ENGLEWOOD, CO - MARCH 07: Quarterback Peyton Manning addresses the media as he announces his retirement from the NFL at the UCHealth Training Center on March 7, 2016 in Englewood, Colorado. Manning, who played for both the Indianapolis Colts and Denver Broncos in a career which spanned 18 years, is the NFL's all-time leader in passing touchdowns (539), passing yards (71,940) and tied for regular season QB wins (186). Manning played his final game last month as the winning quarterback in Super Bowl 50 in which the Broncos defeated the Carolina Panthers, earning Manning his second Super Bowl title. (Photo by Doug Pensinger/Getty Images)

Peyton Manning might be retired, but he hasn't quite stepped away from the football field just yet

If this guy takes Manning's advice...

Peyton Manning has stepped away from the football field for good (barring a Brett Favre-type return), and in his spare time he's apparently giving pointers to up-and-coming quarterbacks.

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The veteran reportedly took his knowledge to South Beach to meet with his former Denver Broncos offensive coordinator, and now Miami Dolphins head coach Adam Gase and Dolphins quarterback Ryan Tannehill, per Miami Herald:

"It was really cool," Tannehill told me. "A guy that had his career, the living legend he is, coming off a Super Bowl winning season —-  it was really cool just to be able to sit and pick his brain about things he's done in this offense and football things in general: snap counts, things you like, the way you want guys to run routes, little details about the game. We really just got to talk the game, which is something we both love."

There's certainly worse things Manning could be doing that mentoring one of the brighter young talents in the NFL. And if Tannehill can turn things around, the Miami offense might be one to watch for in what could be a relatively wide-open AFC East.