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CLICK HERE to Register for a free account and login for a smoother ad-free experience. It's easy, and only takes a few moments.pats1 said:The National League of Junior Cotillions has named Peyton Manning has the best-mannered person in 2005...
Just saw it on 1st and 10 on ESPN.
pats1 said:The National League of Junior Cotillions has named Peyton Manning has the best-mannered person in 2005...
Just saw it on 1st and 10 on ESPN.
Bill's Girl said:And I bet he looks just lovely in his cotillion dress, sipping mint julips with his pinkie in the air........
Flying Fungi said:didn't Peyton get into some hullaballoo about assaulting a female trainer at Tenn?
wonder how she feels about his manners...
Flying Fungi said:didn't Peyton get into some hullaballoo about assaulting a female trainer at Tenn?
wonder how she feels about his manners...
SoonerPatriot said:Yeah, he dropped his pants in front of her to reveal what is Im sure a very small penis.
nhpatsfan said:Say what?
I hadn't heard of this. Details?
Bill's Girl said:And I bet he looks just lovely in his cotillion dress, sipping mint julips with his pinkie in the air........
SoonerPatriot said:Yeah, he dropped his pants in front of her to reveal what is Im sure a very small penis.
PATSNUTme said:Now BG, mind your manners.
Terry Glenn is a cowgirl said:...true story.
He applied his rectum in an area from her forehead to her chin. I guess he was trying to prevent her from having a chapped face.
She sued him and the school (Tenn)...I dunno the results of it though.
All right, so if you were really paying attention, you may remember that back at Tennessee in 1996, when Manning already was an all-SEC quarterback, there was that mooning incident, but, hey, you'd say, can't the lady take a joke? Manning said he meant to drop his pants to show his rear end to another male athlete, not the female trainer. Boys will be boys, you'd say, right? But the female trainer apparently got in the way and saw Manning's backside. So Manning got into a little trouble. So the woman received a settlement from the university and left town. Things happen, you'd say. But that's ancient history. Peyton's still a great guy. Does all that charitable work, is a fabulous role model for kids.
Except that, while apparently everyone else, including the woman, forgot about the incident, one man did not. That fellow was Peyton Manning. In 2000, he wrote a book with his father, Archie, called Manning:A Father, His Sons, and a Football Legacy. In it, for some unknown and extremely ill-advised reason (our hero couldn't be the vindictive type, could he?), Peyton Manning decided to revive the mooning story, calling his action "crude, maybe, but harmless," while saying the female trainer should have "shrugged (it) off." He also said the woman "had a vulgar mouth."
The female trainer, Jamie Ann Naughright, who by then was teaching at Florida Southern College with a doctorate in health education, was minding her own business when word got out that Manning had called her vulgar and dredged up what he did to her.
Soon, copies of the book were all over campus, Naughright says, and the resulting notoriety led to a demotion at work.
Then came the lawsuit. (How could there not be a lawsuit?) And the court documents. And the explicit details about the 1996 training room incident from Naughright's attorney that, if correct, show that Manning's definition of a mooning and your definition of a mooning are two entirely different things.
Naughright's attorney says his client, doing her job, was crouching behind Manning to determine why he was having pain in one of his feet when "entirely unprovoked, Peyton Manning decided to pull down his shorts and sit on Dr. Naughright's head and face." Court documents add graphic body-part details, which we shall omit because you certainly can get the picture.
All right, you say, but this is Peyton Manning, the Boy Scout, and it's just another one of those he-said, she-said stories, right? Well, not exactly. Add another "he" to the equation — on her side. The court record includes a letter to Manning from former Tennessee cross country runner Malcolm Saxon, who Manning said was the intended target of the so-called mooning.
"Bro, you have tons of class," Saxon's letter says, "but you have shown no mercy or grace to this lady who was on her knees seeing if you had a stress fracture. ... You might as well maintain some dignity and admit to what happened. ... Your celebrity doesn't mean you can treat folks that way."
Bella*chick said:OMG, thanks for the story. You saved me the trouble of having to type "Peyton Manning" and "rectum" into Google.
I applaud that.