New York Post

Denver faces future without Peyton at QB

- By BRIAN COSTELLO brian.costello@nypost.com PEYTON MANNING

SAN FRANCISCO — After the Broncos hold their parade and finish celebratin­g their Super Bowl 50 victory, they will start thinking about the 2016 season when they likely will become the third Super Bowl winner in history to start the next season with a different quarterbac­k.

All indication­s are Peyton Manning is planning on retiring in the coming weeks, but even if he does want to keep playing, it won’t be for the Broncos. Denver can save $19 million in salarycap space by releasing him, and the Broncos have pending free agent Brock Osweiler ready to take over. If Osweiler thinks he’ll have to sit behind Manning for another year, he probably would sign elsewhere.

Manning’s father, Archie, acknowledg­ed after the Super Bowl on Sunday night that Manning is done in Denver.

“If he wants to play some more football, he’s going to have to go to another team,” Archie Manning said. “He’d be 40. I don’t know. We have not talked about it. The first thing I want to do is, I’m just going to say, ‘ Talk to me, tell me what’s on your mind.’ ”

The Broncos have been down this road before. John Elway retired after winning his second Super Bowl after the 1998 season. Elway did not retire until May. Denver turned the controls over to Brian Griese and finished the 1999 season 610.

The only other Super Bowl winner to change quarterbac­ks were the 2000 Ravens. They chose not to resign Trent Dilfer, who became a free agent. The Ravens signed Elvis Grbac instead and went to the playoffs in 2001, but lost in the division round.

On Monday, Broncos coach Gary Kubiak did not feel like talking about the future yet.

“No, I haven’t looked too far ahead past today, but I’ll say this with Peyton ... the job he did this year to make his way back for our football team was the difference in us being a champion or not,” Kubiak said. “What he had to go through physically was very difficult, and it was tough on him mentally. But him fighting the battle to get back, getting himself in position to lead our team again the last month, it says so much about him as a person.”

As for Osweiler, the 2012 secondroun­d pick has patiently waited behind Manning for his chance. He started seven games for the Broncos this year while Manning was dealing with his foot injury. The Broncos went 52 in those games, and he played well enough that there was a debate about whether the Broncos should go back to Manning when he was healthy. He threw 10 touchdowns and six intercepti­ons, his only multiinter­ception game came against the Chargers in Week 17 when he was benched in favor of Manning.

“Everybody contribute­d to us being here and getting this done. Brock had — what? — a sevenweek run as our starter,” Kubiak said. “We won a lot of big football games during the course of that season. So, [I am] very proud of him. He has got a bright future, but we’ll take it a day at a time.”

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