The Colts didn’t just hand CJ Allen a chance this offseason. They handed him a job with weight on it.
Indianapolis moved on from starting MIKE linebacker Zaire Franklin by trading him to the Green Bay Packers, then turned around and used a second-round pick on Georgia’s CJ Allen to step into that spot. It was a clear bet on youth, upside and a player the Colts had been tracking for a while.
“CJ, we've liked CJ through the whole process,” Colts general manager Chris Ballard said after the draft.
“He stands for all the right stuff. He's an athletic, fast MIKE.
He'll be a green-dot guy for us from the get-go. I mean, he's a face-of-the-program type of guy.
He's a really special dude now. Loves to play, serious about football.”
That kind of praise tells you exactly how Indianapolis sees him. But it also tells you why the spotlight is already hot. Allen isn’t just arriving with a clean path to playing time; he’s arriving with expectations that come with replacing a productive starter.
CBS Sports’ Josh Edwards put Allen at No. 9 on a list of 10 rookie draft picks under the most pressure to perform in 2026, noting that Allen was once viewed by some draft analysts as a possible first-rounder before slipping to the second round. Edwards also pointed out that the Colts no longer have familiar names at linebacker like Shaq Leonard, Zaire Franklin, Anthony Walker or E.J. Speed, which leaves Allen with a real opening to seize the role.
“Allen was at one-time regarded as a potential first-round pick by several in draft media, but was not taken until the second round,” Edwards wrote. “Indianapolis no longer has recognizable names like Shaq Leonard, Zaire Franklin, Anthony Walker, or E.J.
Speed at the linebacker position, so the Colts need Allen to step up and take ownership of the role. His primary competition is traveled veteran Akeem Davis-Gaither and fourth-round selection Bryce Boettcher.”
The Colts are clearly excited about what they got. Defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo sounded just as sold on Allen’s makeup and football instincts, while also making it clear the team isn’t planning to dump everything on him at once.
“I just think everything about him and his makeup, both on and off the field. Coach (Kirby) Smart down there at Georgia thinks the world of the guy.
Has played a ton of football there,” Anarumo said. “He is all about football - the old school gym rat.
He just wants to get better at playing football. He's a great leader for them.
We're not going to ask him to do all that when he first gets here. We just want to let him be the best version of himself that he can be, and then we'll kind of take it from there.
But certainly has a skill set to help us out.”
Allen, for his part, has already started acting like a player who knows what’s coming. Anarumo said he’s been showing up early and putting in work before practice, leaning on the coaching staff as he gets ready for the challenge ahead.
“He's in here every day super early, getting his work done before practice,” Anarumo recently said about Allen. “Yeah, really excited about where he's at.”
In Other News...
Colts Linked To Troubling Terrion Arnold Interest During Legal Drama
Terrion Arnolds legal situation took another turn this week when he appeared in court for a hearing tied to whether he would have to wear a GPS monitor while on house arrest as he awaits trial on felony charges. His agent told the court that interest in Arnold has not gone away, with multiple NFL teams still checking in even as he remains confined to his home except for work and legal meetings.
For the Colts, the intrigue is less about the courtroom mechanics and more about what happens next with a player whose football future is still drawing attention despite the off-field uncertainty. Indianapolis is among the teams that have inquired, and the broader picture now centers on how much appetite there is around the league to keep pursuing him while his legal case continues to play out. [Read more 🡒]
Colts Linebacker Overhaul May Not Be Done After All
The Colts have already spent part of the offseason reworking their off-ball linebacker group, moving on from Zaire Franklin and bringing in Akeem Davis-Gaither as they try to reshape the middle of the defense. Even with those changes, the position still looks like an area that could use another steady hand, especially for a unit that wants more reliability and leadership in the front seven.
One name that continues to make sense is Bobby Wagner, whose resume still carries real weight because of his tackling, consistency and the way he has stayed productive deep into his career. His experience would also give the Colts another veteran voice for younger defenders to lean on, and with his market value projected in the mid-range for 2026, the question is whether Indianapolis is willing to keep pushing on a linebacker overhaul that may not be finished yet. [Read more 🡒]
Chris Ballard Linked To A Colts Move Fans Will Absolutely Question
A surprising Colts rumor surfaced this week when reporting from Dave Birkett linked Indianapolis to cornerback Terrion Arnold, one of several teams said to be interested in a player whose off-field situation has already made any football discussion complicated. Arnolds agent said in a court hearing that he has had one visit with a team and is expected to have another, which only adds to the sense that clubs are at least kicking the tires even as the legal cloud hangs over everything.
For Indianapolis, the fit is what makes the idea hard to square. The Colts already have depth at cornerback, so a move like this would have to clear a lot of football and non-football hurdles before it made much sense on the roster. And with the risk tied to Arnolds case and the possibility of an NFL suspension looming, it is the kind of link that will naturally leave fans wondering why the team would even be in the conversation. [Read more 🡒]
