PRE-SEASON GAME 1 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS

Similar documents
CINCINNATI BENGALS (2-2) vs. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS (0-3)

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS (1-2) at CINCINNATI BENGALS (1-2)

PLAYOFF RACES HEATING UP AS NFL SEASON ROLLS ON

JOHN RANDLE PRO FOOTBALL HALL OF FAME 2010 FINALIST

GONZALEZ S NFL STATISTICS

Kurt Warner. Quarterback 6-2, 220 Northern Iowa St. Louis Rams, 2004 New York Giants, Arizona Cardinals (12 playing seasons)

MOST RECEIVING YARDS IN A SIX-SEASON SPAN, NFL HISTORY

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS 2008 SCHEDULE

Terrell Davis. Running Back 5-11, 206 Long Beach State, Georgia Denver Broncos (seven playing seasons)

MORE EXCITING FOOTBALL AHEAD AS NFL ENTERS WEEK 3

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS (10-6) 2ND AFC WEST

RECORD-BREAKING 2015 SEASON HAD IT ALL

Kevin Greene. Kevin Greene, a fifth-round draft pick of the Los Angeles Rams in the 1985 NFL Draft,

New England Denver Broncos

History of The Seattle Seahawks

LBS. LOUISIANA TECH BORN JULY 12, 1981 JACKSONVILLE, TEXAS ACQ. TRADE 2009 (TAMPA BAY) EXP.: 8TH YEAR

The Lions 10 points yielded at the New York Giants mark the lowest total Detroit has ever allowed on the road during a Monday Night Football game.


COWBOYS & PEPSI HEAD COACHES

2005 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS PETER HEYER DEWAYNE WASHINGTON

ALL-TIME POSTSEASON RECORDS

VOL. XV; NO. 10 GREEN BAY, SEPT. 24, 2013 BYE WEEK

First, we will take note of two histograms ("percent frequency histograms" more

Professional Football in Texas

HUSKERS in the NFL. Nebraska Football in the NFL

2007 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS POSTSEASON GUIDE. KANSAS CITY CHIEFS One Arrowhead Drive Kansas City, MO Phone: (816)

KANSAS CITY CHIEFS (7-9) 3RD AFC WEST

REGULAR-SEASON INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

2006 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS MICHAEL BENNETT TY LAW

GAME OF MY LIFE. Pittsburgh Steelers. Memorable Stories of Steelers Football. Matt Loede. Sports Publishing

Largest Comeback vs. Eagles vs. Minnesota Vikings at Veterans Stadium, December 1, 1985 (came back from 23-0 deficit in 4th qtr.

The following are post-game notes from the Detroit Lions win against the Chicago Bears at Soldier Field on Sunday, November 19, 2017.

SCOUT S HONOR! THE RAMS HAD SOLEMNLY PLEDGED TO BEAT THE FIRST- PLACE FALCONS.

RUNNING BACK LBS COLLEGE: MISSISSIPPI ACQUIRED: UNRESTRICTED FREE AGENT (KC) NFL EXPERIENCE (NFL/TITANS): 7/3 HOMETOWN: LARGO, FLA

History of The Carolina Panthers

2019 NFL SCHEDULE ANNOUNCED

COWBOYS & MILLER LITE

Web Address: Address: 2018 Official Rules Summary

COWBOYS MEDIA CENTER COWBOYS & CHIEFS QUICK FACTS: RADIO & TELEVISION THIS WEEK S SCHEDULE

As of July 1, Nebraska had 39 former players on NFL rosters including 17 players with four or more years of experience.

2010 QUICK STATS GP/GS: 16/11 28 receptions for 393 yards, 5 TDs

A Critical Re-Evaluation of the Career of Sam Baugh. Glenn Gerstner St. John s University PCA/ACA Conference March 28, 2013

Phoenix Cardinals. Record: 7-9 t-3rd Place - NFC East Head Coach: Gene Stallings Defense: 4-3 Against Runs: Average to Poor; Against Passes: Poor

REGULAR-SEASON INDIVIDUAL RECORDS

The following are post-game notes from the Detroit Lions win against the Green Bay Packers at Lambeau Field on Monday, November 6, 2017.

RYAN DAVIS 2016 NON-MEDIA GUIDE BIOS. 75 Defensive End

John Lynch. The Tampa Bay Buccaneers selected John Lynch out of Stanford in the third round, 82nd

WIDE RECEIVER LBS COLLEGE: MINNESOTA ACQUIRED: FREE AGENT NFL EXPERIENCE (NFL/TITANS): 8/1 HOMETOWN: COLD SPRING, MINN

SUPER SEASON KICKS OFF

2004 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS UPDATED BIOS FINAL REGULAR SEASON

Pittsburgh Steelers (1-1) vs. Indianapolis Colts (0-2)

Official Website of the New England Patriots

OLD PAC 10 FOES, FORMER OREGON HEAD COACH CHIP KELLY AND SOUTHERN CAL S PETE CARROLL FACED EACH OTHER ONCE MORE IN A CRITICAL NFC BATTLE.

RAMS IN PROFESSIONAL FOOTBALL

Phoenix Cardinals. Record: th Place - NFC East Head Coach: Joe Bugel Defense: 3-4 Against Runs and Passes: Poor. Sun Devil Stadium - 74,865

QUARTERBACK LBS COLLEGE: SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA ACQUIRED: FREE AGENT NFL EXPERIENCE (NFL/TITANS): 13/2 HOMETOWN: NORTHRIDGE, CALIF

KICKER LBS COLLEGE: SOUTH CAROLINA ACQUIRED: FREE AGENT NFL EXPERIENCE (NFL/TITANS): 9/4 HOMETOWN: HICKORY, N.C

Top3 Fantasy Sports Rules. General. Eligibility AGE PLACE OF RESIDENCE: pg. 1

HOMECOMING AT LAMBEAU FIELD ATTRACTS GREEN BAY PACKER LEGENDS. GREEN BAY S PRESENT GENERATION OF CHAMPIONS DID NOT DISAPPOINT.

NFL SCHEDULE SAMPLE. Green Bay

Kurt Warner a l e g e n d r e t i r e s j a n u a r y 2 9,


COWBOYS MEDIA CENTER COWBOYS & GIANTS QUICK FACTS: RADIO & TELEVISION THIS WEEK S SCHEDULE

SUPER SEASON KICKS OFF

Rya y n Fitzpatrick an Fitzpatric PRO: CAREER HIGHLIGHTS: TITANS TIDBITS: CAREER TRANSACTIONS: SEASON RECAPS: 2013 (11/9 - Tennessee):

2015 Fantasy NFL Scouting Report

PATRIOTS FINISH 13-3 AND EARN TOP SEED IN AFC PLAYOFF FIELD

MALCOLM SMITH SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA

2014 NFL RECORDS AND MILESTONES THE TEAMS

Regular Season Week 6

2006 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS MICHAEL BENNETT ROD GARDNER TY LAW MONTEZ MURPHY CHRIS TERRY JOHN WELBOURN

TERRIFIC TURNAROUNDS, RECORD-SETTING PERFORMANCES & RISING STARS HIGHLIGHT STELLAR 2017 SEASON

Speak to a football fan long enough and the conversation will cease to cover simple questions

94 MARIO WILLIAMS. HEIGHT: 6-6 WEIGHT: 292 AGE: 30 HOMETOWN: Richlands, NC

2006 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS MICHAEL BENNETT ROD GARDNER GREG HANOIAN TY LAW

HEAD COACHES

COWBOYS MEDIA CENTER COWBOYS & LIONS QUICK FACTS: RADIO & TELEVISION THIS WEEK S SCHEDULE

JIMMY GAROPPOLO EASTERN ILLINOIS

IN THE SECOND QUARTER, THE FESTIVE MOOD INSIDE COWBOYS STADIUM SUDDENLY TURNED SOUR.

2017 NFL PLAYOFFS GET UNDERWAY

2010 QUICK STATS GP/GS: 10/7 160 of 278 for 1,823 yds, 14 TDs and 8 INTs, 82.2 rating 10 rushes for 1 yards, 0 TDs

By Kerry Beck. Kerry Beck,

NFL SCHEDULE SAMPLE. Green Bay

20 CB» 5-11» 195» MICHIGAN

OUTSTANDING PERFORMERS

2005 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS SUPPLEMENTAL BIOS PETER HEYER ED PERRY DEWAYNE WASHINGTON

History of The Houston Oilers and Tennessee Titans franchise

NFL SCHEDULE SAMPLE. Green Bay

BACK IN THE POSTSEASON

JIMMY GAROPPOLO EASTERN ILLINOIS

2013 NFL RECORDS & MILESTONES

VOL. XIV; NO SCHEDULE

INDIVIDUAL YEAR-BY-YEAR LEADERS

REGULAR SEASON This will be the third matchup between the two clubs in the last 12 Date Opponent Time (CT) TV

NFL SCHEDULE SAMPLE. Green Bay

2018 Positional Coaches

2016 COWBOYS MEDIA GUIDE COWBOYS & 49ERS RADIO & TELEVISION

PATRIOTS TRAVEL TO TAMPA TO FACE THE BUCCANEERS

Hole in One Lounge. 22 nd Annual American Century Golf Championship July 12 14, 2011

2007 AWARDS. AFC Pro Bowl Starter

Transcription:

