Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis Colts highest and lowest PFF grades on offense in 2025
These Colts’ players on offense received the highest and lowest PFF grades over the 2025 NFL season.
With the Indianapolis Colts’ season now behind us, let’s take a look at which players on offense received the highest and lowest grades from Pro Football Focus.
Below is a look at PFF’s grading system for some context. While this metric is very helpful when it comes to quantifying a player’s performance, PFF’s grading system isn’t the be-all and end-all either. It is one metric out of many that are out there.
- 90.0+: Elite
- 80-89.9: High quality
- 70-79.9: Good
- 60-69.9: Above average
- 50-59.9: Average
- 40-49.9: Below average
- 39.9 or less: Poor
Now, here are the Colts’ five highest graded players on offense from the 2025 NFL season.
Colts’ five highest graded players for 2025 season
- LG Quenton Nelson: 84.5
- C Tanor Bortolini: 82.6
- LT Bernhard Raimann: 82.0
- WR Alec Pierce: 79.3
- RB Jonathan Taylor
In both pass-blocking efficiency and run-blocking grade, Nelson was one of the highest-rated guards in all of football by PFF’s metrics. Bortolini wasn’t credited with allowing any sacks, but what really boosted his overall grade was his performance as a run-blocker.
Raimann was steady across the board, grading out very well as both a run blocker and pass blocker.
Pierce led the Colts in receiving, totaling over 1,000 yards, and he also led the NFL in yards per catch. Taylor was the NFL’s second-leading rusher this season.
Colts’ three lowest graded players in 2025
- OL Dalton Tucker: 39.3
- QB Phillip Rivers: 51.0
- WR Anthony Gould: 52.0
Tucker’s pass-blocking grade is what brought down his overall grade. He allowed eight pressures and two sacks in just 86 pass-blocking snaps.
Remember at the beginning of this I said take these grades with a grain of salt? Rivers’ grade is an example of that. Overall, he provided the Colts’ with stability at quarterback and kept them in games. However, the late interceptions and lack of explosive plays brought his grade down.
Gould has a very small sample size to pull from, but of his two receptions, he generated just six yards of offense.
Indianapolis, IN
IU lands back in Indiana with extra carry-on: A national championship
IU, Curt Cignetti lands in Indianapolis following CFP championship win
Curt Cignetti offered a wave and a small smile after disembarking a charter plane from Miami to Indianapolis.
The Indiana Hoosiers flew back to Indianapolis on Jan. 20 with one additional carry-on: a national championship trophy.
One by one as the sun was setting, the players on the IU football team disembarked a United charter flight at the Indianapolis International Airport and boarded a handful of coach buses to take them the rest of the way back to Bloomington, where celebrations will continue into the coming days and weekend. Some players wore shorts as they stepped out into the bitter Indiana cold while others were bundled up in pajama pants.
Starting quarterback and Heisman winner Fernando Mendoza had on shorts and a pair of shiny gold headphones as he exited with his team.
And less than 24 hours after he led his team to a perfect 16-0 season and the first national championship in program history, IU football head coach Curt Cignetti, known for his dour expressions, offered a wave and a slight smile to a small crowd of local media as he walked the short distance to the bus.
Though there was no iconic trophy lift as the team exited the plane, the hardware will be arriving in Bloomington soon enough.
A handful of fans used some savvy flight tracking skills to find the team’s flight and braved the cold to see a glimpse of the buses leaving the private charters terminal on the north side of the airport.
Karen and Mel Fletcher from Greenwood staked out a spot outside the airport as they waited for the team to land and head to Bloomington. Between the two of them, the couple had three kids graduate from IU, and the pair have been waiting decades for a national championship.
“We came out early and just hopefully, we could see them,” Karen Fletcher said.
The Fletchers had high praise for the Hoosiers as the motorcade passed by.
“It was a great team, a great bunch of guys. Fantastic coach. And they did it,” Karen Fletcher said.
Alysa Guffey writes business, health and development stories for IndyStar. Have a story tip? Contact her at amguffey@usatodayco.com or on X: @AlysaGuffeyNews.
Indianapolis, IN
Neighbors honor retiring mailman for 20 years of service
One Indiana mailman’s retirement has brought the community together to honor his 20 years of work.
Residents of one Indianapolis area neighborhood worked together to honor “Mr. Kenny, “who’s also lived in that same neighboorhood for over three decades.
According to neighbors, he has always been a light in the neighborhood, going above and beyond what was required of his job.
Mr. Kenny described the neighborhood as more than a job, also saying they are like family.
“Kids in the neighborhood did pictures, you know, they would make pictures for me. I used to work six days a week so I would see these people everyday and then it just became like we were family, you know they treated me like their family,” said Kenneth Caldwell, mailman.
Because for Kenny, being there for his community was more than delivering letters and packages.
What we don’t know is what Kenny’s future plans are.
Indianapolis, IN
Suspect sought after Indiana judge, wife shot inside home
A manhunt was underway on Monday for whoever shot an Indiana judge and his wife on Sunday afternoon.
Tippecanoe Superior Court 2 Judge Steve Meyer and his wife, Kim, were injured in a shooting at their home, Chief Justice of Indiana Hon. Loretta H. Rush said in a letter.
The shooting occurred at approximately 2:15 p.m. at the couple’s residence in Lafayette, Indiana, which is approximately 60 miles northwest of Indianapolis. Officers arrived and located both victims, who were taken to a nearby hospital in stable condition, reported WTHR, the NBC affiliate in Indianapolis. In an update on Monday, Lafayette police said Steve Meyer suffered an injury to his arm, while Kimberly Meyer suffered a hip injury.
Rush said police were still looking for the suspect.
Lafayette police said “an active and ongoing joint investigation” was underway.
Anyone with information about the shooting was asked to call police at 765-807-1200.
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