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The drama may only be beginning.
With Irsay's men in place in the front office and on the coaching staff, Pagano can focus his attention on selecting a staff. Grigson said Pagano will make those choices.
Irsay's decisions will become much more difficult.
Indy's horrendous 2-14 season has given it the No. 1 overall pick, which Irsay has said they will use for their quarterback of the future -- presumably Stanford's Andrew Luck.
If so, Irsay must decide how much money he wants to invest in one position. Manning signed a five-year, $90 million contract in July and is due the bonus in March. Soon to be 36, the perennial Pro Bowler is also coming off his third neck surgery in less than two years.
Irsay reiterated Thursday that his choice will come down to Manning's health, not money.
"I think fans already understand that," Irsay said when asked whether Manning may have played his final game in Colts' blue. "This isn't an ankle, it isn't a shoulder. Often times the NFL is criticized for putting someone out there at risk, and I'm not going to doing that. I think he and I just need to see where his health is because this isn't about money or anything else. It's about his life and his long-term health."
Those answers still may not be determined by the March 8 deadline.
That's only the start of the Colts' questions.
Grigson and Irsay must figure out how to free up salary cap space and what to do with a group of high-priced veterans such as Gary Brackett and Melvin Bullitt, and whether they want to bring back some of their key free agents such as Robert Mathis, Jeff Saturday and Reggie Wayne.
Not surprisingly, Pagano wants as many of those guys back as he can get, including Manning.
"I just came from a great organization and just spent some time with one of the greatest leaders (Ray Lewis) to ever play this game," Pagano said. "And there's one of those leaders right here (Manning) and those are the types of individuals and people that you have to surround yourself with."
But it's Irsay who must make that decision, and it's obvious that the two haven't been talking much lately -- something Irsay acknowledged will change between now and March 8.
"It's a very simple issue, it's a health issue," the owner said.
"It's one of those things where just when you think it's going in the right direction, things change," he said, explaining later there was no indication Manning had had a setback over the last month. "It's been very hard on everyone around here, and it's been very hard on Peyton, too."
[Associated Press;
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