Indianapolis Colts News and Notes for 2004/2005

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$99.2M deal includes $34.5M signing bonus

Colts quarterback Peyton Manning has agreed in principle to a landmark $99.2 million, seven-year contract that will pay him a league-record $14.17 million annually.

The deal, which will be announced at a 4:30 p.m. ET news conference, also includes a record $34.5 million signing bonus. It is technically for nine years, but the final two seasons will be voided if Manning, who has never missed a game in his professional career, simply reaches league minimum playing time benchmarks.


"There was a lot of pressure because we're getting close to the Super Bowl," team owner Jim Irsay told The Associated Press. "If you don't get it done, we're going in a dramatically different direction, and our chances are reduced."


Sources told ESPN.com that the 27-year-old Manning can earn, relatively early in the contract, an additional $19 million in incentives, although Colts officials deny that total. The eighth and ninth years, included for bookkeeping purposes and to protect the Colts against an extension of the collective bargaining agreement, are for base salaries of $1 million each season.


The deal gives Indianapolis much-needed salary cap relief. Since all teams must be in compliance with the NFL's $80.6 million salary cap by Tuesday's 4 ET deadline, the Colts -- saddled by Manning's record cap charge -- scrambled to renegotiate the contracts of at least a half-dozen veterans. Five veterans also were released outright.

Only some minor paperwork needs completing, and a final draft of the contract must be submitted to Manning and his representatives. But sources emphasized that substantive negotiating points have been finalized.


There are any number of methods employed to determine the overall worth of an NFL contract, but by virtually all of the most recognized valuation standards, the Manning deal is clearly the most lucrative in NFL history. His average annual salary will dwarf those in the $100 million deals that quarterbacks Donovan McNabb and Brett Favre and others have signed in recent years.


Irsay told ESPN.com during Super Bowl week that he was prepared to make Manning the highest-paid player in history, but cautioned that Indianapolis might not be able to push the bar too high because of resultant roster ramifications.


The bar, though, has now been moved higher than most experts believed it would be. For agents Tom Condon and Ken Kremer of IMG Football, who have negotiated some of the biggest contracts in NFL history and devised the structure by which most quarterback deals are now done, Manning's represents months of arduous work on a complicated contract.


Beyond catapulting the league's co-most valuable player for 2003 into a new financial stratosphere, completing the contract will allow the Colts to operate in free agency. The Colts designated Manning as their exclusive "franchise" player on Feb. 23, meaning that no other team could negotiate with him but also resulting in a record $18.4 million salary cap charge for the 2004 season.


In privately discussing the moves that might have to be made if Manning did not agree to a long-term contract, Colts officials told counterparts league wide they they might face an "offensive Armageddon" and even mentioned potentially releasing running back Edgerrin James. While some cuts made to create cap room will hurt the Colts' depth, all of the players released were ticketed for an exit from Indianapolis anyway.


Manning's new contract, however, should permit the Colts to conduct business as usual and to make qualifying offers to their restricted free agents before the deadline. It is believed that, when Manning signs the contract, his salary cap charge for '04 will now be more than halved.


The two sides have been negotiating a new deal off-and-on for months and most NFL observers acknowledged that the Colts backed themselves into a corner by not addressing Manning's contract situation much earlier. Two years ago, it is believed that Colts president/general manager Bill Polian approached Manning's agents about possibly improving the situation, but those talks quickly ceased.


Polian had placed a Monday deadline on finishing a long-term deal, citing the possible necessity for making further player cuts and the need to determine the shape of the Colts' roster if forced to carry Manning's burdensome $18.4 million cap charge.


Negotiations early Monday appeared headed in a positive direction, but then turned sour in the evening. Polian and Condon resumed talks later Monday night and finalized an agreement early Tuesday morning. As usual in such deals, a sense of urgency served as catalyst for heightening the negotiations, as the club couldn't realistically afford to carry such a large cap value for Manning for a second consecutive season. Manning had a cap charge in excess of $15 million for 2003.


There certainly were times, given the natures of Polian and Condon, when the discussions went beyond contentious. Only last week, at the Indianapolis airport, patrons of an airline courtesy club witnessed what might kindly be called an animated exchange between the two men as they discussed Manning's contract during the league's draft combine.


Coming off a season in which he led the Colts to within one game of the Super Bowl, Manning, 27, is the consensus top player in the league.


Manning was chosen first overall in the 1998 draft out of Tennessee. He's thrown for more than 3,000 yards in all six seasons in the league, and only once failed to surpass 4,000 yards. Manning has started 96 straight regular-season games and has completed 2,128 of 3,383 passes for 24,885 yards, with 167 touchdown passes, 110 interceptions and a QB rating of 88.1.

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One of the key points to the seven-year, $98 million contract signed by quarterback Peyton Manning was the immediate salary-cap relief it provided the Indianapolis Colts.

In fact, the most lucrative deal in NFL history, one that includes a record $34.5 million signing bonus, is cap friendly over the first four seasons.

The contract is structured in such a way that Manning likely will count no more than $10.05 million against the league's salary cap in any of the next four years.

Team president Bill Polian acknowledged the landmark status of the deal for the league's co-MVP. The signing bonus dwarfs the $20 million bonus the Philadelphia Eagles gave to quarterback Donovan McNabb in 2002. Along with the signing bonus, the contract's annual average of $14 million is the highest in league history.

"But the way we structured it makes it doable and allows us to remain competitive over the next four years," Polian said. "And then, if there is an (labor agreement) extension, as everyone expects there will be, it will be more competitive at that point in time."

Manning will count $8.302 million against the league's 2004 salary cap of $80.6 million. Had the team been forced to carry him as its "exclusive franchise player" in '04, he would have counted $18.4 million.

Manning's cap number in '05 will be $8.432 million, then hit $10.052 million in '06 and $7.686 million in '07. The latter two figures are dependent upon the Colts prorating roster bonuses of $9 million in '06 and $10 million in '07 over the life of the contract. That is considered a formality.

Because of the way the package is constructed, the Colts likely will revisit Manning's contract after the '07 season. In 2008, his base salary escalates to $11.5 million and his salary-cap number to more than $18 million.

Unlike contracts in Major League Baseball and the NBA, the only portion of Manning's contract that is guaranteed is the $34.5 million signing bonus. He will receive that bonus in two installments over the next 12 months.

"I'm happy for him," veteran tight end Marcus Pollard said of Manning. "I think it's win-win for everybody, except for (owner Jim) Irsay because he's got to pay him all that money.

"But seriously, getting (the deal) done was big. We've got to try to secure as many players that we can so we can get back to where we were last year, and go a step further."

Investment in Williams

The enormity of Manning's deal has been the talk of the NFL. But Josh Williams didn't do badly this week, either.

The Colts' veteran defensive tackle signed a six-year deal worth $19.1 million. It includes a $3.6 million signing bonus.

Williams was part of coordinator Ron Meeks' defensive line rotation a year ago. He saw action in all 16 regular-season games, four as a starter, and finished with 33 tackles and one sack. He enjoyed his best season in 2001, starting all 16 games and collecting 68 tackles and three sacks.

Ex-Colts on tour

Two Colts who became unrestricted free agents on Wednesday already are looking around.

Linebacker Marcus Washington has a visit scheduled with the Pittsburgh Steelers today. Then, he's headed to Washington on Friday and San Diego on Monday. Cornerback David Macklin is expected to meet with the Arizona Cardinals today.

Dilger free again

Former Colts tight end Ken Dilger was released by Tampa Bay on Tuesday.

Dilger said he wouldn't mind a reunion with the Colts, who terminated his contract prior to the 2002 season. The team does not comment on free agents it might be pursuing.

Mark Bartelstein, Dilger's agent, said on Wednesday it's too early in the free agent process to predict where his client will land.

"We'll be talking to a lot of teams," he said.

http://www.indystar.com/articles/2/126265-8852-036.html
 

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Jim Irsay wants to win, and he's hoping the city of Indianapolis will help.

