Report: Irsay, Manning to part
Published 2:38 am Wednesday, March 7, 2012
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Barring a last-minute change of heart, the Indianapolis Colts are expected to release quarterback Peyton Manning after a 14-year star turn that included one Super Bowl title and a record four MVP awards.
The Colts scheduled a noon news conference for Wednesday without saying why, but a person with knowledge of the decision said the team planned to announce it was parting ways with Manning rather than pay him a $28 million bonus. He would become a free agent.
The person spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity Tuesday night because no official announcement had been made.
Manning’s impending departure was first reported by ESPN earlier Tuesday.
Manning and Colts owner Jim Irsay flew into Indianapolis together late Tuesday, but the QB declined to address questions about his future with the team.
“We’ll see y’all tomorrow,” Manning told a small group of reporters. “We’re good. We’ll talk tomorrow. We’ll do it the right way tomorrow.”
Peyton’s older brother, Cooper, told the AP in a brief phone interview that he couldn’t confirm his brother was leaving the Colts.
“I don’t know anything,” he said.
Word of the impending breakup — though not unexpected — still caught one of Manning’s closest friends, Colts center Jeff Saturday, off guard.
“I never thought it was a foregone conclusion,” Saturday said. “I was always hopeful they’d get something worked out, and that he would be back in a horseshoe, but it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen.”
That’s what Manning wanted, too.
He had said in the past that his goal was to play his entire career with the Colts, but a damaged nerve that forced him to have neck surgery kept him out of action for all of 2011, and not coincidentally, his team’s record plummeted to 2-14.
“I can’t tell you what an honor it is to go start-to-finish with the same organization here in Indianapolis. That is something I have always wanted to do as a rookie coming out,” Manning said in July, after signing a five-year, $90 million contract. “Of course, you never know if that is possible, but after yesterday it is official that I will be an Indianapolis Colt for my entire career. I will not play for another team. My last down of football will be with the Colts, which means a great deal to me.”
But things changed since last summer. Now it seems all but certain that Manning won’t be wearing No. 18 for Indy anymore — and he’ll certainly draw interest from teams in need of a quarterback.
With the bonus payment due Thursday, the neck problems, and the fact that the Colts own the No. 1 pick in April’s draft, the Colts seem to have deemed it too risky — and too pricey — to keep the longtime franchise quarterback, who will turn 36 later this month.
The Colts are expected to take Stanford quarterback Andrew Luck first overall, with the first pick in April’s draft.
The question now, if he indeed goes, is where Manning might land.
Arizona, Miami, Tennessee, Washington and the New York Jets all have been rumored as possible destinations, and Manning’s former longtime offensive coordinator in Indianapolis, Tom Moore, did work with the Jets as a consultant less season.
It’s still possible, however unlikely, that Manning could return to Indy for a lower price if he can prove he’s healthy.
“This isn’t an ankle, it isn’t a shoulder. Often times the NFL is criticized for putting someone out there at risk, and I’m not going to doing that,” Irsay said in January. “I think he and I just need to see where his health is because this isn’t about money or anything else. It’s about his life and his long-term health.”
But based on some back-and-forth comments made by Manning and Irsay of late, indications were that the two were squabbling.
With the Colts in full rebuilding mode, Irsay was expected by many to play for the future by allowing Manning to chase a second Super Bowl ring elsewhere.
If he goes, Manning’s departure marks the end of a remarkably successful era that included the 2006 league title.
He started every meaningful game for 13 seasons in Indianapolis — 227 in a row, including the playoffs — and took the Colts from perennial also-ran to one of the NFL’s model franchises.
In the two decades predating his arrival, the Colts won 116 games, one division title and made the playoffs three times. With Manning taking snaps, the Colts have won 150 games, eight division titles, two AFC championships and the franchise’s first Super Bowl since moving from Baltimore in 1984.
Indy broke the league record for most regular-season wins in a decade (115), tied Dallas’ mark for most consecutive playoff appearances (nine), and the success changed Indy from a basketball town to an NFL town.
Manning is one of four players with more than 50,000 yards passing, one of three with more than 350 touchdown passes and one of two quarterbacks with more than 200 consecutive starts. He broke all of the franchise’s major career passing records, previously held by Hall of Fame quarterback John Unitas, and he may not be finished.
In 2009, Manning placed the Colts on the cusp of football history with a 14-0 start.
It’s been mostly bad news ever since. The Colts pulled their starters against the Jets and lost the final two games that season. Indy then wound up losing to New Orleans in the Super Bowl. During the offseason, Manning had the first of his neck surgeries.
Then, after making an early playoff exit in the 2010 season, Manning underwent another neck surgery to repair a damaged nerve that was causing weakness in his throwing arm.
When the nerve did not heal as quickly as expected, Manning had two vertebrae fused together in September, a surgery that forced him to miss a game for the first time in his NFL career. There are still questions about the strength of Manning’s arm.
Still, he has insisted he intends to play football next season.
“My plan hasn’t changed,” Manning said during Super Bowl week in Indianapolis, where his future was the main topic of conversation. “I’m on track with what the doctors have told me to do, and I’m doing that. I’m rehabbing hard.”