INDIANAPOLIS -- All Gunnard Twyner could do to calm Zach Pascal’s restless mind was tell him what’d he heard. He sat in the offensive meetings with Frank Reich and the Indianapolis Colts coaching staff, so he knew there was a plan.
They needed to get Pascal more involved. It was time, they agreed.
Twyner, the Colts offensive quality control coach, relayed the message, but Pascal was getting antsy. To begin the season, he’d played two games, 54 snaps in a row, without receiving a single look from quarterback Jacoby Brissett. Not one target.