After signing Peyton Manning, the NFL's co-MVP, to a franchise record $98 million contract Tuesday, Irsay will turn to the Colts most pressing offseason need -- working with the city on a new stadium deal.

"I hope this is an investment in the future and it's absolutely the right thing to do for our franchise," Irsay said after agreeing to Manning's contract. "In the long term, we're going to keep trying to find solutions [on the stadium]."

For Irsay, winning is coming at an increasingly exorbitant cost.

During the past several years, Irsay has forked out tens of millions of dollars in signing bonuses just to keep the Colts competitive. And that was before he gave Manning the largest signing bonus in league history, $34.5 million -- the same as the total salary cap in 1994.

Manning's new deal illustrates the dilemma owners like Irsay, with small-market teams, often face.

If a deal had not been reached and Manning played under the franchise tag, he would have counted a league-record $18.4 million against a salary cap of $80.6 million. Had that happened, the Colts could have been without 13 players from last year's roster, a hit that might have prevented them from any chance at a Super Bowl.

If Manning had hit the free-agent market, another team probably would have signed him to a larger deal, forcing the Colts to start over.

"These are the kinds of negotiations you look back at 10 or 20 years from now and it becomes a crossroads with very significant long-term ramifications," Irsay said.

Irsay had an easier decision after the Colts went 14-5 and reached the AFC Championship Game last year.

But there are still risks.

Irsay said the Colts pay out about 70 percent of their gross revenue in salaries and signing bonuses, significantly more than he claims big-market teams pay. Some, Irsay said, pay as little as 44 percent.

As long as the Colts are playing in the 55,506-seat RCA Dome, the NFL's smallest stadium, it will likely be a concern.

So the Colts and city officials are trying to work out a deal to improve the team's revenue base.

"It's clear that the city of Indianapolis is at a disadvantage with a city like New York or Washington," said Steve Campbell, spokesman for Mayor Bart Peterson. "That doesn't mean it can't be done."

After the 2005 season, the city is to begin making payments of an estimated $10.6 million to bring the Colts up to the NFL's median income level. The city would be required to make payments two of every three years through the end of the lease, 2013.

Irsay, who has tried to quash rumors about a possible to move to Los Angeles, remains hopeful a deal will be reached. No new talks have yet been scheduled.

Campbell said that any stadium project would likely include an expansion of the city's convention center and would also have to account for a facility that could host the NCAA men's basketball final four.

The city recently signed an agreement with the NCAA to bring the men's and women's final fours to Indianapolis every five years and will allow the city to become a permanent backup site in the other years.

"We want to get it done to help the team and another equally important reason is the future of the convention center and the NCAA," Campbell said. "We have to plan for that. We have to plan for expanding the convention center and building a new stadium."

Until then, the Colts say they are committed to winning -- even if it comes with a big price tag.

"That's a huge commitment on the part of the owner and he never blinked," team president Bill Polian said of Manning's new deal. "The Colts are today, tomorrow and for the next seven years, at least because of Jim Irsay, competitive with the every team in the NFL. And that's got to be good for Indianapolis."

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com
 

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As expected, the Indianapolis Colts are looking for a starting strong-side linebacker today.

Marcus Washington, who held that position the past three seasons, agreed to terms with the Washington Redskins on Thursday evening. The six-year deal is worth $24 million and includes a $7 million signing bonus.

Washington became an unrestricted free agent Wednesday, and the Colts were all but resigned to the fact they would be unable to retain a player they selected in the second round of the 2000 draft.

Coach Tony Dungy said Thursday he talked recently with Washington about possibly returning to the Colts. The anticipated roadblock: money.

"We felt there was a good chance someone would place that high a value on him and we wouldn't be able to match it," said Dungy.

It marks the second year in a row the Colts have lost a starting linebacker to free agency. Last year, the team made no attempt to re-sign Mike Peterson, who went to AFC South rival Jacksonville.

Pat Dye, Washington's agent, said the Redskins targeted his client from the outset. The NFL's veteran free-agent market opened at 12:01 a.m. Wednesday. Washington received a call from the Redskins at 12:05.

"Marcus had a long conversation with (coach) Joe Gibbs and (defensive coordinator) Gregg Williams," said Dye. "They must have talked for 45 minutes and talked X's and O's, and how Marcus would be used with LaVar Arrington.

"Needless to say, Marcus was very impressed."

Washington visited with Pittsburgh and had scheduled a visit to San Diego.

"He's relieved to have this resolved," said Dye. "It was a tough decision for him."

http://www.indystar.com/articles/6/126480-8496-094.html
 

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A Position-By-Position Look at the Colts (First of a Series)

INDIANAPOLIS – Over the past five or six seasons, there have been constants for the Colts. One has been at quarterback.

The position has been injury-free.

It has been consistent.

And it has consistently improved.

That’s because the position has been manned by four-time Pro Bowl selection Peyton Manning. The Colts ensured the position would continue to be a strength early this week, signing the co-Most Valuable Player to a seven-year contract, but when Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy spoke about Manning recently, it wasn’t money or contract terms he discussed.

It was the improvements made this past season.

Improvements that helped the Colts to within a game of the Super Bowl.

“I thought he did a great job implementing what we wanted to do,” Dungy said of Manning, who made his fourth Pro Bowl this past season, a season in which he passed for more than 4,000 yards for an NFL-record fifth consecutive season.

“The guys around him stepped up and he had confidence in them to make plays. But more than that, we went in each week saying, ‘This is how we’re going to attack. This is our philosophy.’

“We played within that and he did a great job of that.”

Manning, who never has missed a start in six NFL seasons, had his best statistical season in 2003, completing 379 of 566 passes for a career-high 67.0 percent completion percentage.

Manning, who will turn 28 this month, threw 29 touchdowns, the second-highest total in his career, and his 10 interceptions were five fewer than his previous career-low.

His 4,267 passing yards were also the second-most in his career, and his passer rating of 99.0 was second in the AFC and more than four points higher than his previous career-best.

“Certainly, he had a phenomenal year,” Dungy said.

But Dungy said beyond the numbers, what was impressive about Manning’s season was his increasing grasp and execution of the offense. In 2000, Manning’s previous best statistical season, he threw 33 touchdowns and 15 interceptions, a ratio of just over 2-to-1.

This past season, his touchdown-to-interception ratio was nearly 3-to-1, which Dungy said was an indication of Manning’s grasp of what was needed to win. In crucial games against Miami and Tennessee, Manning led numerous drives into the opponents’ territory that stalled.

The Colts kicked three field goals against Miami and five against Tennessee, beating the Dolphins, 23-17, and the Titans, 29-27.

“We understood what’s going to win games,” Dungy said. “We had situations where we kicked field goals and just thought, ‘Score, score, score.’ In the past, we’d gotten in scoring range, blown some opportunities and come up four points short in the end.

“Just realizing we can win games that way – that was a big step forward for us as a team.”

Manning, on several occasions this past season, played at levels well beyond most NFL quarterbacks. Three times he threw five or more touchdowns – against New Orleans and Atlanta in the regular season and against Denver in the playoffs. Twice he had a perfect passer rating -- against New Orleans, when he set a team record with six touchdown passes, and against Denver in the playoffs.

He also led the Colts to their first two playoff victories since 1995, beating Denver, 41-10, at home in the first round and Kansas City, 38-31, in a Divisional Playoff in Kansas City.

“I think the comfort level with the guys around was high, what we had done in the off-season, those guys being here,” Dungy said. “He had an amazing year. We’ll just keep hammering on that and continue to try to be explosive and do things our offense does and cut down on our turnovers even more.

“There’s no reason to believe he’s not still at a level where he can get better.”

Backup quarterback is a less-certain area. Brock Huard, Manning’s backup the last two season, had his contract terminated after this past off-season, and while Dungy said the team would like to re-sign the five-year veteran, he didn’t know if it would be financially feasible.

Third-team quarterback Cory Sauter, a six-year veteran, is in a similar situation.

