Peyton Manning
Peyton Williams Manning (born March
24, 1976) is an American football quarterback for the Denver Broncos of the
National Football League (NFL). He played for the Indianapolis Colts for 14
seasons from 1998 to 2011. He is a son of former NFL quarterback Archie Manning
and an elder brother of New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning.
Manning was born in New Orleans,
Louisiana, the son of Olivia (née Williams) and NFL quarterback Elisha
Archibald "Archie" Manning III. He married his wife, Ashley, in
Memphis on St. Patrick's Day in 2001. Ashley was introduced to him by her
parents' next-door neighbor the summer before Manning's freshman year in college.
Peyton and wife Ashley have twins, a boy and a girl, Marshall Williams and
Mosley Thompson.
Manning reportedly has an excellent
memory for plays. He memorized the Colts' playbook within a week after being
drafted, and In 2012 was able to precisely recall the details and timing of a
specific play he had used at Tennessee 16 years earlier. During the summer,
Archie, Peyton, Eli, and Cooper run the Manning Passing Academy, a five-day
camp which aims to improve the offensive skills of quarterbacks, wide
receivers, tight ends, and running backs. In addition to the Mannings, the camp
has included many prominent players from football as coaches, such as Colts
wide receivers Marvin Harrison and Reggie Wayne.
Peyton, along with Archie, authored
a book entitled Manning: A Father, His Sons, and a Football Legacy, which was
released in 2000. The book covers Archie's and Cooper's lives and careers, and
Peyton's life and career up to the time that the book was released, and
examines football from both Archie's and Peyton's points-of-view.
In 2009, Peyton, Eli, and Archie
co-authored a children's book entitled Family Huddle, which describes in simple
text and pictures how the three Manning brothers played football as young boys
(Scholastic Press; illustrations by Jim Madsen).
Manning has donated over $8,000 to
Republican politicians, among them Fred Thompson, Bob Corker, and former
President George W. Bush.
In regard to religion, Manning is a
devout member of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and prays before every game.
Manning played college football for
the University of Tennessee, leading the Volunteers to the 1997 SEC Championship
in his senior season. However, No. 3 Tennessee lost to the No. 2 Nebraska
Cornhuskers 42-17 in the Orange Bowl giving Nebraska and Tom Osborne their 3rd
national championship in 4 years. He was chosen by the Indianapolis Colts with
the first overall pick in the 1998 NFL Draft. From 1998 to 2010, he led the
Colts to eight (seven AFC South and one AFC East) division championships, two
AFC championships, and one Super Bowl championship (Super Bowl XLI). He has won
a record four league most valuable player awards, was the most valuable player
of Super Bowl XLI, has been named to twelve Pro Bowls, has twelve 4,000-yard
passing seasons, and is the Indianapolis Colts' all-time leader in passing
yards (54,828) and touchdown passes (399). In 2009, he was named the best
player in the NFL, and Fox Sports, along with Sports Illustrated, named him the
NFL player of the decade for the 2000s.
In May 2011, he underwent neck
surgery to alleviate neck pain and arm weakness he dealt with during the previous
few seasons before signing a five-year, $90 million contract extension with the
Colts in July 2011. Manning had hoped to play in the 2011 season, but in
September 2011 he underwent a second, and much more serious surgery: a level
one cervical fusion procedure. Manning had never missed an NFL game in his
career, but was forced to miss the entire 2011 season. He was released by the
Colts on March 7, 2012, and after an almost two-week period where he visited
with and worked out for several NFL teams, he signed with the Denver Broncos on
March 20, 2012.
Manning's pre-snap routine has
earned him the nickname "The Sheriff", and he is one of the most
recognizable and parodied players in the NFL. Teams led by Manning more often
than not use the hurry-up offense in place of the standard huddle.
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