PRE-SEASON GAME 1 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS (0-0) vs. INDIANAPOLIS COLTS (0-0) DATE: Sunday, August 15, 2010 SITE: Lucas Oil Stadium KICKOFF: 1:00 p.m. (EDT)/10:00 a.m. (PDT) SURFACE: FieldTurf CAPACITY: 63,000 The Indianapolis Colts initiate 2010 preseason play and embark on the second year of the Head Coach Jim Caldwell era on Sunday, August 15 by hosting the San Francisco 49ers. Kickoff in Lucas Oil Stadium is 1:00 p.m. (EDT)/10:00 a.m. (PDT). Caldwell was elevated to head coach in January of 2009, and this is his ninth season with the franchise. Caldwell directed the club to a memorable season in his first year at the helm. Indianapolis won its first 14 games, tied a franchise record for most seasonal victories, won the AFC South title, earned homefield advantage and won the AFC Championship. He directs the Colts into their 27th season in Indianapolis. Indianapolis reported to training camp on Sunday, August 1 at the Anderson University in Anderson, Ind., the site of the club's training camp from 1984-98. The club practices daily in training camp prior to this weekend's game (see www.colts.com for practice information). The Colts return to Anderson University on the Monday following the San Francisco game for three days of practice before breaking camp on August 18. The Colts are owners of the NFL's best regular-season record (128-48) since the start of the 1999 season, while being the only team to earn 10 playoff appearances in the last eleven seasons, including a league-best eight consecutive post-season berths. Indianapolis has won 73 of its last 89 regular-season games. The Colts own a 98-29 record (counting the playoffs) since the start of the 2003 season and are 84-24 since 2004. From November, 2003 to December, 2009, the Colts produced a regularseason record of 81-19, tying New England (2003-09) for the NFL's best 100-game regular-season mark. Indianapolis' winning ways include a 38-10 record in AFC South play, while the club has owned or shared the lead in 112 of 136 weeks of the division's existence. The Colts won five AFC South championships from 2003-07, the best divisional-title streak in club history. The Colts were wire-to-wire divisional leaders during the 2005, 2006, 2007 and 2009 seasons. The club's nine playoff berths in the 2000-09 decade tied the NFL record set by Dallas (9) in the 1970s. Indianapolis is the only team since 2002 Realignment to earn annual double-digit victory totals and playoff berths. From 2008-09, the Colts set an NFL record with 23 consecutive regular-season victories (21, New England, 2006-08). The streak was the sixth 10+-game regular-season winning streak in franchise history (23, 2008-09; 13, 2005; 11, 1964; 11, 1975-76; 11, 1999; 10, 2005-06), the fourth since 1999. Caldwell became the only NFL rookie head coach to win his first 14 games in a season, surpassing Potsy Clark (8, Portsmouth, 1931), and he surpassed Wally Lemm (10, 1961 Houston Oilers-1962 St. Louis Cardinals) for the most consecutive wins to start a career. Caldwell also became the 2nd rookie head coach since the 1978 NFL move to a 16-game season to win 14 games (George Seifert, SF, 1989). Indianapolis extended its NFL record as the only franchise to win seven or more consecutive regularseason games in six consecutive seasons (8, 2004; 13, 2005; 9, 2006; 7 and 6, 2007; 9, 2008; 14, 2009). Additionally, the Colts posted their eighth consecutive 10+-victory season, setting the 2nd-longest such streak in NFL history (16, San Francisco, 1983-98; 7, Dallas, 1975-81). Indianapolis earned its seventh consecutive season with 11+ victories, surpassing the NFL record it had shared with Dallas (6, 1976-81). The COLTS 2010 SCHEDULE PRE-SEASON DAY DATE OPPONENT TIME/RESULT Sun. Aug. 15 SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS 1:00 p.m. Thu. Aug. 19 at Buffalo Bills (Toronto) 7:30 p.m. Thu. Aug. 26 at Green Bay Packers 8:00 p.m. Thu. Sept. 2 CINCINNATI BENGALS 7:00 p.m. REGULAR SEASON Sun. Sept. 12 at Houston Texans 1:00 p.m. Sun. Sept. 19 NEW YORK GIANTS 8:20 p.m. Sun. Sept. 26 at Denver Broncos 4:15 p.m. Sun. Oct. 3 at Jacksonville Jaguars 4:05 p.m. Sun. Oct. 10 KANSAS CITY CHIEFS 1:00 p.m. Sun. Oct. 17 at Washington Redskins 8:20 p.m. Mon. Nov. 1 HOUSTON TEXANS 8:30 p.m. Sun. Nov. 7 at Philadelphia Eagles 4:15 p.m. Sun. Nov. 14 CINCINNATI BENGALS 1:00 p.m. Sun. Nov. 21 at New England Patriots 4:15 p.m. Sun. Nov. 28* SAN DIEGO CHARGERS 8:20 p.m. Sun. Dec. 5* DALLAS COWBOYS 4:15 p.m. Thu. Dec. 9 at Tennessee Titans 8:20 p.m. Sun. Dec. 19* JACKSONVILLE JAGUARS 1:00 p.m. Sun. Dec. 26* at Oakland Raiders 4:05 p.m. Sun. Jan. 2* TENNESSEE TITANS 1:00 p.m. Colts extended their league mark to seven consecutive seasons (2003-09) with 12+ victories. The Colts produced 115 victories for the 2000-09 decade, surpassing the league record of 113 by San Francisco from 1990-99. TELEVISION/RADIO: WTTV-TV telecasts with Don Fischer, Mark Herrmann and Jeffrey Gorman (field reporter). 1070-The Fan/HANK-FM, 97.1 broadcasts with Bob Lamey, Will Wolford and Kevin Lee (field reporter). NEXT WEEK: Indianapolis visits Buffalo on Thursday, August 19 in a preseason outing to be played in Toronto, Canada. Kickoff is 7:30 p.m. (EDT). WWW.COLTS.COM/MEDIA: Please visit the media site for club information, releases, quotes, feature clips, advisories, etc. The username and password is media.

INDIANAPOLIS COLTS TO WEAR 'THROWBACK' UNIFORMS AGAINST SAN FRANCISCO DURING PRE-SEASON OPENER The Indianapolis Colts will christen the 2010 pre-season against San Francisco on August 15 by taking a page from the past. When the club lifts the veil on its 2010 playing schedule, the Colts will be wearing 'Throwback' uniforms from the 1955 season.. "Our uniform design has changed little through the decades and is among the most recognizable in all of sports," said Colts Owner and CEO Jim Irsay. "This is a chance for our fans to see a Colts uniform with a different twist, in a classic throwback at Lucas Oil Stadium." This will mark the first time the Colts have worn a uniform with a distinctly different style from a previous era at a home game. Indianapolis donned uniforms from its 1956 predecessors on Thanksgiving Day in 2004, earning a 41-9 victory at Detroit. The club's helmets that day were white with blue horseshoes on the back that bracketed the striping down the middle of the headwear. The club's 1955 helmets were blue, with white striping and horseshoes on the back of the gear. The historic logo was moved to the side of the helmet in 1957, where it has remained. The club's jerseys will be white with blue numbers. There will be three stripes on the sleeves below the jersey numbers. The pants will be white with a single blue stripe down the side, and the white socks will feature three blue horizontal stripes. The NFL initiated the 'Throwback' uniform concept in 1994, but the club's only difference in the chosen design was a minor change in sock design that was not a prominent change from the present uniform design.

2009 TEAM RANKINGS OFFENSE RANKING DEFENSE RANKING Total Rush Pass CONF. NFL Total Rush Pass CONF. NFL Colts 363.1 80.9 282.2 4-16- 2 9-32- 2 339.2 126.5 212.7 9-11- 9 18-24-14 49ers 290.8 100.0 190.8 14-12-13 27-25-22 326.4 97.0 229.4 8-4-10 15-6-21 HEAD COACHES JIM CALDWELL was named head coach of the Colts on January 13, 2009, and this marks his ninth season with Indianapolis. Caldwell joined the club in 2002 as quarterbacks coach before adding the title of assistant head coach prior to the 2005 season. Caldwell was promoted to associate head coach with the club prior to the 2008 season. From 2002-09, Caldwell has been a part of Colts teams that produced 10-6, 12-4, 12-4, 14-2, 12-4, 13-3, 12-4 and 14-2 records. Indianapolis is the only team to earn 12+ victories in seven consecutive seasons, setting the NFL's all-time standard. Indianapolis has had eight consecutive 10+-victory seasons, setting the second-longest streak in NFL history (16, San Francisco, 1983-98; 7, Dallas, 1975-81), and the Colts have surpassed Dallas (1976-81) as the only franchise to earn at least eleven victories in seven consecutive seasons. The Colts also have earned an NFL-best eight consecutive playoff appearances, and Indianapolis is the only team to post double-digit victory seasons and playoff berths each season since the 2002 realignment. From 2008-09, Indianapolis set the NFL record with 23 consecutive regular-season victories (21 New England, 2006-08). Indianapolis also won 115 regular-season games from 2000-09, the most by a team in a decade in NFL history. From 2004-09, Indianapolis became the only NFL team to win at least seven consecutive games in six consecutive seasons (8, 2004; 13, 2005; 9, 2006; 7 and 6, 2007; 9, 2008; 14, 2009). In 2009, Caldwell became the 5th NFL rookie head coach to reach the Super Bowl. Caldwell joined Chuck Knox (L.A. Rams, 1973), Red Miller (Denver, 1977), Mike Martz (St. Louis, 2000) and Josh McDaniels (Denver, 2009) as the only rookie head coaches in the Super Bowl era to start 6-0. He became the fourth coach ever to start 6-0 when succeeding a head coach who won 100+ games (Blanton Collier, Cleveland, 1963, succeeded Paul Brown, 111 wins; Jack Pardee, Washington, 1978, succeeded George Allen, 116 wins; Josh McDaniels, Denver, 2009, succeeded Mike Shanahan, 146 wins; Caldwell, Colts, 2009, succeeded Tony Dungy, 139 wins). Caldwell joined the Colts after serving as quarterbacks coach with Tampa Bay in 2001. Caldwell has more than 20 years of collegiate coaching experience. He spent 1993-2000 as head coach at Wake Forest. He served as an assistant coach at Southern Illinois (1978-80), Northwestern (1981), Colorado (1982-84), Louisville (1985) and Penn State (1986-92). Caldwell has coached in six bowl games and won a national championship with Penn State in 1986. In addition to serving on Joe Paterno's title staff, Caldwell tutored under three other coaches who won collegiate crowns (Rey Dempsey, Southern Illinois; Bill McCartney, Colorado; Howard Schnellenberger, Louisville). Caldwell was a four-year starter at defensive back at Iowa and worked as a graduate assistant for Iowa in 1977. He holds a bachelor's degree from Iowa. Caldwell was born on January 16, 1955 in Beloit, Wis. MIKE SINGLETARY was named the 16th head coach in San Francisco history on October 20, 2008. Singletary has directed the 49ers to 7-9 and 8-8 records in his first two seasons. Singletary served 2003-04 as inside linebacker coach with Baltimore. He served 2005-08 under Mike Nolan at San Francisco before assuming the position of field general. Singletary was a LB with Chicago from 1981-92. He was named to 10 consecutive Pro Bowls and earned eight All-Pro nominations before being inducted in the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1998. Singletary was an All-America LB at Baylor. He is a native of Houston, Texas. COLTS-49ERS SERIES NOTES The Colts and 49ers will be meeting for the first time in preseason play. Sunday's meeting leaves only Baltimore, Houston and Jacksonville as teams the Colts have not faced in preseason action. The league series spans 42 games and originated in 1953. The Colts own a 24-18 edge. The teams met twice annually through 1969. Since then, the clubs met in 1972, 1986, 1989, 1995, 1998, 2001, 2005 and 2009. The series was renewed last November 1 in Lucas Oil Stadium. Scoring its only touchdown on the first play of the fourth quarter on a tailback pass, Indianapolis battled to beat San Francisco, 18-14. RB-Joseph Addai hit WR-Reggie Wayne (12-147, 1 TD) on a 22t pass to give the Colts their only lead of the game seven seconds into the final period. K-Matt Stover hit field goals of 38, 33, 31 and 40 yards as the Colts offset two 49ers first-half touchdowns. QB-Peyton Manning was 31-48-347 and became the 4th QB with 4,000+ career completions (Brett Favre, Dan Marino, John Elway), and he did it in his 183rd career game, the fastest pace to that plateau (193, Marino; 196, Favre, 227, Elway). Addai added 62 rushing yards, while Wayne tallied his 10th career 10+-reception game. The last meeting in San Francisco came on October 9, 2005. Producing five sacks and five turnovers, the Colts earned a 28-3 victory. Manning (23-31-255, 1 TD/2 ints.) and RB-Edgerrin James (21-105, 1 TD rushing/4-42 receiving) led the Colts offense, while DEs-Robert Mathis and Dwight Freeney and LB-Cato June headlined the defense. June intercepted two passes and returned one 24 yards for a touchdown. Indianapolis never trailed in notching its first victory in San Francisco since 1968. San Francisco gained its last series win in Indianapolis on November 25, 2001, when it earned a 40-21 victory. In that contest, five Colts turnovers led to 23 San Francisco points. The battle stood 21-20 in favor of the Colts late in the third quarter before the 49ers pulled away. Manning was 31-51-370, 1 TD/4 ints., while WR-Marvin Harrison was 8-128, 1 TD and rookie RB-Dominic Rhodes was 27-104, 2 TDs rushing. QB-Jeff Garcia was 14-22-179, 2 TDs/1 int., while WR-Terrell Owens was 6-103, 1 TD and RB-Garrison Hearst was 12-106, 2 TDs rushing. The Colts appeared in San Francisco on October 18, 1998, when the 49ers rallied from a 21-0 second-quarter deficit to take a 34-31 decision at 3Com Park. In that contest, K-Wade Richey's 24-yard FG with :05 left capped a frustrating loss for the Colts. The Colts built an early 21-0 lead behind RB- Marshall Faulk (17-103, 1 TD rushing; 65t), Manning (18-30-231, 3 TDs) and Harrison (6-98, 3 TDs; 4t, 6t, 61t). Faulk's burst and Harrison's initial two scores came in the game's first 19 minutes, but the 49ers cut the gap to 21-17 at halftime after two Colts end-zone interceptions were negated by defensive holding calls. QB-Steve Young (33-51-331, 2 TDs) guided the comeback with two scoring tosses and two TD rushes. K- Mike Vanderjagt was short on a 53-yard FG with 1:08 left to set the stage for the 49ers' final drive. Prior to 2009, the last Colts series win at home was on October 15, 1995. K-Cary Blanchard's 41-yard FG with 2:36 remaining handed the Colts an 18-17 decision over the defending Super Bowl champions.