“I thought we had a very good situation with Brock and Cory Sauter,” Dungy said. “They know the offense. Cory’s been in it a while, and this would be Brock’s third year in it. I don’t know if we’re going to have that luxury financially, but that would be the ideal situation. Those guys have done a good job in practice and they’ve done a good job in preseason. They haven’t played much because Peyton’s been so durable, but that would give us a comfort there.

“The fact is, it’s iffy. We don’t know how everything is going to pan out. We don’t know if we’re going to be able to go with veteran backup quarterbacks like that.”

Tom Arth, who signed as a rookie free agent last off-season, likely will be among the quarterbacks in camp this summer, Dungy said. Arth spent last season on the non-football injury list, and the team designated him to NFL Europe this spring.

“He’s gotten a chance to be here and really learn,” Dungy said. “He hasn’t had a chance to practice with us, but he’s a guy we’re really looking forward to seeing what he can do. I would say if we can come back with those four guys, we’re in pretty good shape.

“We’d like to do that, but you just don’t know if it’s financially doable.”

www.colts.com
 

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Peyton Manning and the Colts were all smiles last week, and they should smile while they can. Now that Manning and the Colts have a $98 million commitment between them, it will become increasingly difficult for the team to remain one of the league's best.

I'm certain G.M. Bill Polian will continue to draft well and make shrewd decisions, that coach Tony Dungy will continue to teach his players well and use them to the best of their abilities, and that Manning will continue to prepare and play like a champion. But the system will eat away at the Colts the way a closet full of moths eats away at a collection of wool sweaters.

Manning's signing bonus of $34.5 million will mean the always cash-poor Colts won't have much money to sign other players this year. In subsequent years, Manning's landmark contract will take up an inordinate amount of the Colts' salary-cap space, and that will leave less for other players.

Already, the Colts have cut a number of players who have been contributors, including starting cornerback Walt Harris, defensive end Chad Bratzke, fullback Detron Smith, offensive lineman Adam Meadows and backup quarterback Brock Huard. These players may have been cut regardless of Manning's contract, but the fact remains that the Colts need to replace them with players who will cost less. They also lost free agent Marcus Washington, their starting strongside linebacker, to the Redskins.

"You can still field a competitive team, but it can't be as good as it was," one NFC general manager says. "Things can only get worse. That's the real issue."

If he has lesser players around him, Manning will be less effective. Yet more will be expected of him.

You have to wonder if Manning will have Marvin Harrison to throw to after this season. Harrison's contract will expire next March, and he isn't going to be any easier to sign after seeing Manning's blockbuster numbers.

From a salary-cap standpoint, Manning won't tax his team too much this season or next, when his cap hits will be $8.3 million and $8.4 million. But in 2006, there will be problems in Coltsville because his cap number shoots up to $17.7 million. The next year, it's $14.7 million, the year after $15.2 million, then $17.7 million and $15.8 million.

The contract probably will have to be redone to provide cap relief, perhaps as soon as 2006. But at some point, the Colts will have to answer for Manning's deal. The credit-card mentality -- buy now, pay later -- is popular in many NFL front offices.

We've listened to much chatter about how teams have been able to win with quarterbacks who weren't high-round picks. But that talk is missing the point. It is not about where these quarterbacks came from as much as it is about how little these quarterbacks are costing their teams compared with QBs on other teams.

The cap numbers of the quarterbacks in the Super Bowl last month enabled their teams to spread the wealth. Tom Brady counted only $3.3 million against the Patriots' cap, and Jake Delhomme's figure for the Panthers was $1.78 mill.

Other recent Super Bowl winners followed a similar pattern. In 1999, Kurt Warner's cap figure for the Rams was $753,000. In 2000, Trent Dilfer counted $1 million against the Ravens' cap. Brady's salary-cap number was $315,000 in 2001.

These figures underscore the team concept the Patriots have executed so brilliantly. "The Patriots have done a good job of showing people there's another way to do it," Bills general manager Tom Donahoe says. "Whether everybody has bought into that or accepts that, everybody has their own philosophy."

It's about to become more difficult for the architects of the model. Brady's cap number springs up to $8.3 million this year. It's the price of success.

When a quarterback deserves to be paid, there really isn't much the team can do except cough it up. Letting Manning sign elsewhere would have been disastrous. Homer Simpson could have figured that one out. "You can't recover if you let him go," the NFC general manager says. "Inside and outside the building, the loss of credibility is too hard to overcome."

You can't blame Manning or Tom Condon, his agent, for holding the gun to the Colts' horseshoe. Manning is a rare talent, maybe the best player in the game. He gives the Colts as much in the locker room, in the meeting room, on the practice field and in the community as he does on the field. He represents everything that's good about the NFL.

"Peyton Manning is a great player," Donahoe says. "But you still have to have a team. Peyton by himself isn't going to be as effective as Peyton with a good offensive line, good running back, good receivers, good defense. It's really not fair for me to tell Indianapolis they should do this or that, and I'm not, but you can't get to the point where you're giving everything to one guy. It's still a team sport."

A lot of general managers, if they were starting a team and could pick any player first, would pick Manning. But they'd like to pick some other players to go with him.

http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4481458/
 

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The Colts went nearly two seasons without a major vacancy on their coaching staff.

The one that was created this off-season was filled from within.

Ricky Thomas, the Colts’ offensive quality control coach the past two seasons, was promoted recently to tight ends coach. The quality control position has been filled by former NFL tight end Pete Metzelaars.

Thomas, 38, served as the tight ends coach in Tampa Bay from 1999-2001, joining the Colts in 2002 when Tony Dungy – the head coach in Tampa Bay from 1996-2001 – joined the Colts as head coach. Thomas also assisted offensive line coach Howard Mudd the past two seasons, as well as helping with other areas of offensive preparation.

Thomas was an offensive assistant with the Buccaneers from 1997-1998.

Metzelaars, 43, worked with the Colts during 2003 training camp, helping coach the team’s tight ends. He played 16 NFL seasons with four NFL teams, playing with Seattle from 1982-84, Buffalo from 1984-1994, Carolina in 1995 and Detroit from 1996-97.

Metzelaars caught 383 passes in the NFL for 3,686 yards and 29 touchdowns.

Thomas replaced tight ends coach Chris Foerster, who left recently to take a similar job with the Miami Dolphins. Foerster coached Colts tight ends the past two seasons.

http://www.colts.com
 

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A Position-By-Position Look at the Colts (Second of a Series)
INDIANAPOLIS – The Colts’ running back position would be among the deepest areas on the team. That was the theory before this past season.

The theory turned out to be true, with a bonus.

The Colts were not only deep at running back. They were good, too.

Edgerrin James. Dominic Rhodes. Ricky Williams.

James Mungro. Brian Allen.

The Colts’ running game, after a season in which it struggled at times to provide balance in the offense, returned to form in 2003, thanks largely to the return to health of James, the NFL’s leading rusher in 1999 and 2000.

That return – plus quality depth – is why Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy recently said he feels good about the team’s running back position.

“We not only won when Edgerrin played well for us, but we were able to win and perform well offensively when he wasn’t playing,” Dungy said recently. “We have some quality guys there, guys who have proven they can come in and get the job done.”

As was true the previous four seasons, James was the key to the running back position. And the key in 2003 was that not only did he start the season well, he played better as the season continued.

James, who missed the final half of the 2001 season with a severe knee injury, returned in 2002, rushing for 989 yards and two touchdowns on 277 carries. Although James was effective at times, he said near the end of that season he never was fully healthy, having played through rib, knee, ankle and hamstring injuries.

Early in the 2003 season, James sustained a back injury that forced him to miss three games – the Colts’ victories over New Orleans and Tampa Bay, and their overtime loss to Carolina. He returned to rush for 104 yards on 23 carries on October 26 against Houston, and he finished the season rushing for more than 100 yards in five of the last 10 games.

For the season, James rushed for more than 100 yards in six of 13 regular-season games, and also rushed for 281 yards and three touchdowns on 63 post-season carries.

“I thought he was really, really good, and I think he’s become a different type of runner,” Dungy said. “He’s breaking tackles and becoming more of a power back. He still pass protects well and catches the ball out of the backfield. He does a lot of things that really help us in this offense.

