The Colts’ 2025 season showed both sides of the same coin: a team good enough to race out to a 7-1 start and ugly enough to finish 8-9. That collapse left Indianapolis with another losing year under General Manager Chris Ballard, his fifth in nine seasons on the job, along with just four winning seasons and one playoff win to his name as he heads into year 10.
That backdrop is why the 2026 conversation feels so loaded. If the Colts are going to get back to that first-half version of themselves, they may have to make a move that carries some real risk. One name that fits that mold is Brandon Aiyuk.
It sounds aggressive, sure, but it would still be a smaller swing than the two first-round picks Indianapolis sent for Sauce Gardner last year. And with the Brandon Aiyuk situation in San Francisco getting messier by the day, the door is at least cracked open.
Aiyuk is not going to play for the 49ers anymore, and while San Francisco likely wants to trade him, there does not appear to be a long line of teams ready to jump in. That creates an interesting possibility for the Colts, especially after they sent Michael Pittman Jr. to the Pittsburgh Steelers earlier this offseason. With Alec Pierce and Josh Downs in place as a solid complementary pairing, Indianapolis has room for another receiver.
The contract math also matters here. As the source laid out: "San Francisco would have taken on $29.6 million in dead money for the upcoming season by trading Aiyuk before June 1.
In a post-June 1 trade, the 49ers would only take on $8.3 million of dead money. Cutting Aiyuk, per Over the Cap, would save the team $6.3 million on the salary cap and bring about a $7.36 million dead money hit."
That opens up another path entirely. If the 49ers decide they simply want out, they could release him, and that would give the Colts a chance to sign him for what could be the minimum.
For a franchise that may have multiple jobs riding on 2026, the appeal is obvious. Indianapolis already made a notable receiver move this offseason, and adding Aiyuk would fit the idea of a low-risk, high-reward gamble.
Ballard has often been criticized for not showing enough aggression during his time in Indianapolis. The Gardner deal marked a clear step in a more forceful direction, and the recent free-agent work has also looked more assertive than what Colts fans are used to seeing.
Now, with a decade on the job and very little to point to in the way of sustained success, the Colts may be reaching the point where taking a shot on Aiyuk is exactly the kind of risk worth making.
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His path gets a little more interesting because of Lou Anarumo, the Colts defensive coordinator, who coached Taylor-Britt in Cincinnati for three seasons. That connection gives him a built-in layer of familiarity, but it does not change the basic reality of camp - he still has to win over a roster spot against other contenders and prove he belongs in the mix when the decisions get tight. [Read more 🡒]