COLTS STATISTICAL NOTES BEST NFL HOME WINNING PERCENTAGE 2002-2009 TEAM RECORD WINNING % New England 52-12.813 COLTS 51-13.797 Pittsburgh 46-17-1.727 Baltimore 46-18.719 San Diego 44-20.688 BEST STARTS IN NFL HISTORY YEAR TEAM STARTED FINISHED 2007 New England 16-0 16-0 1972 Miami 14-0 14-0 2009 COLTS 14-0 14-2 1934 Chicago 13-0 13-0 1998 Denver 13-0 14-2 2005 COLTS 13-0 14-2 2009 New Orleans 13-0 13-3 MOST CONSECUTIVE 10+-VICTORY SEASONS-NFL HISTORY NO. OF SEASONS TEAM YEARS 16 San Francisco 1983-98 8 COLTS 2002-09 7 Dallas 1975-81 MOST CONSECUTIVE 12+-VICTORY SEASONS-NFL HISTORY NO. OF SEASONS TEAM YEARS 7 COLTS 2003-09 4 Dallas 1992-95 3 5 Teams, Last Philadelphia 2002-04 COLTS PENALTIES AND NFL RANK DURING EIGHT-YEAR PLAYOFF STREAK YEAR PENALTIES NFL RANK 2009 68 T2 2008 91 14 2007 67 3 2006 86 7 2005 94 T2 2004 106 T10 2003 92 T6 2002 91 7 THIRD-DOWN CONVERSION PERCENTAGE YEAR MADE-ATT. PCT. AFC/NFL RANK 2009 95-193 49.2 1/1 2008 101-201 50.2 1/1 2007 100-203 49.3 1/1 2006 105-187 56.1* 1/1 2005 91-187 48.7 1/1 2004 70-164 42.7 5/7 2003 91-217 41.9 2/6 2002 102-227 44.9 2/3 2001 85-205 41.5 3/6 2000 94-201 46.8 1/2 1999 73-186 39.2 6/8 1998 71-202 35.1 9/17 *-NFL record BEST NFL ROAD WINNING PERCENTAGE 2002-2009 TEAM RECORD WINNING % COLTS 48-16.750 New England 44-20.688 Philadelphia 38-25-1.602 NY Giants 36-28.563 Pittsburgh/San Diego 35-29.547 MOST NFL WINS IN A DECADE NO. OF WINS TEAM DECADE 115 COLTS 2000-09 113 San Francisco 1990-99 113 New England 2000-09 105 Dallas 1970-79 COLTS RECORD BY TURNOVER MARGIN SINCE 2004 TURN. DIFF RECORD WINNING % Plus 3 11-0 1.000 Plus 2 20-0 1.000 Plus 1 18-3.857 PLUS 1 OR BETTER = 49-3 (.942) Even 15-4.789 Minus 1 9-6.600 Minus 2 4-4.500 Minus 3 0-2.000 THE COLTS BY MONTH SINCE 2002: (OVERALL 99-29) Sept. Oct. Nov. Dec. Jan. 2002 2-1 2-2 3-1 3-2 -- 2003 4-0 2-1 3-2 3-1 -- 2004 2-1 2-2 4-0 4-0 0-1 2005 3-0 4-0 4-0 2-2 1-0 2006 3-0 4-0 3-1 2-3 -- 2007 4-0 3-0 2-2 4-1 -- 2008 1-2 2-2 5-0 4-0 -- 2009 3-0 3-0 5-0 3-1 0-1 TOTAL 22-4 22-7 29-6 25-10 1-2 THIRD-DOWN CONVERSION PCT. SINCE 2002 TEAM MADE-ATT. PCT. COLTS 755-1,579 47.8 New Orleans 739-1,719 43.0 New England 738-1,719 42.9 Green Bay 743-1,745 42.6 San Diego 673-1,631 41.3 FOURTH-DOWN CONVERSION PCT. SINCE 2002 TEAM MADE-ATT. PCT. New England 91-146 62.3 COLTS 58-95 61.1 Houston 77-129 59.7 Jacksonville 97-172 56.4 San Diego 55-98 56.1

NFL'S BEST REGULAR SEASON RECORDS 1999-2009 LONGEST REGULAR-SEASON WINNING STREAKS IN NFL HISTORY Team Games Year COLTS 23 2008-09 New England 21 2006-08 Record Team Head Coach 128-48 COLTS Jim Mora/Tony Dungy/Jim Caldwell 120-56 New England Pete Carroll/Bill Belichick 109-66-1 Pittsburgh Bill Cowher/Mike Tomlin 108-67-1 Philadelphia Andy Reid 104-72 Tennessee Jeff Fisher 103-73 Green Bay Ray Rhodes/Mike Sherman/Mike McCarthy 100-76 Baltimore Brian Billick/John Harbaugh 99-77 Denver Mike Shanahan/Josh McDaniels 95-81 NY Giants Jim Fassel/Tom Coughlin COLTS TURNOVER DIFFERENTIAL SINCE 2004 DEFENSE OFFENSE MARGIN AFC/NFL RANK Int. Fumbles Total Int. Fumbles Total 2004 19 17 36 10 7 17 +19 1/1 2005 18 13 31 11 8 19 +12 3/4t 2006 15 11 26 9 10 19 +7 4t/6t 2007 22 15 37 14 5 19 + 18 2/2 2008 15 11 26 12 5 17 +9 4/4 2009 16 10 26 19 5 24 +2 6t/13t Total 105 77 182 75 40 115 +67 NFL TURNOVER RATIOS FROM 2004-2009 FEWEST GIVEAWAYS MOST TAKEAWAYS BEST MARGIN 115 COLTS 200 CHICAGO +67 COLTS 122 SAN DIEGO 195 CINCINNATI +56 SAN DIEGO 130 JACKSONVILLE 194 CAROLINA +38 CINCINNATI 136 NEW ENGLAND 189 BALTIMORE +36 CAROLINA 146 WASHINGTON 182 COLTS +34 NEW ENGLAND 149 ATLANTA 178 BUFFALO/SAN DIEGO +24 BALTIMORE COLTS TEAM OFFENSIVE NOTES... 2009 OFFENSIVE NOTES *The Colts ranked 3rd in the AFC and 7th in the NFL, averaging 26.0 points per game. *The Colts ranked 4th in the AFC and 9th in the NFL with 363.1 yards per game. *The Colts ranked 2nd in AFC and NFL passing offense with 282.2 yards per game. *The Colts ranked 1st in the NFL in sacks allowed per pass play, allowing one sack per 47.2 attempts (13 sacks, 614 attempts). *The Colts offense ranked 1st in the AFC and 2nd in the NFL in TD% inside the red zone, scoring a TD 66.0% of the time (35/53). The Colts scored a TD on 19 of their last 24 red zone opportunities (79.2%). COLTS OFFENSE HAS CONTINUED TO RANK AMONG NFL S BEST *The Colts have finished in the top four in NFL scoring offense eight of the last 11 years. *The Colts have finished in the top three in AFC passing offense for 12 consecutive seasons, leading the conference six times in that span. *The Colts have finished in the top six in NFL passing offense for 12 straight seasons, leading the league in 2003 and 2004. *The Colts have finished ranked in the top 10 in NFL total offense for 10 of the last 11 seasons. *In eight of those 11 seasons, the Colts have ranked in the top five in NFL total offense, including six years in the top three. COLTS TEAM DEFENSIVE NOTES... 2009 DEFENSIVE NOTES *The Colts ranked 9th in the AFC and 18th in the NFL in yards allowed per game (339.2). *The Colts ranked 5th in the AFC and 8th in the NFL in points allowed per game (19.2). *The Colts ranked 8th in the AFC and 13th in the NFL in TD% inside the red zone, surrendering a TD 49.0% of the time (25/51). *Since 2002, the Colts have ranked in the top 10 in scoring defense six times. *The Colts allowed six of 19 4th-down conversions (31.6 percent), ranking 1st in the AFC and 2nd in the NFL. *The Colts pass defense allowed only 6.23 yards per pass attempt, 4th in the AFC and NFL. COLTS PASSING DEFENSE RANKINGS YEAR YDS./GAME AFC/NFL RANK 2009 212.7 9/14 2008 188.1 3/6 2007 172.8 1/2 2006 159.3 2/2 2005 196.9 5/15