“I thought it was a lesson for us in that he was fresh in the end.”

The Colts learned that lesson by choice. In the off-season, the plan had been to rest James periodically throughout the season, and not force him to play through injuries. As a result, when James was hurt in October, Dungy said there was no thought of rushing him back despite back-to-back games against defending Super Bowl champion Tampa Bay and then-unbeaten Carolina.

After James returned, he took more plays off than in the past. He finished the season with 310 carries, his most since 1999, but 59 fewer than he had as a rookie and 77 fewer than he had his second season.

“I thought he played well,” Dungy said. “I thought he got better as the season went on and he was fresh at the end of the year, which helped us. His best stretch, by far, was the last three games of the regular season and his three games in the playoffs. It’s probably not coincidental.

“It probably is still a matter of him coming back from that injury, but also maybe not having 350 carries by the time we got to the playoffs.”

James, who will enter his sixth season next season, spoke often late in the season about caring less about statistics than he had early in his career. His focus, he said, was on winning a Super Bowl, and he was visibly shaken following the team’s loss to New England in the AFC Championship Game.

“His first couple of years, when he had those big years, he was a rookie and a young guy,” Dungy said. “Now, he is one of the veteran guys on offense and he wasn’t fighting through an injury. He was doing his job and playing well.

“It seemed like he felt he could be more of a leader.”

A question facing the Colts in the off-season is backup running back. Williams, a valuable reserve and a quality pass receiver out of the backfield, was allowed to become a free agent, leaving Rhodes, Mungro and Allen as the team’s reserves.

Rhodes, who rushed 1,104 yards as a rookie in 2001, sustained a torn anterior cruciate ligament in 2002 training camp, an injury that forced him to miss the entire season. He returned last season, and played well at times, rushing for 157 yards on 37 carries and catching six passes for 62 yards and a touchdown.

Mungro, who rushed for 336 yards and eight touchdowns as a rookie, rushed for 60 yards on 24 carries last season, and missed the final four games of the season on injured reserve. Allen, a 2002 sixth-round draft choice, played extensively in the preseason, but was injured much of the regular season.

“We got hit with some injuries, but I think what those guys showed last season is they were going to find ways to contribute,” Dungy said. “All in all, those guys performed and produced and we were able to win games – even without Edgerrin.

“I think the thing we’re looking forward to this season is getting Dominic back. He’ll be very similar this year to what Edgerrin was last season. Last season, he showed some flashes and did some things. We felt like he was back, but not quite all the way back.

“This year could be a better year physically for him, and maybe by extension, a better year for our backs as a whole. He gave us a lift in some games and gave us some big runs when we did get him in there to spell Edgerrin, and he should be able to do even more this season.”

http://www.colts.com
 

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Virtually every day, the NFL's veteran free agent market delivers another marquee name to another needy team's doorstep.

So, you think someone lost the address for the Indianapolis Colts? The league's annual rite of addressing deficiencies with expensive talent is nearly two weeks old, and the Colts remain window-shoppers.

That isn't likely to change, even though offseason personnel decisions have stripped a still-evolving defense of several players who were major contributors in 2003: linebacker Marcus Washington, lineman Chad Bratzke and cornerbacks Walt Harris and David Macklin.

Fans flood local talk radio with their concerns. The Colts, calmly and patiently, stay the course.

"People just have to know we're trying to put the best team possible out there," coach Tony Dungy said. "But we're trying to remain competitive well into the future."

With that blueprint in mind, help for a defense that ranked No. 11 in total yards allowed but No. 20 in points allowed in 2003 likely will emerge from three areas: the April 24-25 draft, the secondary phase of veteran free agency when prices are slashed, and from within.

The Colts, Dungy noted, aren't the Washington Redskins, who routinely treat the offseason like a shopping spree at the mall. Redskins owner Daniel Snyder has doled out more than $50 million in signing bonuses this offseason in an attempt at returning the franchise to the playoffs for the first time since 1999.

"People see that and think that's the norm," Dungy said. "But everybody has a different strategy and a different theory and different amounts of cash they can use."

The Colts' philosophy on upgrading personnel depends on which side of the ball is being addressed. They've been an offense-driven franchise since selecting quarterback Peyton Manning with the first overall pick in the 1998 draft.

That won't change anytime soon, not after owner Jim Irsay agreed earlier this month to retain Manning with a seven-year, $98 million contract that included a league-record $34.5 million signing bonus. Next year, Irsay and team president Bill Polian face the unenviable task of dealing with wide receiver Marvin Harrison and running back Edgerrin James, both of whom become free agents after the 2004 season.

"It's a good problem to have when you have great players," Irsay said. "But, yes, it makes things difficult."

Added Dungy: "Obviously we have some really high-priced offensive players, and it becomes tougher to keep high-priced defensive players."

Last offseason, the Colts decided they couldn't afford to re-sign starting weak-side linebacker Mike Peterson. Last month, Washington, a three-year starter at strong-side linebacker, was deemed too expensive to retain.

"It's not that you don't think the players aren't worth it," Dungy said. "It's what you can pay . . . in the total picture."

Committed to maintaining excellence on offense, the Colts compensate by leaning heavily on the draft to strengthen their defense. Their current two-deep defensive chart reflects as much -- 15 of the top 22 are draft picks. Five others are free agents the team signed as rookies. Only two -- linebacker Jim Nelson and tackle Montae Reagor -- were acquired as veteran free agents.

Dungy has not ruled out the Colts pursuing defensive tackle Warren Sapp and safety John Lynch, a pair of Tampa Bay standouts. But financial considerations make a relocation to Indy by either player unlikely.

"You get young players and develop them," Dungy said. "They grow and you get better and better and you improve gradually. You build for the long term.

"I'm not one to look at, 'Well, the window of opportunity is one year or two years, so you've got to do this or that.' You explore every way you can (to) improve your team whether that's trade, free agency, draft choices. But in the long run, you have to continue to bring young talent in. That's the only way you're going to get to the top and stay on top long term."

Candidates to replace Washington include Nelson, Keyon Whiteside and Cato June. Whiteside was a fifth-round draft pick a year ago, while June was selected a round later. But Washington's successor might not be on the roster. The draft contains several intriguing possibilities, such as Miami's Jonathan Vilma and D.J. Williams and Auburn's Karlos Dansby. And don't rule out a second-tier veteran free agent.

Although Harris and Macklin have been deleted from the secondary, the Colts believe two reliable starters will emerge from training-camp competition involving Nick Harper, Donald Strickland and Joseph Jefferson, and perhaps a draft pick. The returning trio has potential, but only Harper has started an NFL game at cornerback. Strickland started eight games at safety as a rookie when injuries sidelined Idrees Bashir and Mike Doss. Jefferson missed the 2003 season after undergoing surgery to address a hernia.

"Growth from within is the principal way we're going to do it," Polian said of upgrading the defense. "We always place heavy emphasis on the draft and even collegiate free agency."

http://www.indystar.com/articles/2/129399-7332-036.html
 

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INDIANAPOLIS (AP) -- Tony Dungy and the Indianapolis Colts have waded patiently through free agency. They've re-signed a handful of backups and made no major additions.

In the past week, things have started to change.

When it appeared free agent defensive tackle Warren Sapp would not return to Tampa Bay, Dungy gave his friend a call. When the Buccaneers released safety John Lynch, Dungy made another call.

Just don't expect the Colts to become Tampa Bay north.

"Personally, I'd love to have Warren and John here," Dungy said Tuesday. "We had special times together for six years, and it would be great to get back together. But where we're sitting financially, I don't know if we're in position to sign them."

Sapp's agent, Drew Rosenhaus, said he has been talking to Baltimore and the Colts as well as several other teams but declined to characterize the extent of the talks.

If Sapp does leave Tampa Bay for a new home, some have speculated he could land in Baltimore where he would be reunited with linebacker Ray Lewis, a former college teammate, or Indianapolis because of his close friendship with Dungy.

"I think relationships are very important," Rosenhaus said. "Every situation has its positives and one of the positives with the Colts would be Tony Dungy and his relationship with Warren."

