The Colts didn’t just trade for Sauce Gardner. They bought into a player evaluation battle that has followed him since he entered the league.
Indianapolis gave up two first-round picks in the 2026 and 2027 NFL Drafts, plus Adonai Mitchell, to land one of the NFL’s best pure cover corners. That price alone has made the move one of the most debated in recent Colts history. But the bigger shock for some fans is starting to look familiar: once Gardner is in the spotlight, the criticism tends to come fast and loud.
CBS Sports’ Pete Prisco added another layer to that conversation by ranking Gardner as the 23rd-best player in the NFL...aged 25 or younger, then placing him 48th overall. For a cornerback with All-Pro honors and a reputation built on shutting down receivers, that kind of placement is hard to square.
It’s the same old story Jets fans already knew well. Gardner’s game gets picked apart in ways that can make his elite status look up for debate, even though the evidence keeps pointing the other direction. The question of how Cooper DeJean could be ranked above him is part of that broader disconnect.
The numbers from Gardner’s early years tell a pretty clear story. In each of his first two seasons, both of which ended with All-Pro recognition, he was near the top of coverage metrics.
Even after a dip from those peak numbers, his yards per route run against stayed near the bottom of the league. That’s the kind of profile that explains why the Jets paid him $30 million per year and why the Colts were willing to pay such a steep price.
The knocks on Gardner are familiar ones: he’s not viewed as a great tackler, and he doesn’t pile up interceptions. But elite corners rarely get a steady stream of chances to make picks when quarterbacks avoid them. His tackling has improved over the last few years, even if it still isn’t the part of his game that stands out.
That weakness has become a favorite target for critics, who use it as a shortcut to diminish everything else he does. The truth is simpler. He is not Patrick Surtain II right now, but he is much closer to that level than he is to DeJean.
There’s a real discussion to be had about whether Indianapolis gave up too much and whether a cornerback should be the centerpiece of an all-in push. What doesn’t hold up is the idea that Gardner himself is anything less than an elite shutdown player.
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 🡒]
