Tag: Denver Broncos

Peyton Manning: Take the ring and hang it up

That’ll do, Peyton Manning.

Aided by a vicious defense led by Von Miller and a running game anchored by C.J. Anderson, Manning has collected that elusive second Super Bowl, with Denver beating the Carolina Panthers 24-10. The one he needed to vindicate a Hall of Fame career that hopefully ended on Sunday night in San Francisco.

Manning became the oldest quarterback in NFL history to win a Super Bowl. He became the only quarterback in NFL history to win a Super Bowl with two different teams. He has collected 200 wins, between the regular season and the playoffs, and that is also a record. Add in a slew of regular season records and Manning has done it all. For the postseason, he completes 63 percent of his passes and threw 40 touchdowns against 25 interceptions.

Manning admitted in the week leading up to Super Bowl 50 that he wasn’t exactly Bruce Springsteen anymore. “I’m still a part of the band. I’m not the lead singer, but I can still play a few solos.” He isn’t what he used to be, but that was by design. The Broncos defense, the quickest in the lead, didn’t need Manning to be Joe Montana out there. Wade Phillips defensive schemes were more than enough to sink the ship of Tom Brady and scramble the brain of the young Cam Newton. All Manning had to do was take the field, limit the mistakes, make some precise passes and hand the ball off.

He went from  the guy who wasn’t supposed to play football five years ago after four neck surgeries to a guy tossing a two point conversion at the end of Super Bowl 50 to pound the nail into the coffin of another team. The Colts cast him off after he was deemed damaged goods. When he brought Denver back to the Super Bowl two years ago, the Seattle Seahawks embarrassed him. He was denied against New Orleans years earlier. Today, he can wake up and acknowledge that he was able to bring the Broncos back to the promised land at the rye old age of 39 years old. The only guy who can claim to do that this late in the game is the guy who brought Peyton to Denver. A man named John Elway.

Now, Manning should ride off into the sunset. Hop on a bronco, grab his hat, sit high and ride off. He should say no to that lame offer from Stan Kroenke and the LA Rams when it comes in. Flip Stan the bird as you ride past his house. He has no reason to go out there and be a part of that circus, unless he wants to be laid out at least 4-5 times per game behind that weak offensive line. The Rams are 5 years away from thinking about a Super Bowl, so forget it. There’s no need to be Johnny Unitas or Joe Namath on a football field, existing as more of a prop and marketing tool than an actual football player. Manning should walk away a champion while his back is straight and his brain is intact. Very few players leave when it’s right in their head and heart.

Let me give you some numbers before I leave.

In his career during the regular season, Manning completed 6,125 passes for 71,940 yards(40.8 miles worth). He threw 539 touchdowns and 251 interceptions while fumbling 47 times in 266 games with a 96.5 passer rating. He won a pair of Super Bowls to go with those stellar stats.

Peyton Manning will retire. Bet on it. He will rest, talk with his family, hug his son, kiss his wife and drink some Budweiser. He’ll film a dozen commercials and host Saturday Night Live. He will hang out, reap the rewards of a 17 year career. He will hang out a little and decide if he has thrown his last pass. Sometime this month or next, before the NFL draft unfolds and training camp uncoils, Manning will call it a day. He can’t go out on a higher note and will hopefully resist the Brett Favre body assault tour.

Peyton Manning loves football, so I can only hope he takes that passion to the sidelines and becomes a coach. He won’t be able to stay away and will stick around to keep an eye on his brother and the upcoming fleet. He has one of the smartest minds in the game and doesn’t need to be a color analyst next to Joe Buck or cram into a booth with Boomer and Steve Young. Be a coach. He will make a great head coach one day.

When Manning threw his last college football pass, I was a freshman in high school. When he won his first Super Bowl I had been married for two years. As he contemplates retirement, my son is four years old. Every football fan has their guy. The one they root for no matter what. Manning is my guy.

It’s time for my guy to hang it up. He’s at the top of the mountain. Everybody is looking up at him now. He is the star. One last time. There’s a reason several Broncos and Panthers players broke out their camera phones to snap photos of Manning and get a moment with him.

Everybody wants to share the stage with a legend.

