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Peyton Manning Reveals What He’d Tell His Rookie Self After Throwing 28 Interceptions
Peyton Manning looks on before the game between the Denver Broncos and New York Giants at Empower Field at Mile High. Oct 19, 2025; Denver, Colorado, USA; Peyton Manning looks on before the game between the Denver Broncos and New York Giants at Empower Field at Mile High. Mandatory Credit: Ron Chenoy-Imagn Images

When people think of Peyton Manning, they think of his 71,940 passing yards, 539 touchdowns, 2 Super Bowl rings, and 14 Pro Bowl nods. However, what often gets buried beneath that greatness is how brutal his beginnings in the big league were.

Before Manning became a Hall of Famer, he authored one of the most infamous rookie seasons in NFL history. In 1998, the No. 1 overall pick threw 28 interceptions, still the most ever by a rookie quarterback.

And recently, during an appearance on the Kittle Things podcast with George Kittle and his wife, Manning peeled back the curtain on that season while explaining exactly what he would tell his rookie self today.

“People ask me if I could go back and talk to myself as a rookie, what would I tell myself? It’s easy,” the Broncos legend began. His answer boiled down to a balance young quarterbacks often struggle with, respecting how hard the league is without letting it get into their heads.

“There’s a fine line. Rookies should respect the NFL because it is harder. These guys do it for a living. But you can’t give it too much respect,” he explained. “If you over-respect it, you start doing things differently and stop playing the way you’re capable of playing.”

Manning admitted that was exactly what happened during his rookie season. Instead of trusting his instincts, he tried to outmatch the league physically rather than mentally. “I did that a lot as a rookie. I kept thinking, ‘These guys are faster, they’re bigger, I have to throw it harder, my footwork has to be faster,” he remembered.

Now, when Manning watches his film from the 1998 season, he barely recognizes the player on screen. “I watched the film and thought, ‘That doesn’t even look like me out there’… Twenty-eight interceptions later, the work was done. That was my rookie year,” he said.

Rather than viewing those struggles as a stain in his storied career, Manning clearly sees them as essential. “I figured some things out and played better the next year. And maybe I don’t figure those things out if I don’t go through those struggles,” he said.

But that doesn’t mean Peyton doesn’t want his infamous record to be broken.

“Am I proud to hold the NFL rookie interception record? No,” he said. “Would I like it to get broken? Yes. Should it be broken now that there are 17 games? Yes.”

He also had some advice for coaches developing rookies. “Do coaches take rookies out too early when they’re struggling? One hundred per cent,” Manning said. “Leave them in there. Let them learn.”

Unfortunately for Peyton, it is unlikely his interception record will be broken anytime soon, because today’s league simply does not have the patience to give rookies such a long leash. Even those who were given extended opportunities, like J.J. McCarthy this season, threw only 12 interceptions. Safe to say, this record may not be leaving Manning anytime soon.

This article first appeared on The SportsRush and was syndicated with permission.

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