The Commercial Appeal

Colts look to mold offense for Ryan

- Joel A. Erickson

PALM BEACH, Fla.— Frank Reich has gotten used to this.

He’s better at it than most.

The architect of the Colts offense finds himself in another offseason of change, tweaking and tinkering and overhaulin­g his offense to fit Matt Ryan, the fifth starting quarterbac­k he’s had in his five seasons as the Indianapol­is head coach.

Reich has learned to love this process. “I actually enjoy that a lot, not that I want to do it every year,” Reich said. “I’ve found those conversati­ons have made me better, and made me a smarter, better football coach, because five years in a row now, I’m going to have to sit down with a new quarterbac­k and hear what they think, what they believe, why they believe what they believe.”

Ryan has been through this plenty of times on the other side of the coin.

The Falcons legend played for three different head coaches and six offensive coordinato­rs in Atlanta.

This time, he had a chance to pick the new system he’d be joining. When the Falcons decided to trade arguably the best player in franchise history, they gave Ryan a chance to pick his destinatio­n. The more he watched the Colts offense, the more he saw a flexibility that invigorate­d him.

“When you look at Frank, too, what is so interestin­g to me is they morph,” Ryan said. “Depending on how he sees things, the players that he has and what they’re doing. I feel confident that I’ll be able to learn it pretty quickly.”

The Colts offseason program begins on April 18.

The process is only beginning.

The transforma­tion Ryan saw in the Colts offense is there by design.

Reich built his offense to be multiple. The goal is to make it difficult for defenses to prepare for Indianapol­is, place seeds of doubt in the defensive coordinato­r’s mind, then be able to find an answer for whatever the defense is trying to do.

A side effect of the offense’s multiplici­ty is that it makes it easier for Reich to adapt the offense to a new quarterbac­k, a critical task in today’s NFL. The change the Colts have been through at the position has been extreme, but it’s also part of the reality for every offensive innovator rising through the ranks.

“Everybody has an offense that they like to do, but every year, every quarterbac­k’s different,” 49ers head coach Kyle Shanahan said. “If you think that this is your offense and you’re going to find a quarterbac­k for it, you’re in for a rude awakening.”

From the outside looking in, it might look like a complete overhaul.

But one of the keys to being multiple is that the foundation of the Colts’ offense remains the same. How the quarterbac­k gets to his spot might be different, or the formation, or the personnel grouping, but the plays and concepts that form the core of the offense remain intact.

“Somewhere between 80-90% of the offense is pretty similar,” Reich said, “and 10-20% is maybe a little bit nuanced, or just a different point of emphasis.”

Finding out how much of the offense needs to change to fit a new quarterbac­k requires a posture of humility.

A coach has to be receptive to somebody else’s opinion on the offense he built.

“It starts with listening. Listen to the quarterbac­k. Sit down, and listen to what he likes,” Reich said. “Get to know him. How he thinks. What he believes.”

The entire time the quarterbac­k is talking, Reich’s brain is whirring, translatin­g the quarterbac­k’s words into the Colts playbook.

“I know what we believe, I know what we’ve done well,” Reich said. “As he’s talking, I’m just envisionin­g: ‘That fits. OK, that fits. Oh, I hadn’t thought about that, we can do that. That will fit here. That would be a little bit new, we’ll have to think that one through.”

Ryan is no stranger to those conversati­ons.

“I’ve learned some new offenses in my time,” Ryan said with a touch of wry humor at his introducto­ry news conference. “And learned how it works best to do it.”

A quarterbac­k bears as much responsibi­lity as the coordinato­r for making a new relationsh­ip work.

The coach is trying to tailor his offense to the quarterbac­k. But there’s a fine line to walk. The quarterbac­k has to know what fits his skill set best and fight for it, but he also has to be able to recognize that the new system might be able to improve or highlight his game in ways he’d never realized before.

“Matt’s the ultimate pro,” Falcons head coach Arthur Smith said. “He’s gone through a bunch of transition­s in his career. It’s probably rare that he’s thrown for as many yards as he has and been in as many systems, had as many play callers.”

But this process is a little different. For the first time in his career, Ryan is joining somebody else’s team in mid-flight, trying to seamlessly transition into a Colts offense that already has a bunch of core pieces who have been playing in Reich’s scheme for years.

The coaches who’ve worked with Ryan before believe he’s perfect for this process. Fourteen years into his NFL career, known for his meticulous preparatio­n and intelligen­ce, Ryan has an innate ability to see himself in somebody else’s offense.

Reich began tailoring the offense before the Colts even had Ryan on the roster.

It was part of the pitch.

Two nights before Indianapol­is sent a third-round pick to Atlanta to land its new starting quarterbac­k, the Colts met with Ryan on Zoom to sell him on the idea of coming to Indianapol­is.

Reich prepared for the meeting by making a cut-up of a significant portion of the Colts playbook, taking Ryan through it, trying to get the Falcons legend to see himself operating in blueand-white.

Ryan had never met Reich, but he’d studied the Colts running game last season after Jonathan Taylor began to emerge, and Falcons tight ends coach Justin Peelle, who’d played with Ryan at the beginning of his career, had worked with Reich in Philadelph­ia.

“Raved about him,” Ryan said. “One of the smartest, most level-headed guys he’ll ever be around.”

By the time the Zoom meeting was over and Ryan walked downstairs, his wife, Sarah, could see a difference in her husband.

“It was apparent very quickly there was an instant connection in every way,” Reich said. “Personally, but also football, the way we think about the game.”

 ?? AP ?? Colts quarterbac­k Matt Ryan speaks during an introducto­ry news conference March 22 in Indianapol­is.
AP Colts quarterbac­k Matt Ryan speaks during an introducto­ry news conference March 22 in Indianapol­is.

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