COLTS 2009 INDIVIDUAL AWARDS QB-Peyton Manning Associated Press NFL Most Valuable Player QB-Peyton Manning Associated Press NFL All-Pro Team QB-Peyton Manning NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09) QB-Peyton Manning PFW/PFWA NFL Most Valuable Player QB-Peyton Manning PFW/PFWA NFL Offensive Player-of-the-Year QB-Peyton Manning PFW/PFWA NFL All-NFL Team QB-Peyton Manning PFW/PFWA NFL All-AFC Team QB-Peyton Manning AFC Offensive Player-of-the-Month (September) QB-Peyton Manning Kansas City Committee of 101 AFC Offensive Player-of-the-Year QB-Peyton Manning AFC Offensive Player-of-the-Week (11/15 vs. New England) QB-Peyton Manning The Sporting News NFL Player-of-the-Decade QB-Peyton Manning The Sporting News NFL All-Decade Team QB-Peyton Manning Sports Illustrated NFL Player-of-the-Decade QB-Peyton Manning Sports Illustrated NFL All-Decade Team QB-Peyton Manning AFC Pro Bowl Team Starter WR-Reggie Wayne AFC Pro Bowl Team Starter TE-Dallas Clark AFC Pro Bowl Team Starter TE-Dallas Clark NFL Alumni Tight End-of-the-Year TE-Dallas Clark The Sporting News NFL All-Pro Team TE-Dallas Clark Associated Press NFL All-Pro Team TE-Dallas Clark PFW/PFWA NFL All-NFL Team TE-Dallas Clark PFW/PFWA NFL All-AFC Team C-Jeff Saturday The Sporting News NFL All-Decade Team C-Jeff Saturday AFC Pro Bowl Team DE-Dwight Freeney AFC Pro Bowl Team Starter DE-Dwight Freeney Associated Press NFL All-Pro Team DE-Dwight Freeney The Sporting News NFL All-Pro Team DE-Dwight Freeney NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09) DE-Dwight Freeney PFW/PFWA NFL All-NFL Team DE-Dwight Freeney PFW/PFWA NFL All-AFC Team DE-Robert Mathis AFC Pro Bowl Team Starter DE-Robert Mathis AFC Offensive Player-of-the-Month (November) DB-Antoine Bethea AFC Pro Bowl Team K-Adam Vinatieri NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09) K-Adam Vinatieri The Sporting News NFL All-Decade Team K-Adam Vinatieri Sports Illustrated NFL All-Decade Team Bill Polian Sports Illustrated Best General Manager (Decade) Bill Polian Sports Illustrated NFL All-Decade General Manager P-Pat McAfee PFW/PFWA NFL All-Rookie Team P-Pat McAfee The Sporting News NFL All-Rookie Team WR-Austin Collie PFW/PFWA NFL All-Rookie Team WR-Austin Collie The Sporting News NFL All-Rookie Team DB-Jacob Lacey PFW/PFWA NFL All-Rookie Team DB-Jacob Lacey The Sporting News NFL All-Rookie Team Bill Polian PFW/PFWA NFL Executive-of-the-Year Bill Polian The Sporting News NFL Executive-of-the-Year RB-Edgerrin James NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09) WR-Marvin Harrison NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09) Head Coach Tony Dungy NFL All-Decade Team (2000-09)

QUARTERBACK PEYTON MANNING REWRITING THE COLTS RECORD BOOKS: Manning owns the club career passing marks in completions, attempts, yards and touchdowns. Manning also owns club records with 21 4+-TD games, six 5+-TD games and seven 400+-yard games. His 472 passing yards at Kansas City 10/31/04 marked a franchise-best. In 2004, Manning s seasonal completion percentage (67.6), touchdowns (49), passing yardage (4,557) and passer rating (121.1) all marked club records. He bested his own completion percentage mark in 2009 at 68.8 percent. Manning owns the single-game club mark with 6 TD passes at New Orleans 9/28/03 and at Detroit 11/25/04. NFL ALL-TIME CAREER PASSING LEADERS TOUCHDOWNS PASSING YARDS 1. Brett Favre* 497 1. Brett Favre* 69,329 2. Dan Marino 420 2. Dan Marino 61,361 3. Peyton Manning* 366 3. John Elway 51,475 4. Fran Tarkenton 342 4. Peyton Manning* 50,128 5. John Elway 300 5. Warren Moon 49,325 6. Warren Moon 291 6. Fran Tarkenton 47,003 7. John Unitas 290 7. Vinny Testaverde 46,233 8. Vinny Testaverde 275 8. Drew Bledsoe 44,611 9. Joe Montana 273 9. Dan Fouts 43,040 10. Dave Krieg 261 10. Joe Montana 40,551 IRONMAN: Manning has started the first 192 games of his career (the longest career-opening streak of any QB in NFL history and the longest streak in Colts history). He collected his 100th career starting win in his 154th career game vs. Kansas City 11/18/07, the 5th-fastest pace to 100 wins in NFL history. Manning surpassed Unitas (118) for most wins in Colts history at Miami 9/21/09. Manning has won 10+ games in a season 10 times (1999-00, 2002-09), 1st among Colts QBs (3, Unitas; 3, Jones). Among QBs, his 192-game start streak is 2nd-longest in the NFL history (285, Brett Favre, NFL Record). MOST CAREER STARTING WINS IN NFL HISTORY Rank Name Record Pct. 1. Brett Favre* 181-104-0.635 2. John Elway 148-82-1.643 3. Dan Marino 147-93-0.613 4. Peyton Manning* 131-61-0.682 5. Fran Tarkenton 124-109-6.531 6. John Unitas 119-63-4.651 7. Joe Montana 117-47-0.713 8. Terry Bradshaw 107-51-0.677 9. Warren Moon 102-98-0.510 10. Jim Kelly 101-59-0.631 PEYDIRT: Manning (1998-09) has 20+ TD passes in 12 consecutive seasons, extending his club record and tying the NFL record (Favre). Manning owns 12 of 22 20+-TD seasons in club history. Manning (1998-08) is the only NFL QB with 25+ touchdowns passes in 12 consecutive seasons. Manning owns one of five 40+ seasons in NFL history (50, Tom Brady, 2007; 49, Manning, 2004; 48, Marino, 1984; 44, Marino, 1986; 41, Kurt Warner, 1999). He owns five of the franchise s six 30+-TD seasons (49, Manning, 2004; 33, Manning, 2000, 09; 32, John Unitas, 1959; 31, Manning, 2006-07). MOST CONSECUTIVE SEASONS WITH 20+-TD PASSES Player Cons. Seasons Peyton Manning 12 seasons (1998-present) Brett Favre 12 seasons (1994-2005) Dan Marino 10 seasons (1983-92) IN 192 CAREER GAMES, MANNING HAS RECORDED THE FOLLOWING: CATEGORY NO. OF TIMES 2+ Touchdown Passes 110 3+ Touchdown Passes 59 4+ Touchdown Passes 21 5+ Touchdown Passes 6 300+ Passing Yards 56 400+ Passing Yards 7 100+ Rating Games (min. 15 atts.) 73 20+ Completion Games 138 Games with TD pass 168 50+ Completion Percentage 184 55+ Completion Percentage 165 60+ Completion Percentage 141 Colts scored 30+ Points 72 Produced 100+ Receiver 118 Red Zone TD: Int Ratio 226:23 PEYTON MANNING BY THE YARDS PASSING YARDS (192 games) TOTAL OFFENSE (192 games) 200+ yards 156 games 300+ yards 159 games 250+ yards 110 games 350+ yards 108 games 300+ yards 56 games 400+ yards 48 games 350+ yards 20 games 400+ yards 7 games MANNING has taken every snap in 162 of 192 games. Manning took 1,590 consecutive snaps to open his career. He had a career-best streak of 1,631 consecutive snaps end at New Orleans 9/28/03. He has taken 11,623 of 12,047 possible snaps from 1998-09. The only other QBs to take snaps from scrimmage during Manning s career are Steve Walsh (21, 1999), Mark Rypien (22, 2001), Brock Huard (22, 2003), Jim Sorgi (75, 2004; 102, 2005; 74, 2007; 56, 2008; 1, 2009) and Curtis Painter (47, 2009). P-Hunter Smith took one snap in 2000 (fake FG), 2003 (fake FG), 2004 (fake punt) and 2005 (fake FG). RB-Edgerrin James took one direct snap in 2005. Manning has missed one career snap due to injury (vs. Miami, 11/11/01). NFL ALL-TIME CAREER COMPLETIONS LEADERS 1. 6,083 Brett Favre* 2. 4,967 Dan Marino 3. 4,232 Peyton Manning* 4. 4,123 John Elway 5. 3,988 Warren Moon 6. 3,839 Drew Bledsoe 7. 3,787 Vinny Testaverde 8. 3,686 Fran Tarkenton 9. 3,409 Joe Montana 10. 3,297 Dan Fouts Manning reached 3,000 completions in his 139th career game vs. Philadelphia 11/26/06, marking the fastest player in league history to reach 3,000 career completions (146 games, Dan Marino and Drew Bledsoe). MOST CONSECUTIVE SEASONS WITH 25+-TD PASSES Player Cons. Seasons Peyton Manning 12 seasons (1998-present) Dan Marino 5 seasons (1984-88) Brett Favre 5 seasons (1994-98)