Doubting Peyton Manning is futile

(Photo by Anthony J. Causi)
(Photo by Anthony J. Causi)

Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, Peyton Manning is 39 years old and still winning football games. Four neck surgeries. Constant doubt. Predators lurking waiting for him to finally fall and the man just keeps firing pigskin ribbons like he just stepped on a football field. Unlike former Iron Man Brett Favre, Manning has made adjustments and endured. He’s surprised many, including his boss and former Bronco legend John Elway and his rival, Tom Brady.

When Manning had a rough opening week this season, a game that followed a weak preseason round, the vultures flew in. He only threw one touchdown, and had a passing rating below 50. Oh no, he’s finally done. Call the referee or the NFL quarterback coroner. Peyton may finally be relegated to being a commercial comedy king. Well, four days later, on Thursday night against Kansas City at Arrowhead Stadium, Manning turned back the clock to…well last season.

He threw for 256 yards, 3 touchdowns and one interception. More importantly, with his team down 24-17 late with 1:51 left in the game, Manning led the team down the field in the 2nd most hostile environment for a road team like a technician. It didn’t matter the defense laid in front of him. He was going downfield and that’s all. He led them back and tied the game at 24 with a 19 yard touchdown pass to Emmanuel Sanders with 36 seconds left. Vintage Peyton Manning on full display for the world to see.

Peyton Manning isn’t done yet. He won’t let the 2014 playoff one and done be his swan song. He still wants that second championship to easily put him into the top 5 quarterbacks list. Everyone’s list. He did something else on Thursday. He threw for his 70,000th yard. That’s right. Manning has thrown for 70,122 yards, or in other words, nearly 40 miles worth of completed passes. He’s thrown for 533 touchdowns, or 533 more than me or you.

The world of sports is a frenzy and causes many to jump to conclusions. We all do it. The speed of this mobile cultural driven world means move from one topic to the next. Most people want to deem Manning finished because it means they can move onto the next hot specimen in waiting. Well, as the old cowboy said when he was down on one knee, Manning has something to say about that.

We need the Peyton’s to stay upright. He’s a throwback, a man who doesn’t use twitter or take shots at other players. A guy who doesn’t like he belongs on the front of a bodybuilders magazine. He’s the classic pocket passer who has been silencing doubters ever since he made it into the league. People said he didn’t have the arm strength when he broke into the NFL in 1998. 17 years later, they are saying the same thing and Manning just keeps completing passes. It’s not how hard you can throw in this league. It’s about how accurate you can be under pressure. In a new system with a patchwork offensive line, Manning is still getting it done.

Go ahead and keep doubting him. Manning seems to like this kind of pressure and won’t make excuses for being old as long as the doubters refrain from thinking a bad week means a burial is in order.

Talk at me, @buffa82 on Twitter

A Super Bowl 48 Rant

It happened four days ago and I am here to deliver the Super Bowl 48 recap.  I will be blunt honest here.  I am going back in time and giving you a pure rant.   A list of imageedit_1_2936190761things I will take away from this game, the next day and how I feel about it.   You have heard at least 25 different accounts of the game by now.  Neither have been this direct or unfiltered.  I won’t bore you with hesitation or stats.  Just my take.

My team lost.  There, I said it.  I was rooting for Peyton Manning to win his 2nd ring and climb into the top 5 QB’s of all time conversation and create words about the greatest arm of all time.   So much for that theory.    Manning and his Mile High horses got caught in a storm of Seahawks fiery vengeance and basically got sonically(my own word and ode to the city’s former basketball team) bitch slapped across the forehead.   Forget the Legion Of Boom.  Manning and company got tortured on Sunday in Super Bowl 48.  Believe me, as I downed the 32nd buffalo chicken sauce dipped chip, Manny Rameriz flung a high snap over Manning’s head and the route was on.   The game of “they are still in it” began with less than a minute gone and before a Broncos fan could find chocolate covered strawberries, the score was 22-0.  Knife, inserted into shoulder, and twisted.   NOOOOO!!!

The commercials didn’t help.   An overweight Laurence Fishburne trying to bring back Morpheus and the exploding city didn’t work and neither did the overly sappy Coke commercials.   The best commercial, the Mountain Dew/Dale Earnhardt spot, came on before the game even started.   The Budweiser ad was kind of sweet and featured a real soldier family but there weren’t a lot of laugh out loud commercials to balance one of the worse blowouts in Super Bowl history.  Blame the Seahawks lazy fourth quarter coverage for revoking the shutout.   And one more thing, Bud Light, please don’t show us the entire 3 minute 45 second commerical before game day.   By the time it aired, it was chopped, confusing and all together horrible.   Arnold should be ashamed of himself.  Back to the game…..

