
How Colts see Charvarius Ward, Cam Bynum adding key ingredients to Lou Anarumo’s defense
Ward and Bynum’s impact on the Colts defense goes beyond each free agent signing being a productive, proven veteran.
PALM BEACH, Fla. – It’s one thing to look at Charvarius Ward’s 10 career interceptions and 60 pass break-ups, or Cam Bynum’s 233 tackles plus five interceptions and 14 pass break-ups over the last two seasons. Those easily-identifiable numbers are, for both big-ticket Colts free agent signings, the product of certain intangible traits.
Ward, the veteran cornerback, has built a career on a fearless, confident “dog mentality,” as head coach Shane Steichen put it. Even as an undrafted free agent scrapping to try to make the Dallas Cowboys’ roster in 2018, Ward didn’t back down from a challenge.
The Colts will embrace Ward’s unshakeable confidence in 2025, with the plan to have the 28-year-old follow a team’s No. 1 receiver around the field.
“(He has) the lockdown capability one-on-one,” Steichen said. “You got really good wideouts in this league and you want a guy to go lock him down and cover one-on-one, and he’s the guy that can do that. Obviously an All-Pro a couple years ago. Just a hell of a competitor. You see it on film, he’s got some dog in him, which I love.”
In years past, the Colts have had their cornerbacks stick on either the left or right of the formation, or have assigned roles for field-side and boundary-side cornerbacks. Those roles did not change based on an opposing team’s receivers.
Most teams, by the way, don’t have a cornerback who’s able to travel with an opponent’s No. 1 receiver. Those players are hard to find. The Colts believe they found one in Ward, who’s traveled to cover star wideouts like Ja’Marr Chase (two targets, zero receptions against Ward in a 2023 49ers vs. Bengals game) and Amon-Ra St. Brown (one target, one reception, seven yards against Ward in the 2023 NFC Championship), among others.
For an offensive play caller – as Steichen, one himself, explained – having to account for a cornerback taking away your top pass-catcher forces teams to operate differently than the way they may prefer.
“I think corners and pass rushers, those are guys that affect the quarterback, and that’s why they make a lot of money,” Steichen said. “So to get a guy like him in our building that can lock down the No. 1 receiver is going to be huge.”
Bynum, too, brings a certain mentality to the Colts’ defense – and it goes beyond the ebullient safety’s viral dances. The Colts saw Bynum as an ideal fit for defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo because of his high football IQ and ability unlock multiple coverages in the secondary.
“Obviously you want to be multiple on that back end, so you gotta have a guy that’s the quarterback on the back end,” Steichen said. “And I think Bynum does a good job communicating, just watching him on film. But now getting him in Lou’s system, I think is going to be really good for the scheme that he wants to run.”
Anarumo, while with the Cincinnati Bengals, deployed a healthy mix of coverages and had plenty of success – especially when he had veterans like Vonn Bell and Jessie Bates Jr. at safety.
The Colts will sort through the rest of their secondary in the coming weeks and months, with Nick Cross returning at safety and three younger cornerbacks with starting experience in Jaylon Jones (27 starts), JuJu Brents (nine starts) and Sam Womack III (nine starts).
But with three seasoned veterans in Ward, Bynum and Kenny Moore II – all with their own blend of confidence, instincts, football IQ and talent – the Colts have high expectations for their secondary in 2025.
Where Colts’ needs stand at tight end, offensive line, defensive line and linebacker in free agency, upcoming NFL Draft
Colts general manager Chris Ballard and head coach Shane Steichen this week addressed a few areas of their team’s roster that could see additions and/or strong competition in 2025.
PALM BEACH, Fla. – While questions about the Colts’ quarterback competition dominated Chris Ballard and Shane Steichen’s press conferences at the NFL Annual Meeting in Florida this week, there were a few critical areas of the roster discussed by both the Colts’ general manager and head coach.
Here’s what you need to know about four key position groups, all of which lost players via free agency in the last few weeks:
Tight End
- Additions:Â None
- Moving on:Â Kylen Granson (signed with Philadelphia Eagles)
- Re-signed:Â None (Mo Alie-Cox remains an unsigned free agent)
- Currently on the roster:Â Will Mallory, Sean McKeon, Drew Ogletree, Albert Okwuegbunam, Jelani Woods
The Colts have been searching for a true two-way tight end – one who can reliably block and catch passes – since Jack Doyle retired following the 2021 season.
“I remember when we lost Jack Doyle telling everybody in the building, we just lost a real game changing player,” Ballard said. “I my mind, Jack Doyle was freaking great. He was great in who he was, how he produced. It wasn’t sexy but he was great.
“And do we need a game changer? Absolutely we do. Will it happen? I can’t dictate the draft.”
With the NFL Draft approaching in just over three weeks, plenty of mock drafts have the Colts drafting either Penn State’s Tyler Warren or Michigan’s Colston Loveland with the No. 14 overall pick in the first round. It’s easy to see why those predictions are being made: The Colts have a need for a tight end who can both block and catch.
While finding one of those dual-threat tight ends is difficult – there aren’t many of them in the NFL – having one can keep opposing defenses guessing in a way that’s difficult to replicate with tight ends who a capable in only one area (i.e. just receiving or blocking).