Stamford Advocate

Jets’ Berrios driven by competitiv­e edge

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FLORHAM PARK, N.J. — It’s still a sore subject for Braxton Berrios, so tread lightly when it’s brought up.

The New York Jets wide receiver was a star on the field at the University of Miami and a whiz in the classroom, where he was the valedictor­ian of the School of Business Administra­tion, a double major in finance and entreprene­urship and an academic AllAmerica with a sparkling 3.96 GPA.

Now, if not for that one B.

“I don’t want to talk about it,” Berrios said with a smile before bowing his head. “It stung. It hurt.”

The one blemish on his academic record came in a finance class in the second semester of his junior year. He declined to mention the specific class or professor, but it was the only grade he received in college that wasn’t an A on his way to being the valedictor­ian in 2017.

“Yeah, it bothered me for a while,” Berrios said. “Luckily I was able to still get that accolade at the end of those four years. But that’s all it was, I had that competitiv­e edge I just never turned off. And then once I smelled it, once I got too close to it, I became obsessed with it — a little bit.”

Berrios takes that approach with everything he does, including football.

At 5-foot-9 and 190 pounds, he’s hardly imposing. But he might have the most chiseled physique on the team. He might not be the fastest, but he’s arguably the most driven.

“Yeah, he’s got little man’s syndrome, you know? I understand that,” said Mike LaFleur, the Jets’ similarly vertically challenged offensive coordinato­r. “There’s a level of competitor in him, and dog, that he believes he’s the best one when he steps on the field.

“And it’s not something he just tells himself, he truly believes it.”

That’s to say failure is never an option for the 26-year-old Berrios, who leads the NFL in kick return average with 28.9 yards per runback — helped by a 79-yard return last Sunday against Philadelph­ia. He’s also among the league leaders with a 13.6-yard average on punt returns, putting himself in the Pro Bowl discussion. Berrios also has 26 catches for 251 yards and a touchdown on offense.

“Whatever, whenever, truly,” he said.

“Another one of those model citizens, if you want to call him,” coach Robert Saleh said, “in terms of what profession­al athletes look like, what a profession­al athlete who maximizes every ounce of fiber in his body looks like, and that’s what Braxton represents.”

Berrios grew up in the Raleigh, North Carolina, area and was a four-star wide receiver in high school before heading to Miami. He played as a freshman and carved himself a terrific college career on the field, but all the while doing everything he could to also stand out in the classroom.

He started off as an entreprene­urship major and became a double major partly because of a challenge from a football teammate. After his first semester of his freshman year, the coaches were reading out the players’ grades during a team meeting. Berrios, of course, had a perfect 4.0 GPA, and one of his fellow wide receivers walked out with him.

“He was actually a finance major and he goes, ‘Yeah, try getting a 4.0 in upper level finance classes,’ ” Berrios recalled. “So he said that and then the next week I said, ‘You know what?’ And I added finance as a major. True story. That’s how I got into finance.”

Balancing two difficult majors with football in college is far from an easy task. But Berrios was eager to prove he could succeed in both.

“I preface it every time before this talk with, I’m not the smartest man in any room I walk in. I’m really not,” Berrios said. “But at the end of the day, I have a competitiv­e edge and I have a switch that just doesn’t go off.”

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