lights out in Week 7, but that’s a long time to wait.
20 TB Chris Godwin Returns from torn ACL last December. Top-12 when healthy, but that’s a quick   turnaround to be back to form by Week 1. Bucs added Julio Jones and Russell Gage, so less need to rush him back.
21 NO Michael Thomas I do remember 2019 but it is fading. Was already less effective after his 149   catches and then injured his ankle and hasn’t played for almost two years. Plus Drew Brees is long gone. He’s only 28 and still has years, but an immediate return to form would be a surprise.
22 LAC Mike Williams Was the No. 14 last year and has both a great QB and an easier schedule. Had four 100-yard games and nine TDs last year. As a deep WR2? Very nice.
23 HOU Brandin Cooks Something Cooks does leads to his team cutting ties – three times. But it isn’t   production with  six 1,000-yard seasons. And he’s only 28 and in his prime. Played on lowly Texans with a rookie QB last year and had a career-high 90 catches.
24 MIN Adam Thielen At 31 years of age, Thielen is starting to age out, but he still scored ten times in 13 games last year and MIN looks to pass more in 2022. The catches   get shorter and Justin Jefferson gets the most targets, but Thielen is a consistent contributor.
25 LVR Hunter Renfrow Third year was the charm when Renfro caught 103 passes during the Raiders most   challenging year ever. He was a standard 55-catch, 650-yard slot guy for two years before they ran out of receivers. Adding Davante Adams changes everything, and Renfro is more likely to head back to his previous production   than the one magic year.
26 CLE Amari Cooper Cooper steps into a very clear WR1 role with the Browns that ranked No. 31 in nearly   all WR categories last year. Deshaun Watson is an obvious upgrade when he does play but this is an offense that is built to run. He was already the No.   27 fantasy WR last year and that was with Dak Prescott.
27 LAR Allen Robinson Yes. I welcome Robinson onto all my teams. Sure, he was terrible in Chicago last   year, but was good for around 100 catches and 1,200 yards in the two previous seasons. Now he’s with the team that ranked No. 1 in WR last year. He’s   impressed the coaches and no longer gets double teams. One of my favorite sleepers this year.
28 DEN Jerry Jeudy The former first-rounder hasn’t met expectations but finally gets a Top-Tier QB. There’s plenty of upside here and the first chance we get to see what Jeudy can really do after catching balls from a string of mediocre passers.
29 CHI Darnell Mooney Mooney managed 81 catches for 1,055 yards last year, somewhat miraculous considering no other CHI receiver had more than 410 yards. Second year of Justin Fields should be better without HC Matt Nagy around. Solid WR3 pick that could   easily deliver WR2 production.
30 ARI Marquise Brown BAL committed to the pass last year and Brown ended with 91-1008-6 for career highs. He lands in Arizona where he’ll replace DeAndre Hopkins for six weeks, and then pair with him while catching passes from Kyler Murray. This could be a career move that can get him to that elite level expected as the first WR   in the 2019 NFL draft.

