Complicating matters is the fact that Jones is an unrestricted free agent, and his rehab could delay the start of his 2026 season. Nonetheless, Ballard appeared to indicate that Jones remains in the Colts’ future plans.

“I think Daniel Jones has a really bright future here in Indianapolis, ” Ballard said.

Ballard added: “I think (a return is) mutual on both sides. I think Daniel was a really good fit for this organization, and I think this organization and city were a really good fit for Daniel.”

The fact that Richardson was still recovering from an orbital fracture when Jones got hurt compounded the issue, robbing the young QB a chance to salvage his and the Colts’ season and necessitating bringing Rivers out of retirement after four-plus years out of the league. Ballard indicated Thursday that he tried to make a trade for another quarterback at the deadline but was unable to do so.

Richardson wasn’t able to return to the field in the 2025 season, keeping his future in Indianapolis murky. Is there still a role for him with the Colts next season?

“That’s a very fair question,” Ballard said. “I was really happy with Anthony. I think you knew that even after we named Daniel Jones the starter. Unfortunately for Anthony, he’s had some really bad luck. … Anthony was making really good strides.

“I’ll tell you this about Anthony — he’s a great teammate, he’s a great teammate. He never sulked, never complained, was doing a great job as a backup quarterback and then had a freak accident in the locker room. I think time will tell. … He’s gotta still work through the vision that he has, and we’ll see what the future holds there, but (he’s had) a little bit of bad luck.”

The Colts also have 2025 sixth-round QB Riley Leonard, who initially replaced Jones and played well in the Week 18 start after Rivers was benched.

Now the franchise must decide which quarterbacks will be back and whether they must help from outside the building. It has been near-constant turmoil at the position since Andrew Luck retired suddenly years ago.

“When you’re chasing the quarterback all the time, it’s hard,” Ballard said. “Your margin for error shrinks down.”