2009 PEYTON MANNING GAME-BY-GAME DATE OPPONENT Att-Comp. Yds. Pct. TD INT LG Rat. Result 09/13 vs. Jacksonville 38-28 301 73.7 1 1 39 94.3 W 14-12 09/21 at Miami 23-14 303 60.9 2 0 80t 133.9 W 27-23 09/27 at Arizona 35-24 379 68.6 4 1 72 130.5 W 31-10 10/04 vs. Seattle 41-31 353 70.8 2 1 35 107.1 W 34-17 10/11 at Tennessee 44-36 309 81.8 3 1 39t 109.2 W 31-9 10/25 at St. Louis 34-23 235 67.6 3 0 27t 116.7 W 42-6 11/01 vs. San Francisco 48-31 347 64.6 0 0 40 86.0 W 18-14 11/08 vs. Houston 50-34 318 68.0 1 1 26 83.6 W 20-17 11/15 vs. New England 44-28 327 63.6 4 2 29t 97.4 W 35-34 11/22 at Baltimore 31-22 299 71.0 1 2 66 85.3 W 17-15 11/29 at Houston 35-27 244 77.1 3 2 31 100.2 W 35-27 12/06 vs. Tennessee 37-24 270 64.9 1 0 36 95.6 W 27-17 12/13 vs. Denver 42-20 220 47.6 4 3 29 65.6 W 28-16 12/17 at Jacksonville 30-23 308 76.7 4 1 65t 134.4 W 35-31 12/27 vs. New York Jets 21-14 192 66.7 0 0 29 95.7 L 15-29 01/03 at Buffalo 18-14 95 77.8 0 1 17 65.5 L 7-30 TOTAL 571-393 4,500 68.8 33 16 80t 99.9 14-2 Category 1998 AFC/NFL 1999 AFC/NFL 2000 AFC/NFL 2001 AFC/NFL 2002 AFC/NFL 2003 AFC/NFL 2004 AFC/NFL Comp. 326 1/2 331 1/3 357 1/1 343 2/3 392 2/2 379 1/1 336 2/4 Attempts 575 1/1 533 2/4 571 2/3 547 2/5 591 4/4 566 1/2 497 4/8 Comp. Pct. 56.7 9/19 62.1 1/2 62.5 2/5 62.7 3/6 66.3 4/4 67.0 1/1 67.6 1/3 Yards 3,739 1/3 4,135 1/3 4,413 1/1 4,131 1/2 4,200 3/3 4,267 1/1 4,557 2/3 Yds./Att. 6.50 10/20 7.76 1/4 7.73 2/5 7.55 2/5 7.11 7/10 7.53 3/4 9.2 1/1 TDs 26 2/5 26 1/3 33 1/1* 26 2/5 27 2/2* 29 1/2 49 1/1 Rating 71.2 12/23 90.7 1/4 94.7 2/6 84.1 4/8* 88.8 4/6 99.0 2/2 121.1 1/1 Category 2005 AFC/NFL 2006 AFC/NFL 2007 AFC/NFL 2008 AFC/NFL 2009 AFC/NFL Comp. 305 5/6 362 1/3 337 3/7 371 2/4 393 2/2 Attempts 453 9/13 557 1/4 515 4/10 555 2/5 571 2/2 Comp. Pct. 67.3 3/3 65.0 2/3 65.4 4/6 66.8 2/3 68.8 1/2 Yards 3,747 5/7 4,397 1/2 4,040 3/7 4,002 3/6 4,500 2/2 Yds./Att. 8.3 2/2 7.89 1/4 7.84 2/3 7.21 6/13 7.88 4/10 TDs 28 2/2 31 1/1 31 3/4 27 2/5 33 1/2* Rating 104.1 1/1 101.0 1/1 98.0 4/4 95.0 3/5 99.9 3/6 PEYTON MANNING CAREER PASSING TOTALS YEAR ST/PL Att-Comp. Yds. Pct. TD INT LG Rat. 1998 16/16 575-326 3,739 56.7 26 28 78t 71.2 1999 16/16 533-331 4,135 62.1 26 15 80t 90.7 2000 16/16 571-357 4,413 62.5 33 15 78t 94.7 2001 16/16 547-343 4,131 62.7 26 23 86t 84.1 2002 16/16 591-392 4,200 66.3 27 19 69 88.8 2003 16/16 566-379 4,267 67.0 29 10 79t 99.0 2004 16/16 497-336 4,557 67.6 49 10 80t 121.1 2005 16/16 453-305 3,747 67.3 28 10 80t 104.1 2006 16/16 557-362 4,397 65.0 31 9 68t 101.0 2007 16/16 515-337 4,040 65.4 31 14 73t 98.0 2008 16/16 555-371 4,002 66.8 27 12 75 95.0 2009 16/16 571-393 4,500 68.8 33 16 80t 99.9 TOTAL 192/192 6,531-4,232 50,128 64.8 366 181 86t 95.2 MANNING AMONG COLTS QUARTERBACKS Attempts Completions Yards Touchdowns Games 6,531 Manning 4,232 Manning 50,128 Manning 366 Manning 206 Unitas 5,110 Unitas 2,796 Unitas 39,768 Unitas 287 Unitas 192 Manning 2,464 Jones 1,382 Jones 17,663 Jones 122 Jones 98 Jones 1,536 Trudeau 874 George 9,647 Trudeau 49 Harbaugh 61 Trudeau 1,532 George 812 Trudeau 9,551 George 47 Morrall 53 Harbaugh 1,230 Harbaugh 746 Harbaugh 8,705 Harbaugh 41 Trudeau 52 George 1,154 Pagel 587 Pagel 7,474 Pagel 41 George 51 Morrall/Pagel

MANNING AND MORE MILESTONES: Manning, a 10-time Pro Bowler (1999-00, 2002-09), is the only player in NFL history with 3,000 passing yards in each of his 1st 12 seasons, and he owns 12 of the 18 3,000+ passing seasons in Colts history (3, Unitas; 3, Bert Jones). Manning extended his NFL-record streak of 4,000+ seasons to six in 2004, tying Dan Marino s all-time NFL mark. He holds the NFL career mark for 4,000+ passing seasons with 10. MANNING EFFICIENT IN FOURTH-QUARTER IN 2009 Peyton Manning ranked 1st in the NFL in fourth-quarter passing efficiency in 2009 with a 116.0 rating. Manning completed 79 of 109 passes (72.5 percent) for 939 yards and seven TDs with one interception. NFL QBs WITH MULTIPLE 4,000+ PASSING SEASONS 10 Peyton Manning, Colts 1999-04, 06-09 6 Brett Favre, Green Bay 1995, 98-99, 04, 07, 09 6 Dan Marino, Miami 1984-86, 88, 92, 94 4 Drew Brees, New Orleans 2006-09 4 Warren Moon, Houston/Minn. 1990-91, 1994-95 3 Dan Fouts, San Diego 1979-81 3 Drew Bledsoe, NE/Buff. 1994, 96, 02 3 Tom Brady, New England 2005, 07, 09 3 Trent Green, Kansas City 2003-05 3 Kurt Warner, St. Louis, Ariz. 1999, 01, 08 2 Steve Young, San Francisco 1993, 98 2 Philip Rivers, San Diego 2008-09 2 Aaron Rodgers, Green Bay 2008-09 2 Tony Romo, Dallas 2007, 09 MISCELLANEOUS: Manning has 73 career 100+ rating games (minimum 15 attempts), including three perfect rating games of 158.3, tied for the most by any NFL QB (3, Roethlisberger; 3, Warner) since 1973 when the rating system was instituted. The Colts are 66-7 in those 73 games. Manning has 34 career 50+-yard TD passes, including a career-high 6 in 2000. He has hit passes to 7+ different players 59 times in his career and with 8+ players 16 times. Manning is the only player in club history to throw for 400+ yards in multiple games. MOST PROLIFIC QB-WR TD DUOs IN NFL HISTORY Peyton Manning-Marvin Harrison, Colts, 1998-2008 112 Steve Young-Jerry Rice, San Francisco, 1987-99 85 Dan Marino-Mark Clayton, Miami, 1983-92 79 Jim Kelly-Andre Reed, Buffalo, 1986-96 65 John Unitas-Raymond Berry, Colts, 1956-67 63 Peyton Manning-Reggie Wayne, Colts, 2001-present 61 Brett Favre-Antonio Freeman, Green Bay 1995-03 57 John Hadl-Lance Alworth, San Diego, 1962-70 56 Dan Marino-Mark Duper, Miami, 1983-92 55 Joe Montana-Jerry Rice, San Francisco, 1985-92 55 MOST PROLIFIC ACTIVE TD DUOs Peyton Manning-Reggie Wayne, Colts, 2001-present 61 Peyton Manning-Dallas Clark, Colts, 2003-present 41 Carson Palmer-Chad Ochocinco, Bengals, 2003-09 40 Ben Roethlisberger-Hines Ward, Pitt., 2004-09 36 Tom Brady-Randy Moss, NE, 2007-09 36 MOST PROLIFIC COMPLETIONS DUOs IN NFL HISTORY Peyton Manning-Marvin Harrison, Colts, 1998-2008 953 Peyton Manning-Reggie Wayne, Colts, 2001-present 668 Jim Kelly-Andre Reed, Buffalo, 1986-96 663 MANNING S TOP 5 RATING GAMES (with min. 15 attempts) Date Opponent Rating (Passing Totals) 9/28/03 at New Orleans 158.3 (20-25-314, 6 TDs) 11/10/02 at Philadelphia 158.3 (18-23-319, 3 TDs) 10/22/00 New England 158.3 (16-20-268, 3 TDs) 12/9/07 at Baltimore 157.5 (13-17-249, 4 TDs) 12/4/05 Tennessee 151.2 (13-17-187, 3 TDs) MANNING DURING 23-GAME WINNING STREAK Date Opponent Att-Comp Yds Pct TD Int Rating 11/02 vs. New England 29-21 254 72.4 2 0 121.9 11/09 at Pittsburgh 40-21 240 52.5 3 0 95.8 11/16 vs. Houston 46-30 320 65.2 2 0 99.9 11/23 at San Diego 44-32 255 72.7 2 1 92.5 11/30 at Cleveland 21-15 125 71.4 0 2 46.8 12/07 vs. Cincinnati 32-26 277 81.3 3 0 134.0 12/14 vs. Detroit 37-28 318 75.7 1 0 110.0 12/18 at Jacksonville 34-29 364 85.3 3 0 140.7 12/28 vs. Tennessee 7-7 95 100.0 1 0 158.3 ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9/13 vs. Jacksonville 38-28 301 73.7 1 1 94.3 9/21 at Miami 23-14 303 60.9 2 0 133.9 9/28 at Arizona 35-24 379 68.6 4 1 130.5 10/04 vs. Seattle 41-31 353 70.8 2 1 107.1 10/11 at Tennessee 44-36 309 81.8 3 1 109.2 10/25 at St. Louis 34-23 235 67.6 3 0 116.7 11/01 vs. San Francisco 48-31 347 64.6 0 0 86.0 11/08 vs. Houston 50-34 318 68.0 1 1 83.6 11/15 vs. New England 44-28 327 63.6 4 2 97.4 11/22 at Baltimore 31-22 299 71.0 1 2 85.3 11/29 at Houston 35-27 244 77.1 3 2 100.2 12/06 vs. Tennessee 37-24 270 64.9 1 0 95.6 12/13 vs. Denver 42-20 220 47.6 4 3 65.6 12/17 at Jacksonville 30-23 308 76.7 4 1 134.4 TOTALS 820-574 6,461 70.0 50 18 105.9 MANNING TD PASSES BY TARGET (32): M. Harrison (112), R. Wayne (61), D. Clark (41), M. Pollard (34), B. Stokley (15), E. James (11), J. Addai (9), A.Collie (7), K. Dilger (7), A. Gonzalez (7), T. Small (7), T. Wilkins (7), J. Pathon (6), B. Fletcher (5), M. Faulk (4), P. Garcon (4), D. Rhodes (4), T. Walters (4), Q. Ismail (3), J. Mungro (3), E.G. Green (2), B. Utecht (2), R. Williams (2), J. Finn (1), T. Insley (1), K. Keith (1) D. Klecko (1), L. Lawton (1), A. Moorehead (1), M. Roberg (1), T. Santi (1), L. Warren (1). MANNING S COMPLETIONS BY RECEIVERS (Top 10): M. Harrison (953), R. Wayne (668), E. James (355), D. Clark (350), M. Pollard (243), K. Dilger (150), J. Addai (157), J. Pathon (138), B. Stokley (134), D. Rhodes (125). MANNING S YARDS BY RECEIVER (Top 11): M. Harrison (12,766), R. Wayne (9,247), D. Clark (4,132), M. Pollard (3,138), E. James (2,833), B. Stokley (1,794), K. Dilger (1,663), J. Pathon (1,650), T. Wilkins (1,445), J. Addai (1,231), A. Gonzalez (1,230). MANNING TD PASSES BY QUARTER: QUARTER TD PASSES 1st 86 2nd 103 3rd 92 4th 85 TOTAL OFFENSE UNDER MANNING The Colts have had 12 consecutive seasons of 5,000+ net yards offense. The team had a club-record 6,475 yards in 2004. Manning has engineered 12 of the 17 5,000+ seasons in club history. YEAR TOTAL YDS. YDS./GAME AFC/NFL RANK 2009 5,809 363.1 4/9 2008 5,368 335.5 6/15 2007 5,739 358.7 2/5 2006 6,070 379.4 1/3 2005 5,799 362.4 2/3 2004 6,475 404.7 2/2 2003 5,874 367.1 2/3 2002 5,616 351.0 5/9 2001 5,955 372.2 1/2 2000 6,141 383.8 2/3 1999 5,726 357.9 1/4 1998 5,116 319.8 7/12

