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Julian Edelman's Patriots Story Truly One Of The Best The NFL Has Ever Seen

Editor's note: This story originally ran on Dec. 29, 2020, when Julian Edelman's football future was very much unknown. On Monday, the receiver officially retired from the NFL, due to a knee injury that will not improve enough for him to play again. And so this story is coming back, with a few tweaks to reflect the updated news on Edelman.

By Michael Hurley, CBS Boston

BOSTON (CBS) -- The sports world relies entirely too much on cliches. Even if those hackneyed banalities exist for a reason, they end up being overused so badly that they tend to lose any real meaning.

So when you hear the words gritty underdoghard-workerrelentless competitor, it can all kind of blend into the wallpaper.

Yet if there's anyone who should defy that trend, it would of course be Julian Francis Edelman.

Julian Edelman
Julian Edelman (Photos by Adam Glanzman/Maddie Meyer/Getty Images)

The 34-year-old officially put a bow on his career on Monday, due to a knee issue that can't be fixed. He underwent a midseason procedure last year and tried to get back onto the field before the season ended, but his knee didn't cooperate. The Patriots terminated his contract due to a failed physical, and shortly thereafter, Edelman announced that he is retiring from football.

And with that career now over, it comes after 12 years, four major injuries, one suspension, 738 receptions, 69 rushing attempts, eight passes, 48 touchdowns, one Super Bowl MVP Award, three Super Bowl titles, countless instances of absorbing massive hits and getting back up, and one of the most unbelievable rises to superstardom the sports world -- and certainly, the Patriots franchise -- has ever seen.

Sure, the unlikelihood of Edelman's path may pale in comparison to Tom Brady, the quarterback who threw him the majority of the passes in his career. But that's only because Brady's climb from sixth-round pick to fourth-string QB to seven-time Super Bowl champion remains the most improbable sports story of all time.

Yet Edelman's beginnings were undoubtedly more humble than Brady's. After getting zero scholarship offers out of high school, he spent a year at junior college in San Mateo before getting an offer from Kent State. There, he threw 30 touchdowns and 31 interceptions, doing more damage on the ground (2,483 rushing yards, 22 rushing touchdowns) than with his arm. The Golden Flashes went 13-23 during his three years at quarterback.

To say that Edelman wasn't getting much draft buzz would be ... an understatement. And then some.

But Bill Belichick -- who's got a bit of a knack at discovering talent where others might not look -- took a seventh-round flier in the final hour of the 2009 draft on the undersized kid from Redwood City, California, specifically drafting the quarterback as a receiver.

From there, you know the story quite well, though it often still gets distorted. While Edelman became Brady's favorite target, providing a seamless transition out of the Wes Welker era, it took a while to get there. (Welker, by the way, was the most productive wide receiver in Patriots history not named Stanley Morgan, and he was a rock-solid, reliable punt returner. Replacing him was no minor feat.)

The two-touchdown performance as a rookie making his playoff debut was of course the only memorable part of an otherwise miserable afternoon for the Patriots, but it was hardly an "arrival" for Edelman, who would catch just 11 total passes over the next two seasons before contributing with 21 receptions, 235 yards and three touchdowns in 2012. His spot work on defense against Anquan Boldin in the AFC Championship Game stood out more than most of his offensive workload.

At that point, Edelman was a free agent. He made a visit to the Giants. His career could have gone several different ways. But he ended up re-signing with New England on a one-year deal worth less than $1 million. If he failed to take significant steps forward as a 27-year-old with four years of experience in the league, then his career would likely be over.

And it was at that crossroads when Edelman became Edelman.

With Welker gone, Edelman caught 105 passes for 1,056 yards and three touchdowns. For perspective, he had 69 receptions, 714 yards, and four touchdowns combined in his first four years.

