18 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 6, 2006 MANNINGHAM: Ready to up his role for '06 campaign ' ~m Continued from page 15 And work hard he must. Right next to the chip on Manningham's shoulder after a 7-5 season will be a target placed squarely on his back. Rivals.com listed Manningham as the nation's top No. 2 receiver in its preseason rankings, a list that placed him above receiv- ers such as Southern Cal's Steve Smith and Notre Dame's Rhema McKnight. After the team's opener against Vander- bilt, it appears as if Manningham may be the go-to guy for the receiving corps. More responsibility? Manningham doesn't mind. Manningham, who was raised in a sin- gle-parent home with his mother along with his grandparents, took on the added task of caring for his brother and sister while growing up. He has the names of his brother (Mardel, 13 years old) and his sis- ter (Jeffer'l, 11) tattooed across his wrists, along with a chain and a lock, to symbolize his tight family bonds. "He's very protective of them and very nurturing," Simpson said. "Mario will go out of his way to do little things for them. ... He just listens to them, sits down and talks to them and shows interest as to what they're into. He'll make special calls back from Ann Arbor just to talk to them, which I think is pretty neat." Manningham said he tries to just instill in his younger siblings the same values that his mother and grandparents taught him. "My mom, my grandfather and my grandmother are the most important people in my life," Manningham said. "They've always been there for me; they taught me the rights and wrongs. Even though there's an age gap between me and my brother and sister, I still think I can help. I was their age once, and I've been there before. I can help them out when they need me. I show them what's right and what's wrong." Responsibility isn't new to him, and nei- ther are hype or high expectations. Even midway through his freshman season, he was already being tapped as the "next big thing." "Super Mario" shirts were distributed throughout the student body, with the like- ness of a Manningham-like "Super Mario" Brothers character in the center of a shirt. Manningham admits that it's flattering, but he's yet to prove that this is Super Mario's world just yet. "I've got one," Manningham said. "But it isn't really anything but another shirt for me. I feel like I really haven't done any- thing yet to deserve it." That isn't the lone attire-related issue that Manningham has to face. The tradi- tion of Michigan's top receiver wearing the No. 1 jersey is well known in Ann Arbor. Former All-American Braylon Edwards was the last Wolverine to wear the number. And despite having to live up to Edwards's' legendary status, Manningham admits the prospect of wearing it is intriguing. "I've thought about it, but I've got a long way to go," Manningham said. "Those are some big shoes to fill." Being the next Braylon and gaining indi- vidual accolades aren't the key concerns for Manningham going into his sophomore season. His one and only goal for the year is to get Michigan back on the map as a national power. "Sometimes we forget who we are, and who we're playing for," Manningham said. "But passion this year - passion is a big thing for us. Our passion is going to be out there, you'll see it." Manningham said the team's goal since last season's Alamo Bowl defeat has been to return passion and intensity to its reper- toire. He uses his free time with teammates as an opportunity to show just how hungry he is. Manningham spent his first summer in Ann Arbor this offseason, where he roomed with sophomore cornerback Johnny Sears. The two competed whenever they could, doing "anything and everything" to test each other's wills. "All we do is compete," Manningham said. "Video games, washing hands, it doesn't matter. That's it - that's all we do is compete." Sears said their tendency to compete carries onto the football field as well. "Last year, we'd watch tape, and we went against each other a lot," Sears said. "We just try and make each other better, and we're so competitive that we're always going atlit hard. We don't let up on each other." Manningham doesn't let his practice competition end at roommates. He remem- bers fondly the impact cornerback Leon Hall had on him as a freshman, and he hopes to keep learning from the All-Amer- ica candidate. "Leon Hall does nothing except get me better," Manningham said. "Because of some of the things I did last year, it's because of Leon Hall - he helped me a lot. He played three years before I got here, and he knows how it is, so every time he used to get up there, I tried to get up there and battle against him. "When I first got here, he tried to jam me up. Now I know the little things; he's taught me a lot of little things. I had to learn fast, coming in and playing right away and everything. The cornerbacks, especially Leon, taught me how to learn the little things really fast." And fast is exactly how Manningham likes things. Whether it's quickly making Th impact "I've thought about it, but I've got a long way to go. Those are some big shoe to fill." - Sophomore wide receiver Mario Manningham on the prospect of wearing the No. 1 jersey, last worn by Braylon Edwards. as a freshman, blazing by defenders with his 4.39 speed in the 40-yard dash or rapid- ly ascending up the wide-receiver rankings, Manningham has just one gear: full-speed ahead. If he has his way, that will be exactly the gear Michigan will be stuck at on its way back to the top of the college football universe. TOP: Mario ManninghamWakes a touchdown catch in Michigan's season opener this season against Vanderbilt. BOTTOM: Manningham looks to Juke out a defender in a road contest against Wisconsin last season. over If you didn't buy your textbooks at Half.com, you paid too much. 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