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Peyton Won't Be a Colt in 2012

NinerSickness

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Is this old news? It's an article from yesterday, but this is the first I've heard anyone say that the Colts & Peyton are going to part ways. Sorry if you've heard ths a million times already, but I just heard this morning on the radio:

NFL -- What will Manning choose? - ESPN

Steak or flounder?

Seems simple enough. What are you in the mood to eat, red meat or fish? It is a basic, easy choice with no wrong answer. One meal fills you up, the other leaves you wanting, perhaps, just a little more.

This should come as no surprise: Peyton Manning prefers steak.

Any day now, Manning and Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay will meet to discuss Manning's surgically repaired neck and throwing arm. They undoubtedly will talk about the good times, the 14 years together when each made the other wealthy beyond imagine. Maybe they will meet at St. Elmo, the iconic Indianapolis steakhouse, and break bread one more time.

Any day now, Manning and Indianapolis Colts owner Jim Irsay will meet to discuss Manning's surgically repaired neck and throwing arm. They undoubtedly will talk about the good times, the 14 years together when each made the other wealthy beyond imagine. Maybe they will meet at St. Elmo, the iconic Indianapolis steakhouse, and break bread one more time.

And then the two shall part ways. Their union will be over after 208 games, seven AFC South titles and one magical Super Bowl run. Standing as a remembrance will be fabulous Lucas Oil Stadium.

When the suitors come calling -- and the line for Manning's services probably will be longer than the line to bother Shaq at ESPN's Super Bowl party last Friday -- Manning will divide them into two categories: steak and flounder.

Steak: A franchise where Manning can step in and run the show, where the coach is malleable and willing to let Manning do what he does best. Preferential treatment will go to a team with a solid offensive line and an array of offensive weapons.

Flounder: A franchise where others, be it the coach or the offensive coordinator or Daniel Snyder, will dictate the offense Manning will run.

Listen to Archie Manning for a clue where his middle son might go:

After the New York Giants' Super Bowl win over the New England Patriots, Manning talked to Sports Illustrated's Damon Hack about the difference between his youngest sons, Peyton and Eli. Archie said that he thought that Peyton was embarrassed about the amount of media coverage he received before Super Bowl XLVI -- even though Peyton facilitated a lot of it himself -- but that Eli was unfazed by it.

"If Eli orders steak and they bring him flounder, he'll just eat it," Archie told SI. "What would Peyton do? You ought not bring Peyton the flounder."

In other words, Peyton wants what he wants. This isn't exactly breaking news. Manning doesn't like surprises. He isn't going to work around other people's mistakes. He is inflexible and hard-headed and type triple-A.

Those aren't knocks on Peyton. He is who he is, and those qualities have made him the NFL's MVP four times in his career.

At age 35, Peyton Manning isn't going to change. Not now. Not for anybody. He is used to running an offense he wants to run, to calling plays, to dictating practice. He has been in charge of the Colts for so long, he knows no other way.

Not every NFL organization would allow Manning to step in and take over, not at his age and with his health. Not every coach is Jim Caldwell or Tony Dungy, easy, almost egoless personalities who didn't need the spotlight for fulfillment.

Washington Redskins owner Dan Snyder might be willing to throw ungodly amounts of money at Manning -- that's been his history -- but why would Manning go to Washington? Mike Shanahan might be flexible enough to allow Manning to have control, but it is hard to imagine his offensive coordinator, son Kyle, would. The offensive line needs rebuilding, and the Redskins have few weapons currently on the roster. It is also hard to imagine that Manning would want to move into a division where he would play his baby brother twice a year.

Although it has cap space, Seattle is far from his extended family, and the Seahawks' projected starting offensive line of Russell Okung, Robert Gallery, Max Unger, John Moffitt and James Carpenter played all of four games together last season because of injuries. Miami is warm, and Manning, who's used to playing inside, probably could work with Mike Sherman, but it does not seem like the right fit. (Although Dolphins-Patriots games would get a lot more interesting.) The Cleveland Browns play outdoors and in the cold.

The New York Jets are too dysfunctional for Manning. The locker room is fractured. There is not much talent on offense. Rex Ryan is too outspoken. It would be fun to have both Mannings in New York, but it seems unlikely.

The best fit -- the best cut of beef, if you will -- other than the Colts appears to be the Arizona Cardinals. They play indoors. Ken Whisenhunt would allow Manning to control the offense. Arizona just hired Frank Reich, who spent the past six seasons on the Colts' offensive staff, to be its wide receivers coach. Russ Grimm is as good an offensive line coach as you will find anywhere.

And there is a certain stud wide receiver on the roster who would be a big draw. Larry Fitzgerald is loyal to Kevin Kolb, but surely he would be intrigued by the possibility of playing with Manning.

For the Cardinals, as is always the case, it would come down to finances. They owe Kolb a $7 million bonus on March 17. It is hard to imagine the Bidwills paying Kolb and Manning at the same time. If the Cardinals don't pay Kolb the bonus, he could walk as a free agent.

There are still plenty of questions that could render the discussion moot. The most important is Manning's overall health. His doctor said last week that he had cleared Manning to play, but reports about exactly what Manning is able to do have been mixed.

Can he regain strength in his arm? Can he throw downfield the way he used to? Can he make all the throws an NFL quarterback needs to make? In essence, can he be the Peyton Manning we are used to watching?

If not, whether he prefers steak or flounder won't matter.

Ashley Fox is an NFL columnist. Follow her on Twitter: @AshleyMFox.
 

NinerSickness

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Somenoe (forget who) suggested Manning go to the Texans. I'm glad that isn't realistic because the Texans may be the most talented team in the NFL at this point (Texans & Steelers look like they're in the best shape in the AFC).
 

coffeeman

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The Peyton story was bigger then the Super bowl at times back in Indy.
There is little doubt that he is done there.
 

NinerSickness

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I'm pretty excited about this news because there isn't a QB needy team in the NFL better prepared to win a SB than the Niners. If Peyton plays this year and he plays for the Niners I think they would be the favourites in the NFC & probably even the NFL.
 

coffeeman

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It would not surprise me at all to see Peyton Manning wearing a 49er jersey next year.
 

clyde_carbon

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Don't be ridiculous Sickness. We have Alex.
 

DoobieKeebler

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Why does NO ONE ever mention the Niners in these articles about where Peyton might land? It is like the world forgot the Niners were one Kyle Williams away from going to the Super Bowl - and probably winning it.
 

clyde_carbon

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Here more shit stirring...Sickness you were never a big fan of peyton anyways.
 

NinerSickness

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Here more shit stirring...Sickness you were never a big fan of peyton anyways.

Of course I was never a fan of his! He was a Colt.

Always said he's a top 5 all time QB though, and I'd quickly go get my #18 Jersey if he came to SF. He deserves that much credit unlike his cheater counterpart in New England who blew it in the SB. :)
 

Crimsoncrew

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So, wait. Seattle is out because their OL - which actually has some potential if they can get guys healthy - only played four games together, but Arizona is the place to go? How many OLs are worse at pass-blocking than Arizona's? And that's when they ARE healthy.
 

bvanthielriceyoung

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chrisrock2.gif
 

grayghost668

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He won't be a 49er next year,the money would be too much
 

Crimsoncrew

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He won't be a Niner next year because he won't want to play for Harbaugh. Harbaugh won't be content to sit back and let Peyton run the show. He'll want a lot of say in the offense. I'm not sure Peyton would go for that. Not to mention we play outdoors (granted in generally good weather), and are far from his family. The Niners with Peyton at 85% are serious contenders for the super bowl IMO, and for that reason he might consider coming here. But I would be surprised.
 
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