Sleepers and overvalued players

ADP Tm Wide Receiver
31 DEN Courtland Sutton Like Jerry Jeudy, Sutton gets his first legitimate NFL QB with Russell Wilson. He   topped out with 72 catches for 1,112 yards in 2019 and struggled last year after returning from the torn MCL of 2020. His best season was No. 19 so he’s worth a shot with his major upgrade in passer.
32 BUF Gabriel Davis Davis produced around 35 catches for 550 yards and six TDs in his two previous seasons, and the needle is pointing up for his third season since Emmanuel   Sanders left. It’s a great offense with a great schedule, but it also has a lot of weapons. He was considered a sleeper my some this summer but he’s a safe grab at this level regardless.
33 PHI DeVonta Smith His rookie year was a big success with 64-916-5, but he topped 100 yards just twice and the addition of A.J. Brown is certain to cut into his workload. He’s still a very serviceable WR3 that should turn in at least a few big games along the way. But Brown will be the more consistent and productive of   the pair.
34 NYJ Elijah Moore Moore was only the No. 50 fantasy WR as a rookie last year, and the Jets added Garrett Wilson, C.J. Uzomah, and Breece Hall who will impact the target share. He’ll improve by playing in all games but needs Zach Wilson to take a very big step forward if he’s going to be worthy of a weekly fantasy start.
35 DET Amon-Ra St. Brown Love this pick. The rookie on a talent-starved Lions team ended the year with six   straight games of 8+ receptions. He caught 90 passes for 912 yards and five   scores to rank No. 22. He’s joined by DJ Chark and Jameson Williams which   will have an impact, but the Lions passing schedule got much easier and St. Brown is the only WR with any chemistry with Jared Goff. He could slow down   later in the year as the others get more comfortable, but as a tail-end WR3   he is a great value.
37 TEN Robert Woods Tore his ACL last November but is expected to be healed for the season and has   been talked up by his coaches. He leaves the pass-happy Rams for the   run-heavy Titans though, and they drafted Treylon Burks to add to the mix   that seeks to replace A.J. Brown. Long as the knee is okay, this is a reasonable spot.
38 BAL Rashod Bateman The rookie was limited to only 46-515-1 last year, but the departure of Marquise Brown promotes him into the WR1 spot for the Titans. Bateman is a sleeper to some, and he has a new opportunity, but BAL wants to return to their run-heavy ways and face a worst schedule. This WR4 level is good to see if he merits a fantasy start or just use as a solid bye week replacement.
39 KC JuJu Smith-Schuster Signed a one-year deal with KC hoping to recharge his career and cash in 2023. Nice balance of upside and risk leave him right after the fantasy starters at wideout.
40 SF Brandon Aiyuk He’s been worth around No. 35 in his two seasons, but has been inconsistent. Adding a new QB that may run more and pass less than Jimmy Garoppollo means fewer targets as the No. 3 or No. 4 read on most plays.
41 SEA Tyler Lockett Lockett has been a borderline fantasy WR1 for years, but losing Russell Wilson has him tumbling this far in ADP. It’s probably too far for such a reliable set of hands, but Seattle wants to run more and the QB situation is still not   concrete.
42 PIT Chase Claypool This WR4 level is a good value for a receiver that was No. 24 as a rookie and then fell back to No. 38 last year when the TDs dried up. He produced around 60 catches for 850 yards as the deep threat on a team that had no QB that could throw downfield. Regardless of which QB starts, Claypool has new upside and should flirt with being a fantasy starter.
43 TB Russell Gage Jr. Gage was the rage this summer since Chris Godwin could be slow to return from his torn ACL and Tom Brady only has maybe eight to ten years left to play. But the Bucs added Julio Jones that should impact the target distribution.
44 DAL Michael Gallup The Cowboys fully intend on using Gallup after giving him a five-year, $63M contract. But his Week 17 ACL tear could see him remain out going into the season. Too many healthy options for this risk.
45 JAC Christian Kirk Left a career year in ARI with 77-982-5 and lands in Jacksonville on a four-year, $72M deal to be the new WR1. The Jags take a mulligan on their disastrous   2021 season, and the best college QB in the 2021 NFL draft has a new primary target. Great passing schedule, so Kirk has a big opportunity to be a fantasy   starter at the price of a late WR4.
46 GB Allen Lazard Ton of targets to find new homes in GB after Davante Adams left and Lazard in line to be WR1. That’s gotta be worth more than the 46th WR taken. Maybe not a lot more, but Aaron Rodgers has never failed to produce at least one   fantasy starter at WR.
47 NYG Kadarius Toney The   Giants passing game has struggled but starts over with HC Brian Daboll importing some BUF offense. Toney mostly disappointed last year but had ne   big game at Dallas. This deeply it worth swinging for the fence that   something changed for the G-Men.
48 ATL Drake London QB situation may change midstream but Falcons are short on receiving talent outside of Kyle Pitts. This is a good spot for London to see if he develops into a fantasy option.
49 NO Jarvis Landry Michael Thomas is likely rusty, Chris Olave has to learn the NFL and Landry is the veteran presence that has been a great fit in camp. He may not offer any big   games, but he should be a serviceable option as a flex play with consistent points.
50 TEN Treylon Burks Burks was drafted to replace A.J. Brown but struggled earlier this summer. Titans don’t throw much and Robert Woods should be the WR1. This offense doesn’t   often produce two viable fantasy WR starters.
51 NO Chris Olave The 1.11 pick lands in a good spot but may remain behind Michael Thomas and Jarvis Landry all season.
52 ATL Calvin Ridley Needed time off, bet on games, got suspended indefinitely for at least this season. And yet here he is in ADP.
53 NE DeVante Parker Not a bad depth pick for Parker who could use the change in scenery. Barring a big jump by Mac Jones, Parker won’t offer consistently relevant fantasy points.
54 GB Christian Watson Why   not jump on the new guy for the Packers with their wide open depth chart?   Davante Adams needed a few years to realize his potential, but Watson merits   a pick this deep just to see if anything happens.
55 CIN Tyler Boyd Granted, Boyd is behind Ja’Marr Chase and Tee Higgins. But Boyd was still No. 31 last year as his worst in five years. He’s likely to do better than this, and   could again flirt with being a consistent flex play.
56 KC Skyy Moore Tyreek Hill left and they drafted Moore which alone draws fantasy interest. But he missed most of the offseason with a hamstring injury, and then hurt his hip. Can’t fault swinging for the fence, but this feels like a waiver wire guy by Week 3.
57 TB Julio Jones Name alone gets him drafted. But 33 years old and last good year was 2019. I’d let someone else take him.
58 KC Marquez   Valdes-Scantling Almost to WR6 area and MVS lands on a team that gave him a three-year, $30M contract while JuJu Smith-Schuster only got one year. The speed guy from GB was never   better than 690 yards and four scores, but Davante Adams dominated. MVS also  has a career 17.7 yards per catch. Buy him as depth, but know he is in a   great situation and the Chiefs locked him up for three years.
59 ARI A.J. Green He’s 34 years old and won’t be better than the No. 3 receiver. He managed 54 catches for 848 yards last year, but he’s far more likely to decline than   improve.
60 KC Mecole Hardman Gets a little better each year and reached 59 catches for 693 yards, but Chiefs   brought on JuJu Smith-Schuster,  Marquez Valdes-Scantling and drafted Skyy Moore. He’s another guy that finds the waiver wire by Week 3.

