ENGLEWOOD, Colo. -- All eyes were on Peyton Manning this season, especially Brock Osweiler's.

He's the Denver Broncos' OTHER first-year quarterback, a 6-foot-8 passing project from Arizona State who's the first signal-caller ever drafted with the intention of one day succeeding the league's most decorated passer.

Osweiler bears a striking resemblance to "Twilight" actor Robert Pattinson, but what he really wants is to look more like Manning.

So, he's taken advantage of his apprenticeship by watching Manning's every move, scribbling copious notes and mimicking his mentor's notorious work ethic and preparation.

Osweiler said he's thrilled to be in Manning's shadow and insists he'll gladly bide his time while learning as much as he can from one of the game's greats.

Still, he says he's ready if needed.

"With my experience that I took being the backup at ASU, I understand what it's like to be thrown into the middle of a game," Osweiler said. "So, I just study that game plan inside and out and prepare like I'm the starter so if anything ever did happen, I'm ready to go."

If, heaven forbid, something should happen in the playoffs to the league's only four-time MVP, the next man up is a guy who's thrown all of four passes as a pro.

All of those throws came Sunday when Osweiler played the fourth quarter of Denver's 38-3 blowout of Kansas City, his fifth NFL game but the first in which he didn't just hand the ball off or line up in victory formation.

Osweiler, who handed off a dozen times before taking a knee three times, completed two passes for 12 yards in his three series of work Sunday.

"I'm not just here to hand off," he said.

Or take a knee, although he admits he's getting pretty good at that.

"I've got it down to where I'm taking only 1-yard losses," he joked. "At first, I was taking 2-yard losses."

All kidding aside, "those are game reps and those are hard to come by," said Osweiler, who knows he might be called upon at some point to make sure Denver's Super Bowl aspirations aren't derailed.

Nobody, not even Osweiler himself, knows how he would handle the playoff pressure.

"I have confidence in how he prepares, I have confidence in how he conducts himself in meetings. I have confidence in how he conducts himself in this locker room, on this field," John Fox said. "But as a coach, until you see a guy play live in a game, you don't know. That's not any kind of indictment, by any stretch. But until he gets out there and you watch him operate, you won't know. And neither will he, really."

Osweiler takes no offense.

As Manning's backup, Osweiler only gets a handful of throws each week at practice, but he does get to pick the perfectionist's brain while Caleb Hanie runs the scout team. Osweiler doesn't just stay on the sideline, either; he stands behind the offense "so I can try to see what Peyton's seeing and I use that as a mental rep and put myself through the play."

Manning quickly answered all questions about his arm strength after missing all of last season while dealing with a nerve issue in his neck, putting up numbers this season worthy of a fifth MVP award while guiding the Broncos (13-3) to the top seed in the AFC.

He's also taken time to tutor Osweiler, who's almost 15 years his junior.

"I've always tried to choose the right time to ask it because he's very busy with very important things, but he's been more than happy to help me out," Osweiler said. "There's even times where in a meeting he'll pause the tape and be like, `Hey, Brock,' and get my attention and point something out to me. And that's obviously not something that a lot of quarterbacks do, if any. And for him to take the time and do that is pretty special."

Broncos boss John Elway loved Osweiler's size, strength and spunk and used a second-round pick on him last April after the tall passer threw for 4,036 yards and 26 touchdowns in his one season as the Sun Devils' starter in 2011.

Had he stayed in school for his senior season, Osweiler, who turned 22 last month, might have been a top-10 pick in this upcoming draft, which is light on marquee quarterbacks.

Osweiler didn't throw overhand all the time at ASU, sometimes dropping his right elbow below his shoulder and winging it out a bit, which negated his height advantage over the Pac-12's pass-rushers.

So, after deciding to forgo his senior season in a new system under a new coaching staff, he went to work last spring with UCLA offensive coordinator Noel Mazzone, who was his offensive coordinator in college, to fix flaws in his passing game.

His education really ramped up when he started dissecting Manning's every move.

"I've learned so many things this football season that I wouldn't have if I'd stayed in school," said Osweiler, adding that deep down, he's sure "it's a situation I think a lot of quarterbacks would do almost anything to have. I recognize that and that's why I try to soak it up every day."

Copyright 2012 by The Associated Press. All rights reserved. Material may not be redistributed.

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