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GO DEEPER<\/p>\n
Rinse and repeat: Colts’ offensive flaws surface again in another loss to Titans<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n
That was the premise on which the Colts traded for Ryan in the spring, remember, what they sold the longtime Falcons QB on before he approved the deal: Behind an elite offensive line and with a dominant running back in Jonathan Taylor, he’d be the perfect fit.<\/p>\n
\u201cI told this to Matt,\u201d Reich acknowledged Monday, \u201cwe did not hold up our end of the bargain.\u201d<\/p>\n
He’s right about that.<\/p>\n
But no matter now.<\/p>\n
This is a mess, and the Colts are grasping at straws in an attempt to clean it up.<\/p>\n
Seven games in, the results are ugly, the issues damning: Ryan leads the league in fumbles (11), interceptions (nine) and sacks taken (24). Somehow, the Colts are 3-3-1.<\/p>\n
But something needed to change, and Irsay knew it. He let his top lieutenants know over the past few weeks. Ballard was on board with the move. And deep down, after Sunday’s loss, Reich realized it, too. The only way the Colts would ever find out whether Sam Ehlinger could play is if they gave him a shot.<\/p>\n
And so, nine months after the three of them huddled in Irsay’s office after the team’s stunning end-of-season collapse in Jacksonville \u2014 the very night Irsay made it clear the Colts would not, under any circumstances, bring back Carson Wentz for a second season \u2014 the three met again, after another dispiriting divisional loss, to map out another unforeseen change at the most important position on the field.<\/p>\n
They spoke for an hour. The verdict: Ryan’s headed to the bench, and Ehlinger’s getting his shot.<\/p>\n
The second-year QB will make his first career start Sunday against the Washington Commanders at Lucas Oil Stadium.<\/p>\n
He’ll be the Colts’ sixth starter since Andrew Luck retired in August 2019, after Jacoby Brissett, Brian Hoyer, Philip Rivers, Wentz and Ryan.<\/p>\n
\u201cYou want to measure twice and cut once,\u201d Reich said Monday. \u201cYou want to make sure you make this move that it is truly the best thing for the team and you don’t want to rush into this kind of a judgment. I don’t think we did that. It wasn’t like we’re sitting here saying, ‘Let’s wait until he throws another interception and then we’re going to make a switch.’\u201d<\/p>\n
No, they didn’t rush into this, because this call was weeks in the making. And it was a hard one, because of the respect Reich has for Ryan and the admiration he’s earned inside the locker room.<\/p>\n
But the coach, in his fifth year in Indianapolis, can feel his seat getting warmer, and Ryan \u2014 inconsistent as he’s been \u2014 probably gives him a better shot to win in the short term. Ehlinger, like any young quarterback, will make his fair share of mistakes in the coming weeks. But the upside is higher, and Ehlinger’s scrambling ability might prove to be a spark this offense desperately needs.<\/p>\n
The offense had grown stagnant with Ryan. That’s undeniable. The Colts weren’t just unproductive \u2014 a 16.1 points-per-game average, 29th in the league \u2014 they were predictable. Ryan is averaging just 5.9 yards per throw, the worst of any starter in the league, and Sunday’s loss in Tennessee was especially revealing. The Titans defense knew the Colts weren’t willing to take any shots down the field, so they crowded the line of scrimmage and forced the Colts into a dink-and-dunk game, baiting Ryan into two brutal interceptions, one of which was returned for a touchdown.<\/p>\n
To be clear, Reich is right: the Colts haven’t done much to help him. But the problem is Ryan’s often made it worse.<\/p>\n
\u201cThis is another point that needs to be made crystal clear, and I told this to Matt,\u201d Reich said. \u201c’You came here and we promised you a top-NFL rushing game and we promised you great protection and we haven’t really, as an offense, delivered on that.’ And that really starts with me.\u201d<\/p>\n
Ryan’s taken a beating this season: 80 hits, most in the league, on top of 110 pressures, and was slow to get up from a number of punishing shots Sunday. He’s dealing with a Grade 2 shoulder separation, Reich said, he wo n’t practice this week and will be inactive for Sunday’s game. Nick Foles, signed to be Ryan’s backup in the spring, will now back up Ehlinger. But Reich was adamant, this decision was made regardless of Ryan’s injury.<\/p>\n
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\n Frank Reich says the Colts haven lived up to the promise of a strong running game and a great offensive line that was sold to Matt Ryan. (Isaiah J. Downing \/ USA Today)<\/span><\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\nThe Colts plan to keep Ehlinger as the starter for the rest of the season, even after Ryan recovers.<\/p>\n
\u201cThis move was gonna be made either way,\u201d Reich said.<\/p>\n
It’s worth noting that the Colts always saw Ryan as at least a two-year answer, and Monday’s decision puts that in peril. Roughly $12 million of the $29 million he’s due in 2023 is guaranteed, and there is a $7.5 million roster bonus that kicks in March 17. If the Colts were to cut him, he’d cost $18 million against the salary cap.<\/p>\n
He met with all three quarterbacks Monday morning and relayed the decision.<\/p>\n
It’s clear Irsay has had his say in this. The owner rarely involves himself in personnel matters, leaving that instead to Ballard, Reich and the staff, but he has spoken up on both occasions, in January after Wentz’s disastrous end to the season, and recently, as Ryan’s early-season stumbles hindered the offense and the team.<\/p>\n
Reich and Irsay typically speak in the locker room after each game, but meetings like the one Sunday night are extremely rare. When it comes to the quarterback position \u2014 something the Colts have n’t really gotten right since Andrew Luck retired five years ago \u2014 the owner wants his voice heard.<\/p>\n