Houston Chronicle

NFL clears Manning of HGH allegation­s

- By Arnie Stapleton

The NFL said it found no credible evidence that Peyton Manning was provided with human growth hormone or other prohibited substances as alleged in a documentar­y by Al-Jazeera America last year.

The league said the quarterbac­k and his wife, Ashley, fully cooperated in the seven-month investigat­ion, providing interviews and access to all records sought by investigat­ors.

The NFL is continuing its investigat­ion into allegation­s made against other NFL players in the documentar­y, which the league said involves “different lines of inquiry and witnesses.” Those other players — all of them linebacker­s — provided the league with sworn affidavits, but the NFL wants to interview them in person.

In stark contrast, Manning, 40, who retired a month after Denver’s 24-10 victory over Carolina in Super Bowl 50, welcomed the probe.

In December, Al-Jazeera reported that an intern at an Indianapol­is antiaging clinic was secretly recorded suggesting that Manning’s wife received deliveries of HGH in 2011 while the quarterbac­k was recovering from neck fusion surgery. Charles Sly, the intern, recanted his statements, which were recorded without his knowledge. He said they were fabricated in an attempt to impress a potential business partner.

Manning angrily denounced the report, calling it “completely fabricated, complete trash, garbage,” and insisting he never took shortcuts in his return to football after missing 2011 with neck problems.

At the time the allegation­s were made, the Broncos and the Colts, for whom Manning played from 19982011, issued statements in support of the five-time MVP.

Manning said he sought holistic treatments such as hyperbaric oxygen and nutrient therapy at the Guyer Institute of Molecular Medicine with knowledge and consent of the Colts’ training and medical staff after his four neck surgeries. He insisted he never used performanc­e-enhancing substances and never took anything sent to his wife.

HGH is banned by profession­al sports leagues.

The Al-Jazeera report alleged other high-profile athletes obtained PEDs, including baseball stars Ryan Howard of the Philadelph­ia Phillies and Ryan Zimmerman of the Washington Nationals. The report also named four other prominent NFL players — Clay Matthews and Julius Peppers of the Green Bay Packers, James Harrison of the Pittsburgh Steelers and free agent Mike Neal.

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