Skip to main content

Doyel: Colts coach Jeff Saturday has fired up a team, fanbase, and me!


Colts coach Jeff Saturday sits down to meet with reporters on a Zoom call, looks into the camera and says the following:

“All right, just crank it up.”

No kidding, those are the first words out of his mouth. He’s just different, this guy. Some people don’t like different. Different isn’t comfortable, you know? It’s not predictable.

Jeff Saturday is different, and not just as an NFL coach, going from ESPN’s studio to the head coach’s office at 7001 W. 56th St. He’s just different, period. He’s confident but humble, exciting without being excitable. He’s unusual, and he’s ours, an explosion of good and goodwill on a Colts season that was nearing the intersection of Bad and Worse.

Doyel: That Colts win in Las Vegas was for all you Jeff Saturday doubters

Folks outside of Indianapolis, they’re not loving this hire. That’s ground already covered, but you might be curious, now, to know how Saturday processed the avalanche of ugliness that landed on this hire – from the cold dismissal of his former coach with the Colts, Tony Dungy, to the lampooning from his former colleagues at ESPN, to the primordial fury oozing from Bill Cowher.

Saturday knows it’s out there, to an extent.

“I felt conviction about the opportunity,” he said Monday, shortly after saying he was just going to crank it up. “I have no qualms about what anybody says about their opinion. Great. If they disagree with it, still love them. Not really worried about it. I’ve got other things I’ve got to take care of.”

Like beating the Las Vegas Raiders. That happened. And you know who’s loving this hire, right now? You are. I am. This city. This fan base. That locker room.

Circle the wagons, Indianapolis, because they’re still coming for the Colts, for Saturday, for us. Rooney Rule implications, respect for more experienced coaches, whatever. As I was saying earlier, some people don’t like different. It’s not comfortable, not predictable.

Different, when done right, is cool.

Speaking of the 2022 Indianapolis Colts…

Jeff Saturday as Colts coach lit a fire under all of us

We’re galvanized, right? All of us have been since this Jeff Saturday hire. The initial news was energizing and exciting, on the surface, but we had to see it in action. Show us a game. Let’s see a score.

How’s 10-0, Colts? Under their fiery new coach, they started fast for the first time all season.

How’s 25-20, Colts? Under their calm new coach, they closed strong.

This could all fall apart soon, you know. And by that I mean: I know. The Philadelphia Eagles come to town on Sunday, and the Eagles are nasty. They won their first eight games by an average of nearly 12 points per game. They have a top-three offense. They have a top-three defense. Jalen Hurts can throw it, A.J. Brown and Dallas Goedert can catch it, and Miles Sanders can run it. C.J. Gardner-Johnson has more interceptions, by himself (five), than the entire Colts defense (four).

This game could be ugly. The Eagles are nearly a 4-to-1 favorite, and they are favored by more than a touchdown. In the NFL those are big numbers. In the NFL, on the road? Damn near doesn’t happen. But the Eagles are that good and the Colts are … well, who knows what the Colts are?

The Raiders aren’t very good. We know that. They’re coached by Josh McDaniels, which is about all you need to know. Beating the Raiders doesn’t exactly put the Colts in the running for the AFC crown, and oddsmakers aren’t impressed. Just as Saturday knows there is skepticism about his hire, he knows – now – the level of skepticism about this game, this week.

How? Because a reporter told him Monday, asking him if he’ll address the point spread – being underdogs, all that – to his players. Saturday answered the question with a question.

“Is it bad?” he said of the betting line. “I haven’t looked at it. I’m sure it’s not pretty.”

He’s laughing, because that’s what you do when the world says you can’t, and you’re pretty sure you can.

“It’s 9.5 (points),” the reporter responded.

“So, that’s a bad one,” Saturday said, and now he’s laughing some more. “Listen, I’m not sweating that. I’m not sure who was favored the last one (against the Raiders), but it probably wasn’t our way.”

No, it was not. The line for Colts-Raiders varied somewhat based on where you looked, but everyone had the Raiders winning. And at ESPN, where Jeff Saturday had worked since 2013, and where his colleagues were giving his Colts hire the “bless his heart” treatment – as in, we like Jeff, but bless his heart … – the NFL Football Index gave the Raiders an 86% chance at victory.

Did you cash that ticket? Speaking of spending some money, guess when the Colts’ season tickets next season went on sale? Seriously, guess.

Colts 2023 season tickets went on sale when???

It was a coincidence, the Colts assure me. And I believe them. Because they said so? Well, that helps. But also, the facts are in their favor. And here are the facts:

Colts seasons tickets for 2023 went on sale Monday morning, hours after Jeff Saturday’s successful debut at Las Vegas sent a jolt of caffeinated happiness into the fanbase.

Colts season tickets for 2022 went on sale on Nov. 8, 2021. Colts season tickets for 2021 went on sale on Nov. 16, 2020.

The timing this year falls smack-dab in the middle of that. How were initial sales Monday? Nobody’s talking. I can tell you I called the ticket line myself Monday afternoon, and listened to it ring 7-8 times before someone was able to answer.

The Colts are in a weird position right now, fully aware of the enthusiasm for Jeff Saturday, fully aware of the coincidental timing of their long-planned rollout of 2023 season ticket sales, and also fully aware of something they need Colts fans to remember:

There is no guarantee Jeff Saturday will be the coach in 2023.

For one thing, he could lose the next seven games. Probably will lose Sunday against the Eagles, if we’re being honest, though who knows? For another, the Colts have to follow the Rooney Rule after the season and open up the hiring to a broad, diverse field of candidates. We all can imagine how this will go, if the Colts finish the 2022 season strongly – imagine the Colts reaching the 2022 NFL playoffs! – but there are no guarantees about anything.

Do not, in other words, buy 2023 season tickets with certainty that you’ll watch Jeff Saturday. Well, not unless you have cable. Because he could be back at ESPN.

We can hope not, and if grammar isn’t your strong suit, let me explain something: That was a first-person pronoun, we. Plural, but still first person. Meaning: I hope Saturday’s not back at ESPN next year. I want that sucker here for the rest of my writing career, however long that lasts. He’s a bolt of charm and energy, and while most coaches have some level of both to reach the pinnacle of their profession – Bill Belichick got there with serpentine smarts – I’ve rarely seen it at the Jeff Saturday level.

The only thing that compares, in my experience – and I’ve been doing this since 1989 – is Thad Matta early in his Ohio State tenure, and Roy Williams when he arrived at UNC in 2003. I was there for both, and it just felt different. So much energy, so much charm, so much likeability. Players loved playing for those guys, fans loved supporting them, reporters enjoyed talking to them.

Saturday has that vibe. Now, you can’t win games with vibes. You win with competence, and with players. Pretty sure Saturday has the competence. Not sure he has the players. Not yet.

Maybe next year he will, when free agents around the NFL decide what we’ve known around here for years:

Jeff Saturday’s a winner. Let’s crank it up.

Find IndyStar columnist Gregg Doyel on Twitter at @GreggDoyelStar or at  www.facebook.com/greggdoyelstar.

More: Join the text conversation with sports columnist Gregg Doyel for insights, reader questions and Doyel's peeks behind the curtain.