The Colts’ Nightmare Continues: Charvarius Ward To IR, Philip Rivers Returns, and a Season On Life Support
If you listen closely, you can actually hear the collective groan of Indianapolis. It’s a sound that has been building for weeks, transforming a season that started with Super Bowl dreams into a survival horror movie.
The latest blow came down on Wednesday, and it’s a heavy one. The Colts have placed Pro Bowl Cornerback Charvarius Ward on injured reserve. This isn’t just a “tweak” or a “strain.” Ward is dealing with his third concussion of the season.
This goes way beyond football. We aren’t just talking about pass breakups or interceptions here; we are talking about a human being’s long-term health. Ward admitted to The Athletic that the symptoms have been brutal—dizziness, vomiting, and an inability to function in daily life. He even confessed that retirement crossed his mind.
When a player of his caliber starts thinking about hanging up the cleats because he can’t stop the room from spinning, the game becomes secondary. Shutting him down for at least the final four games wasn’t just a roster move; it was the only humane choice the franchise could make.
The “Super Team” Secondary That Never Was
Remember the trade deadline? It feels like five years ago. The Colts pushed all their chips into the middle of the table, trading two first-round picks for Sauce Gardner. The vision was crystal clear: pair Gardner with Ward and Kenny Moore to form a “No Fly Zone” that would terrorize the AFC.
Instead, the football gods laughed.
That trio, arguably the most talented collection of defensive backs on paper, has played exactly one full game together. Gardner is currently hobbling around with a calf strain he picked up against the Texans. DeForest Buckner, the anchor of the defensive line, hasn’t seen the field since Week 9 because of a neck injury. The defense that was supposed to carry this team deep into January is now being held together by duct tape and prayers.
A Quarterback Room Out of a Horror Movie
If the defensive injuries are tragic, the offensive injuries are bordering on slapstick comedy. You almost have to admire the creativity of the misfortune here.
It started with Anthony Richardson. The young gunslinger didn’t get hurt on a scramble or a sack. No, he suffered an orbital fracture due to an “elastic band mishap” while stretching. You literally cannot make this stuff up. It’s the kind of injury report entry that makes you stare at your phone screen for five minutes just to make sure you’re reading it right.
Then came Daniel Jones. You have to give the guy credit for toughness; he was playing on a fractured fibula. But the body has limits. In Week 14, that limit was reached when he tore his Achilles. Jones is done.
That left the team turning to rookie Riley Leonard, who promptly strained his knee in a loss to the Jaguars. At this rate, the Colts are going to be holding open tryouts in the Lucas Oil Stadium parking lot before kickoff next week.
The Philip Rivers Hail Mary
Desperate times call for… nostalgic measures? With the quarterback room looking like a MASH unit, the Colts made a call to an old friend. Philip Rivers is back. Yes, that Philip Rivers. The 44-year-old hasn’t taken an NFL snap since the 2020 season, but he’s currently on the practice squad.
Is this insane? Probably. Is it also the most electric storyline of the week? Absolutely. Rivers knows Shane Steichen’s system. He has the experience. Does he have the arm strength or the durability to survive an NFL pass rush at 44? That remains to be seen. But right now, with Brett Rypien as the only other healthy option, Rivers feels like the team’s last, desperate grasp at relevance.
Can Indianapolis Save Its Season?
Here is the cold, hard reality. The Colts started this year 7-1. They were the darlings of the league, the team nobody wanted to play. Since then? They’ve dropped four of their last five games. They are sitting at 8-5, clinging to the 8th seed in the AFC, currently looking in from the outside of the playoff bracket.
They have a massive showdown with the 10-3 Seahawks in Week 15. The roster is decimated. The momentum is gone. The vibes are bad.
But this is the NFL. It’s a league where a 44-year-old quarterback can come off the couch to save the day, and where a team written off for dead can find a spark. The Colts are down, battered, and bruised. But until the math says zero, they aren’t out.