But could the Colts afford Sapp or Lynch?

Sapp, a seven-time Pro Bowler, made $6.6 million in 2003 in the final season of a six-year, $36 million contract, and said earlier this month he believes he can continue playing at a high level for four more years.

Rosenhaus would not disclose what Sapp is seeking, saying Sapp would be flexible in reaching a new deal and that he was looking to win another Super Bowl ring.

Baltimore and Indianapolis both were in the playoffs last year, with the Colts losing in the AFC Championship Game.

"Warren himself has said he's very interested in getting another ring," Rosenhaus said. "We're trying to find the right fit."

Lynch, a five-time Pro Bowler, was to make $4.1 million in 2004 and $5 million in 2005. Phone messages were left by The Associated Press at the office of Lynch's agent, David Dunn.

Even after clearing almost $10 million of cap room by signing the NFL's co-MVP, Peyton Manning, to a seven-year, $98 million contract, the Colts still may not have enough room under the league's $80.6 million salary cap to make a major move.

President Bill Polian was out of town Tuesday and could not be reached, but he has said that the Colts would take a wait-and-see approach.

"I have spoken with those guys," Dungy said, referring to Lynch and Sapp. "They are excellent football players and, obviously, a lot of organizations want to have a look at them. But we have to look at our picture."

The Colts could use Sapp and Lynch to help solidify the middle of a defense that has struggled to stop the run in recent seasons.

Sapp, a versatile defensive tackle, ended last year within two sacks of become Tampa Bay's all-time leader and Lynch was a hard-hitting safety on one of the league's best defensive units.

But both are now in their 30s, and the Colts have other pressing needs.

After losing linebacker Marcus Washington to Washington, cornerback David Macklin to Arizona and releasing cornerback Walt Harris, the Colts are looking to add depth in both spots.

"We've got to add and we will add, either in the draft or before we go to camp," Dungy said. "We can't go in with what we have right now, but we can't get alarmed."

Dungy said he initially resisted the urge to contact Sapp because he, like others around the league, figured Sapp would re-sign with Tampa Bay.

When it appeared Sapp may not be back with the Bucs, Dungy picked up the phone.

"We've talked a couple of times," Dungy said. "Really up until two or three days ago, I just assumed he'd be going back to Tampa."

Rosenhaus said there haven't been any meaningful negotiations with the Bucs, but he did not rule out the possibility of Sapp's return to the Bucs although he called it a "remote possibility."

Lynch reportedly visited Seattle this week and was reportedly scheduled to visit the New York Jets and head coach Herman Edwards. Lynch and Edwards also developed a close friendship when the two were in Tampa Bay with Dungy.

Still, Dungy isn't sure relationships alone will entice top free agents to sign at a bargain-basement price.

"I think guys want to feel comfortable and fit in," he said. "That's what most guys are looking for."

The question for the Colts is whether they can fit Sapp or Lynch onto the roster -- or, more important, within their financial constraints.

"We're still looking to get some of our own guys back," Dungy said. "It's not really about making a splash. It's about what a guy brings to the table and financially does it make sense."

http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com
 

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A Position-By-Position Look at the Colts (Third of a Series)
INDIANAPOLIS – The preseason storyline may have to change.

And as far as Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy is concerned, when it comes to the Colts’ wide receivers, that’s not bad.

For several seasons, preseason stories on the Colts wide receivers generally focused on Pro Bowl wide receiver Marvin Harrison – not only his prolific numbers, but the inability of Indianapolis to develop a complementary second receiver.

That likely will change this off-season.

Because this past season, the Colts developed complements.

Not only one, but two or three.

“When you look at our six – and we really do go that deep – we’ve got a nice group,” Dungy said.

Harrison, a five-time Pro Bowl selection, was still the Colts’ top receiver this past season and figured to remain so in the future. He made the Pro Bowl for the fifth consecutive season, leading the team in receptions, yards and touchdowns.

But this past season, there were also Reggie Wayne.

And there was Brandon Stokley. And Troy Walters.

The Colts’ top four wide receivers, as a group, combined for 220 receptions for 2,777 and 23 touchdowns, with Wayne, Stokley and Walters combining for 126 receptions for 1,518 yards and 13 touchdowns. All are under contract for next season.

The previous season, the top four wide receivers – Harrison, Wayne, Qadry Ismail and Walters – combined for 254 receptions for 3,107 yards and 18 touchdowns, but Harrison accounted for an NFL-record 143 receptions for 1,722 yards and 11 touchdowns.

The other three combined for 111 receptions for 1,385 yards and seven touchdowns.

The result of the increased production from the second, third and fourth receivers was a diversity previously missing from the Colts’ offense, Dungy said, and the result was a more consistent offense.

“We got a lot of productivity from our wide receivers,” Dungy said. “That’s what we wanted coming into the season, and I think we accomplished that.”

Harrison, a nine-year veteran, finished the 2003 season with 94 receptions – his first season under 100 receptions since 1998 – but he had 1,272 yards receiving and 10 touchdowns. His yards per reception rose a yard and a half from 2002 to 2003.

Harrison also missed a game for the first time since 1998, sitting out the second half of the Colts’ November loss to Jacksonville with a hamstring injury and also missing a 38-31 victory the following week over the New York Jets.

“His play didn’t fall off a bit,” Dungy said. “He had the hamstring injury against Jacksonville where he got one catch. He missed the next game and was really limited the next, so it’s probably two-and-a-half games.

“In a normal situation, that’s probably 15 catches for him. You go from 94 catches to 110 and that’s really a normal year for him. So, I look at it as if he had a normal year and we had four or five other guys playing well, so that’s what you want.”

Wayne, the Colts’ first-round draft choice in 2001, set career-highs with 68 receptions for 838 yards and seven touchdowns, developing into one of the unit’s most effective players following the catch.

“He had a great year blocking, catching the ball, running after the catch,” Dungy said. “He made a lot of big plays.”

Stokley, signed as a free agent before the season from the Baltimore Ravens, missed much of the regular season with injuries, but became a major factor late. He finished the regular season with 22 receptions for 211 yards and three touchdowns, then was key during the AFC Championship Game run, catching 11 post-season passes for 223 yards and three touchdowns.

“When Brandon got healthy, he started making a contribution,” Dungy said.

Walters, after catching 18 passes for 207 yards and no touchdowns while also serving as the team’s punt returner in 2002, filled the third receiver role throughout much of the 2003 regular season in Stokley’s absence. He caught 36 passes for 456 yards and three touchdowns, emerging as a reliable third-down option for Colts quarterback Peyton Manning.

“Troy had a lot of clutch plays, especially early in the year,” Dungy said.

Aaron Moorehead, a rookie free agent, caught seven passes for 101 yards, playing extensively in Harrison’s absence, and a sixth receiver – rookie Brad Pyatt – missed the second half of the season after sustaining a neck injury in Miami. Pyatt, when healthy, doubled as Indianapolis’ punt and kick returner, a role he could play again next season, Dungy said.

“We have quality group, and we feel like we’ve got a good group going forward,” Dungy said. “We’ve got a star player that everyone’s got to contend with when they face us, but then we’ve got guys any number of guys who are capable of having a 100-yard day.

“We’ve got four or five guys like that, and that’s really a situation you want.”

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The president of Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology anticipates the Indianapolis Colts' training camp returning to Terre Haute for a sixth consecutive summer.

"I would say they are coming back for another year," Sam Hulbert said Thursday. "As far as I know, the legal counsel of the Colts and Rose-Hulman's legal counsel are hammering out the lawyers' language.

"I think the details are worked out from Rose-Hulman's point of view."

An agreement with Rose-Hulman would be for one year. Then, there's a strong possibility the Colts will move to Saint Joseph's College in Rensselaer in the summer of 2005.

Owner Jim Irsay acknowledged Thursday the team considered holding training camp in Rensselaer this summer. The city used to host the Chicago Bears' summer camp.

"They can't take us this year," said Irsay, "but Saint Joseph's has a real good shot at 2005."