Best of the Rest

 Robby Anderson (CAR) – After posting 1,096 yards on 95 catches in first year at Carolina, fell out of sight last year.  Baker Mayfield won’t be any worse and likely better. Anderson deserves at least one more chance.

Nico Collins (HOU) – Big guy at 6-4 that looks to take the next step with the Texans. Has impressed in camp and Texans need the help.

Donovan Peoples-Jones (CLE) – More of a stash and wait for Deshaun Watson. As the WR2 for the Browns, should offer a flex option.

 DJ Chark (DET) – One-year deal to rekindle his career and lands with the Lions. No chance of becoming the WR1 but worth rostering to see if the change in scenery helps.

Jalen Tolbert (DAL) – Cowboys spent their third-round pick on the South Alabama product for depth but Michael Gallup still on the mend and James Washington out for two or three months. Tolbert has impressed and DAL has no other options.

Matt Ryan traded to the Colts

The Atlanta Falcons part ways with Matt Ryan as the HC Arthur Smith’s rebuild begins with a teardown.

The Colts acquired Matt Ryan from the Atlanta Falcons for a 2022 third-round pick. The 36-year old Ryan played 14 years for the Falcons after being the 1.03 pick of the 2008 NFL draft. The former NFL MVP leaves an Atlanta franchise in the start of a rebuilding year under new head coach Arthur Smith and goes to a more mature offense in the fifth season under Indy’s head coach Frank Reich.

