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Canton Can Wait: Colts Ask Philip Rivers for One More Run

Hunter Tierney 's profile
Original Story by Wave News
December 11, 2025
Canton Can Wait: Colts Ask Philip Rivers for One More Run

The Colts weren’t exactly hoping to have to call a retired quarterback who's currently on the Hall of Fame ballot when the calendar flipped to December. But one rough Sunday in Jacksonville turned their entire season on its head. Daniel Jones went down on a non‑contact play, and suddenly the Colts were staring at a depth chart that looked like something out of the third preseason game — not a playoff race.

So yeah… they picked up the phone. And the guy on the other end was 44‑year‑old Philip Rivers.

If you’re a Colts fan, you probably had the same reaction everyone else did: “Wait… what?” followed very closely by “…well, what else were they going to do?”

Because teams don’t call retired quarterbacks in December just to be cute. They do it when the season is still alive, the locker room still believes, and the usual backup plans are gone. This is what desperation looks like.

The Colts Were Out of Answers

Everything about the quarterback room made Colts fans nervous once Jones went down. Anthony Richardson is still on IR after fracturing his orbital bone in pregame warmups. Riley Leonard got banged up in relief for Jones. The practice‑squad option has thrown more interceptions than touchdowns. And yet, somehow, the Colts are 8–5 with real games left that actually matter. They couldn’t just jog out there on Sunday and hope the defense bailed them out.

And the timing made it all sting even more. Indianapolis rolled into Week 14 in a decent spot — not cruising, but very much in the mix — and then Jacksonville punched them right in the mouth, 36–19, dropping their chances to make the playoffs down near 20%.

So the Colts did the only thing that makes sense when every plan you had goes up in smoke — they called the last guy who won games for them. He just also happens to be a guy who hasn’t played since 2020.

Not a Time Machine, But a Familiar Face

Jan 9, 2021; Orchard Park, New York, USA; Indianapolis Colts quarterback Philip Rivers (17) makes an adjustment at the line of scrimmage in the third quarter wildcard playoff game against the Buffalo Bills at Bills Stadium.
Credit: Mark Konezny-Imagn Images

When a playoff contender loses its quarterback in December, there’s no magic fix waiting in the back of the playbook. You don’t overhaul the offense, and you don’t reinvent who you are. You look for someone steady — someone who’s seen everything, can run an NFL operation on rhythm and timing, and won’t flinch when the pocket tightens. That’s where Philip Rivers fits.

The Steichen Connection: Why This Isn’t as Random as it Sounds

The move makes even more sense once you remember Rivers and Shane Steichen go way back. They spent years together with the Chargers, speaking the same football language and running the same style of offense. That familiarity matters — especially when a team is prepping on a short week and genuinely doesn’t know who will be healthy enough to start on Sunday.

What really ties all of this together is how Rivers and Steichen never fully drifted apart after their Chargers days. According to JJ Watt (who's spoken to Steichen and his staff in production meetings), the two stayed in regular contact — even talking weekly — going through game plans, concepts, and how Steichen’s system continued to evolve.

Rivers wasn’t just absorbing it casually, either. He was installing and calling a high‑school version of the Colts’ offensewhile coaching his son, giving him hands‑on reps with the same terminology and ideas Steichen uses on Sundays. 

Rivers at 44: What He Still Brings to the Table

Rivers isn’t returning because he’s suddenly going to uncork 65‑yard shots down the sideline. That was never his game, even when he was at his best.

What made Rivers successful was the stuff that doesn’t age much — the timing, the feel, the ability to throw guys open instead of waiting for them to be open. He’s always won with anticipation, rhythm, and knowing exactly where the ball needed to go before anyone else could figure it out. Those traits don’t disappear just because you’ve spent a few years coaching high‑school ball instead of running an NFL huddle.

The real question now is the physical side. Can he slide enough in the pocket to avoid the free rusher? Can he still hold up if the Colts end up asking him to throw 30–35 times in a game?

The AFC South Math: Indy’s Season Isn’t Dead… But It’s Wobbling

The Colts wouldn’t be making a move like this if their season were already buried. At 4–9, nobody’s calling a 44‑year‑old quarterback and asking him to help steady the ship. But at 8–5, with the division still right there in front of them, the stakes look a whole lot different.

Indy is sitting in the thick of a three‑team race — tied with Houston at 8–5 and chasing a Jacksonville team that’s only one game ahead at 9–4. It’s not a comfortable spot, but it’s absolutely one where every decision can make or break your season.

And the road ahead isn’t doing them any favors:

  • Week 15: at Seahawks (Sunday, Dec. 14)

  • Week 16: vs. 49ers (Monday night, Dec. 22)

  • Week 17: vs. Jaguars (Sunday, Dec. 28)

  • Week 18: at Texans (TBD)

That’s not a stretch you navigate with wishful thinking or half‑measures, especially after losing your starting quarterback. None of these games give Rivers a soft place to land. The defenses are too good and the playoff picture too crowded.

The Age Thing: If Rivers Plays, He’s Entering a Tiny Club

Dec 27, 2020; Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA; Pittsburgh Steelers quarterback Ben Roethlisberger (7) and Indianapolis Colts quarterback Philip Rivers (17) embrace at mid-field after their game at Heinz Field. Pittsburgh won 28-24.
Credit: Charles LeClaire-Imagn Images

If Rivers ends up getting activated and actually starts a game, it becomes one of the most unusual quarterback moments the league has seen in years — not just because of his age, but because of everything wrapped around this comeback.

Only a handful of quarterbacks have ever taken meaningful snaps at 44 or older, and all of them — Tom Brady, Warren Moon, Vinny Testaverde, Steve DeBerg — did it while staying connected to the league. Rivers would be stepping back into the fire after five full seasons away, a gap that feels even longer when you consider how much the sport has evolved in that time.

But the twist that really sets this apart is his Hall of Fame status. It’s rare enough to sign someone in their mid‑40s. It’s something entirely different to sign someone who is actively on the Hall of Fame ballot. Typically, once a player reaches that stage, their story is locked in — the debates begin, the legacy gets sorted out, and their playing days are locked in stone in the past. Pulling someone out of that process and placing them back onto an NFL roster feels surreal.

And the stakes aren’t small. If Rivers takes even one snap, the Hall of Fame clock resets. His candidacy pauses and his next shot doesn’t come until 2031, a massive delay at a point in his life where he was already gearing up for the conversation. It’s rare territory for any player, let alone a modern-day quarterback who has to pull double-duty as a father of ten and a grandpa when he leaves the facility.

All stats courtesy of NFL Pro.

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