Jonathan Taylor Faces A Colts Question That Could Shape Everything

As Jonathan Taylor continues to break records and evolve his game, the Colts are counting on their star running back to lead a potent offense into the new season.

The Colts spent big this offseason to shore up the offense, locking in Daniel Jones on a two-year, $88 million deal and Alec Pierce on a four-year, $114 million contract. But if you ask ESPN’s Mike Clay, the real engine of this team still sits in the backfield.

Clay pegged Jonathan Taylor and the Colts’ running backs as Indianapolis’ biggest strength, and it’s not hard to see why. Taylor just put together the best all-around season of his career, one that ended with his third Pro Bowl and a pile of numbers that made him impossible to ignore.

He led the NFL in carries with 323, rushing first downs with 84, rushing touchdowns with 18 and total touchdowns with 20. He also finished second in touches with 369, third in rushing yards with 1,585 and third in yards from scrimmage with 1,963. On top of that, he ranked eighth among running backs in receiving first downs with 15 and tied for 10th in yards per carry at 4.9.

That production wasn’t limited to the ground game. Taylor set career highs in pass targets with 55, receptions with 46 and receiving yards with 378, while tying his single-season best with two receiving touchdowns. He also posted new highs in receiving first downs (15), receiving success rate (54.5%) and pass protection grade (58.6), according to Pro Football Focus.

Clay pointed to that growth in the passing game while noting that Taylor’s production dipped after Daniel Jones suffered a season-ending Achilles injury in Week 14. Even so, Taylor’s season was still loaded with impact plays: eight games with at least 100 yards from scrimmage, including three with 150 or more, plus five games with at least three touchdowns.

The workload conversation, though, isn’t going away. Taylor has now posted three seasons with more than 300 touches, and Colts coach Shane Steichen said the team will keep an eye on how the backfield pieces fit together.

"I think he led the league last year in carries, but talking to him after the season, he said he felt good," Steichen said. "But yeah, obviously he's a (heck) of a player. It's hard to take him off the field when he's running so good, but getting Seth (McGowan) in the fold and DJ (Giddens), and see how those guys come along in training camp, and we'll go from there."

Taylor isn’t losing sleep over the topic.

"They're going to talk about it every single year. You talk about it every single year until something happens and you're like, ‘Ah, there it is,’" Taylor said.

"It's just how you prepare. I mean, like ever since college, it's preparing for the type of workload you're going to have, whether it's more, whether it's less, but then it's also finding - you guys know, I'm big on recovery.

And it starts immediately after the game, but also in the offseason, you’ve got to find that good balance of restoring the body and then knowing how to pace yourself in order to build your body back up."

Taylor’s résumé keeps growing, too. He passed Hall of Famer Edgerrin James for the franchise career rushing touchdown record and now sits 1,629 rushing yards away from overtaking him there as well.

The bigger question for Indianapolis is whether Taylor gets a real partner in the run game in 2026. Giddens, a rookie last season, wasn’t ready for third-down passing-game work and didn’t play special teams, which limited him to nine games. McGowan, also a rookie, brings a more urgent, violent style and projects as someone who can handle pass protection and special teams, though that part of his game will need to be developed since he didn’t do much of it in college.

That matters because any backup behind Taylor will likely need to contribute on third downs and on special teams. Without that, there’s not much reason to keep a player active on game day if he’s not helping on offense or defense.

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