V V V V V V V w W, w INS w v M Welcome to the 2011 season: where Denard Robinson could cap- Mattison could be the key to all the defensive problems, where nothing is certain - can you honestly say you know what this team will do? No, you can't. But Chuckles, the cat of former Daily Western Michigan (Sept. 3): Brady Hoke's Michigan State (Oct. 15): Edwin Baker and Managing Sports Editor Andy Reid, probably does. first game as head coach. You only get one first Le'Veon Bell ran over and through Michigan last impression, so he'd better make it count. year, and Kirk Cousins ain't too shabby either. Michael Florek, Stephen J. Nesbitt, Kevin Raftery, Tim Rohan Little Brother's growing up. Notre Dame (Sept. 10): Under the lights (sung Purdue (Oct. 29): Guard your ACLs! The knee TABLE OF CONTENTS like in Kanye's song). This game could spring injury has plagued Purdue the past two seasons. Blue on to great things. Or derail the season. Quarterback Rob Henry was the latest victim. MICHAEL FLOREK: Brady Hoke hue Eastern Michigan (Sept. 17): Another meeting Iowa (Nov. 5): The faces change, but it always 2 made fans beeve with his words, Now with another inferior neighbor: may be Michi- seems like Kirk Ferentz finds the same exact he's got to make them believe with the gan's only shot to hang 50-plus points in a game. type of players. This is just another Iowa team. team's play on the field. San Diego State (Sept. 24): Hoke said it was Illinois (Nov. 12): Nathan Scheelhaase-to-A.J. AND MICHIGAN RULED THE WEST: hard leaving his players behind at San Diego Jenkins and Jason Ford are the whole offense. Uncovering the roots of one of Michi- State. They were mad he didn't say goodbye. Consider Scheelhaase a poor man's Denard. gan's oldest, proudest heirlooms. Minnesota (Oct.1): MarQueis Gray played wide Nebraska (Nov. 19): The legendary blackshirts THE LONELIEST NUMBER: The story of receiver last year - now he's the quarterback make their debut at the Big House. By the time 6 five men who took a jersey and turned it and the only thing exciting about the Gophers. Jared Crick and Co. leave, it may get ugly for 'M.' into a tradition. no rd .Northwestern (Oct. 8): Dan Persa - that's Ohio State (Nov. 26): No Tressell? No Pryor? about it. Ohio State's still deeper than Michigan, but a lot Cover photo by Marissa McClain could change by Thanksgiving. No.2 Alabama 31)vs hix No. 3 Oregon at No. 4 Louisiana Stat ei-) No. 5SBise St. at. No. 9tGeorgia (3) No. 6 Florida State (-28) vs La.-Monroe No.7 Stanford (-28)vsSan Diego State No. 8 Texas A&M(-4) vs SMU No.9Oklahoma State (-34)vs Lafayette No. 10Nebaska (-34.5) vs Chattanooga No.12 South Carolina (-13) vs East Carolina No.13Va. Tech (-25)vs Appalachian St. No. SArkansas (-15.5) vs. Missouri St. o 16 otre ie (7 s South Florida No.17MSU(-34) iSYoungstownState No.18Ohio State (-34) vs Akron No.2 Misouai(-205)vsMiami (OH) No.2 lrida(-29) v loiaA. No. 23 Auburnt(32vta h Sate No.2s USC (-16.5)vs Minnesota NortherwesternatBostonCollege(-10) Iowa(-40)vsTennesseeTech Purdue(-15)s Mii Tennessee Illinois (-14.5) vs. Arkansas State Indiana (-6) at Ball State Penn State (-37) vs. irdiana State }9% Aabama Oregon Boise St. La.-Monroe Stanford Texas A&M La.-Lafayette Nebraska UNLV South Carolina Virginia Tech Arkansas Notre Dame Youngstate State Ohio State Miami (OH) Forida Auburn WetVirgnia USC Boston College Tennessee Tech Purdue llinois Indiana Indiana State 5-0_ A ebama Oregon Boise St. Florida State Stanford Texas A&M La.-Lafayette Nebraska South Carolina Virginia Tech Arkansas Notre Dame Michigan State Ohio State Missouri Forida Ati. Auburn West Virginia USC Northwestern Tennessee Tech Purdue llinois Indianat Penn State 0-0 Altbawa Louisiana State Boise St. Florida State San Diego State TexasiA&M Oklahoma State Nebraska UNLV South Carolina Virginia Tech Arkansas South Florida Youngstate State Akron Miami (OH) Utah State West Virgimia Minnesota Northwestern TennesseeTech Purdue Illinois Indiana Indiana State o0- Aiatbama Oregon BoiseSt. Florida State Sacie tate Texas A&M La.