đ„ HOT NEWS: Shane Steichenâs update on Philip Riversâs availability for ColtsâSeahawks leaves fans buzzing with fresh questions âĄ. DH

Stuck at EverBank Stadium, and waiting for a new charter home with mechanical issues sending the team plane in for repairs, Colts coach Shane Steichen and GM Chris Ballard were staring down a quarterback situation in apparent disrepair.

Starter Daniel Jones, already playing through a fractured fibula, had sustained a season-ending torn Achilles hours earlier, in what became a blowout loss to the Jaguars.
Then, in the locker room postgame, rookie sixth-rounder Riley Leonardâwhoâd put together an admirable, hope-provoking three quartersârevealed to coaches the pain he felt in a knee that he tweaked during the second half.
Former first-rounder Anthony Richardson, who underwent orbital surgery in late October after a freak accident with a resistance band, was already shelved with no timetable for return.

Veteran Brett Rypien was stashed on the practice squad. The Colts, quite simply, were long on problems and short on answers at the gameâs most important position.
âWhat about Rivers?â Steichen asked, in the bowels of the stadium.
Ballard, taken aback, responded, âWould he do it?â

And thus began a wild 48 hours that brought eight-time Pro Bowl quarterback Philip Rivers, a veteran of 17 NFL seasons, back to pro football after a five-year retirement.
No one has outsized expectations on how this will all play out. The Colts arenât going to saddle Rivers with salvaging their 8â5 season, which was so promising until the most recent three-game losing streak.
For now, theyâre anxious to see what he looks like on the practice field on Wednesday, as they start preparing for Sundayâs showdown with the 10â3 Seahawks in Seattle.

But what Rivers can give them, and more specifically their locker room, is some semblance of hope in the wake of a catastrophic Sunday in North Florida, and a truckload of energy and enthusiasm for the game, with four regular-season dates left on their 2025 schedule.
From that standpoint, Steichen and Ballard know exactly what theyâre getting.
Steichenâs relationship with Rivers was born in his first NFL season, 2011, in the San Diego Chargersâ lunchroom, as the young coach was getting his start as a defensive assistant for Norv Turner.
Rivers heard Steichen running the scout team in practice, and could tell, by how the coach barked out his cadence, that he was a quarterback. So that day, Rivers and Steichen shot the breeze over Steichenâs playing days at UNLV, and a bond was born.
Turner was fired after 2012 and took Steichen to Cleveland, then Steichen returned to San Diego to work for Mike McCoy in 2014, this time on the offensive side. By 2016, Steichen was Riversâs position coach.

Midway through the 2019 season, Chargers head coach Anthony Lynn tabbed Steichen to become Riversâs coordinator, based primarily on the strong relationship the two had built.
The next year, Rivers became a free agent, and Ballard signed him to a one-year deal in Indianapolis, reuniting him with Frank Reich and getting to see what Steichen had for eight seasons in San Diego and, after the team relocated, Los Angeles.
Steichen and Rivers kept in touch. And that dialogue never stopped
The coach and quarterback talk twice a week, and that conversation over the years has evolved. They talk football. They talk life. They would exchange film, and laugh about how the Colts and the St. Michael Catholic schemes are so similarâRivers has been the head coach for the past five seasons at the Fairhope, Ala., parochial school, where his eldest son, Gunner, is now a junior quarterback and blue-chip recruit.
How similar? Steichen could look at any number of concepts St. Michael was running and immediately identify the one-word call that those old Chargers would associate with it.

Rivers also stayed connected to the league, helping guys prepare for the draft, working with his friend David Morrisâs Mobile-based business, QB Country.
In recent years, Morris has brought his draft prospects to Riversâs house once a week to throw and talk football, in the lead-up to the Senior Bowl and combine. In 2024, that group included Bo Nix and Drake Maye. Last year, Tyler Shough and, yes, Leonard himself were part of the crew.
At the end of those days at Riversâs house, the old quarterback would bring the kids out back and have a quarterback competition that Rivers would routinely win.
Part of it, those there would tell you, was the home-field advantage he had, throwing on his own yard into his own nets. But another was that, even when compared with quarterbacks in their early 20s who were headed for the pros, Rivers could still really sling it.
So, at a baseline, Steichen knew Rivers was running a simplified version of his offense, knew Rivers had been watching the Coltsâ tape and knew Rivers could still throw it.
But did Rivers, at 44, actually have the appetite to reenter the brutal world of the NFL?
After landing in Indianapolis on Sunday night, Steichen and Ballard called Rivers to figure that out. Rivers told them, in so many words, that if he was going to do it, itâd probably be a good idea for him to come and throw for them first, and see how he felt.
But he wanted to give it more thought, so they resolved to circle back Monday morning.
When they did, Riversâs excitement wasnât hard to pick up on.
âLet me get up there and throw it around a little bit,â he said, âand weâll figure it out.â
The Colts sent the Irsay family plane to pick up Rivers at midday. He landed around 5 p.m. and soon thereafter was walking into the team facility heâd called home five years earlier, remarking quickly how the weight room had been renovated.

They met for an hour in Ballardâs office, catching up and talking about the team and the season, before moving to the teamâs field house at 7:30 p.m. for the throwing session.
Steichen and the offensive coaches had a 30-to-35-throw program for him, with practice squad receivers Coleman Owen and Eli Pancol, and a couple of equipment staffers to catch the ball for him.
He threw shallow crosses. He threw deep overs. He threw go balls. They went through the whole route tree.
The ball was jumping off Riversâs right hand. His feet were quick. He looked sharp.
Everything was checking out. Rivers, Ballard and Steichen met again for a couple of hours after the throwing session. Rivers felt good coming out of it, and asked the Colts to give him until noon Tuesday to make a final call.

Meanwhile, Leonardâwhoâd told his coaches, after initially reporting the injury postgame, that he felt a little stiff coming off the planeâwas trending in a positive direction, and had been apprised of the Rivers situation on Monday, and Rypien was elevated off the practice squad.
So the Colts were prepared for whatever Rivers decided. But they were also excited by the idea that he might go through with something theyâd seen as a shot in the dark 24 hours earlier.