PEYTON MANNING PASSING BREAKDOWN vs. AFC (Regular Season Only) TEAMS W-L ATTS COMP PCT. YDS. TD INT LG SACKS RATING AFC EAST 25-24 1667 1031 61.8 11,992 76 59 80t 58-424 84.0 AFC NORTH 19-3 753 489 64.9 5821 42 18 80t 23-149 97.0 AFC SOUTH 39-10 1626 1115 68.6 13,059 98 33 76 45-288 104.3 AFC WEST 16-8 867 531 61.2 6270 42 28 63 35-223 85.9 AFC TOTALS 99-45 4913 3166 64.4 37,142 258 138 80t 164-1084 93.1 NFC TOTALS 32-16 1618 1066 65.9 12,986 108 43 86t 51-308 101.6 LEAGUE TOTALS 131-61 6531 4232 64.8 50,128 366 181 86t 215-1392 95.2 MANNING IN ELITE COMPANY Peyton Manning has reached several key milestones for a quarterback in a short period of time. Here is a look at where he ranks in NFL history on how many games it took him to reach these milestones: 100 TD Passes Games 150 TD Passes Games 200 TD Passes Games 250 TD Passes Games 300 TD Passes Games Dan Marino 44 Dan Marino 62 Dan Marino 89 Dan Marino 128 Peyton Manning 157 Kurt Warner 50 Brett Favre 84 Peyton Manning 106 Peyton Manning 132 Dan Marino 157 John Unitas 53 Peyton Manning 86 Brett Favre 107 Brett Favre 141 Brett Favre 167 Peyton Manning 56 John Unitas 87 Tom Brady 116 John Unitas 149 Fran Tarkenton 217 350 TD Passes Games Peyton Manning 185 Dan Marino 185 Brett Favre 196 25,000 Yards Games 30,000 Yards Games 35,000 Yards Games 40,000 Yards Games 45,000 Yards Games Dan Marino 92 Dan Marino 114 Dan Marino 134 Dan Marino 153 Dan Marino 172 Peyton Manning 97 Kurt Warner 114 Peyton Manning 135 Peyton Manning 154 Peyton Manning 174 Kurt Warner 97 Peyton Manning 115 Drew Bledsoe 145 Warren Moon 165 Warren Moon 186 Drew Brees 103 Warren Moon 125 B. Favre/W. Moon 147 Brett Favre 166 Brett Favre 191 50,000 Yards Games Peyton Manning 191 Dan Marino 193 Brett Favre 211 John Elway 229 NFL S TOP 10 CAREER LEADING PASSERS AND A 13-YEAR COMPARISON WITH PEYTON MANNING Yards Name Games Att. Comp. Pct. Yards Yd/Att. TD Int. Rating Years 69,329* Brett Favre 192 6,463 3,960 61.3 45,646 7.06 346 209 86.9 1991-03 61,361 Dan Marino 186 6,531 3,913 59.9 48,841 7.48 352 200 88.4 1983-95 51,475 John Elway 190 5,926 3,346 56.5 41,706 7.04 225 191 77.7 1983-95 50,128* Peyton Manning 192 6,531 4,232 64.8 50,128 7.68 366 181 95.3 1998-09 49,325 Warren Moon 180 6,000 3,514 58.6 43,787 7.30 254 208 81.0 1984-96 47,003 Fran Tarkenton 181 4,449 2,459 55.3 33,248 7.47 249 187 80.4 1961-73 46,233 Vinny Testaverde 157 4,613 2,569 55.7 32,575 7.06 205 191 75.5 1987-99 44,611 Drew Bledsoe 188 6,548 3,749 57.3 43,447 6.64 244 198 77.3 1993-05 43,040 Dan Fouts 158 4,810 2,839 59.0 37,492 7.79 228 205 81.8 1973-85 40,551 Joe Montana 166 4,579 2,914 63.6 34,998 7.64 242 123 93.4 1979-91 QBs TAKEN AS FIRST OVERALL DRAFT PICK SINCE 1970 COMPLETE 13-SEASON TOTALS Name Games Att. Comp. Pct. Yards Yd/Att. TD Int. Rating Years Peyton Manning 192 6,531 4,232 64.8 50,128 7.68 366 181 95.2 1998-09 Troy Aikman 165 4,715 2,898 61.5 32,942 6.99 165 141 81.6 1989-00 Jeff George 134 3,967 2,298 57.9 27,602 6.96 154 113 80.4 1990-01 Drew Bledsoe 188 6,548 3,749 57.3 43,447 6.64 244 198 77.3 1993-05 Steve Bartkowski 129 3,456 1,932 55.9 24,124 6.98 156 144 75.4 1975-86 John Elway 190 5,926 3,346 56.5 41,706 7.04 225 191 77.7 1983-95 Vinny Testaverde 157 4,613 2,569 55.7 32,575 7.06 205 191 75.5 1987-99 Terry Bradshaw 166 3,893 2,020 51.9 27,912 7.17 210 210 70.7 1970-82 Jim Plunkett 136 3,148 1,631 51.8 21,620 6.87 141 176 65.5 1971-83

