By Alex Butler
Indianapolis Colts head coach Chuck Pagano watches his team
during warm-ups before their game against the New York Jets at Lucas Oil
Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, September 21, 2015. Photo by
John Sommers II/UPI
| License Photo
Indianapolis
Colts head coach Chuck Pagano reacts to his teams play against the
Cincinnati Bengal during the second half of play in their NFL Wild Card
game at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, January 4, 2015.
Photo by John Sommers II/UPI
|
License Photo
Indianapolis
Colts owner Jim Irsay hold up the Lombardi Trophy for the crowd at a
Superbowl celebration rally at the RCA Dome in Indianapolis February 5,
2007. The Colts defeated the Chicago Bears 29-17 to win Superbowl XLI.
(UPI Photo/Mark Cowan)
| License Photo
The
Indianapolis Colts finished its first round of general manager interviews Saturday, following the dismissal of Ryan Grigson.
Colts interim GM Jimmy Raye III and
Green Bay Packers director of football operations Eliot Wolf were the final two candidates to be interviewed.
Kansas City Chiefs director of football operations Chris Ballard,
Minnesota Vikings assistant GM George Paton, and
Seattle Seahawks co-directors of player personnel Trent Kirchner and Scott Fitterer interviewed for the position earlier this week.
The Colts are expected to bring in several candidates for additional interviews, but Ballard is the early favorite for the hire.
In fact,
KMBC Kansas City's Steven Albritton
reported that Ballard is the "clear favorite" for the Colts' GM gig. He
also reported that Ballard wants to change the team's head coach if he
gets the job.
Colts owner
Jim Irsay fired Grigson on Jan. 21. Grigson and current Colts coach Chuck Pagano both began their stints with the franchise in 2012.
"The new general manager will come in, evaluate our whole football program, and we'll see where we're at,"
Irsay said in his press conference.
"Again, I hope Chuck can be our coach for many years to come. He is our
coach this year, and going through this process and interviewing
general managers and having whoever the new general manager come in to
work with me, to evaluate where we're at will play a big role in that in
the long term. But for 2017, Chuck is our coach."
The Colts are 16-16 in the last two seasons, missing out on the postseason.
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