Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Peyton spoils his fans by winning 2nd Lombardi Trophy in possible final game of career

- By Eddie Pells

Everyone got spoiled. Over two decades of watching Peyton Manning play on the biggest stages, fans became numb to all he could do — the way he dissected defenses with clinical precision, the way he rewrote the record book, even the way he came back from a neck injury that was supposed to be career-ending. Then this. Hobbled, creaking, sputtering to the end of his 18th season, he became a different quarterbac­k. Not the Alpha Dog who needed to call all the shots. But a 39-yearold game manager who needed others to carry him over the finish line.

And what a finish the 24-10 win over the Carolina Panthers was — if, in fact, this was it.

Not so much because of the 13 completion­s and 141 yards — that used to be one quarter’s worth for Manning. But because of the Super Bowl title he brought back to Denver — the second of his storied career and the one that proved every last thing he needed to.

“I don’t worry much about Peyton’s legacy,” said his dad, Archie, as he leaned against the wall outside the Broncos locker room. “Peyton’s legacy was he was a good quarterbac­k. He showed up and played.

“A lot of people give him credit for changing things about the game. But there’s nothing wrong with being 2-2 in the Super Bowl instead of 1-3.”

About those two losses: They hovered over Manning like a dark cloud. It wasn’t so much that he couldn’t win the big one — he did that in 2007 with the Colts — it was that he didn’t win enough of them.

All the passing yards (71,940), all those MVP awards (a record five), all those wins (Sunday’s marked No. 200) should’ve translated into more rings.

Now he has two, and is one of only 12 quarterbac­ks who can claim multiple Super Bowl titles.

One of the others is John Elway, who took a chance on Manning’s surgically repaired neck in 2012, boldly proclaimin­g at the time that there was no Plan B in case things didn’t work out.

Manning repaid him by throwing for nearly 15,000 yards over the first three seasons, and taking them to the Super Bowl two years ago. But the Broncos weren’t a complete team, and the best proof came Feb. 2, 2014 against the Seattle Seahawks, who humiliated them from beginning to end, 43-8.

The bolstering of the defense began immediatel­y, but not until halfway through this season did the magnitude of the transforma­tion — of the Broncos and of Manning himself — really sink in.

His post-injury arm strength already a question, it became a glaring liability. He threw an NFL-high 17 intercepti­ons through 8 1/2 games before he finally succumbed to the bench with a torn ligament in his left foot.

“He had to do several things different this year,” Archie said. “Had to take off during the season, which he’d never done before. He ran the scout team, which I don’t think he’d ever done, and he dressed out as a backup, which he’d never done.”

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