INDIANAPOLIS -- Loaded. That’s the best way to describe the Indianapolis Colts' offense on paper.

Running back? Check. Frank Gore.

Receiver? Lots of depth potentially with T.Y. Hilton, Andre Johnson, Phillip Dorsett, Donte Moncrief and Duron Carter.

Tight end? Dwayne Allen and Coby Fleener give the Colts arguably the best young tight end duo in the NFL.

That’s the good news. Now it’s up to offensive coordinator Pep Hamilton and quarterback Andrew Luck to make sure the ball gets spread around to prevent the offense from being predictable.

The loads of talent allows Hamilton to mix and match personnel groups.

When it came to lineup combinations last season, the Colts ran the most plays with three receivers, one tight end and a running back. They used that formation 557 out of 1,105 plays (50.4 percent) in the regular season. They also scored 10 of their 51 touchdowns in that same formation.

Of all the different personnel combinations used by the Colts last season, the top four each consisted of three wide receivers, one running back and one tight end.

Indianapolis should have an even better receiving group next season. It started with the signing of Carter, who spent the past two seasons playing in the Canadian Football League, and Johnson and then got even better when the Colts used their first-round pick on the speedy Dorsett.

“I don't think that's been an issue in the past few years just as far as distributing the ball and finding ways to create the matchups that are in our favor,” Hamilton said. “I feel like there will be more times than not where we should be able to find that matchup and exploit that matchup. I don't know that we have anybody that's playing a skill position for us that shouldn't be able to win a one-on-one matchup. That should be something that can help us to get over that hump and defeat teams that like to play a lot of man coverage."