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Manning may miss year

Peyton Manning underwent more neck surgery Thursday, the third time in 19 months, and will miss not only the opening game but possibly the entire season.

INDIANAPOLIS — Peyton Manning underwent more neck surgery Thursday, the third time in 19 months, and will miss not only the opening game but possibly the entire season.

Losing Manning for any stretch of time is a huge blow to the Colts and throws the race for the AFC South wide open. The four-time NFL MVP hasn’t missed a game in 14 NFL seasons, with 227 consecutive starts, including post-season.

“Rehabilitation from such surgery is typically an involved process,” the team said in a statement, calling the procedure “uneventful.”

“Therefore, there will be no estimation of a return date at this time. We will keep Peyton on the active roster until we have a clear picture of his recovery process.”

The Colts’ statement came just hours after team owner Jim Irsay wrote on Twitter that the 35-year-old Manning would be out “awhile” and coach Jim Caldwell promised to provide more clarity. The Colts could have put Manning on injured reserve to open up a roster spot, but that would have meant he would not play at all in a season that will end in February with the Super Bowl played at Lucas Oil Stadium in downtown Indianapolis.

Team officials said Manning had an anterior fusion procedure to treat the nerve problem that was continuing to give him trouble months after his May 23 surgery.

The Colts didn’t provide details, but such a procedure usually involves making an incision in the front of the neck, removing soft disk tissue between the vertebrae and fusing the bones together with a graft. The goal is to ease pain or address a disk problem.

Recovery from the procedure typically takes at least eight to 10 weeks, said Dr. Victor Khabie, co-chief of the Orthopedics and Spine Institute at Northern Westchester Hospital in New York. He has not treated Manning, but is familiar with the procedure and how athletes recover from it.

“It could be season-ending, seeing the piggybacking off of another surgery,” Khabie said. “But the athletes I’ve known over the years, I never count out because they are such great competitors and such great healers.”

If Manning recovered in 10 weeks, he would be back around the Nov. 13 game against Jacksonville, the week before the Colts have a bye.

Manning, who signed a five-year, US$90 million contract in July, also had neck surgery in February 2010. The team said Manning will begin his latest rehab stint immediately.

For Manning, one of the league’s true ironmen, it was a continuation of the most frustrating off-season of his career.

He already has dealt with a 4 1/2-month lockout that prevented him from working out with team trainers after his surgery to repair a nerve. He also couldn’t negotiate a new contract with the Colts during the lockout. Then he started training camp on the physically unable to perform list, which prevented him from working out with teammates until Aug. 29.

After one week of practice, left Manning with a sore back. And now surgery just one day after the Colts ruled him out of Sunday’s game, ending a streak second only to Brett Favre among NFL quarterbacks.

With Manning, the Colts have been a perennial Super Bowl contender. Without him, the most dominant team in the AFC South since its creation faces a daunting challenge: trying to become the first team to play a Super Bowl in its home stadium without having Manning behind centre for what could be a significant portion of the season.

Speculation over another surgical procedure ramped up earlier this week and team owner Jim Irsay created even more buzz Thursday morning when he gave fans the latest update on Manning’s condition via Twitter.

“We had a good practice yesterday and r guys r fired up 4 the season. (hash)18’s out for awhile, but compete, we will/BELIEVE,” Irsay tweeted.

The biggest question is when he will be back.

The Colts thought Manning would return within six to eight weeks after surgery, but the rehab has taken far longer than anyone expected. On Monday, the team issued a statement saying his progress slowed last week, too.

“In terms of the timeframe we’re talking about, I think he (Irsay) is also stating we don’t know what kind of a timeframe. None of us know,” Caldwell said before the surgery was announced. “It is a little bit in flux at this point.”

Khabie said the fact Manning has had neck surgery three times in such a short period is reason for concern.

If Manning does return this season, he will also be playing behind a revamped line that has three new starters and a fourth playing a new position. Longtime right tackle Ryan Diem has moved inside to guard.

The player who can empathize most with Manning is running back Joseph Addai, who injured a nerve in his left shoulder Oct. 17 against Washington, then missed the next eight games.

There were times, Addai recalled, he would wake up during the night with sudden pain. There were other times he couldn’t hold up a microphone or the ball would drop out of his hands with a slight bump.

Addai figured the ensuing bye week would give him enough time to heal, but it took him more than two months to get back into a game and he still didn’t feel 100 per cent until this season.

“After a while it came back, but you don’t really know when it’s going to come back,” Addai said. “It’s frustrating.”

Addai said Manning asked him about the experience, something the two discussed at length since players reported to camp July 31.

Addai said he’s worried about playing the Texans without Manning.

“You know how important Peyton is,” Addai said. “I think everybody has to step it up.”