Matt Ryan Career Stats

YEAR GMS RUN RYD RTD PASS COMP PYD PTD FUM INT PTS RANK
2021 17 40 82 1 560 375 3968 20 11 12 292.6 17
2020 16 29 92 2 626 407 4581 26 6 11 354.25 12
2019 15 34 148 1 616 408 4466 26 9 14 348.1 6
2018 16 33 125 3 608 422 4924 35 5 7 416.7 3
2017 16 32 143 0 529 342 4095 20 3 12 299.05 14
2016 16 35 117 0 534 373 4944 38 2 7 410.9 3
2015 16 37 63 0 614 407 4591 21 5 16 319.85 16
2014 16 29 145 0 628 415 4694 28 2 14 361.2 7
2013 16 17 55 0 651 439 4515 26 4 17 335.25 9
2012 16 33 138 1 615 422 4719 32 2 14 383.75 5
2011 16 37 84 2 565 347 4177 29 3 12 345.25 8
2010 16 46 122 0 571 357 3705 28 3 9 309.45 9
2009 14 30 49 1 451 263 2916 22 2 14 244.7 19
2008 16 55 104 1 434 265 3440 16 1 11 252.4 16

The Falcons still have second-year tight end Kyle Pitts, but are left with no quarterback, a middling backfield at best, a soft offensive line and Olamide Zaccheaus as their top wideout. That’s a rebuilding season that is starting from scratch.

The Colts benefit with the addition of Ryan who spent most of his career as a Top-10 quarterback and dipped lower in recent years only because of a lack of receivers or a supporting ground game. That’s nothing like what Ryan finds in Indianapolis where they enjoy an elite offensive line and the NFL’s current rusher leader in Jonathan Taylor. That alone immediately upgrades Ryan’s outlook for 2022.

The Colts’ depth chart is topped with Michael Pittman Jr., Zach Pascal, and T.Y. Hilton though free-agent moves and rookie additions are expected to happen.  Hilton is no lock to play this year and Pascal is a free-agent pending being resigned. Parris Campbell is a fourth-year speedster that has yet to translate into a starter. There is plenty of room for improvement from the receiving crew, and at least they’ll have a quarterback to help maximize the crew that starts the season.

Patriots S Kyle Dugger, Colts WR Michael Pittman ejected after altercation

An extremely physical night led to this altercation.

Things got chippy in the New England Patriots’ Week 15 matchup against the Indianapolis Colts.

The Patriots, who are one of the most physical teams in the NFL, were feeling the physicality of the Colts from the beginning of the game. Jonathan Taylor and the offensive line were pounding the Patriots’ defense, while the Colts defense laid hard hits the entire night.

This level of physicality led to an altercation between safety Kyle Dugger and Colts receiver Michael Pittman. Pittman appeared to make initial contact and Dugger tore his helmet off during the altercation. Both players were flagged and kicked out of the game.

It was a tough night all around for the Patriots.

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Four Verts: Markus Golden and Unsung Heroes we’re thankful for in the 2021 NFL Season

Watch out, Ja’Whaun Bentley and Markus Golden are coming for you in your dreams.

The NFL season is rapidly approaching the end and this feels like a good time to bring some names to the forefront that might not be household names.

Every team needs those second-tier players that aren’t quite superstars, but are still effective players and have a huge role when it comes to winning games each week.

Here are a few “unsung” heroes that I’ve really enjoyed watching this season. Fans of the teams listed likely know how impactful these players have been, but the point of this is to bring attention to everyone just how much these guys have meant to their teams — with a little help from Sports Info Solutions.

These are a few non-household guys I’ve really loved watching this year.

Secret Superstars: The NFL’s best underrated players in Week 2

Derek Carr, Sam Darnold, Rashawn Slater, and Melvin Ingram lead Doug Farrar’s Secret Superstars list for Week 2 of the 2021 NFL season.

Every NFL season features a certain number of players who come out of nowhere to surprise and entertain at a level we did not expect. Perhaps they’re veterans for whom everything finally clicks. Perhaps they’re rookies who show that the NFL curve can be navigated at a quicker pace by some more than others.

