Tyler Warren's versatility shines again with first career touchdown in Colts' Week 4 loss to Rams
The rookie tight end scored his first career NFL touchdown on Sunday.
Through his first four games in the NFL, Tyler Warren has made one thing very clear: he may be predictable, but that doesn't mean you're going to stop him.
The rookie tight end is, as everyone knows by now, a physical, gritty throwback football player. He can catch, he can run, he can hit – and he enjoys it all. He can run a route as a wide receiver, he can line up as fullback, he even takes snaps in wildcat formation.
Warren did it all in college at Penn State, and he's doing it all now with the Colts. If you aren't expecting it, that's on you.
The entire league is well aware of Warren's talent, which is why he's consistently been heavily defended throughout the first four games of his NFL career. Everyone knows he's going to make a cut to get around his defenders, they know he's going to stretch up for a catch, they know he's going to barrel into a defender for a block.
But no one – not even the Los Angeles Rams, with a top five defense – has been able to stop him.
In the Colts' tight 27-20 loss to the Rams at SoFi Stadium on Sunday, Warren racked up 70 yards on five receptions for what was already his third game with at least 70 receiving yards. He also had two carries for three rushing yards – and those three yards were the most important ones of Warren's young career.
Early in the second quarter, with the score tied 3-3, the Colts stood at the Rams' three-yard line and were looking to get the first touchdown of the day. But as they lined up at the line of scrimmage, it wasn't quarterback Daniel Jones standing behind center to receive the snap, like usual.
It was Warren.
It was a question many Colts fans had: would head coach Shane Steichen ever use Warren in wildcat formation, having the tight end take the snap directly? Warren played quarterback in high school and college tape of his success in similar situations, and it felt like it was only a matter of time before Steichen took advantage.
Now, this snap didn't necessarily yield the (assumed) desired result of a touchdown, but Warren was able to gain a yard against an incredibly stout Rams defensive line. And on the next play, the Colts once again turned to their physical tight end – this time with a handoff – to muscle his way through to the end zone.
Warren did just that, with the help of Jones and fellow tight ends Mo Alie-Cox and Drew Ogletree, physically willing himself across the goal line. Really, there wasn't a more fitting way for Warren to record his first career NFL touchdown.
"It was good," Warren said. "Actually, I think Daniel jumped in the pile and started pushing, and Mo and Tree were right there pushing the pile in. So it was fun."
"I just tried to help where I could," Jones said with a small chuckle. "A good effort by him and those guys and they were pushing. Just tried to try that on there, and we got in."
And it's not like the Rams didn't know what was coming; after Jones handed the ball off to Warren there was really only one thing the tight end was going to try to do.
They still couldn't stop it: Warren's talent and physicality outweighed his predictability, as per usual.
Warren, predictable not just in his performance on the football field but in his overall approach to the game in general, said he would "probably" keep the football. But he made it clear he's much more focused on the work the Colts still must put in to succeed as a team.
"Still got a lot of stuff to do in the season," he said. "It was fun, but still got work to do."
Warren was one of the bright spots in the Colts' loss on Sunday, in which it felt like they couldn't stop beating themselves with mistakes and penalties. And Warren took responsibility for his part in that as well; he had an offensive holding penalty in the third quarter that negated a big reception that would have put the Colts just a few yards from the end zone again.
"Those are big, big deals," Warren said of the penalties. "And in this league with the quality of teams, it's tough to come back from those."
When Warren thinks back to the Colts' Week 4 game against the Rams, there's a very strong likelihood that the first thing he thinks about is the team's loss and how he could have been better. It was his first loss of his NFL career, and no doubt a tough one to swallow in a game the Colts had a good chance to win.
But all of that still doesn't take away the fact that it was also the game Warren scored his first NFL touchdown – and yet another game in which he showed just how much he belongs in the league.
Giants QB Jaxson Dart Sends Message to Malik Nabers Amid Injury News

The New York Giants won their first game of the 2025 season in Week 4 on the back of rookie quarterback Jaxson Dart, but the victory was bittersweet after the news that star wide receiver Malik Nabers was carted off the field with what is “believed” to be a torn ACL.
After the game, Dart sent a heartfelt message to Nabers after being asked about the impact of his potential long-term injury.
“Obviously, prayers to him,” Dart began during his postgame press conference. “I don’t think that we know exactly what happened, so he’s going to be one of my first phone calls to check on him.”
“Malik is — I’ve said it — Malik’s one of one,” the rookie continued. “When you have a guy like that on the field, you have all the confidence in the world that he can just be a dominant game-changer. But I thought from that moment, obviously, it’s really hard seeing one of your best friends go down, but we were able to rally, and I thought guys made some good plays. But, obviously, prayers to him.”
After a follow-up question, Dart added that the Nabers injury “hurts,” and that “the worst part of this game is injuries.”
“You hate to see your teammate, your brother, go down and look in pain like that,” Dart expressed. “But I’m just going to be praying for him, and I’ve got his back through it all.”
Giants Have Yet to Confirm the Severity of Malik Nabers’ Injury as Fans Wait on Update
There will likely be a Nabers injury update at some point today, on Monday, September 29.
Most are expecting it to confirm the worst, that Nabers has indeed suffered a torn ACL. But that has not been reported at this time.
“Head coach Brian Daboll didn’t have an update after the Giants’ 21-18 win over the Los Angeles Chargers at MetLife Stadium, but ESPN and NFL Media reported Nabers is feared to have suffered a torn ACL,” New York Daily News beat reporter Pat Leonard wrote on Monday morning.
Leonard also quoted Daboll, who said: “Unfortunately, this is a business of injury. I feel terrible for Malik’s injury. We’ll see where it’s at. He’s an important piece of our team, but … it’s next man up.”
As noted above, NFL Network insiders Ian Rapoport and Tom Pelissero initially reported that Nabers is “believed to have torn his ACL.”
The next several hours will be spent waiting on the results of the Giants’ various medical tests and exams.
Are the Giants ‘Cursed’ Despite Jaxson Dart’s Exciting Debut?
On Monday morning, one of the headlines from ESPN and insider Dan Graziano was a debate over whether or not the Giants are “cursed.” This was in reference to Nabers getting injured despite Dart’s Week 4 emergence.
Graziano did deem this an “overreaction,” but his reason wasn’t very convincing.
“[Overreaction,] but only because I don’t believe in curses,” the ESPN insider wrote. “Since the start of the 2017 season, the Giants are tied with the [New York] Jets for the most losses in the NFL. The Giants are on their fourth head coach since they fired Tom Coughlin at the end of the 2015 season. They’re banking on Dart, the 25th pick in this year’s draft, to be a franchise savior at quarterback, and if he’s not, they’ll probably hire their fifth post-Coughlin coach before long.”
“The Giants are down bad, folks, and I’m not trying to minimize that,” Graziano continued. “And the prospect of having to watch the rest of this season without Nabers, who would be Dart’s biggest early-career star target if he were healthy, is extremely disappointing.”
Having said that, he went on to note that “there’s always hope.” Explaining: “Look around. The [Detroit] Lions are awesome. The [Buffalo] Bills go to the playoffs every year. A decade ago, those things would have sounded ridiculous. Keep the faith, Giants fans. I know it’s tough, but Dart looked like fun Sunday, and the pass rush got after Justin Herbert. So, maybe there’s something special to come before long.”