Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers for Tracker Season 3, Episode 9.
‘Tracker’ Left Us Hanging on Keaton’s Ultimate Fate in the Mid-Season Finale
It would be one thing if “Good Trouble” just shot Keaton and Colter had to leave him to go get help, or even if Keaton had been injured in a way where he wasn’t actively bleeding out (and hadn’t nearly died before the rewardist could stabilize him). But considering the urgency of Colter’s attempts to keep Keaton awake and alive, the episode adds further insult to the ex-detective’s pre-existing injury by tossing him off a literal cliff. The irony isn’t lost on us. The episode ends with an infuriating “To Be Continued…” before those credits roll. Admittedly, there isn’t much hope for Keaton going into the back half of Season 3, and showrunner Elwood Reid didn’t help much either in his post-mortem with TV Line. “I can say that he was initially dead [in the episode’s first draft],” Reid explained after being asked about Keaton’s fate. “Now, whether that remains, I don’t know…” That’s certainly not a bout of confidence that Brent Sexton will return.
At this point, we’re not at all worried about Colter. If Justin Hartley were leaving the show, there would have been some sort of announcement by now, and Tracker would’ve had to set up someone else to take over. Sure, there have been rumors of a Russell Shaw (Jensen Ackles) spin-off, but that would change the tone and feel of the show so drastically that there’s no way the writers would axe Colter and just replace him with Russell. Considering Hartley himself has had such a direct hand in putting Tracker together, that, too, gives us confidence that Colter Shaw is A-okay. But everything’s still up in the air for Keaton, and even if he does survive, there’s no telling whether he’ll be able to help Colter see this Tacoma-based conspiracy through…
Keaton Brings a Lot to Colter’s Investigations on ‘Tracker’
Keaton brings something special to Tracker that no other supporting or recurring character can. What made his partnership with Colter so rich and engaging in Season 2 was his longtime knowledge of law enforcement practices, his lasting connections to that world, and his keen investigative eye that allows him to connect certain dots that Colter previously overlooked. Of course, he has his blind spots too, which is why he brought Colter in to help uncover what his former partner, Nat Dobbs (Dean McKenzie), got himself caught up in. Still, Keaton is the type of character who is invaluable to someone like Colter. Although our hero is generally a “lone wolf,” he still employs people like Reenie (Fiona Rene) and Randy (Chris Lee) to help him in areas that he isn’t as proficient in. Keaton is another character who fits that bill, and not just for Colter.
In Collider‘s recent sit-down with Eldwood Reid, the showrunner gave us some additional hope that Keaton may make it out of this alive — if not just because the writers have other things they want to do with him.
We haven’t gotten there yet, but we were trying to put Keaton in the office to be a private investigator with Reenie. Colter said, “Hey, I met this really great cop. He’s retired and he’s got nothing to do.” It was a way to close a loop on that storyline and maybe dangle that possibility of Keaton was to live. That’s the way we backed into that thinking. Keaton is a character that we, since last season, have talked a lot about. I thought those episodes were really intense, with him hunting down the guy that killed Colter’s old girlfriend, so they’ve got this bond that’s there.
We can certainly see the vision here. As Reid notes, Colter and Reenie want to bring Keaton deeper into the fold, if not just in an off-screen capacity, to help the lawyer in some of her more difficult legal cases that Colter can’t be bothered to get involved with. “We’re trying to slowly expand the Tracker universe a little bit,” Reid adds, and we can certainly see the potential. Although Keaton explains that many of his old connections have run dry in the last year, it appears that Detective Willa Simms (Jes Macallan) may be more understanding now than before. If Keaton’s able to make it out of this one alive, he would still be a great asset for the team to have at their beck and call. In the same way that Russell brings a brotherly bond and effortlessly ushers Colter into the world of government conspiracy and armed private contractors, so does Keaton with an almost paternal bond with the rewardist, resulting in a mutual respect and admiration.
‘Tracker’ Doesn’t Return Until March, So We Have a Long Winter To Wonder
Perhaps the most disappointing thing about this classic network television cliffhanger (how many times have we seen this before on various CBS shows?) is that Tracker is not returning until March 1, 2026 after the Winter Olympics. The last thing we’d want is to see this ex-Washington detective so unceremoniously killed off, especially after the show has so intentionally set him up as a possible recurring star. Here’s hoping that the CBS drama pulls through and that Colter can perform some sort of life-saving miracle to ensure Keaton’s survival; otherwise, this may be the last we see of Brent Sexton on Tracker — and that would be a crying shame.
Tracker airs Sundays on CBS and is available the next day for streaming on Paramount+.

