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Peyton Becoming a Popular Name as Parents Want Their Kids to Be Like Manning


Fifteen years ago, the name Peyton was unusual -- birth certificate data indicates that it wasn't even one of the 500 most popular boys' names in America.

But then a freshman named Peyton Manning enrolled at the University of Tennessee, and things started to change. By 1997 -- Manning's senior football season -- Peyton had become the 51st most popular boys' name in the state of Tennessee. And it didn't stop there.

Andrea Adelson of the Orlando Sentinel reports:
as Peyton became the best quarterback in the NFL, the name started rising up the U.S. charts -- for boys and girls. In 2007, the name ranked No. 125 for boys and No. 121 for girls. Compare that to his freshman year at UT in 1994, when the name ranked No. 431 for girls and 546 for boys in the country.

"Peyton is going through what a friend of mine calls a name wave, where a particular person is in the news for a long period of time and they have positive things attributed to them, good values, good morals, highly successful," said Frank Nuessel, a professor of modern languages at the University of Louisville and editor of NAMES: A Journal of Onomastics. "Peyton Manning seems to fit into this model."
Manning is far from the only athlete whose name has become more popular as he has become more famous. Similar phenomena have been noted with names like Jordan and even Shaquille. If you call your father today, you might want to ask him if you share a name with his favorite athlete from the year you were born.

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