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    Peyton Manning's Super Choke

    Peyton Manning chokes: Tim Tebow outperforms incredible shrinking star in Super Bowl dud

    Chris Baldwin
    Feb 2, 2014 | 11:07 pm

    With six minutes left in his Super Bowl nightmare, Peyton Manning sits meekly on the Denver bench, quietly watching his time tick away. Peyton's helmet is still on, but all his fight is long gone.

    In the biggest game of all, with a grand chance to cement a legacy that Tom Brady could never touch, Peyton Manning chokes. It's an ugly word. But it's also the undeniable truth.

    The Denver Broncos implode — and inflict 43-8 on an unsuspecting America — because Manning seizes up on the monster stage and flings ducks all around his little brother's stadium. The long-feared and vastly over debated cold weather Super Bowl is a near balmy blowout. With the only thing special about Peyton Manning on this Sunday the depth of his dud-dom, the Broncos and competitiveness are both doomed.

    Who would have ever thought Tim Tebow would outperform Peyton Manning in Super Bowl XLVIII?

    But that's exactly what happens on this Sunday. Tebow's No Contract commercials are the most entertaining thing of the night, easily topping Bruno Mars and the Red Hot Chili Pepper's lame attempt to be edgy by having Anthony Keidis and Flea . . . go shirtless at halftime. Of course, no one comes up as small as Peyton.

    "It's not an easy pill to swallow," Manning says in his postgame news conference broadcast live on several networks.

    The Broncos are built around Manning orchestrating a fearsome offense. Instead he plays afraid.

    Sitting there on a dais, decked out in an expensive, conservative blue suit, Peyton Manning looks like he's just going through the motions. He'll throw out that pill cliche. He'll keep mentioning how the Seattle Seahawks just executed better. He'll try and make it a team thing.

    When you're Peyton Manning, it's never just a collective loss though. Peyton Manning is this team. The Broncos are built around Manning orchestrating a fearsome offense. Instead he plays afraid. Peyton Manning blinks and bungles away any shot at the championship.

    Super Dud.

    Seattle mocks the Broncos and Manning, only they do it quietly. With Seahawks cornerback Richard Sherman — the most interesting man in football — on his best behavior after America lost its mind over him daring to get excited in the vicinity of Erin Andrews, Seattle coach Pete Carroll is the one who attacks.

    The Seahawks win the toss, decide to defer and watch the Broncos offense self destruct.

    Manning and center Manny Ramirez completely mess up the first offensive snap of the game, leaving Broncos running back Knowshon Moreno falling on the ball in the end zone for a game opening safety. Manning attributes it to "a cadence issue." So much for Omaha.

    Still, the Broncos stay close, within one score at 8-0 despite three Seattle scores. Then, Manning throws it all away.

    He goes three and out on the Broncos' second possession. Facing another three and out on possession number three, Peyton Manning makes it worse. He air mails a pass way over tight end Julius Thomas on third-and-7 and Seahawks safety Kam Chancellor grabs it for one of the easiest interceptions you'll ever see. Of course, Seattle linebacker Malcolm Smith's enjoys an even easier interception — courtesy of Manning — later and returns it for a Pick 6.

    Houston Texans quarterback Matt Schaub couldn't have given that one away any better.

    Super Dud.

    Peyton Manning's New Legacy

    How pathetic is Peyton? The Seahawks of Russell Wilson and Percy Harvin rack up nine first downs before the Broncos get a single one. Manning never gives Denver a chance in this game. He's the biggest reason the Super Bowl morphs back into the blowout brigade it was in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

    "We expected a great fight," Smith says in an NFL Network set visit. "But we kind of just dominated the game."

    That's on Peyton Manning. It turns out Sherman's too kind during the week when he notes that this 37-year-old, surgically-repaired Manning throws a lot of "ducks." Manning's passes in Super Bowl XLVIII are more like sickly baby robins. They don't quack. They barely make a peep.

    Who would have ever thought Tim Tebow would outperform Peyton Manning in a Super Bowl?

    "To finish that way is special," Wilson tells the Fox cameras. "It's a mindset."

    So is throwing up all over yourself on the big stage. Peyton Manning is now an under .500 quarterback (11-12) in the postseason again. He won that one Super Bowl in Indianapolis on the strength of his running game and defense. He lost this one showing surprising little fight.

    "We just ran right into a buzz saw," John Fox says in the losing coach's interview. "(Peyton's) disappointed like all of us. He had a tremendous year."

    And another horrible finish. The 25-year-old, third round pick quarterback is the one dousing his coach in a Gatorade bath. The Hall of Famer, Chosen One From Day One? He's playing the good sport loser again, shaking everyone's hand as both the executive vice president who brought him to Denver (John Elway) and the little brother with the steelier nerves (Eli Manning) both watch stone faced from suites at Met Life Stadium.