Matt Pack, the director of continuing education and summer programs at Saint Joseph's, said the school "is very interested in (the Colts) coming here.

"Timing was an issue for us (this summer)," he added, "but (2005) is definitely a possibility."

Whatever decisions are made regarding training camp will be short-term in nature. The future might include holding training camp at the team's Union Federal Football Center, although Irsay conceded there are numerous obstacles that would have to be cleared for that to happen.

Despite Hulbert's optimism for the Colts' return to Terre Haute, Irsay cautioned nothing has been finalized. The team also has looked into holding training camp this summer at Eastern Illinois in Charleston, Ill.

One long-term option has been deleted. The Greater Louisville Sports Commission has ended its bid to lure the Colts' training camp out of state.

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INDIANAPOLIS – The more things change, sometimes, the more they stay the same.

The Colts’ offensive line, long one of the team’s most solid units and a major reason for the team’s extended run of offensive success in recent seasons, underwent major changes and sustained major injuries in 2003.

And still, the success continued:

The third-ranked offense in the NFL.

The second-most points in the NFL.

A fourth playoff berth in five years.

A co-Most Valuable Player season for the quarterback.

“I think our offense was pretty consistent,” Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy said recently. “You have to have outstanding offensive line play to do that.”

The Colts, despite a new starter at right tackle, despite a rookie starting at one guard, despite an injury to a player who is almost never injured, maintained their high level of line play this past season. The reason?

They don’t expect anything less. No matter the circumstances.

“Whoever’s in, we just keep on trucking and play the game,” offensive guard Rick DeMulling said late last season.

That’s been the philosophy on the line since 1998, when Howard Mudd took over as the coach of the unit.

Never has it been more evident than last season. The team not only had new starters at two positions – right tackle Ryan Diem and right guard Steve Sciullo – the most durable player on the line, left tackle Tarik Glenn, missed six games, the first time in his career he missed time with an injury.

Diem also missed time with injury, as did Sciullo.

The only linemen to play the entire season? Center Jeff Saturday, who played all 16 games for a fourth consecutive season, and guard Rick DeMulling, who played all 16 games for the first time in three NFL seasons.

“The gratifying thing was we did go through some injuries,” Dungy said. “We were able to mix and match guys and not really feel like we were in any kind of a tough situation. When you have seven or eight guys you have confidence in, you feel like you’re in good shape on the offensive line.

“We’ve felt like we’ve had that for some time. This past season proved that out, and we feel like we’ll be that way in the future.”

The future won’t be without issues. A reason the line was consistent despite injuries last season was the presence of veteran Adam Meadows, a starter at right tackle from 1998-2003 who became the team’s top backup at guard and tackle last season.

Meadows’ contract was terminated after last season in a salary-cap move, and he signed with the Carolina Panthers shortly thereafter.

Aside from Meadows, the line likely will return mostly intact, Dungy said recently, with Glenn starting at left tackle, DeMulling at left guard, Saturday at center and Diem at right tackle. Glenn has been the starter at left tackle since 1998, DeMulling has started at left guard since 2002, Saturday has started at center since 2000 and Diem took over from Meadows at right tackle last season.

“With DeMulling and Diem really starting to play and play well, it’s a young line,” Dungy said. “Our backup guys are young guys, with really only Jeff and Tarik what you would call veteran players.”

Glenn, who missed six games with a knee injury in October and November, is widely considered one of the NFL’s top left tackles. He will enter his eighth NFL season. In his absence last season, then-rookie Makoa Freitas – a sixth-round draft selection – started six times and played in 12 games.

Saturday in recent seasons has developed into one of the AFC’s top centers, handling line audibles in an offense that routinely calls the majority of its plays at the line of scrimmage.

Diem, after playing as a reserve at tackle at times during his first two seasons, moved to the position full-time last season. He missed four games with an ankle injury, and Dungy said he improved as the season continued. DeMulling, like Diem, continued developing in his third NFL season, becoming more comfortable as the season continued, Dungy said.

“He took a step up and played with a lot more confidence,” Dungy said of DeMulling. “He really felt sure of himself, which is probably from being in his second season as a starter. Ryan was starting to get into that groove, got hurt, and came back in the lineup. Rick really played that way all year.”

An area undecided entering the mini-camp and off-season program likely will be right guard, Dungy said. Sciullo, a fourth-round draft choice last season, started the first 12 games last season, but fourth-year veteran Tupe Peko started the final regular-season game and all three post-season games.

“I think it’s going to be pretty competitive,” Dungy said. “We’re going in feeling that way. Tupe, the more he got a chance to play, the better he played. He did a good job in the playoff games. He played well.”

While Dungy said replacing Meadows’ experience and versatility will be difficult, he said the Colts have been addressing the possibility for several seasons. He missed two games in 2002 with a hip injury, and missed the last two games of 2003.

“We experienced it last year,” Dungy said. “With him injured, we had to develop some other guys. You need versatility, and those guys showed that.

“Overall, what we have are a bunch of guys who are versatile and who believe they’re going to play well no matter who is out there. They deserve a lot of credit for that.”

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INDIANAPOLIS – Through three months of the 2003 NFL season, the Colts had a near-ideal tight end situation.

They had veteran Marcus Pollard.

They had rookie Dallas Clark.

Together, the duo gave the Colts one of the NFL’s top tight end combinations, a combination that helped give the Colts one of the league’s most potent offenses. Clark, the Colts’ first-round selection in the 2003 NFL Draft from the University of Iowa, sustained a leg injury in late November that kept him out the rest of the season.

Still, Clark’s progress made Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy sure of two things:

The Colts were very good at tight end last season.

And they should get even better.

“You look back and see some of the plays that Dallas was making early in the year, he’s going to help us . . . a lot,” Dungy said recently.

Clark’s addition helped the Colts return to a predominately two-tight end style of offense that had been their staple since 1998, one they couldn’t use as effectively in 2002.

From 1998, offensive coordinator Tom Moore and quarterback Peyton Manning’s first season with the Colts, until 2001, Indianapolis emphasized the two-tight end scheme. Ken Dilger, a former second-round draft choice and an equally adept blocker and receiver, combined with Pollard to give the Colts two proven players at the position.

Then, in the 2002 off-season, the Colts terminated Dilger’s contract in a salary-cap related move.

In 2002, Pollard and several tight ends shared the spot. The position was effective, but not as productive as in seasons past.

Pollard, after catching a career-high 47 passes for 739 yards and eight touchdowns in 2001, caught 43 passes for 478 yards and six touchdowns in 2002. In 2001, the Colts’ tight ends caught 79 passes for 1,082 yards and nine touchdowns.

In 2002, the numbers slipped to 55 receptions for 565 yards and six touchdowns.

The addition of Clark brought the production back.

Pollard caught 40 passes for 541 yards and three touchdowns in 2003; Clark caught 29 passes in 10 games for 340 yards and a touchdown.

For the season, Colts tight ends combined for 72 receptions for 904 yards and four touchdowns, numbers Dungy said would have been higher had Clark played the entire season.

“As a coach, when you know you don’t have someone you try to put it out of your mind,” Dungy said. “We did that, but when you see some of the plays he was making, we missed him. He’ll be so much better this year, having a year to be accustomed to the offense.

“I would expect him to really blossom this year.”

The Colts kept Clark on the active roster after his injury, although he did not play a down after the first half of a loss to New England on November 30. The idea was that he may have been able to play had the Colts reached the Super Bowl.

Wit Clark out, the Colts signed veteran Pete Mitchell for the end of the regular season and the playoffs. He has not been re-signed, nor has Joe Dean Davenport, the team’s third tight end the past two seasons.

The Colts lost in the AFC Championship Game, and Clark was cleared medically to play shortly thereafter. He is expected to be 100 percent for mini-camp and the team’s off-season workout program, Dungy said recently.

“He has a chance to be a very unique player in this offense,” Dungy said. “Tom (Moore) does a lot of things in terms of moving the tight ends around and creating mismatches. He’s going to get opportunities and he blocked very well.

“He’s actually a better blocker than people give him credit for. Barring another injury, I think he’s going to be on his way to being very productive.”