Look, Manning is my favorite player and someone I really admire a lot.   Sure, he puts his face everywhere on television but I’d rather see him hawk Papa Johns disgusting pizza than see one more Ray Vinson/Bernie Federko high five.   Manning is funny, classy, and takes a loss better than most.   When he was getting pounded yesterday, you never saw him chew a teammate out or look like a forgotten diva.  He stood there, helmet strapped to the head, shoulders high and held a thought in his head that a miracle could happen.   Sorry, Peyton, it didn’t.   The Seahawks rolled and punished Peyton.   They sacked him once but collided with his throwing motion twice, resulting in an interception for 6 points and a fumble.   Peyton didn’t throw a duck on his own.  He was helped by a man named Cliff Avril, who got a hold of his shoulder/arm at least 3 times and caused broken pass attempts or complete doom.   Kam Chancellor and Malcolm Smith intercepted Manning.  Byron Maxwell and Chris Clemons forced fumbles.   Richard Sherman and Earl Thomas made sure Demaryrius Thomas, Eric Decker and Wes Welker never created game breaking receptions.   At the end of the brutal affair, the Seahawks defense made sure Peyton Manning not only didn’t receive his 2nd ring, but they gave him nightmares about how he missed it.  A shamefully horrible night to be rooting for the Denver Broncos.

I’m not being mean here.  It was hard to watch.   Let me provide a little perspective.  My birthday was today and the Super Bowl basically subs as my B-day party every year.  I have gotten some pleasant treats around this time of year.  Two Eli/Giants upsets over Tom Brady.   An unfortunate miss by Kurt Warner with the Cardinals.   The Springsteen crotch moment and AARP meeting with The Who.   A mixture of blood, toxin and great nights.   Last night, I got a headache, ate too much and looked drained by halftime.   At the very least, I wanted a good game and didn’t get anything close to it.  I got a slaughter.   I saw New Jersey get darker than the night The Sopranos faded to black.

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Peyton Manning’s Fight

There are a lot of ways to build up hype on a Super Bowl and while other writers are trying to wrap their heads around the entire two team matchup and the commercials, I imageedit_1_5426611002am going to tell you about Peyton Manning’s fight and what the chances are of him winning his second Super Bowl.  I like to pick the juiciest topic and spin it for you.

Make no mistake it will not be an easy task, dry or wet weather.   Manning is playing against one of the best defenses in the NFL and their players have their sights set on one man and it’s Peyton.   Stop Peyton is the mantra, and in my eyes he can only be truly stopped if he isn’t on the field.  This goes for all great quarterbacks who don’t throw a lot of interceptions or shoot themselves in the foot.  Let’s break it down.

You can forget about his regular season stats.  Trust me, they are pretty.   In the history of football, there aren’t many quarterbacks who can match his regular season resume.  He gets it done there.  In his career(15 seasons of 16, 1 missed entirely to injury), Manning has only thrown for 64,000 + yards and 491 touchdowns(against 219 interceptions) with a completion percentage of 65 percent and a QB rating of 97.2   Those numbers shine like a brand new penny in any conversation, but these days, it’s all about his performance in the playoffs.   This is where people get ugly and forget the guy hasn’t played for the best defenses or sits here today with a ring in his pocket.

Then again, this is the NFL and the most popular sport in the country and very much so around the world.  That’s why several announcers from different countries storm the Super Bowl press box to live broadcast the game to their own countries, sitting hundreds of thousands of miles away.   Can you win the big one?  How many times can you win the big one?    Peyton got his ring in 2006 and did so by defeating the Chicago Bears mighty defense and inept quarterback Rex Grossman(who is out of football these days).   Rex was bad, but a lot of people forget Manning had to come back in the AFC championship game and beat Tom Brady to get there.   That is where Peyton started turning things around against Brady in the playoffs.  His Colts came back from being down by nearly 20 points and stole the game.  That is why today Brady can afford to very mad about the Manning’s.   The last three times he has gotten close to a Super Bowl, they have slammed the door on him.

