Road to Matt Ryan: How the Carson Wentz experience helped Colts revive franchise identity

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INDIANAPOLIS -- This offseason was a time of cold, hard reflection for the men in charge of the Colts.

Owner Jim Irsay, general manager Chris Ballard and coach Frank Reich built a roster that was becoming among the most feared in the NFL last season, having stomped on the Bills in Buffalo, toppled the Patriots in primetime and survived the Cardinals amid a rash of injuries. They were so proud of what they built, they broadcast it for the country to see weekly on the first in-season "Hard Knocks."

But nobody got to see their squad in the playoffs, thanks to one fateful day in Jacksonville and a slippage that started amid the winning. Instead, the playoffs featured Josh Allen dueling Patrick Mahomes, of Jimmy Garoppolo's leadership and Joe Burrow's rise and Matthew Stafford carving his own path to reach the mountain top.

Each of those moments was a painful reminder of what the Colts didn't have. They knew something was missing when they beat the Bills with 106 passing yards and the Patriots with five completions.

New Indianapolis Colts quarterback Matt Ryan spent 14 years with the Atlanta Falcons, starting 10 playoff games and a Super Bowl.
New Indianapolis Colts quarterback Matt Ryan spent 14 years with the Atlanta Falcons, starting 10 playoff games and a Super Bowl.

By the time Carson Wentz was falling apart along with the rest of the team in Jacksonville, the hope and belief in the position that has defined their franchise had already slipped away.

The three men processed it in their uniquely different spirits.

Irsay, the man who cried with Peyton Manning and gives speeches in the locker room after wins, started recording cryptic videos outside his private jet.

"We have allowed and I have allowed doubt, fear and a lack of faith slip into our DNA," the Colts owner said. "It will not stand. ... I promise you one thing: Anyone walking into the 56th Street complex this year will be walking in with all chips in, period.”

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Reich, the former pastor, spoke with a quiver in his voice about the failures of the position he played in the NFL for 14 years.

"I stuck my neck out for him last year," he said of Wentz. "I was a big part of that decision to get him here, and so I believe he’s going to continue to have a lot of success at quarterback. That might be here, it might not be here."

Ballard, the lifelong scout, shot from the hip.

"Make the layups," he said. "Do I think you have to throw to win? Yes."

Carson Wentz threw 27 touchdowns to seven interceptions with the Indianapolis Colts in 2021, but his play down the stretch convinced the franchise it was time to move on.
Carson Wentz threw 27 touchdowns to seven interceptions with the Indianapolis Colts in 2021, but his play down the stretch convinced the franchise it was time to move on.

The 10 weeks of postmortem of a 9-8 season have finally ended. The Colts have emerged with a quarterback in Matt Ryan they believe has the track record, playing style, traits, scars and competitive fire to lead them back into the light.

Only time will tell how much a 36-year-old has left, but Ryan is a known commodity, grizzled by the flames of the spotlight, and they won't ask him to be someone he hasn't been.

The 2021 season and the 10 weeks after it have felt like a lifetime. The Colts had to rediscover who they were, what they lost and what they needed to get back.

A desperate place

That autopsy couldn't wait. The night the season ended, the three leaders of the Colts took a jet back to Indianapolis and met in the facility for hours.

Raw emotions spilled out after Wentz's rapid decline coincided with a team-wide collapse, first in a Week 17 home offensive dud against the Raiders and then in a 26-11 thrashing in Jacksonville. It felt like rock bottom.

The franchise has spun its tires at quarterback ever since Andrew Luck retired on the eve of the 2019 season. Ballard was hired to build a team around him, which he preferred to do in the trenches, through the draft and by re-signing talent. Reich had been chosen to protect his body, accentuate his arm and match him in the mind. Irsay was happy to let him grow into the throne Manning rode to a statue out front of his stadium. Luck's retirement blew a hole in those plans.

After two seasons of Band-Aid approaches with Jacoby Brissett and a 39-year-old Philip Rivers, Irsay, Ballard and Reich were tired of coming up with new answers. They had three options at a long-term fix:

>> They could try to trade a package of draft picks for Stafford, who had requested a trade and was on the lookout for a team to go all-in with him. Indianapolis was on his radar.

>> They could move up in the draft, as teams have for Patrick Mahomes and Josh Allen. One dual-threat checked their boxes of production, leadership and toughness in Ohio State's Justin Fields.

>> They could trade for Wentz, the player Reich had coached to prolific heights in Philadelphia before he plummeted to a dark place through injuries and poor performance.