Pollard, the most tenured player on the Colts’ roster, has been productive throughout Moore’s time with the team. He has caught at least 30 passes every season since 1999, and since 1998, he has 28 touchdown receptions, the second most on the team behind wide receiver Marvin Harrison during that span.

“His year got more productive after we lost Dallas,” Dungy said. “He got to do more receiving, more moving. That’s really to his strong suit. He had a solid year through the first eight games, too, when he was doing more of the blocking.”

Pollard said during the season that he embraced his role as a blocker more than in previous seasons.

“I think he did, and he’s going to have to that next year as well,” Dungy said. “We’ve got to find ways to keep him involved, and let him do things he does well.

“That was a role change for him, and having those two guys makes us strong there for the future. I think our tight end position is really in good shape.”

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Cory Bird has re-signed with the Indianapolis Colts. The veteran safety signed the one-year, $628,000 restricted free agent tender the team issued in late February.

Bird was a third-round draft pick in 2001 who has appeared in 32 games, four as a starter. He was one of the Colts' top special teams players in 2003, totaling 20 tackles.

http://www.indystar.com/articles/7/135127-1657-036.html
 

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Along the Colts’ defensive line, success generally revolves around three areas:

Rotation, rotation, rotation.

The Colts had a solid rotation last season. Not perfect in the view of Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy, but very good at times and good enough to help Indianapolis to a 12-4 record, an AFC South title and a spot in the AFC Championship Game.

Now, with defensive end Chad Bratzke released and not re-signed, the Colts have one less veteran on the defensive line.

Can the rotation be as good?

Can it improve?

Dungy believes it can, and believes improving the defensive line play is one of the keys to making the defensive improvements he believes still necessary to advance out of the AFC playoffs and into the Super Bowl.

“We were able to rotate a lot of guys, and have them play well – especially on the front,” Dungy said recently. “It’s been a big part of our success, and we feel like it will continue to be next season.”

The Colts made a major step this off-season toward keeping the rotation. Days before the free-agency period began, they re-signed defensive tackle Josh Williams to a long-term deal. That gives the Colts a three-man rotation at tackle of Williams and third-year veteran Larry Tripplett and sixth-year veteran Montae Reagor.

Reagor, after signing as a free agent last off-season from the Denver Broncos, started 12 of 13 games played, registering 38 tackles – 33 solos – and forcing and recovering a fumble. Tripplett, a 2002 second-round draft selection, had 62 tackles, 49 solo, and also had a sack. He started 16 of 16 regular-season games and all three playoff games.

Williams, a fifth-year veteran, started four of 16 games and played in all three playoff games. He had 33 tackles, 21 solos, and a sack in the regular season.

In the Colts’ Cover 2, one-gap scheme, tackle is crucial, but end is also key, because for the scheme to work effectively, the front must pressure the opposing quarterback without constantly needing help from blitzing linebackers.

“It’s important, because you have to be good on the line for this defense to work,” Dungy said. “It’s a matter of continuing to bring the right guys in. Our personnel department has done a great job since we’ve gotten here (before the 2002 season). We’ve added a lot of good young players to a core of guys who were already here.

“We’ve actually added about six guys to a group of three we had. Now, it’s a matter of continuing to do that.”

End Dwight Freeney, the Colts’ first-round draft selection in 2002, became the first Colts defensive player named to the Pro Bowl since 1987. He started 13 of 15 games, registering 11 sacks, forcing four fumbles and recovering two fumbles. Freeney also started all three post-season games, and had eight tackles, a sack and a forced fumble.

“He played better than he did the year before,” Dungy said. “He had to realize there are going to be teams that try to negate him. Learning how to deal with that is the next step in his development. He did a good job with that.

“He had some stretches where he got a little frustrated, but all in all, he did better.”

End Raheem Brock, who will enter his third season next season, started 16 games opposite Freeney, finishing with two sacks and three fumble recoveries.

Also returning next season: veteran end/tackle Brad Scioli and Robert Mathis, an end who had an impact as a pass rusher as a rookie last season. Mathis played in all 16 games and three playoff games, finishing with three and a half sacks. Scioli also played in all 16 regular-season games and three post-season games.

Bratzke, who started three of 16 games, played both end and tackle last season. His possible loss could hurt the depth across the line, Dungy said, but he said the Colts are excited about the addition of tackle Keith Wright, who spent time on the practice squad last season.

“We play a lot of guys, especially along the front,” Dungy said. “Brad Scioli and Robert Mathis were a big part of that. Keith Wright – we’re looking forward to getting him in the rotation. If you lose that for any reason – whether it’s injuries or salary-cap reasons – you’ve got to find guys who can fit that niche and replace them.

“It’s not always easy. Chad was a great leader for us, set the tempo for us and played really three different spots. He could play in big situations and we all had confidence in him. That’s going to be an issue if we don’t have him back.”

Dungy said often last season the line needed to improve for the defense to reach its potential. He said recently that’s still true – and said what must particularly improve is consistency against the run on early downs. Forcing opponents into obvious passing situations enables a better pass rush on later downs. That leads to increased turnovers, which Dungy believes should be the strength of the defense.

“We’re getting there,” Dungy said. “They’re playing the way we want to play. We’ve just got to do it on a more consistent basis, but I think we have the talent level just about where we want it to be.

“Our whole group on defense just has to understand the level we need to play. We played it at a winning level several times, but we didn’t do it week in and week out. Now, that has to be the challenge – that every week we’re at a level we need to be.

“That, to me, is the next step for this group.”

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The Indianapolis Colts could solidify one spot on their offensive line this week. Starting guard Rick DeMulling appears ready to sign the team's one-year offer of $1.368 million.

Signing the other starter, right tackle Ryan Diem, may require a little more patience.

"I think he'll probably sign in the next day or so," said Ken Staninger, DeMulling's agent. "The way he was tendered, it pretty much took him off the market."

The Colts have been one of the league's quietest teams in this year's free-agent market since agreeing to a $98 million deal with four-time Pro Bowl quarterback Peyton Manning last month.

Instead of pursuing other team's free agents, the Colts have instead tried to focus on keeping their own players. Even that has proved challenging.

The only significant signing so far has been backup safety Cory Bird, who agreed to the team's one-year offer of $628,000.

Three starters - Diem, DeMulling and cornerback Nick Harper - still have not signed the one-year offers the Colts made to the restricted free agents. A message was left at the office of Harper's agent, Hadley Engelhard. The Colts also have offered backup running back Dominic Rhodes, another restricted free agent, a one-year tender of $628,000.

Restricted free agents are permitted to sign offer sheets with other teams until Friday, but the Colts could match the offer and would receive compensation if they decided to let the player go.

Based on the offers, the Colts would receive a first round pick for Diem, DeMulling and Harper. They would get no compensation for Rhodes, who entered the league as an undrafted free agent.

While DeMulling is prepared to sign within days, Diem's signing may not come so soon.

Diem's agent, Clifford Brady, said he received the contract Monday and acknowledged the real deadline was June 1.

"It may be this week," Brady said. "He's been in no rush to signing, but it gets to the point where it's like 'Why not sign it now?' "

The bigger question may be what happens after next season.

Diem and DeMulling would join running back Edgerrin James, a former two-time league rushing champ, and five-time Pro Bowl wide receiver Marvin Harrison as unrestricted free agents off the Colts' high-scoring offense.

Staninger and Brady aren't sure there's enough money for all four players under the NFL's salary cap, which will likely increase from this year's $80.6 million total. And on the open market, both agents figure their clients could get a big raise.

"I think if he hits the unrestricted market next year, he'll get a John Tait type deal," Brady said, referring to the six-year, $33 million deal Tait signed with the Chicago Bears in March.

Staninger and Brady both said their players like Indianapolis and would like to negotiate a long-term deal with the Colts, but discussions have not yet begun.

"Those are the types of big decisions you have to make," Brady said.

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/sports/8415780.htm
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
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New year, same story.

A year ago, the Colts had improved on defense, made the playoffs and almost as soon as the season ended, they lost a starting linebacker.

