a thing. He was so nervous. Braylon just wanted to do so well. Deep down, Stan knew his boy wasn't as prepared as he should be. Sometimes his routes weren't as sharp or he wouldn't look a pass all the way in. Little things like that tend to pop up when you don't prepare... After a forgettable fresh- man year, spent biding his time, Braylon exploded his sophomore season - posting a 1,000-yard season, something Anthony and Derrick never did. Carr knew there was no denying the boy's talent. Braylon figured Carr was in an especially good mood after Michigan's 38-30 win over Flor- ida in the Outback Bowl - Bray- ion had grabbed four passes for 110 yards. So he asked again for the No.1 jersey. Carr knew Braylon really wanted the jersey: Maybe finally wearing it could be the boy's motivation to become great. "I don't want to have to take- this jersey away," Carr said to him, "so these are the things I expect of you..." Braylon didn't live up to the new expectations. At least, not at first, and Braylon and Carr's relationship took a turn for the worse. Already, rumors had been swirling that Braylon wasn't the easiest to coach. Today, Carr claims that the two never had any "major problems," other than when Braylon was late for a few meetings at the very next train- ing camp after being given the No. Ijersey. "The difficult year was his junior year, because that's when he came late," Carr says. That's when - you know, by that time, I had expected him to be a leader." "I had to guide him a lot of times, show him the way," says Braylon's position coach, Soup Campbell. "Let him kibw what the expectations were. ... When he was late for a meeting, he wasn't going to start that game. "We weren't going to give him anything. He had to earn it." In that "rough" junior year, Braylon amassed 85 catch- ., for 1138 yards and 15 touchdowns. He could've left for the NFL, but ultimately decided to stay. He was getting it ... slowly. When Stan watched Braylon practice that spring before his senior season, he knew this year would be different for his boy. "(Braylon) worked his butt off," Soup says. "He knew then what it was all about. We saw a different Braylon Edwards." The boy dominated a triple- overtime thrilling comeback win over Michigan State, and showed up Ohio State two weeks later on his way out. That season put the son among the greats - his 15 touchdowns were second only to Desmond's 19; his 97 catches for 1,330 yards broke both of Marquise Walker's single-season records; his career- total 3,541 yards and 39 touch- downs broke both of Anthony Carter's records. The father was finally again at ease watching the boy play. "Man, I was laying back, my feet were up, because I knew that one time in that game he was going to take somebody," Stan says. "I was comfortable, because he had prepared that way." What Stan is most proud of is not the yards gained, not the No. 1 jersey or how some of Braylon's exploits became stories of legend. Stan's most proud that Braylon loves Michigan enough to go back. Stan did it, and he brought Braylon vith him. But the mood shifts when the father talks about how the Mich- igan community has treated his son. Many were up in arms when Braylon made a big deal about how Rich Rodriguez handed the No. 1 jersey to a freshman defen- sive backn 2008. w 'V . . ' September 3, 2011 vs. Western Michigan .. , i PAGE 6 FILE PHOTO/Daily Braylon Edwards had 189 yards in Michigan's win over Michigan State in 2004. "A lot of people want to know: and so it was assigned. He later why does Braylon have a say?" apologized to Braylon, explain- Stan says. ing that neither he nor Rodriguez Stan sets the story straight real knew all of the particulars. quick. When Braylon established Fans went bezerk. The media the $500,000 scholarship fund had a field day. The No. 1 jer- for receivers to carry on the No. sey does that to people. It had 1 tradition, it was the school that that affect on Braylon. Why else brought it to him in writing: you would he put up with his father's will be consulted on who gets to torture to get to Michigan to have wear the jersey. a shot at his dream? According to the Detroit Free So when Stan is asked, which Press, Carr and Braylon had set of the three current Michigan up requirements for the jersey: wide receivers - Roy Roundtree, no freshmen, a suitable GPA and Junior Hemingway or Darryl appropriate off-the-field con- Stonum - deserves to wear the duct. number his boy worked so hard That day, Braylon had been to earn, he doesn't mince his touring ESPN when he was noti- words. fied of the No. 1 jersey mistake "When you talk about the guys and he was caught revealing his who wore the No. 1 jersey, they true emotion during an online had superior skill level - supe- chat: "I am already mad that Rich rior," Stan says. "And they had o Rod gave the No.1 jerseyto some- tremendous work ethic. They N one other than (a) wide receiver, were game changers. So I don't which is breaking tradition," think that question's for me. I Braylon wrote. don't think it's for Braylon. I don't John Falk, the man who has think it's for coach Hoke. handled the No. 1 jersey since Bo "What David Terrell, Bray- was coaching, said that "it wasn't Ion Edwards, Anthony Carter, Rich's fault." It was no one's fault, Derrick Alexander, did - none really, he says. of those guys - nobody had to Falk said that because of the wonder: 'Haveyou done enough to w limited amount of jerseys avail- wear that jersey?' able to the team, it was available "It spoke for itself." 0 TYRONE BUTTERFIELD Read why everyone thought he disgraced the No.1 jersey. THE FIFTH SECTION IS ONLINE AT MICHIGANDAILY.COM & 121 FootbaitdaturdaySeptember 3, 2011