-Lafayette Nebraska misconsin South Carolina Virginia Tech Arkansas Notre Dame Michigan State OhioState Missouri Auburn West Virginia USC Northwestern owa Purdue llnois Indiana Indiana State Ohio Oreon Boise St. La.-Monroe Statford Texas A&M Oklahoma State Chattacooga UNLV East Caroina Virginia Tech Arkansas Notre Dame Youngstate State Akron Missuri Florda Atl. Utah State West Virginia USC Northwestern owa Purdue llinois ndiana ndiana State teA EARNEDS John Navarre found himself in this particular situation plenty of times. Whenever he was in a jam all he had to do was call an audible - he always had a wayout. "I'm just going to throw it up to this dude..." This time, Michigan was playing Purdue. He looked out wide to his guy. There was only one receiver in this set and they had press coverage on him. Navarre remembers, the audibles were run, run-check, pass-check. He cancelled all the runs and signaled a 15-yard route to the receiver. But wait a second, he thought, "We're on the 35-yard line, (screw) this, let's go for the endzone " Navarre lofted a bomb that only his guy could reach. "He went up and got it because the (cornerback) was this big," Navarre says, motioning with his hand that the defender was half his size. Watching from afar, the father had seen the son make this catch a mil- lion times in the yard. The son always wanted to practice the spectacular catch. The father would loft the ball high and away, just to make it difficult, and the boy would time it just right and come down with the ball, landing on a strategically placed mattress. "He had a very freakish sense of timing," the father says. "He never jumped too soon. He never jumped too late. The ball always arrived when he was at the peak of ajump. Always." The boy savored those few moments of joy he had, floating in the air, because the rest of his day would be spentdoing what other kids weren't doing to be great, what they wouldn't do. The father wouldn't let the boy play football until he knew he was old enough to work at it, to train hard enough, to put in the time to run track. But the boy loved it. He chose this route. From the Michigan practices the father took him to as a toddler, to the old game filmhe found on his own, the game was mesmerizing. Images flickered across the screen of his dad's old teammate, Anthony Carter, and that smooth No. 1 jersey. Ever since he'd always wanted to be a receiver. Now, the father would send him deep, always running "the bomb," the Hail Mary, so the boy would gethis fit- ness right. There was always something on the line, too, his team trailing in the fourth quarter. Catch this ball or the game's over, you lose. The father knew the boy too well. He was too competitive to let that ball drop, and if he did, the workouts that followed stung that much more. One-hundred yard dashes, six in a row, with 10 seconds to rest in between. And that was just the first set. The boy had two more, with five minutes of rest in between. What would hurthmore? Those or the 40-yard dashes he'd have to run every 15 seconds for 15 minutes, with the summer sun wrapping him in blanket. No son of Stan Edwards wouldn't know how to practice, how to prepare. This, when no one's watching - not the coach, not even the father - is when you get better. Bo Schembechler himself had taught the father how to be tough. The father learned to practice out of fear of being yelled at. He hated to hear Bo yell. He tried his hardest on every drill, made sure everything he did was perfect, so Bo wouldn't yell. He can still remember thattday... 