Is Laiatu Latu living up to expectations?

Is Laiatu Latu living up to expectations?
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Indianapolis, INIndianapolis Colts second-year defensive end Laiatu Latu already has more sacks than he did as a rookie, poised to lead the team in sacks as they enter the final stretch of the regular season.

Despite this progression on the surface, some fans and analysts seem to think that Latu will never take the next step in his ascension, often citing claims that his high-pressure numbers are nothing more than empty calories, given that he struggles to finish his sacks.

Colts general manager Chris Ballard took Latu with the 15th overall pick in the 2024 NFL Draft, serving as the first defensive player to come off the board. This naturally baked in an expectation for Latu that he simply must be the best defensive player in his draft class, from the moment he’s drafted no less. Couple that with Ballard’s draft day comments that confidently, or arrogantly, depending on how you look at it, deemed Latu to be the “best [expletive] rusher in the draft,” and it begins to make sense why patience is running thin with the second-year pass rusher.

Entering Week 16, Laiatu Latu has the T-7th-highest pressure rate (14.2%) among qualified defensive ends, according to Next Gen Stats. The names above him: Will Anderson Jr., Myles Garrett, Aidan Hutchinson, Bryce Huff, Danielle Hunter, and George Karlaftis.

The biggest difference? Latu has the slowest get-off amongst the group. His get-off (0.91 seconds) is the only average over 0.90 seconds. The rest have averages from 0.73-0.89. Latu also has the least amount of ‘quick pressures’ — a pressure logged in under 3 seconds — among them, with 9, the only player with less than 10.

Latu’s 352 pass rushes in 2025 are 1 more than his rookie total, aka the perfect sample size to compare. His sack percentage and pressure rate have both improved from his rookie season, but his get-off and time to pressure have fallen off.

Time to pressure: 2.69 seconds -> 3.05

Get-off: 0.84 seconds -> 0.91

Furthermore, you begin to question Latu’s impact when breaking down each of his 10.5 sacks in the league thus far. Broken up between his rookie and sophomore campaigns in the NFL, here’s the type of protection Latu is beating for each of his sacks:

2024-25 (Rookie)

Bears: two tight ends (Marcedes Lewis and Cole Kmet)

Dolphins: tight end

Jets: rookie tackle Olu Fashanu

Lions: swing tackle Dan Skipper

2025-26 (so far)

Rams: tackle Alaric Jackson

Chargers: third-string tackle Austin Deculus

Titans: tackle Dan Moore Jr.

Steelers: tackle Broderick Jones (2x), tight end Darnell Washington

Chiefs: rookie tackle Josh Simmons (1-yard scramble drill)

Seahawks: running back Zach Charbonnet

This isn’t to discredit Laiatu Latu’s efforts thus far, but rather to provide context for how it is he’s landing sacks. He receives his fair share of chip help from tight ends or running backs when 1-on-1 with tackles when rushing the passer, proving that opposing offenses strategically account for his gravity across the defensive front. Latu is undeniably talented;...