Dayton Daily News

Manning ends ride with champ Broncos

QB to forgo $19 million, retire after winning his 2nd Super Bowl trophy.

- By Arnie Stapleton

Peyton ENGLEWOOD, COLO.— Manning surveyed the landscape of his stellar career and made one last big call. He’s retiring as a champion.

A month after Denver’s triumph in Super Bowl 50, Manning informed John Elway he is following his lead and riding off into that orange sunset — just like the Broncos’ boss did 17 years ago after winning his second Super Bowl.

Just shy of 40, Manning will forgo $19 million and a 19th season in the NFL, where he served as both a throwback and a transforme­r in a career highlighte­d by an unpreceden­ted five MVP awards and dozens of passing records.

“Peyton was a player that guys wanted to play with,” Elway said. “That made us better as a team and I’m thrilled that we were able to win a championsh­ip in his final year.”

The Broncos scheduled a news conference for today.

Manning leaves the league he helped popularize to supersize status as its all-time leading passer and winningest starting quarterbac­k, the only one in NFL history to win Super Bowls with two franchises.

His first came in 2007 with the Indianapol­is Colts, who drafted him No. 1 overall in 1998. The Colts gave up on him

Manning exits after his 18th and most trying season on the field.

after a series of neck surgeries forced Manning to miss all of the 2011 season and left him without feeling in the fingertips of his right hand.

A rare superstar quarterbac­k on the open market in 2012, Manning resettled in Denver, where, despite a right arm weakened by nerve damage, he went 50-15 with his fifth MVP award and two trips to the Super Bowl in four seasons.

So, defensive coordinato­rs, you can breathe a little easier today.

“I get asked a lot about my legacy,” Manning said before the Super Bowl. “For me, it’s being a good teammate, having the respect of my teammates, having the respect of the coaches and players. That’s important to me. I am not taking this for granted. I just love football.”

The 18th season for No. 18 was by far his most trying on the field. He had to adjust to new coach Gary Kubiak’s run-based offense, to unrelentin­g health issues and to questions about his character on his way to winning his second Super Bowl.

Manning, whose dry wit and star power has made him a staple of commercial­s and late-night television for nearly two decades, saw his squeakycle­an image take a beating as the final pages were flipped on his storied career.

The NFL is investigat­ing allegation­s that human growth hormone was shipped to his home in his wife’s name following an Al Jazeera report that Manning dismissed as “garbage.” And in a new lawsuit filed last month. Manning was cited as an example of a hostile environmen­t for women at the University of Tennessee for his alleged harassment of a female trainer in 1996.

A torn ligament in his left foot hampered Manning all the way back to August. It led to his worst statistica­l season and sidelined him for six weeks before that fairy-tale finish in Santa Clara, California, when his defense carried him across the finish line.

Constantly harassed, never quite comfortabl­e — sort of the way the whole season played out — Manning walked away with his second title after Denver’s defense, with seven sacks and four takeaways, all but handed him the Lombardi Trophy in a 24-10 victory over Carolina.

“He had to do several things different this year,” said his dad, Archie, a former star quarterbac­k himself. “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.”

Manning also had to play the role of game manager for the first time during Denver’s defense-fueled run to the title. “I’m just glad I was on the same team as our defense,” he said.

Although teammates said his speech on the eve of the game felt like a goodbye, Manning didn’t call it his “last rodeo” right away, saying he needed time to reflect.

Denver gained only 194 yards against the Panthers, the fewest for a victorious team in a Super Bowl, and Manning had but 13 completion­s for 141 yards. Thanks to a defense led by game MVP Von Miller, however, Manning became the oldest quarterbac­k to win a championsh­ip, a year older than Elway was when he won his second in 1999 before walking away.

Manning, who revealed at the Super Bowl that he faces a hip replacemen­t in retirement, finished in a tie with Brett Favre for most regular-season wins with 186. His victory in Super Bowl 50 was his 14th in the postseason, one more than Favre, making him the NFL’s only 200-win quarterbac­k.

 ?? RONALD MARTINEZ / GETTY IMAGES ?? One of the NFL’s greatest QBs, Peyton Manning needed help from Denver’s defense to win his second title.
RONALD MARTINEZ / GETTY IMAGES One of the NFL’s greatest QBs, Peyton Manning needed help from Denver’s defense to win his second title.

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