    Peyton Manning chokes. And all of America suffers through the boredom of it all.

    "What we saw tonight is not good," Deion Sanders says when asked about Manning's legacy after 43-8. "And it started from the first snap . . .

    "These guys dominate Peyton Manning in every way. Intellectually, physically and emotionally."

    Peyton Manning is meekly beaten down. His time ticking away.

    Super Dud.

    Peyton Manning never came close to finding his grip in the Super Bowl.

    Peyton Manning fumble
      
    Photo by Kevin C. Cox Getty Images
    Peyton Manning never came close to finding his grip in the Super Bowl.
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    Remembering Big George

    Olympic champion boxer George Foreman remembered at Houston funeral

    Associated Press
    Apr 14, 2025 | 6:38 pm
    George Foreman boxer
    Photo by Martin Rose/Bongarts/Getty Images
    Friends and family remembered George Foreman at his funeral on Monday, April 14.

    George Foreman was remembered Monday in a memorial service in his hometown of Houston for his legendary boxing career as well as for his love of God, family, horses and cheeseburgers and for his desire to help his fellow man.

    “He preached love all the time. That’s what this life is all about. It’s all about love and George was pure because George lived and believed what he preached,” said James Douglas, a longtime friend and former president of Texas Southern University in Houston.

    During a nearly 1½ hour memorial service, Foreman’s family and friends recalled anecdotes about a man who was a two-time boxing heavyweight champion but who was also a pastor who delivered life affirming sermons at his church in northeast Houston and a savvy businessman best known for the George Foreman Grill.

    Foreman even addressed the crowd posthumously at the Wortham Theater Center, a performing arts center that hosted the memorial, with audio messages recorded previously.

    “Winning and losing can never assure a lasting smile. But saying to the face you see daily, ‘I did my best,’ can,” Foreman said on the recording.

    Many of the people who spoke at the memorial, including George Foreman IV, one of five sons of the boxing legend, highlighted the importance of faith in the elder Foreman’s life and how God guided his efforts to help others.

    “’How well do I remember how Jesus brought me through? I prayed, I walked a night or two. I said, Lord, why don’t you take and use me? That’s all that I can do. I give my life to Jesus, what about you?’ That was a song my grandmother gave to my father. He was going through a hard time. So now I’ve given it to you,” George Foreman IV said as his four brothers stood behind him.

    Foreman had 12 children, including five sons who are all famously named George Edward Foreman.

    “Rest well, dad. We will carry your love with us always,” said George Foreman IV, who is also a pastor.

    Former boxer Michael Moorer, who Foreman defeated in 1994 to become the oldest man at age 45 to win the heavyweight championship, told the crowd that the two went from being competitors to having a relationship “built on respect for over 30 years.”

    “George was a champion in life. His faith transformed the shy country boy from Texas to a successful businessman and a voice for the less fortunate,” Moorer said.

    Dr. Adan Rios, a longtime friend of the boxing great, recalled how Foreman bought land to create a food bank for AIDS patients and donated $1.7 million to help treat adolescent patients with cancer.

    Foreman died on March 21 at age 76. Foreman’s family has not disclosed his cause of death, only saying on social media that he “peacefully departed … surrounded by loved ones.”

    Born in Marshall, Texas, Foreman was raised in Houston’s Fifth Ward, one of the city’s historically Black neighborhoods.

    He began his boxing career as an Olympic gold medalist in 1968, turning pro the next year.

    Foreman became the heavyweight champion of the world when he beat Joe Frazier in 1973. But he lost the title the following year when Muhammad Ali beat Foreman in the famous “Rumble in the Jungle” fight in Zaire.

    Foreman then gave up boxing and after a religious awakening, became an ordained minister in 1978. He began preaching in Houston, later founding The Church of the Lord Jesus Christ in 1980.

    The middle-aged fighter returned to the ring after a 10-year absence and in 1994 pulled off one of the most spectacular knockouts in boxing history, flooring Moorer — 19 years his junior — with a surgical right hand to claim Moorer’s two heavyweight belts.

    Foreman retired in 1997 with a 76-5 career record.

    He then moved on to the next chapter in his life as a businessman, pitchman and occasional actor.

    He became known to a new generation as the face of the George Foreman Grill. The simple cooking machine sold more than 100 million units and brought him more wealth than boxing. A biographical movie based on his life was released in 2023.

    “Of all the traits that I could mention, his faith, his family, his boxing career, his business career, the one that stands out to me as a friend of George Foreman, he never forgot where he came from,” said Houston Mayor John Whitmire.

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