Manning got the ring in 2006 but got booted by the Saints in the Super Bowl in February of 2010.   If you are a Peyton fan like myself but can sit back and see a realistic picture, the memory is quite vivid nearly 4 years later.   The game was a seesaw battle for three quarters.  The Colts jumped out to a 10-6 halftime lead but the Saints scored to make it 13-10 in the third quarter.  The Colts grabbed the lead back, 17-13 before the lead eventually sat at 24-17 Saints in the 4th quarter with just over three minutes remaining.   Peyton was driving the Colts down the field, and was on the 26 yard line.   He threw a routine 10-15 yard pass and Tracy Porter stepped in front of a Colts Receiver and took it 74 yards the other way for a touchdown.  A bad pass, good pick and that was it.   Game over.  Manning’s dream shattered in an instant.

Ask Manning critics and they think he was horrible the entire game.  He finished with a touchdown and the one interception, completed 68 percent of his passes and threw for 333 yards.   However, in this game where one game tiebreakers make or break teams in the playoffs, the one mistake is what people remember.  Right or wrong, that is the way it is.

Manning needs this win against Seattle.   In my mind, he needs that 2nd championship ring to get into the talk for best of all time or at least top 3.   Brady will still have 3 Super Bowls but the Spygate factor looms over his achievements in the postseason and what he has done since.  There are other greats for sure, but Manning’s regular season dominance and his proposed 2 rings will put him right up there.  Especially when you take into account his two team success and 4 neck surgeries that had many counting him out before the 2012 season.  Peyton is easily one of the greatest quarterbacks of all time.   Sunday may determine how high he sits.   Professional sports can be unforgiving and carry a short attentions span for great players.

Manning’s biggest foe may not be Richard Sherman and that amazing Seattle smashmouth defense.   His biggest obstacle in the race may be Seahawks running back Marshawn Lynch and his ability to rumble and gain yards and eat up the clock.    If you ask any defensive coordinator, the best way to beat Manning is to keep him off the field.  As long as he watches on the sidelines, he can do no harm.  That’s the way and if you have a guy like Lynch who can collect so many yards after contact, the forecast is good for a Manning defeat.

Sunday has many storylines but none loom larger than Peyton Manning’s reach for true greatness.   Favre won only a single Super Bowl before crumbling to injury also meeting his end via a Saints defeat(same year).   A lot of other great QB’s have one ring and for them that could be enough.   It’s different for Peyton.  He puts himself out there with his commercials and publicity and carries loads of pressure on his shoulders every time he takes a playoff football field.   Will he sink or swim?  Is this the night Peyton achieves greatness or will he come up short again on National Television in front of the biggest audience in the world?

All he has to do is look up at the press box at John Elway for inspiration.  He failed a few times before winning 2 late Super Bowls with the Broncos when he was 38 and 39 years old.   Manning is 37 years old and may or may not return next season.   My money is on him playing a couple more years.   However, as he told the press this past week, the only game he is thinking about right now is Super Bowl 48.   That’s a good mind set because that is the only game history is thinking about right now as well.

Thanks for reading and enjoy the game!

-D.L.B.

Photo Credit-GuardianLV.com

Peyton Manning Rolls Along

peyton-manning-09292013

The people that don’t like Peyton Manning are usually people that don’t like the perfect athlete he resembles.  A guy who can dish it straight in interviews, play very well on a football field, admit his mistakes, take losing well, and put out some hilarious commercials in his downtime.  He does it all very well and doesn’t come off like a boring robot like Tom Brady.  Manning is interesting and before he steps on a football field, some people hate that.   I have always liked him, cheered for him and gotten a kick out of his TV spots.  That’s the difference.  I see him as a great football player who has had his ups and downs, won a ring and is looking to win more.  To me, he is better than ever these days than he ever was in Indianapolis with the Colts.  With the tag of being one of the greats, nobody has handled it better than Peyton.  He happens to have the off the field respect and personality image going for him as well.   It’s hard not to like if you ask me.

