NFL: Colts release veteran QB Nick Foles

Date:

Share post:


The Indianapolis Colts, after selecting Anthony Richardson with the fourth overall pick of last week’s NFL draft, released veteran quarterback Nick Foles on Friday.

Foles, 34, signed a two-year contract with the Colts as a free agent on May 23, 2022. He appeared in three games — starting two — and was 25-of-42 for 224 yards, no touchdowns and four interceptions.

Indianapolis (4-12-1) struggled with the quarterback position last season, between Matt Ryan, Sam Ehlinger and Foles, who was injured in Week 18.

The current roster has veterans Ehlinger and Gardner Minshew, with the Colts grabbing Richardson out of Florida as the heir apparent to the position.

Foles has played since 2012 for the Philadelphia Eagles (2012-14, 2017-18), St. Louis Rams (2015), Kansas City Chiefs (2016), Jacksonville Jaguars (2019), Chicago Bears (2020-21) and Colts (2022).

He was a Pro Bowl selection in his first stint in Philadelphia (2013) and the Super Bowl Most Valuable Player during his second stint (2017).

Foles has started 58 of 71 career games, completing 1,302 of 2,087 passes for 14,227 yards, 82 touchdowns and 47 interceptions.

–Field Level Media

spot_img

Related articles

NCAAF: Reports: Tulsa to fire head coach Kevin Wilson

Tulsa is expected to fire head coach Kevin Wilson, multiple outlets reported Sunday. The Golden Hurricane fell to 3-8...

NCAAF: Top 25 roundup: Auburn needs 4 OTs to stun No. 15 Texas A&M

Auburn's Payton Thorne tossed a two-point scoring pass to KeAndre Lambert-Smith in the fourth overtime to give the...

NCAAF: USC wins defensive battle, ends UCLA’s bowl hopes

Jayden Maiava's 4-yard touchdown pass to Ja'Kobi Lane midway through the fourth quarter proved the game-winning score for...

NCAAF: Maalik Murphy throws 3 TDs, helps Duke outlast Virginia Tech

Maalik Murphy threw three touchdown passes to Eli Pancol, including two that went for more than 75 yards,...

FREE

Get the most important breaking news and analyses for Free.

Thank you for subscribing

Something went wrong.