sports

Peyton Manning's comeback begins in Denver

By ARNIE STAPLETON, AP Pro Football Writer • Published: July 22, 2012

— It'll take some getting used to, seeing Peyton Manning with the orange-maned mustang on his helmet instead of the blue-on-white horseshoe.

The four-time MVP is making a comeback in the city defined by them thanks to another iconic quarterback.

When John Elway decided to go after the biggest free agent prize in NFL history, the Denver Broncos' brassy boss was first in line to make his pitch. Then Elway gave Manning some space, figuring he'd appreciate not being pestered with follow-up calls.

It was a sign of respect from one superstar quarterback to another as Elway sat back and watched Manning meet with his other suitors and decide where he'd begin his comeback from a lost 2011 season.

“I knew if I was on the market in the prime of my career, then that's the way I would want to be treated,” Elway explained.

Displaying the same icy resolve he demonstrated while leading the Broncos on all those fourth-quarter comebacks and to so many Super Bowls, Elway patiently told an ever-antsy coach John Fox one morning last March that they'd just sit back and wait for Manning to call them — hopefully with good news.

Just then, Elway's phone rang. He took the call, gave his coach a thumbs-up and Fox jumped for joy, joking he nearly sprained both ankles during his silent celebration. When Elway hung up, they hollered and the rest of the coaching staff came running.

Elway's strategy had worked.

Will his bold bet also pay off?

The Broncos are betting $96 million it will.

They jettisoned Tim Tebow a day after landing Manning, who was released by the Indianapolis Colts in March after missing last season following four neck operations. Indy will start anew with Andrew Luck.

Manning moved to Denver, rented Mike Shanahan's massive mansion and went right to work, rehabbing in the morning, throwing in the afternoon and poring over the playbook and film into the wee hours.

During offseason practices, Manning showed no ill effects of the nerve issue that caused weakness in his throwing arm last year and led to his tear-filled divorce from the team and town he brought to the forefront of pro football.

The euphoric Broncos say they've seen no reason to go easy with Manning when training camp begins Wednesday. Although Manning insists he has a ways to go in his rehab, his arm strength looks good and his deciphering of defenses appears as astute as ever.

What he lacks is timing with his new targets, and old pals Brandon Stokley and Jacob Tamme are on hand to help with that.

“There's no question it's been a big change, a big switch. It's one I'm trying to adjust to,” Peyton said at his family's passing camp in Louisiana earlier this month. “There's constantly something to learn, something to adjust to, new players, new teammates, new coaches, new surroundings. So when you're 14 years in one place, you do kind of become institutionalized.


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