The Courier-Journal (Louisville)

Colts have two obvious needs to fill entering NFL draft

- Joel A. Erickson

INDIANAPOL­IS — Drafting for need has taken a public relations hit over the years.

Best player available is the philosophy most NFL teams champion. By taking the best player available, the thinking goes, a team is less likely to miss out on a superstar because its hands are not tied by the holes left on the roster. That’s what teams say publicly. The reality often lies somewhere in the middle. When the first round of this week’s NFL Draft ends, the majority of the picks teams make will end up filling significan­t holes on their rosters.

“I think that’s the general coachingsc­outing tug-and-pull that you get,” Colts general manager Chris Ballard said. “Where we’re looking at: ‘Two years from now, this guy is up, we’ll draft his guy to replace him.’ In coaching, you’re like: ‘Screw that. I need today.’”

Partly because of the franchise’s reluctance to overindulg­e in free agency, the Indianapol­is coaching staff has often gotten its wishes granted on draft day. Ballard has been using his top pick to fill needs for a long time.

Ballard opened his tenure with an opportunis­tic selection of Malik Hooker in 2017, but since taking Quenton Nelson to protect Andrew Luck in 2018, Ballard’s string of top picks — a blocker in 2018, a cornerback in 2019, a wide receiver in 2020, a defensive end in 2021, a wide receiver in 2022 and on through Anthony Richardson in 2023 — have all addressed positions of critical need entering the draft. His second pick has often followed suit.

Indianapol­is almost always drafts for need.

The hard part is often figuring out which need rises above the rest.

“I think, honestly, whatever gives us the best chance to win,” Indianapol­is head coach Shane Steichen said. “Even though I’m an offensive-background­ed guy, I do believe you take a really good player. It doesn’t matter offense or defense — a player that’s going to help you get better.”

The Colts appear to have two critical, obvious needs on either side of the ball as the 2024 draft approaches. Wide receiver and cornerback. Even though Indianapol­is, like almost any franchise other than the team holding the No. 1 pick, has been careful to avoid tipping its hand at this point.

“We just had a long discussion about a couple guys — I’m not going to tell you what side of the ball — but what’s the vision for the player?” Ballard said. “It’s easy for scouts and (front office staff) to have a vision, but the coaches have to have the same vision, and we’ve got to be able to see things, how we’re going to end up developing (them) and what role this guy is going to play.”

Overall team needs could throw a positional curveball.

The availabili­ty of Georgia tight end Brock Bowers, a clear-cut first-round prospect with incredible abilities after the catch for his position, could convince the Colts to add another tight end to a room that is already crowded from a numbers standpoint. Defensivel­y, Indianapol­is pursued edge rusher Danielle Hunter in free agency before the former Viking ended up heading home to Houston, signaling a desire for an explosive speed rusher at a position where the Colts have plenty of power.

But the numbers Indianapol­is already has at both tight end and defensive end make those positions more of a want than a need or a must. Even free safety, a spot where Indianapol­is struggled last year, has two healthy young players with starting experience available.

The need at wide receiver and cornerback is more pronounced.

Only three Indianapol­is receivers — Michael Pittman Jr., Josh Downs and Alec Pierce — played more than 125 snaps offensivel­y last year.

“Usually, you’ve got your three guys, and then that fourth guy is your special teams guy,” Steichen said. “That’s usually how the league works.”

Only in an ideal situation. Pittman, Pierce and Downs were remarkably durable last season. The Colts had all three of those receivers available for 16 of 17 games, the only absence coming after the vicious, illegal hit Pittman absorbed at the hands of Pittsburgh safety Damontae Kazee.

If Indianapol­is had dealt with anything more serious at the position, the options were limited.

“Nothing against the (other) players we had in there playing, it was a rotation all year,” Ballard said. “That makes it really hard on the coaches. I blame myself for that one.”

Wide receiver is also a position of critical need because of Richardson.

Indianapol­is is trying to develop a young, gifted quarterbac­k, a task that requires help around him.

A wide receiver would do that. Particular­ly a wide receiver with the ability to make things happen after the catch. Indianapol­is has its tough, highvolume target in Pittman, a slot receiver in Downs and a vertical threat in Pierce, but the offense has an opening for a player with electric ability in the open field.

The case at cornerback hasn’t been made as obvious by the Colts this offseason. But it is easy to see. Indianapol­is brought back Kenny Moore II to play the slot and play the outside when the Colts have only two corners on the field, but Indianapol­is is counting on a trio of young players to start on the outside, and both third-year cornerback Dallis Flowers (torn Achilles tendon) and 2023 second-rounder JuJu Brents (played just nine games a rookie).

 ?? KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS ?? Indianapol­is Colts general manager Chris Ballard speaks at a press conference at the NFL Scouting Combine on Feb. 28.
KIRBY LEE/USA TODAY SPORTS Indianapol­is Colts general manager Chris Ballard speaks at a press conference at the NFL Scouting Combine on Feb. 28.

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