Many general managers say that the best way to build an NFL roster is to draft well, develop the in-house talent, and extend that talent rather than plunging too frequently into the free agent waters, where lurk significant overpays and the dead money charges they engender.
Perhaps no GM adheres so rigidly to that approach as Colts top exec Chris Ballard. After narrowly missing out on a 2023 playoff berth despite playing most of the season with a backup quarterback, many expected Ballard to pull off a high-end free agent signing or two in order to address his rosterโs most glaring weaknesses and position the club for a postseason run in 2024.
After all, Indianapolisโ starting signal-caller, Anthony Richardson, is entering the second year of his rookie deal, and while he played in just four games in his injury-marred debut campaign, he certainly showed flashes of the high-end two-way ability that made him the No. 4 overall pick of the 2023 draft. And when a club with a potentially postseason-worthy roster has its QB on a cost-controlled contract, that club is better able to make a foray into free agency or to acquire an established veteran via trade.
Last season, the Colts fielded a defense that was in the bottom-10 in terms of total yardage and bottom-five in terms of points allowed. The secondary was a major culprit, but as Joel A. Erickson of the Indianapolis Star points out, the only new defensive back on the roster is Samuel Womack, whom the club recently claimed off waivers.ย
Indianapolis did not even make an offer to safety Justin Simmons before he recently signed with the Falcons, and the Colts will largely run it back with the same secondary that struggled so mightily last year. Ballard, though, is unwavering in his commitment to his roster-building principles.
โI still have a strong belief in what weโre doing, how weโre doing it and how weโre going to get there,โ he said. โThat will not waver. Itโs easy to vacillate, easy to vacillate and go with what the world wants you to do. You either believe in something or you donโt. This is what we believe. If it gets me fired, so be it.โ
To be fair, Ballard did suggest that he considered other moves that did not come to fruition.ย
โThings donโt always work out, even when youโre trying to acquire a player,โ he said. โNot saying we didnโt try to do some things. Sometimes it just doesnโt happen.โ
Julian Blackmon, who turned in a solid individual showing in…