But doesn't his last name still drop below his first name when you look at it on a straight line. I just would be very skeptical of any straight signed last and first name auto's.
This one looks closer than the other two. I'm 99 percent sure it's facsimile, since it was on all of the tickets I believe, so he signed once for the university and then they printed it on all 107,000 tickets or however many it was.
the last portions of both the first and last name look right to me, it's the P and the M that look kind of weird, the P more than the M.
The P looks very short, Peyton usually signs the rounded part of his P very long instead of like a closed parentheses like that.
I'm not sure if it's his, mainly because I'm not sure of the finer points of NCAA law back then. Shoot, I'm not really sure of it now, except you can't profit from a college athlete's signature. IDK if they would consider his printed autograph being on a ticket a selling a point, and by they, i'm talking about the NCAA of course, so maybe he didnt sign it and they used the same person who did the pictures, because they look kind of similar. I'm kind of rambling right now, but it's weird that Peyton wouldn't have signed his fan mail personally in college. Of course, he was probably the busiest college kid in the world those years, so who knows..
Good luck haha