The option that won out was the one they were certain they could pull off: They traded first- and third-round picks for Wentz.

That spring, Stafford went from the Lions to the Rams. Fields fell to the 10th pick in the draft, and the Bears moved up to take him.

The cost for both was one additional first-round pick from what the Colts paid for Wentz. Indianapolis spent that pick on Michigan edge rusher Kwity Paye.

Like Jonathan Taylor and Darius Leonard and Quenton Nelson and other strong draft picks before him, Paye was not able to stop the avalanche that swallowed the quarterback and eventually the team.

Former Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields embodied what the Indianapolis Colts look for in a quarterback with his production, leadership and toughness, but the Colts chose a different route instead of waiting to see if he'd be available in the draft.
Former Ohio State quarterback Justin Fields embodied what the Indianapolis Colts look for in a quarterback with his production, leadership and toughness, but the Colts chose a different route instead of waiting to see if he'd be available in the draft.

That slippage began before the collapse in Jacksonville. It teetered in those wins over the Bills and Patriots, when Reich, the former quarterback, began calling runs for Taylor out of a fear that his quarterback might lose the game.

Reich will never call a player out publicly, but starting in early December, he began to drop bread crumbs of what was missing.

"We just have to get a little bit more of that dynamic back into the pass game," he said.

"I think for us to go where we want to go, there are going to be games where Carson will be the quote-unquote star of the game."

Reich still believed in the physical abilities of the quarterback he'd drafted No. 2 overall out of North Dakota State in 2016. In 2017, Wentz threw 33 touchdowns, scored the best QBR of any quarterback and helped earn Reich the Colts job.

With another quarterback retiring in Philip Rivers, a reunion only felt natural in their hearts.

Reich wanted to empower Wentz like he did in Philadelphia, when confidence fueled a 6-foot-5-inch frame and rocket arm to thrive when a play broke down. As a former 14-year backup in the NFL, Reich coveted those physical gifts.

He gave Wentz the base foundation of Philadelphia's Super Bowl run, with run-pass-options, three-step drops and play-action off a dominant running game, while allowing some room to freelance.

When Wentz would bail on pockets or attempt left-handed throws, Reich would share with him a line his father pounded into his head growing up:

"‘If you’re going to improvise and go out on your own and do your own thing, just make sure you get it right,'" Reich said he told Wentz. "'Otherwise, you better stand up at the podium and take all the heat for it.’"

Reich's dialogue with Wentz was a steady part of every practice and game, but it was just a fraction of his role now as a head coach. Reich would have to answer for Wentz if things began to slip.

"To move away from the family can be good," Ballard said this week on the Pat McAfee Show when asked why he traded Wentz. "He had been in Philly then he'd been with Frank. I think sometimes to get out of your comfort zone can be really good for a player."

After an expected slow start in a new playbook after missing time in the preseason, Wentz had a six-game stretch with 14 touchdowns to two interceptions and a 108.3 rating. That sample coincided with Taylor's ascension as a second-year back, which hit a fever pitch with a 172-yard performance against the Jets.

But soon, Reich found struggle in marrying the two. Wentz was at his best playing out of shotgun and in tempo, but those took the Colts out of the downhill run looks that Taylor was dominating in. Drives often ended in either Taylor's gashing runs, explosive Pittman Jr. catches or punts.

Reich kept reaching back to the 2016 and 2017 seasons with Wentz in Philadelphia, when growth felt linear.

To a coach in his 30th year in the NFL, it didn't feel that long ago.

In Wentz's arc, it was a lifetime ago.

Reich never saw the fall of Wentz in Philadelphia, which started immediately after he left. Foles grew into a folk hero as the Super Bowl MVP while Wentz rehabbed a torn ACL and MCL. Then another vibrant personality, Jalen Hurts, arrived in his quarterback room and created instant bonds in 2020. Wentz spiraled into a lowlight reel of interceptions and sacks, each one tightening the noose on his job and $108 million guaranteed contract.

Wentz needed a fresh start, and Reich thought they could get back to what they'd done together. But that came when Wentz was 24, and now he was turning 29. And this one came with scars.

Frank Reich and Carson Wentz saw higher highs with the Philadelphia Eagles than they did with the Indianapolis Colts.
Frank Reich and Carson Wentz saw higher highs with the Philadelphia Eagles than they did with the Indianapolis Colts.

The version Reich knew shook off 14 interceptions as a rookie when the Eagles still believed in him. The three years Reich didn't see ripped those ingredients up in a highly public display.

