The Indianapolis Colts entered Week 4 with momentum and belief. They were riding high on an unbeaten start to the season. At SoFi Stadium against the Los Angeles Rams, though, all that optimism came crashing down. The Colts were their own worst enemy, undone by sloppy mistakes, and an inability to finish strong. Against a team as talented as Sean McVay’s Rams, those errors proved fatal.
The Colts fell 27-20 to the Rams in a dramatic contest that saw Indianapolis squander multiple chances to seize control. Eleven penalties and three turnovers told the story. However, the most painful moment came when wideout Adonai Mitchell fumbled what would have been a 76-yard touchdown at the goal line.
Despite the miscues, Daniel Jones threw for 262 yards and helped engineer a go-ahead touchdown drive in the fourth quarter. For a moment, it looked like Indianapolis might escape Los Angeles with a resilient victory. With the game on the line, though, the defense collapsed. They gave up an 88-yard bomb from Matthew Stafford to Tutu Atwell. That was made even worse by the Colts having only 10 defenders on the field. In the end, Indianapolis had no one to blame but itself.
Here we’ll try to look at and discuss the Indianapolis Colts who are most to blame for Week 4 loss to Rams.
When you look for a single culprit in this loss, Mitchell’s name is impossible to ignore. His fumble at the goal line erased what should have been a highlight-reel touchdown. Instead, it became one of the most gut-wrenching moments of the Colts’ season. That alone would have been damaging. However, Mitchell compounded the problem with a holding penalty that wiped out a monster Jonathan Taylor run late in the game.
To be fair, no game is ever truly lost by one player. Still, Mitchell came dangerously close to that line on Sunday. His miscues not only took points off the board but also killed momentum and morale. In the NFL, those swings decide games. Right now, Mitchell looks more like a liability than an asset.
The Colts’ defensive coordinator Lou Anarumo preaches a bend-but-don’t-break philosophy. Against the Rams, though, his defense broke in the worst possible moment. Needing just one stop to protect a chance at victory, the Colts allowed Atwell to slip behind coverage for an 88-yard dagger.
The breakdown wasn’t just about cornerback Mekhi Blackmon stumbling on the play. The larger issue was that Indianapolis had only 10 players on the field. That’s just an unforgivable coaching mistake at such a critical juncture. Coverage miscommunication, missed assignments, and a lack of composure doomed them. This was about preparation and accountability, both of which fall directly on Anarumo’s shoulders.
If there’s one theme that continues to haunt Indianapolis, it’s the vulnerability of their secondary. The Rams’ Puka Nacua has been a nightmare for defenses all season. That said, against the...