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-   -   K Spencer Shrader tore multiple ligaments, out for year (http://www.coltfreaks.com/forum/showthread.php?t=201570)

Brylok 10-07-2025 05:28 PM

Probably the best we could get. I expect 50+ yards is out of the question. Anything over 40 will be iffy.

AlwaysSunnyinIndy 10-07-2025 07:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Brylok (Post 329904)
Probably the best we could get. I expect 50+ yards is out of the question. Anything over 40 will be iffy.


Looks like they cast a wide net.

They tried out 8 different kickers today!


https://x.com/AaronWilson_NFL/status...79056000467301

Quote:

Colts worked out Ramiz Ahmed, Matt Ammendola, Michael Badgley (signed), Lucas Havrisik, Dustin Hopkins, Josh Lambo, Harrison Mevis, Matthew Wright

BCN#1 10-08-2025 05:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlwaysSunnyinIndy (Post 329895)
The answer will depend based on the injury settlement terms.

If a player and team agree to an injury settlement, a player is released and compensated for the estimated amount of time in which the injury would keep the player from being able to work. At that point, the player is free to sign with any team but may not sign back with the original team until the length of time from the injury settlement has concluded plus an additional 3 weeks.

So, for example, if the Colts gave him a month of compensation, then they couldn't sign him yet since not enough time would have elapsed.

Thanks for this clarification as I also wonder why we did not bring him back in. I just learned something new with that.

I also saw Atlanta was kicking the tires on him and he appeared healthy.

https://www.cbssports.com/fantasy/fo...-from-atlanta/

AlwaysSunnyinIndy 10-12-2025 09:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Pez (Post 329849)
I missed it when I watched live... I cant believe how late it was... he had both feet on the ground before he got blew up.

I'm sure McCollum will be fined, a suspension would seem more appropriate, but would the 1-4 raiders really be impacted by a suspension of their 2nd string safety...


The league fined McCollum $5722.

https://x.com/JoelAErickson/status/1977112307466399998

Quote:

Raiders S Tristin McCollum was fined $5,722 for the roughing the kicker penalty that ended Spencer Shrader's season.

YDFL Commish 10-12-2025 10:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlwaysSunnyinIndy (Post 330223)

That seems like an odd amount. I guess that may be 1/4 of a game check?

Thorgrim 11-15-2025 05:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Thorgrim (Post 329746)
F’n raiders.

https://www.espn.com/nfl/story/_/id/...ly-done-season

These dirty SOB’s just can’t help themselves. A good penalty for the franchise would be draft compensation to teams they inflict injury to by dirty play.

Colts And Orioles 04-22-2026 02:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by AlwaysSunnyinIndy (Post 329745)



This is not a surprising outcome, based on looking at the video of the injury.

I'm wishing Shrader a speedy recovery.



https://x.com/JoelAErickson/status/1975244625792172524


Colts K Spencer Shrader tore multiple ligaments, a source confirms after Pat McAfee Show’s report from earlier.

Awful break for a guy who won AFC Special Teams Player of the Month in his first month as a starting NFL kicker.



https://x.com/mchappell51/status/1975243288035938814


I can confirm that Colts K Spencer Shrader suffered season-ending knee injury vs. the Raiders. Yes, that sucks.




o


(6 MONTHS LATER)


Kicker Spencer Shrader recently booted a 54-yard field goal, and continues to make strides.



SOURCE: ) James Boyd l (The Athletic)

o

Colts And Orioles 05-08-2026 01:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Colts And Orioles (Post 346701)
o


(6 MONTHS LATER)


Kicker Spencer Shrader recently booted a 54-yard field goal, and continues to make strides.



SOURCE: ) James Boyd l (The Athletic)

o

o


The Colts on Spencer Shrader/Blake Grupe Kicker Battle .... ‘It’ll Be a Difficult One'

(By Joel A. Erickson)

https://www.indystar.com/story/sport...s/89974805007/




INDIANAPOLIS — The hottest battle of Colts training camp likely won’t come at one of the positions left open by the departure of a long-term starter.

It will be waged by two players who started for Indianapolis at the same spot last season.