In Indianapolis, Reich and the Colts gave Wentz the security of having no other quarterbacks competing for his job. They showed him love, praising him when he tripped up, as with the left-handed interception to lose the Titans game.

But adversity eventually compounds for every quarterback. The question was always whether Wentz would respond differently this time.

In a Week 12 shootout with Tom Brady, the Buccaneers decided to test it. One week after Taylor scored five touchdowns on the Bills, Tampa Bay sent run blitzes to nearly every hole. Reich put the game in Wentz's hands with 26 consecutive passing plays.

Wentz threw three touchdowns and topped 300 yards, but the Colts blew a double-digit lead and lost as Wentz was committed three turnovers.

One of them came on a jump ball to Pittman Jr. The play call had been the perfect distillation of Wentz's gunslinger personality, allowing this 6-foot-5 receiver to make posters of defensive backs on the Ravens, Rams and 49ers earlier in the season. But on this play, Pittman Jr. lost track of the ball and allowed 5-9 safety Antoine Winfield Jr. to jump over him.

Wentz attempted one more jump ball to Pittman Jr. that game, on a Hail Mary on the final play.

He didn't attempt another the rest of the year.

In that same loss to the Buccaneers, Wentz threw seven short passes to Zach Pascal, who dropped a pair and fumbled another. After that game, Pascal saw his target share cut in half the rest of the way. That left Wentz playing even more sideline-centric, despite many of Reich's primary concepts coming in the middle of the field.

He began to trust less in the simple, like dump-off passes to running backs. That bothered Ballard, who had just signed Nyheim Hines to a three-year, $18.6 million extension, only to see his catches drop from 63 with Rivers to 40 with Wentz.

When asked what went wrong with the passing game, Nyheim Hines was blunt, too:

“Everything. Just honestly everything," Hines said. "We didn’t execute well. We didn’t do anything well in the passing game. We’ve got to make the plays when they’re there and when we had plays there, we didn’t hit it or we got beat on a protection.

"Each play, something just went terribly wrong."

After the Buccaneers game, Wentz's attempts per game dropped from 33 to 23. Reich leaned more on Taylor and urged his quarterback to make use of the plays he did get, which he often tucked into the game script, or the portion Reich could best control.

Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. recorded more than 1,000 yards with Carson Wentz, but the jump ball they perfected early in the season disappeared down the stretch.
Indianapolis Colts wide receiver Michael Pittman Jr. recorded more than 1,000 yards with Carson Wentz, but the jump ball they perfected early in the season disappeared down the stretch.

Wentz received three straight pass plays to start the game against the Patriots. But after he sailed a third-down fade route over a wide-open Pittman Jr.'s head, Reich called nine straight runs on the next series for a touchdown. Wentz attempted nine more passes the rest of the game, which Taylor sealed on a 67-yard run into a stacked box.

Reich appeared to be losing faith in what to call for Wentz, who had some calling into question his leadership due his decision not to get vaccinated. Wentz wasn't the Colts' only top player who made that choice, but he was the one who was new, a soft-speaker getting to know teammates while wearing a mask or helmet in most settings.

Late in the season, when he struggled on the field, starting defenders and an assistant coach started to decline to answer questions about their quarterback's play.

By the time the Colts fell down double digits to the Jaguars with their playoff lives on the line, their passing game was broken beyond repair. Their opponents seemed to know it, too.

"He was battling the whole time, and we felt it," Jaguars defensive tackle Dawuane Smoot said of Wentz, who threw for 185 yards on 29 attempts with two turnovers. "He threw a couple picks, so he was going to start holding it. We started just teeing off."

Wentz finished the season with 27 touchdowns and 7 interceptions, numbers that made it puzzling to outsiders that the Colts were ready to move on. Numbers didn't tell the story of what happened when the ball went to Wentz with the game on the line, as it did against the Jaguars.

As Wentz trotted off the field as a Colts player for the final time, Taylor joined him step for step. Taylor had just won the rushing title with 1,811 yards, but he would now watch the playoffs from home.

"Golly," Wentz said. "Tough to swallow."

The meeting Irsay called that night with Reich and Ballard was the first step in moving on. Irsay wanted his franchise's identity back, the one Manning built and Luck carried forward to help engineer the shift to a passing league.

"Doubt, fear and a lack of faith."

By the end of the season, Irsay's words explained the feelings many had when his team dropped back to pass.

Indianapolis Colts general manager Chris Ballard is normally keen on finding value in trades and signings, but he relented to give up first- and third-round draft picks to the Philadelphia Eagles for Carson Wentz.
Indianapolis Colts general manager Chris Ballard is normally keen on finding value in trades and signings, but he relented to give up first- and third-round draft picks to the Philadelphia Eagles for Carson Wentz.