'Stan Edwards, please report to rhe gym office. Stan Edwards, please report to the gym office"...when he walked in and first laid eyes on Bo's block 'M.' The coach smiled, shook his hand, kind of took him by the shoulders and spun him around. "Can you play with us? Can you play at our level? Well we're interested and we're going to keep our eye on you," Bo said. From then, the father would do anything to not let that man down. Practices damn near killed him. In the first week, his freshman year, a walk- on fullback missed an assignment and an All-Big Ten safety took the father's head clean off. That was practice under Bo. They'd be the most, organized, most prepared, and toughest team in the country because of Bo, the father thought. And it was because of the way they practiced. So the father worked the son four or five days a week, so the boy could be the best, because he wanted to be. As he grew, the son's body didn't always cooperate. Nature was fight- ing the progress the father had made with the boy, as he went through his awkward stages at the least opportune time in high school. "Sometimes tthoughtshe'd be pret- ty good and other times I'd wonder, and scratch my head - maybe not," the father says. That's why relatively few schools were chasing the Rivals.com No. 49 wide receiver recruit in the country. It hadn't helped that he played a bunch of other positions besides wide receiv- er, and his team didn't throw the ball that much. The son had grown up an Ohio State fan, but they weren't in the mix, and Michigan State was interested in him early - they saw the raw skills he had. But entering his senior season, the father's school hadn't yet offered his son a scholarship. It had felt right all these years that his son would end up there. It was unintentional, but having attended a Michigan football practice every year since he left the school, the father left a mark on his son. "When he was four and five years old, he would stop, and pay attention and look," Stan says. "He could hear the sound. You know, that sound. When people finally get close enough to hear a Michigan practice. To hear those shoulder pads and that flesh pounding against each other. He knew that early on. He knew." By the fourth game of his setior year, Michigan felt comfortable enough after having seen him at a summer camp and seeing some new tape that Brayton Edwardt4.ssn.. Braylon Edwards started off his Michigan career wearing the No. 80 before Lloyd Carr deemed he had earned the No.1 jersey. was Michigan-worthy. The 5-8, 140 pound freshman was now a lean, mean, 6-2, 190 pound machine. The son asked the coaching staff if he could wear the No. 1 jersey dur- ing his recruitment, knowing full well what his father had told him about the school. "You've got to earn this jersey; we don't just give it to anybody," they told him. This pleased the father. All of the father's grit and determi- nation wasn't without reason. He knew Lloyd Carr was a Rn dis- ciple. Carr had coached the father.dHe knew what it would take to succeed, if the boy truly wanted to among the greats - if he truly wanted the num- ber. Anthony Carter. Derrick Alexan- der. David Terrell... "Each one of those guys put in the work to get there," Stan says. "You don't play that way by a gift from God. "That doesn't happen by osmosis. Those guys decided put the work in to earn the right to wear that jersey and also play at a different level than everybody else. Everybody is not going to make that sacrifice. They say they are, but they're not." Here sat Stan Edwards' son, wear- ing the No. 80. The coaches said the boy had to grow up. He had to mature and begin to really work. He didn't walk through the doors at Schem- bechler Hall a Michigan-made Man. For all of the hours the father spent with the boy, something was missing, Maybe Braylon was like the rest of them, too eager to start his greatness now, frustrated by the system holding him back. Maybe Stan was too hard on Braylon - as Stan admits now - and the son thought it was time to coast when he got on his own. Maybe, just maybe, he did need to be taught a les- son in humility. Stan paced before every game Bray- lon played. His palms sweat. When he arrived at the stadium, he couldn't eat I . Mil I tlYili hY ' ' ;; b . To apply to be a guest picker, e-mail trohan@umich.edu. If you're chosen and can beat at least two of us, you'll stay on for another week. The longest tenured guest picker will get a prize at the end of the season. 2 FootballSaturday, September 3,.2011 TheMichlgaosaily - www ich igandaily.com1 11