MANNING AMONG NFL S TOP LEADING PASSERS THROUGH FIRST 12 SEASONS Attempts Completions Yards Touchdowns Rating 6,531 Manning 4,232 Manning 50,128 Manning 366 Manning 96.2 Young 6,049 Bledsoe 3,652 Favre 45,173 Marino 328 Marino 95.2 Manning 6,049 Marino 3,604 Marino 42,285 Favre 314 Favre 93.7 Warner 5,992 Favre 3,449 Bledsoe 42,177 Moon 252 Unitas 93.4 Montana 5,753 Moon 3,380 Moon 39,808 Bledsoe 247 Moon 88.2 Marino COLTS RECORD WHEN MANNING RECORD WITH PEYTON UNDER CENTER PASS ATTEMPTS YARDS INTERCEPTIONS Games Started: 192 Less than 20: 4-4 Less than 200: 21-15 None: 64-12 Overall: 131-61 20-29 attempts: 36-13 200-299 yards: 75-25 1 interception: 50-17 Home: 70-26 30-39 attempts: 68-18 300-399 yards: 29-20 2 interceptions: 16-21 Away: 61-35 40-49 attempts: 21-19 400 or more: 6-1 3 or more: 1-11 On Grass: 42-25 50 or more: 2-7 On Turf: 89-36 Indoor: 73-30 COMPLETIONS TOUCHDOWNS SACKS Outdoor: 58-31 Less than 10: 2-2 None: 12-12 None: 54-22 vs. AFC: 99-45 10-19 completions: 31-19 1 touchdown: 36-22 1 sack: 44-10 vs. NFC: 32-16 20-29 completions: 89-31 2 touchdowns: 36-15 2 sacks: 21-17 Overtime: 3-2 30 or more: 9-9 3 or more: 47-12 3 or more sacks: 12-12 HIGHEST CAREER AVERAGE TD PASSES PER GAME (Min. 150 TDs) TD PASSES GAMES TD PASSES/GAME Peyton Manning* 366 192 1.9063 Tom Brady* 225 129 1.7442 Dan Marino 420 242 1.7355 Brett Favre* 497 289 1.7197 Kurt Warner 208 124 1.6774 Drew Brees* 202 122 1.6557 Jim Kelly 237 160 1.4813 Donovan McNabb* 216 148 1.4595 Joe Montana 273 192 1.4219 Dan Fouts 254 181 1.4033 TOUCHDOWN PASSES FROM 98-09 TDs Peyton Manning 366 Brett Favre 315 Tom Brady 225 Donovan McNabb 216 Kurt Warner 208 Drew Brees 202 PASSING YARDS FROM 98-09 PASSING YDS. Peyton Manning 50,128 Brett Favre 46,738 Donovan McNabb 32,873 Kurt Warner 32,344 Kerry Collins 31,323 Tom Brady 30,844 MOST CAREER 3+-TD GAMES GAMES Brett Favre* 71 Dan Marino 62 Peyton Manning* 59 Fran Tarkenton 41 MOST CAREER 4+-TD GAMES GAMES Brett Favre* 23 Peyton Manning* 21 Dan Marino 21 John Unitas 17 MOST CAREER 400+-YARD GAMES GAMES Dan Marino 13 Peyton Manning* 7 Joe Montana 7 Warren Moon 7 MOST CONSECUTIVE MULTIPLE-TD GAMES 13 Peyton Manning, Colts, 2004 12 John Unitas, Colts, 1959 12 Don Meredith, Dallas, 1965-66 12 Dan Marino, Miami, 1986-87 12 Brett Favre, Green Bay, 1994-95 TOP TOUCHDOWN CONNECTIONS IN COLTS HISTORY 1. 112 Peyton Manning to Marvin Harrison 2. 63 John Unitas to Raymond Berry 3. 61 Peyton Manning to Reggie Wayne 4. 43 John Unitas to Lenny Moore t5. 41 John Unitas to Jimmy Orr t5. 41 Peyton Manning to Dallas Clark 7. 34 Peyton Manning to Marcus Pollard HIGHEST PASSER RATING (SEASON) 121.1 Peyton Manning, Colts, 2004 117.2 Tom Brady, New England, 2007 112.8 Steve Young, SF, 1994 112.4 Joe Montana, SF, 1989 110.9 Daunte Culpepper, Minnesota, 2004 110.4 Milt Plum, Cleveland, 1960 MOST GAMES 4+-TD PASSES IN A SEASON 6 Peyton Manning, Colts, 2004 6 Dan Marino, Miami, 1984 5 Tom Brady, New England, 2007 5 Brett Favre, Green Bay, 1996 5 Dan Marino, Miami, 1986 5 Donovan McNabb, Philadelphia, 2004 MOST GAMES CAREER GAMES 5+-TD PASSES 6 Peyton Manning, Colts 6 Dan Marino, Miami

MANNING S FOURTH-QUARTER AND OVERTIME GAME-WINNING DRIVES (43) Victories in which Manning has rallied Colts from a fourth-quarter deficit or tie to win Manning has 43 career fourth-quarter/ot game-winning drives, 1st in club history (Unitas 31). Manning led the club to an NFL-record seven comeback wins in 2009. Date Opponent Down Won Go-Ahead Scoring Play Time Left Drive/TOP Manning Drive Stats 11/15/98 vs. NY Jets 17-23 24-23 14t pass to TE-Marcus Pollard :24 15-80/2:40 8-13-93, 1 TD pass 9/26/99 at San Diego 13-19 27-19 12t Manning run 11:41 8-83/2:47 3-6-46 pass; 12t rush 10/17/99 at NY Jets 13-13 16-13 Vanderjagt 27 FG :14 10-35/4:18 2-2-12 pass, 1-(-2 rush) *10-13 Vanderjagt 18 FG 12:06 12-53/4:43 4-8-40 pass 10/31/99 vs. Dallas 21-24 34-24 40t pass to WR-Marvin Harrison 14:55 7-75/3:31 4-7-76, 1 TD pass 11/7/99 vs. Kansas City 16-17 25-17 7t Manning run 10:49 6-54/3:04 2-3-17 pass/2-10 rush, 7t 12/5/99 at Miami 34-34 37-34 Vanderjagt 53 FG :00 4-33/0:36 2-2-34 passing 12/19/99 vs. Washington 10-13 24-21 1t pass to TE-Ken Dilger 14:56 7-80/3:11 3-4-40 pass, 1 TD pass 12/26/99 at Cleveland 26-28 29-28 Vanderjagt 21 FG :04 11-54/4:08 4-4-23 pass/1-8 rush *19-28 2t James run 9:54 11-77/5:06 6-7-53 pass/1-9 rush 9/3/00 at Kansas City 14-14 27-14 Vanderjagt 23 FG 13:37 9-27/3:56 3-4-16 pass 10/1/00 at Buffalo 15-16 18-16 Vanderjagt 45 FG :00 8-42/1:08 3-5-25 pass/1-2 rush 10/22/00 vs. New England 21-23 30-23 3t James run 2:09 6-66/2:22 2-2-13 pass *14-23 1t pass to RB-Edgerrin James 6:16 8-65/3:32 6-9-40, 1 TD pass 10/13/02 vs. Baltimore 19-20 22-20 Vanderjagt 38 FG :04 11-60/2:18 5-6-49 pass 11/17/02 vs. Dallas 3-3 20-3 Vanderjagt 32 FG 13:06 12-76/6:53 3-3-31 pass/1-(-1) rush 11/24/02 at Denver 20-20 23-20 Vanderjagt 51 FG 9:22 OT 10-35/5:38 2-3-14 pass *17-20 Vanderjagt 54 FG :03 11-44/1:37 3-8-27 pass/2-12 rush 12/15/02 at Cleveland 21-23 28-23 3t Mungro run 6:46 6-86/3:00 2-2-53 pass *14-23 3t pass to WR-Marvin Harrison 11:30 7-57/2:58 4-6-49, 1 TD pass 12/29/02 vs. Jacksonville 13-13 20-13 11t pass to TE-Marcus Pollard 2:26 7-47/2:11 3-3-32 pass, 1 TD pass *10-13 Vanderjagt 27 FG 5:46 16-68/8:09 5-9-25 pass/1-8 rush 9/7/03 at Cleveland 6-6 9-6 Vanderjagt 45 FG :01 11-65/2:38 8-10-65 pass 10/6/03 at Tampa Bay 35-35 38-35 Vanderjagt 29 FG 3:47 OT 15-76/6:46 5-9-49 pass *28-35 1t R. Williams run :35 5-85/1:06 2-3-64 pass *21-35 28t pass to WR-Marvin Harrison 2:29 6-58/1:08 5-6-63, 1 TD pass *14-35 3t Mungro run 3:37 4-12/1:32 1-2-6 pass 11/23/03 at Buffalo 10-14 17-14 1t James run 1:38 16-83/6:00 5-7-55 pass *3-14 14t James run 10:40 9-61/4:11 3-4-15 pass 12/28/03 at Houston 17-17 20-17 Vanderjagt 43 FG :00 12-65/2:40 2-4-22 pass/2-8 rush *10-17 5t pass to WR-Brandon Stokley 3:50 1-5/0:05 1-1-5, 1 TD pass *3-17 6t James run 14:57 11-67/5:36 3-3-24 pass 9/19/04 at Tennessee 17-17 31-17 4t James run 7:31 11-80/3:57 4-7-70 pass *10-17 1t pass to TE-Marcus Pollard 14:56 6-80/2:42 3-4-57 pass, 1 TD pass 10/03/04 at Jacksonville 17-17 24-17 3t James run 3:33 13-74/7:04 5-5-33 pass 11/8/04 vs. Minnesota 28-28 31-28 Vanderjagt 35 FG :02 9-55/2:52 2-2-23 pass/3-12 rush 12/26/04 vs. San Diego 31-31 34-31 Vanderjagt 30 FG 12:13 OT 5-61/2:47 2-2-58 pass *23-31 21t pass to WR-Brandon Stokley :56 9-80/2:46 6-8-85, 1 TD pass 9/18/05 vs. Jacksonville 0-3 10-3 6t Carthon run 8:33 17-88/8:59 3-3-21 pass 10/1/06 at NY Jets 24-28 31-28 1t Manning run :50 9-61/1:30 6-8-60 pass/1-1, 1t rush 10/8/06 vs. Tennessee 7-13 14-13 2t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 5:10 10-43/4:28 4-6-34, 1 TD pass 10/29/06 at Denver 31-31 34-31 Vinatieri 37 FG :02 8-62/1:47 5-5-47 pass *23-28 19t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 3:35 7-80/3:19 5-6-75, 1 TD pass 11/18/07 vs. Kansas City 10-10 13-10 Vinatieri 24 FG :03 14-61/6:56 4-4-59 pass/4-(-3) rush 12/16/07 at Oakland 13-14 21-14 20t pass to WR-Anthony Gonzalez 4:49 11-91/5:40 7-7-68, 1 TD pass 9/14/08 at Minnesota 15-15 18-15 Vinatieri 47 FG :03 5-21/1:04 1-2-20 pass *7-15 32t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 5:54 3-61/1:15 3-3-61, 1 TD pass 10/5/08 at Houston 24-27 31-27 5t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 1:54 2-20/0:42 1-1-5, 1 TD pass *17-27 68t Gary Brackett FR 3:36 *10-27 7t pass to TE-Tom Santi 4:04 11-81/4:14 8-10-59, 1 TD pass/1-11 rush 11/2/08 vs. New England 15-15 18-15 Vinatieri 52 FG 8:05 8-48/3:28 2-4-44 pass 11/9/08 at Pittsburgh 17-20 24-20 17t pass to RB-Dominic Rhodes 3:04 4-32/1:40 1-1-17, 1 TD pass 11/23/08 at San Diego 20-20 23-20 Vinatieri 51 FG :00 8-37/1:30 4-6-36 pass 12/14/08 vs. Detroit 21-21 31-21 1t Rhodes run 8:39 7-88/4:13 4-4-74 pass 9/21/09 at Miami 20-23 27-23 48t pass to WR-Pierre Garcon 3:18 4-80/0:32 3-4-80, 1 TD pass 11/1/09 vs. San Francisco 12-14 18-14 Addai 22t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne14:53 9-70/3:10 4-6-30 pass 11/8/09 vs. Houston 13-17 20-17 2t Addai run 7:11 8-61/3:49 3-4-38 pass 11/15/09 vs. New England 28-34 35-34 1t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 0:13 4-29/1:47 2-2-16, 1 TD pass *21-34 4t Addai run 2:23 6-79/1:49 4-5-44 pass *14-31 29t pass to WR-Pierre Garcon 12:14 5-79/2:04 3-3-59, 1 TD pass 11/22/09 at Baltimore 14-15 17-15 Stover 25 FG 7:02 9-60/3:10 4-5-52 pass 11/29/09 at Houston 14-20 35-27 6t pass to TE-Dallas Clark 8:24 7-89/2:50 4-4-49, 1 TD pass 12/17/09 at Jacksonville 28-31 35-31 65t pass to WR-Reggie Wayne 5:23 3-70/0:42 2-3-70, 1 TD pass *Italics denotes comeback drive. Regular font dentoes game-winning drive.