Whatever the circumstances, there were several players who either expanded their 2020 performances, or came into the NFL as first-year players in 2021 and showed that they didn’t need too much preparation to ball out at a professional level.

Here are the NFL’s Secret Superstars for Week 2 of the 2021 season.

A.J. Brown has hilariously blunt reaction to Michael Pittman-Carson Wentz jersey drama

A.J. Brown’s response was too perfect.

Tennessee Titans receiver A.J. Brown had a few words of wisdom for Michael Pittman. The Indianapolis Colts receiver decided he will keep No. 11 despite quarterback Carson Wentz asking for it after the team acquired him in a trade with the Philadelphia Eagles.

Brown didn’t seem to agree with Pittman’s decision.

“Lol he is not about to get the ball . Gotta know who in control bro lmao,” Brown tweeted on Monday night before deleting the message.

Most teammates allow their new quarterback to have the jersey number of their choosing. If that means money has to exchange hands behind the scenes, then that’s what happens. But Pittman made it pretty clear in an interview with TMZ.

“I am number 11,” he said. “I don’t think there’s any deal that is gonna be done.”

Here’s Brown’s response.

Even if Wentz is coming off one of the worst statistical seasons of his career — which has apparently damaged his street credibility — he is likely to be the Colts’ starter at the beginning of 2021 after Indy gave up a 2021 third-round pick and a conditional 2022 draft pick, which will be either a second- or first-round pick.

Wentz has the power to distribute the ball where he wants, as Brown pointed out. Pittman probably would’ve been wise to take some money and give the No. 11 jersey to the quarterback. And perhaps with all this attention on the topic, that’s what he’ll do. But, hey, maybe Wentz genuinely doesn’t care. Maybe he’s just happy to be out of Philadelphia, where he was reportedly unhappy.

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Michael Pittman did the right thing by not giving Carson Wentz his No. 11 jersey

Carson Wentz can get a new number.

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Imagine you’ve made it all the way to the NFL and are living your dream while wearing the number you’ve worn since you were a kid having those dreams.

Then imagine some struggling QB gets traded to your team for a couple of whatever draft picks and asks if he can have your number because that’s the number he has worn during his not-so-great NFL career.

What would you do?

I know what I would do… exactly what Colts WR Michael Pittman did recently when Carson Wentz asked him for his No. 11 – I’d say no deal.

Pittman explained his decision quite simply by saying, “I am number 11.”

It really doesn’t get more easy to understand than that.

He also said Wentz was very respectful while asking for the number and that the two of them are cool.

Pittman did the right thing. Too often QBs will go to a new team and feel like they should just get their number if someone already has it. Sure, some of them have to give something up to get the number, but they still feel like they deserve the number and that’s messed up.

Well, it’s not messed up if someone like Tom Brady asks for his No. 12, which Chris Godwin gave to him, because Brady is the GOAT. Godwin and Brady, of course, then went out and won a Super Bowl together.

I am cool with other GOATs at other positions getting their number, too, though they should give up some good things for it.

Wentz, however, isn’t the GOAT. He’s coming off a terrible season with the Eagles and is trying to resurrect a career that looked so promising in 2017 but has basically been a mess ever since then. He should be thankful that he can’t wear No. 11 because it feels like he needs a completely new beginning, number included.

Pittman, meanwhile, is coming off a rookie season in which he had 40 catches for 503 yards and touchdown in eight starts. His career is off and running and Wentz will be smart to look for him a lot this season.

I mean, it’s a number he’ll surely recognize.

Quick hits: J.D. Martinez’s hilarious Tom Brady shirt… NBA TopShot explainer… Awesome skiing videos… And more. 

Jonathan Dyer-USA TODAY Sports

– Speaking of Brady, he seemed to really like J.D. Martinez’s hilarious Tom Brady shirt.

– My pal Charles Curtis did a great job of explaining everything you need to know about the NBA Top Shot madness.

– Henry McKenna has the seven best videos from one of skiing’s most iconic freeriding competitions… and they are pretty awesome.

– In music news, Daft Punk announced their split with a cryptic, dramatic video.