Last night, Manning rolled right along and helped his Broncos beat the Kansas City Chiefs 27-17 and hand that mighty defense its first loss.  Manning was solid if not spectacular.  He completed 60 percent of his passes and threw a 70 yard bomb.  He threw a touchdown, zero interceptions but lost a fumble.  That will get the critics rolling in a small area picking apart his performance.   When I think of Peyton, I think of Yadi Molina on a football field.   A coach and player inside one body out there calling plays and making them happen.   He doesn’t make excuses or point fingers.   After the game tonight, Peyton will say he played well, not feel the need to thank the lord but credit the prep, his teammates and the coaching staff.  He deflects attention when he could command it like Ron Burgundy.   Once again, Manning helped his team take down a very good team and win on Sunday.  The Broncos and Chiefs are both 9-1.

So many people complain about Peyton’s arm strength.  It doesn’t take a anatomy and physiology major to notice the man has lost a little steam on his fastball.   He has had four neck surgeries.   He will never be the same as he was in his hey day in Indianapolis.  It’s just not medically possible.   However, Peyton has made up for his physical shortcomings by using that big all important muscle up above.  The brain.   He doesn’t need to throw every pass hard.  He just needs to be accurate.  As long as his receivers know where to go, the pass will get there.   Why focus on his arm strength when it isn’t required in the offense he calls?   Some guys in the NFL have to throw hard to get the pass where it needs to be.    The Broncos and Peyton(I refuse to give much credit to their offensive coordinator, because that is essentially Peyton himself) have devised a plan to shred defenses without throwing lasers across the field.

Last week against the Chargers in San Diego, Manning completed 70 percent of his passes and threw 4 touchdowns.  He threw 3 interceptions against Washington the week before but threw 4 touchdowns and helped the Broncos demolish the Redskins by completing 68 percent of his 44 passes.   There’s an artform to Manning’s new found tenure with the Broncos.  Do everything you can do and leave the rest to the defense and critics.    Critics in the past loved to blame the loss of Peyton’s team on him and forget the rest of the team plays too and Manning can’t play cornerback.  That’s easy fodder for discussion but forgets the greatest story.  Manning’s comeback with the Broncos.

I understood why the Colts cut him loose.  I just didn’t agree with it.  Now, seeing Andrew Luck’s success may cause you to question my logic but hear me out.   Peyton led the Colts to the promise land once and was on the door step many times.  While he had a lot of surgery done to his neck, I think he was owed a year to prove he could come back and be effective without the arm strength.  Then the Colts selected Luck and then he was awesome.   Manning was kind of left for dead by many critics.   Many thought he simply couldn’t come back from the 4th surgery at his age.  In my eyes, he has defied that theory and proven to be as sharp if not sharper with Denver.  It’s an amazing transformation in his career that I believe will result(this year or next) in a second Super Bowl for Manning.

The projections for the rest of the season after last night’s game for Manning lay out like this: 5776 yards, 71 completion percentage, 59 touchdowns, 11 interceptions, 7 fumbles(that doesn’t include lost fumbles) and a quarterback rating of 121.   That’s not bad for a guy who treats the game right, plays it great and never stops competing while serving as an on the field coach.  Peyton Manning is just rolling along during this second phase of his career.   A career in comedy awaits him after his retirement.  Watch his SNL skits and try not to laugh.

My belief is he needs another ring to put him up there with the best quarterbacks and overall players of all time.   If he keeps playing the way he is, on one foot and with an average offensive line, I think he will get that ring.   Next week, he takes on his nemesis, Brady, in a great matchup of two great AFC teams.  On the same stage as last night, Sunday Night Football, two of the greatest quarterbacks in the history of the game will duel in New England.  This will be Manning’s fiercest test because he hasn’t played historically well in New England.  However, those tumultuous years came with the Colts when he was trying to throw bullets everywhere and resembled more of a gunslinger.   He’s a different quarterback these days and that may be the difference.

How does he fare this year in his 2nd year with Denver?  Will he get that second and most coveted ring?   Well, luckily, he didn’t predict 4, 5, or 6 like Lebron James did.   We will have to wait and see but I think Peyton’s critics(and there are plenty) should take a step back first and realize how far the 37 year old Manning has come since early 2012.   Did anybody think he would make it back with a new team and be as good if not better than his legendary days with the Colts?   I never lost an ounce of faith.  The man is simply great.

Thanks for staying,

Dan L. Buffa

@buffa82 on Twitter

buffa82@gmail.com