NFL TEAM-BY-TEAM STARTING QUARTERBACKS SINCE SEPTEMBER 6, 1998 (2009 starters in boldface) Arizona (8): Jeff Blake, Dave Brown, Shaun King, Matt Leinart, Josh McCown, John Navarre, Jake Plummer, Kurt Warner Atlanta (12): Chris Chandler, Steve DeBerg, Tony Graziani, Joey Harrington, Doug Johnson, Danny Kanell, Kurt Kittner, Byron Leftwich, Chris Redman, Matt Ryan, Matt Schaub, Michael Vick Baltimore (15): Tony Banks, Jeff Blake, Kyle Boller, Stoney Case, Randall Cunningham, Trent Dilfer, Joe Flacco, Elvis Grbac, Jim Harbaugh, Steve McNair, Scott Mitchell, Chris Redman, Troy Smith, Anthony Wright, Eric Zeier Buffalo (9): Drew Bledsoe, Brian Brohm, Trent Edwards, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Doug Flutie, Kelly Holcomb, Rob Johnson, J.P. Losman, Alex Van Pelt Carolina (10): Steve Beuerlein, David Carr, Kerry Collins, Jake Delhomme, Randy Fasani, Matt Lytle, Matt Moore, Rodney Peete, Vinny Testaverde, Chris Weinke Chicago (16): Henry Burris, Chris Chandler, Jay Cutler, Brian Griese, Rex Grossman, Chad Hutchinson, Erik Kramer, Craig Krenzel, Shane Matthews, Cade McNown, Jim Miller, Moses Moreno, Kyle Orton, Jonathan Quinn, Steve Stenstrom, Kordell Stewart Cincinnati (9): Jeff Blake, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Gus Frerotte, Paul Justin, Jon Kitna, Scott Mitchell, Neil O Donnell, Carson Palmer, Akili Smith Cleveland (13): Derek Anderson, Tim Couch, Ty Detmer, Trent Dilfer, Ken Dorsey, Charlie Frye, Jeff Garcia, Bruce Gradkowski, Kelly Holcomb, Luke McCown, Doug Pederson, Brady Quinn, Spergon Wynn Dallas (13): Troy Aikman, Drew Bledsoe, Quincy Carter, Randall Cunningham, Jason Garrett, Drew Henson, Chad Hutchinson, Brad Johnson, Ryan Leaf, Tony Romo, Clint Stoerner, Vinny Testaverde, Anthony Wright Denver (12): Steve Beuerlein, Bubby Brister, Jay Cutler, John Elway, Gus Frerotte, Brian Griese, Jarious Jackson, Danny Kanell, Chris Miller, Kyle Orton, Jake Plummer, Chris Simms Detroit (14): Charlie Batch, Stoney Case, Daunte Culpepper, Ty Detmer, Gus Frerotte, Jeff Garcia, Joey Harrington, Jon Kitna, Mike McMahon, Scott Mitchell, Dan Orlovsky, Frank Reich, Matthew Stafford, Drew Stanton Green Bay (2): Brett Favre, Aaron Rodgers Houston (5): Tony Banks, David Carr, Dave Ragone, Sage Rosenfels, Matt Schaub Indianapolis (1): Peyton Manning Jacksonville (7): Mark Brunell, Jay Fiedler, David Garrard, Quinn Gray, Byron Leftwich, Jamie Martin, Jonathan Quinn Kansas City (8): Matt Cassell, Brodie Croyle, Rich Gannon, Elvis Grbac, Trent Green, Damon Huard, Warren Moon, Tyler Thigpen Miami (15): John Beck, Daunte Culpepper, A.J. Feeley, Jay Fiedler, Gus Frerotte, Trent Green, Brian Griese, Joey Harrington, Chad Henne, Damon Huard, Cleo Lemon, Ray Lucas, Dan Marino, Chad Pennington, Sage Rosenfels Minnesota (11): Brooks Bollinger, Todd Bouman, Daunte Culpepper, Randall Cunningham, Brett Favre, Gus Frerotte, Jeff George, Kelly Holcomb, Tarvaris Jackson, Brad Johnson, Spergon Wynn New England (4): Drew Bledsoe, Tom Brady, Matt Cassel, Scott Zolak New Orleans (10): Jeff Blake, Todd Bouman, Drew Brees, Aaron Brooks, Mark Brunell, Kerry Collins, Jake Delhomme, Billy Joe Hobert, Billy Joe Tolliver, Danny Wuerffel N.Y. Giants (6): Kerry Collins, Kent Graham, Danny Kanell, Eli Manning, Jesse Palmer, Kurt Warner N.Y. Jets (10): Brooks Bollinger, Quincy Carter, Kellen Clemens, Brett Favre, Glenn Foley, Ray Lucas, Rick Mirer, Chad Pennington, Mark Sanchez, Vinny Testaverde Oakland (14): Aaron Brooks, Kerry Collins, Daunte Culpepper, Charlie Frye, Rich Gannon, Jeff George, Bruce Gradkowski, Donald Hollas, Josh McCown, Rick Mirer, JaMarcus Russell, Marques Tuiasosopo, Andrew Walter, Wade Wilson Philadelphia (9): Koy Detmer, A.J. Feeley, Jeff Garcia, Bobby Hoying, Kevin Kolb, Mike McMahon, Donovan McNabb, Doug Pederson, Rodney Peete Pittsburgh (7): Charlie Batch, Dennis Dixon, Kent Graham, Tommy Maddox, Ben Roethlisberger, Kordell Stewart, Mike Tomczak St. Louis (13): Tony Banks, Brock Berlin, Kyle Boller, Steve Bono, Marc Bulger, Chris Chandler, Scott Covington, Ryan Fitzpatrick, Gus Frerotte, Trent Green, Jamie Martin, Keith Null, Kurt Warner San Diego (8): Drew Brees, Doug Flutie, Jim Harbaugh, Erik Kramer, Ryan Leaf, Moses Moreno, Philip Rivers, Craig Whelihan San Francisco (12): Ty Detmer, Trent Dilfer, Ken Dorsey, Jeff Garcia, Shaun Hill, J.T. O Sullivan, Cody Pickett, Tim Rattay, Alex Smith, Steve Stenstrom, Chris Weinke, Steve Young Seattle (9): Trent Dilfer, Glenn Foley, John Friesz, Charlie Frye, Matt Hasselbeck, Brock Huard, Jon Kitna, Warren Moon, Seneca Wallace Tampa Bay (14): Trent Dilfer, Josh Freeman, Jeff Garcia, Bruce Gradkowski, Brian Griese, Brad Johnson, Josh Johnson, Rob Johnson, Shaun King, Byron Leftwich, Luke McCown, Tim Rattay, Chris Simms, Eric Zeier Tennessee (6): Kerry Collins, Matt Mauck, Steve McNair, Neil O Donnell, Billy Volek, Vince Young Washington (12): Tony Banks, Mark Brunell, Jason Campbell, Todd Collins, Gus Frerotte, Jeff George, Trent Green, Tim Hasselbeck, Brad Johnson, Shane Matthews, Patrick Ramsey, Danny Wuerffel TOP DECADE TOTALS BY QUARTERBACKS IN NFL HISTORY DECADE TOTALS BY DATE (i.e. 1/1/00-12/31/09), NOT SEASON MOST COMPLETIONS Player Comp. 1970s Fran Tarkenton 2,056 1980s Joe Montana 2,580 1990s Dan Marino 2,782 2000s Peyton Manning 3,579 Brett Favre 3,420 BEST COMPLETION PERCENTAGE Player Comp. Pct. 1970s Ken Stabler 59.9 1980s Ken Anderson 64.1 1990s Steve Young 66.3 2000s Chad Pennington 66.1 Peyton Manning 65.9 Kurt Warner 65.5 MOST TOUCHDOWNS Player TDS 1970s Fran Tarkenton 156 1980s Dan Marino 220 1990s Brett Favre 233 2000s Peyton Manning 314 Brett Favre 260 HIGHEST QB RATING Player Rating 1970s Roger Staubach 83.6 1980s Joe Montana 94.0 1990s Steve Young 101.2 2000s Peyton Manning 98.2 Philip Rivers 95.8 MOST PASSING YARDS Player Yards 1970s Fran Tarkenton 23,863 1980s Joe Montana 30,958 1990s Dan Marino 33,390 2000s Peyton Manning 42,322 Brett Favre 38,430 MOST STARTING QB WINS Player Wins 1990s Troy Aikman 90 2000s Peyton Manning 115 Brett Favre 99 Tom Brady 97