A return to feeling right

The path forward was also a path back.

In the autopsy, it became clear the Colts didn't run the 2021 offseason as they had others. Whereas Ballard normally hunts for value in moves and avoids overreaction, he skipped the draft and sent a first-rounder for a flawed quarterback the Eagles were shopping around.

Fear and doubt summed up that move, too. The Colts placed their faith in Reich to return Wentz to his early success, only to realize that success meant he couldn't have known the depths Wentz hit when adversity struck.

The Colts veered from the pillars they had long defined quarterback play by in Indianapolis.

“Ultimately, it’s the most scrutinized position in sports," Ballard said. "You’re playing a position where you’re trying to make accurate throws with people trying to actually hurt you. Then, the scrutiny that comes into play week to week.

"So, handling the ups and downs of it and staying the steady course, there’s so much that goes into it."

They wanted someone who had faced the avalanche and come out as the same guy on the other side.

To find a player with that track record but who wasn't at an age too close to retirement, the Colts had to stick to one of Ballard's oldest principles: patience.

"In the NFL, you take nothing for granted," said a former executive who worked with Ballard at a previous stop. "Expect the unexpected."

Indeed, this year's quarterback carousel had turns the Colts could never have expected. One came about when Deshaun Watson was seeking a trade, reached out to the Falcons and they began to court his services.

Until then, Atlanta had told teams that Ryan was only available through a blow-away offer, which the value-centric Ballard was determined to avoid. The inquiry on Watson meant Ryan could need somewhere to go.

Watson turned down the Falcons, opting instead for the Browns. But in the process of building a recruiting pitch, the Colts saw that their purgatory of being a quarterback away from a contender meant they were an attractive destination for a quarterback in search of one.

And Ryan suddenly was.

Two days after their pitch, a 14-year veteran with nearly 60,000 passing yards asked his team to trade him to the Colts. The Falcons did so for a third-round pick, or less than the Colts got for dealing Wentz to the Commanders earlier that month.

Ryan took the news conference stage and took one minute to pay tribute to the quarterbacks they missed, from Manning to Luck to Rivers. He did not mention Wentz.

He did his best to promise the traits they felt they lost last year.

"You have to get to know your teammates really well and how they tick and how they need to be motivated and what are the things that you can help them with to bring out the best in themselves," Ryan said.

Matt Ryan will be the fifth starting quarterback in five seasons for the Indianapolis Colts since Andrew Luck's abrupt retirement.
Matt Ryan will be the fifth starting quarterback in five seasons for the Indianapolis Colts since Andrew Luck's abrupt retirement.

The Colts believe in him because of 14 years of data dating back to when he was a top-five pick in 2008, asked to lead the Falcons from the aftermath of Michael Vick's dogfighting scandal. Ryan lasted through three head coaches and the full careers of teammates and still found a peak, like the MVP he won in 2016.

Last spring, he helped the Falcons become the first NFL team with a 100% vaccination rate.

Ryan has missed three starts in 14 seasons and has taken at least 40 sacks in four straight years. On teams good and bad, he showed up and threw the favorite concepts of All-Pro receivers such as Julio Jones, Roddy White and Tony Gonzalez.

"He's a fighter," said former Steelers cornerback Bryant McFadden, who is now an analyst with CBS. "I love that in a quarterback."

Ryan soldiered for the past four years of a rebuild, but he felt motivated to move to the right team, the same way that Manning, Brady and Matthew Stafford had en route to winning what he hasn't yet: a Super Bowl.

"In the back of my mind, that’s what I’m thinking about right now, is this opportunity that I have for the rest of my career to try and catch that spark and go," Ryan said.

Ryan is 36, past the age of carrying a team, and he needs weapons to throw to beyond Pittman Jr. They have work to do.

More: Insider: What's next? Colts still have big needs to fill around Matt Ryan

But for the Colts, trading for Ryan was about more than a transaction. It was about what his move told them about themselves.

Their obsession with the most important position in sports drove them to the brink of insanity, to abandoning processes, to erasing and starting over. But that urgency kept them as a place that a four-time Pro Bowler and league MVP could seek out for his first move ever to another team.

For a moment, the Colts are back to equilibrium.

Contact Colts insider Nate Atkins at natkins@indystar.com. Follow him on Twitter @NateAtkins_.

This article originally appeared on Indianapolis Star: Colts: How lessons from Carson Wentz paved the road to Matt Ryan