Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Manning was selected in the Major League Baseball draft four times, first in 1967 by the Braves, twice by the White Sox, and finally by the Royals in 1971. In the summer of 1969, his father, Buddy Manning, committed suicide. Archie, who was home from college for summer vacation, was the first to discover Buddy's body.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Arch_ManningArch Manning - Wikipedia

    Manning was the captain of the Newman football team for his senior season in 2022. In their matchup against Pearl River, Manning threw for 356 yards and seven touchdowns in a 59–7 victory, breaking Eli's record of 7,268 career passing yards and Peyton's record of 93 career touchdowns.

  3. Archie Manning from Mississippi was the first Manning to play in the National Football League (NFL), spending the majority of his career playing for the New Orleans Saints based in New Orleans, Louisiana. The Manning family has since resided in Louisiana.

  4. Checkout the latest stats for Archie Manning. Get info about his position, age, height, weight, college, draft, and more on Pro-football-reference.com.

  5. Archie Manning never found success in the NFL. However, his sons have four Super Bowls between them. This is the story of Archie Manning.

  6. New Orleans Saints legend Archie Manning's NFL career stats, awards, college background, and highlights.

  7. Archie Manning was, perhaps, the most talented QB of his era. That talent was wasted by a Saints organization that surrounded Archie with no offensive line o...

  8. Archie Manning had many great days as a Mississippi quarterback. Against Alabama in 1969, he passed for 436 yards and ran for 104. The combined figure, 540 yards, was a Southeastern Conference record for total offense in one game.

  9. Latest on QB Archie Manning including news, stats, videos, highlights and more on NFL.com.

  10. In 1978, Manning guided the Saints to a 7-9 record, the best in team history, to that point. For his exploits, Manning was named NFC Player of the Year by UPI. In 1979, he led New Orleans to an 8-8 record, narrowly missing a first-ever winning season.