This past February, the Colts had again improved defensively the previous season, and made the AFC Championship Game. Then, almost as soon as the season ended, starting outside linebacker Marcus Washington signed with the Washington Redskins as an unrestricted free agent.

The circumstances were strikingly similar: As was the case the previous off-season, when weakside linebacker Mike Peterson signed as a free agent with Jacksonville, the Colts liked Washington, and very much wanted to retain him. The salary cap made it impossible.

A year ago, second-year veteran David Thornton replaced Peterson and filled in capably, leading the Colts in tackles and receiving late-season Pro Bowl consideration.

New year, same story?

“We think so,” Colts Head Coach Tony Dungy said. “We think somebody can step in.”

A key question facing the Colts during the off-season is just who that someone is, and by extension, just how the 2004 linebacking corps will take shape.

With a week and a half remaining before the NFL Draft, the Colts’ linebackers with extensive NFL experience are as follows:

--- Thornton, who started 16 games at weak-side backer last season.

--- Rob Morris, who started 16 games at middle linebacker last season.

--- Jim Nelson, a reserve who played seven games and missed nine with a clavicle injury.

--- Gary Brackett, a reserve who played extensively on special teams as a rookie free agent last season, which he spent as the backup middle linebacker.

Also on the roster are 2003 draft selections Cato June and Keyon Whiteside, each of whom played a key role on special teams last season. Neither played significantly on defense.

“The thing about it was David had gotten to play a little bit, so this time last year we had a sense that we could say for sure about him,” Dungy said. “But I think, from what we’ve seen in practices, that one of those three guys – whether it’s Gary, Cato or Keyon – should be able to step in and do it.”

Dungy, who said the position also could be addressed early in next weekend’s draft, said while he is confident in the linebackers on the roster, little is yet known about exactly who will line up where next season.

“We hope to draft there, but we’ve got some good young players here – guys who didn’t get much of a chance to play last year,” Dungy said. “We think they can play.”

Dungy said Thornton could move to Washington’s strong-side spot, and with the current lineup, Brackett could move to Thornton’s weak-side spot. Whiteside and June also could play the outside positions, Dungy said.

“We just haven’t seen enough of Keyon and Cato to see where they fit in,” Dungy said. “I think between those three guys we have a pretty good rotation. Those guys – Keyon, Cato and Gary – will get more of an opportunity in the off-season.

“Then, whoever we’re able to draft will be in the mix, too.”

Thornton, who finished the season with 158 tackles – 104 solos – had played extensively as a rookie in nickel packages and on special teams. That experience made him a known entity entering last season, and he replaced Peterson effectively from the start, recording a team-high eight games with double-digit tackles in the regular season, and finishing the playoffs with 26 tackles and two passes defensed in three games.

Morris, the starter at middle linebacker the past three seasons, hasn’t missed a game since 2001. He had 105 tackles last season, 54 solos, and also had one pass defensed.

Washington, who started 16 games for a second time in three seasons, developed into a pass-rushing presence last season, finishing the season with 97 tackles – 56 solos – and also finishing with six sacks, four more than he had the previous season.

Brackett, who started four preseason games when Morris was injured, finished the season with 16 defensive tackles and a sack. He also had 10 tackles in the playoffs, and finished as one of the Colts’ top special teams players. Nelson, who signed as a free agent before last season from Minnesota, had developed into one of the Colts’ top defensive reserves before being injured in October. He finished with 16 tackles and had two crucial early interceptions in a late September victory over New Orleans.

“This is a pretty critical area to this defense,” Dungy said. “We ask them to do a lot and we don’t substitute a whole, whole lot. We don’t play a lot of dime packages with one linebacker. We’ve got at least two guys who are playing all the time, so, it is critical. We’d like to have continuity, but it doesn’t always work that way.

“We’ve just got to keep developing guys who can step in and play. We’re pretty confident we’ll be able to do that.”

http://www.colts.com/
 

Another Day, Another Dollar
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1 Thu Sep 9 at New England 9:00 PM
2 Sun Sep 19 at Tennessee 1:00 PM
3 Sun Sep 26 Green Bay 5
Sun Oct 10 Oakland 1:00 PM
6 BYE WEEK
7 Sun Oct 24 Jacksonville 1:00 PM
8 Sun Oct 31 at Kansas City 1:00 PM
9 Mon Nov 8 Minnesota 9:00 PM
10 Sun Nov 14 Houston 1:00 PM
11 Sun Nov 21 at Chicago 1:00 PM
12 Thu Nov 25 at Detroit 12:30 PM
13 Sun Dec 5 Tennessee 1:00 PM
14 Sun Dec 12 at Houston 1:00 PM
15 Sun Dec 19 Baltimore 8:30 PM
16 Sun Dec 26 San Diego 1:00 PM
17 Sun Jan 2 at Denver 4:15 PM
 

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Indianapolis Colts president Bill Polian doesn't mind facing questions on this subject from players, reporters or even fans.

Like the fan who, after Polian gave a motivational speech last month at IPFW, stood up and asked: "I'd like to know why the Colts didn't sign John Lynch or Warren Sapp, two of the marquee defensive players on the market, especially given your coach's relationship with those players?"

Polian doesn't mind being questioned on this because he believes it is results that are important. He thinks the Colts' 53-30 record over the last five seasons, and an appearance in the AFC Championship game in January, speak for themselves.

He believes he's demonstrated through the years that his philosophy, which is to not overpay for free agents and to build through the draft, is a wise credo.

"We're a draft-driven team," said Polian, whose Colts are preparing for the NFL draft April 24 and 25.

Every year, as the offseason begins, the Colts' personnel and coaching departments get together, sift through the pile of names of potential free agents and assign a dollar figure to those players.

Then the Colts decide which players they want to pursue, reminding themselves every step of the way not to go a single dollar above a player's worth.

"We think this is the value that's on the guy," Polian said, "and we don't pick it out of the air; we work very hard to make sure it's the right value."

Of course, when players like Lynch or Sapp are available - they played for Colts coach Tony Dungy when he was in Tampa Bay - getting into a bidding war can be a difficult urge to resist.

"You've got all kinds of internal discussions about that, where the pro personnel people say, 'Go ahead, pay the extra $300,000,' " Polian said. "Or the coaches will say, 'Boy, we really need this guy.'

"But that's the time when you have to have some discipline and say, 'No, we have a plan and we're sticking with it."

And yes, Dungy was very interested in bringing in Lynch and Sapp. Lynch signed with Denver and Sapp with Oakland.

Polian's system may cost the Colts the hoopla of signing a big-name free agent every year - see if you can name the last such player the team got, and Qadry Ismail doesn't qualify - and it may make them a nightmare for player agents, but it allows the Colts the financial leeway to keep players they treasure.

Quarterback Peyton Manning, for example, signed a seven-year, $98 million contract, the largest in team history, in early March. Had the Colts gone after the guys some within the franchise wanted, it would have been more difficult to keep the NFL's co-MVP.

"Whether you call them 'Hall of Famers' or 'impact players,' whatever, there are only a handful of players where you think you'll come even close to meeting the agents' demands," Polian said.

"And those players are usually your own because those are the ones you know the best. You know what their flaws are, what their positives are and what they mean to you."

But staying away from the big-name free agents, the proven stars, means the Colts have to annually find a few gems in the draft. That's again the case this year, when they're likely to focus on improving their defense.

The Colts' first pick is 29th overall, and they'll have eight total picks.

"We'll be OK," Polian said. "We think we'll get at least four players who can step in and contribute right away. Tony believes in young players and believes in challenging them by putting them out there and getting them ready to play."

Not that the Colts really have a choice but to rely on young players.

"This (NFL) system is designed, if you're a good team, to make you lose players," Polian said. "That's the essence of this system. The NBA system is different. The NBA's system is designed to make you keep your players, because the home team can always bid more than the outside team. ... Unlike baseball and the NBA, our (salary) cap doesn't forgive and it doesn't forget."

But sometimes, neither do the fans.

http://www.fortwayne.com
 

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