The Colts were able to bring back Blake Grupe in free agency, setting up a winner-take-all battle with a recovering Spencer Shrader for a kicking job that has essentially been up for grabs since age finally caught up with Adam Vinatieri.

The Colts have been through plenty of kicking competitions since Vinatieri retired.

What makes this one different is that Indianapolis believes it has two of the best 32 kickers in the NFL on the roster.

“It's going to be exciting to see how those two guys compete. I think it'll bring the best out of both of them,” Indianapolis special teams coordinator Brian Mason said. “One of them will certainly win the competition, be starting for the Colts, and one of them will be fortunate enough to start for somebody else, but I think they're both going to be starting kickers this year in the NFL.”

A late hit by Raiders safety Tristin McCollum on Shrader’s right knee put everything in motion to get the Colts to this point. Shrader, the promising young kicker who won the job last offseason, suffered a torn ACL and MCL, ending his season and putting the Colts right back on the kicker carousel.

When veteran Michael Badgley faltered, Indianapolis pounced on Grupe after New Orleans released the third-year kicker, believing that the Colts’ operational consistency could fix what was ailing a kicker who’d missed eight field goals for the Saints.

Grupe made every kick down the stretch, including a franchise-record 60-yard bomb to give the Colts a late lead in Seattle.

The way Grupe kicked, it was something of a surprise that another team didn’t recognize the difference in operational consistency and sign Grupe, a free agent, as a potential starter.

“There was definitely interest, and he had options, but no matter where he was going to go, unless you're like one of the top-end kickers in the league, he was going to have to compete somewhere,” Mason said. “Obviously, he felt really comfortable with his opportunity to compete here based off how the season ended for him, and we're really happy that he decided to come back.”

When Grupe signed, Shrader’s injury still left uncertainty about how he’d recover.

A torn ACL in the kicking leg is a rare injury for the position — by being in motion, the kicking leg isn’t often planted when a player takes a hit — and it was unclear how he’d respond.

Two months later, the Colts are getting glowing reports.

“All signs are that he’s ahead of schedule,” Mason said. “He’s not with us at practice with him being on the Injured Reserve list, but he has been kicking. He started off kicking deflated footballs. Now he's kicking full PSI footballs. And from all indications that I'm hearing, he looks like he's not even injured as far as when he's kicking. He's got really good juice on his kicks, good pop on the ball.”

Leg strength is often what separates kickers at the NFL level in an age when the position is more accurate than ever. The league average for field goal percentage was .856 last season, and 11 kickers made at least seven field goals of 50 yards or longer.

“Usually when you're talking leg talent, you're talking about the height at the line of scrimmage, so how much height and trajectory do they get on the kick ???” Mason said. “And then, who has an ability to make more from 50-plus and 60-plus ???”

The answer to the second question is not easy.

Grupe was one of the 11 kickers who made at least seven field goals from 50 yards or longer, and even though Shrader is only 1 of 2 in his short career from distance, he actually profiles as the player with a little bit stronger leg.

“They have different mechanics,” Mason said. “Grupe is a jab and two-step guy, where Spencer’s a two-step guy. Spencer is a little bit bigger and more powerful of a leg, being he’s a slightly more statured guy, but Grupe has more experience.”

Mason is typically looking for two things in a kicker battle.

Leg strength and mental makeup.

But he coached Shrader and Grupe at the college level in addition to their time with the Colts, so Mason knows his two kickers are made of the right stuff, and he knows they have the leg strength.

How he decides between them will come down to who makes more kicks in camp. Grupe and Shrader will likely kick three times a week in training camp, and kicks in scrimmages or preseason games will be weighted more heavily than practice kicks.

Who makes more kicks is the easiest way to determine a winner. If the numbers are close, though, the next level is weighing kicks that are down the middle versus kicks on the edges of the uprights, and if that’s all square, Mason will have to make a decision based on upside and talent alone.

Shrader made it easy last year, soundly beating out Maddux Trujillo for the job.

Mason isn’t expecting this competition to be the same way.

“Sometimes it's easy, and one guy's kicking considerably better and more consistent than the other,” Mason said. “I think in this situation with two talented kickers, it'll probably be a difficult one, and it'll be exciting to kind of play all the way out through training camp.”

o


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