He had six receptions for 84 yards in a divisional playoff win over the Colts, and he had 10 catches for 89 yards and a touchdown as the Patriots' only real receiver in the AFC title game loss in Denver. A knack for stepping up in the postseason -- beginning with that two-touchdown game as a rookie, continued with his emergency work on defense in 2011, and blossoming in 2013 -- had become quite clear.

After that, everyone knows the Edelman story.

He caught 251 passes for 2,770 yards and 14 touchdowns from 2014-16.

He caught 26 passes for 281 yards in the 2014 playoffs, and he threw an iconic touchdown to Danny Amendola, and he also hauled in the Super Bowl-winning touchdown against the league's best defense.

Julian Edelman, Danny Amendola
Julian Edelman throws a touchdown pass to Danny Amendola (GIF from NFL.com/GamePass)

(Incidentally, his tackle on Jeremy Lane also knocked the Seahawks' only prayer of covering him out of Super Bowl XLIX.)

Jeremy Lane, Julian Edelman
Jeremy Lane, Julian Edelman (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images)

After 17 receptions and 153 yards in the 2015 playoffs, he showed up in the 2016 playoffs and put forth one of the best performances ever for a wide receiver. It was so good that it's getting the indent treatment.

JULIAN EDELMAN, 2016 PLAYOFFS
21 receptions, 342 yards, 1 TD
2 rushes, 14 yards
7 punt returns, 66 yards, 9.4 yards per return

And also, this:

If Edelman's career had ended there, it would have been an excellent one. And when he tore his knee in the 2017 preseason, it appeared that it had. The list of receivers over the age of 30 to come back from torn ACLs was short. To the point that it was not entirely "existent," as some would say. And the list of receivers who rely more on their quickness and cuts than their outright speed to come back from a torn knee after the age of 30? It basically was as long as the list of MAC quarterbacks who become critical pass catchers on dynastic NFL teams.

So if you were counting Edelman out at that point, you were merely obeying the numbers and history. To do so would not be foolish at all ... if you were evaluating anyone other than Edelman.

While he may have relied upon a banned substance to aid with that recovery in 2018 (in a sport where that's not entirely unique), there's no downplaying what he was able to do once he returned to the field with an offense that desperately needed him. He caught 74 passes for 850 yards and six touchdowns in 12 games, a pace that would have had him setting career highs in yards and touchdowns. (He would set that personal record for receiving yards personal the following season.)

Then came the playoffs. Oh, boy. The 2018 playoffs.

Facing a top-10 defense in the Chargers, Edelman caught nine passes for 151 yards in a 41-28 win.

In a frigid AFC Championship Game in Kansas City, Edelman caught seven passes for 96 yards, including a pair of receptions on third-and-10 in overtime.

Brady To Edelman
(GIF from NFL.com/GamePass)

And then the Super Bowl. The Rams threw every defender they could at the man. Nobody could stop him.

Julian Edelman
(GIF from NFL.com/GamePass)

Ten receptions, 141 yards, Super Bowl MVP.

Next -- because a dynasty cannot close its doors without losing -- Edelman and Brady brought it back for another year. The 2019 season won't be remembered fondly in New England, but Edelman was nevertheless a standout: 100 receptions, 1,117 yards, six touchdowns.

The 2020 season of course brought about the end. But Edelman did still manage to set a single-game career high in receiving yards when he caught eight passes from Cam Newton for 179 yards in Seattle in Week 2. Unfortunately for that duo, the chemistry didn't get much more chance to build, as Edelman's battle with a knee injury became too much to bear by the end of October.

Edelman won't get the chance to add to his postseason totals, but he doesn't really need to. Here's what Edelman's been able to accomplish in his 19 playoff games, 15 of which involved him contributing as an offensive player:

MOST PLAYOFF RECEPTIONS, ALL TIME
1. Jerry Rice, 151
2. Julian Edelman, 118
3. Reggie Wayne, 93

MOST PLAYOFF RECEIVING YARDS, ALL TIME
1. Jerry Rice, 2,245
2. Julian Edelman, 1,442

3. Michael Irvin, 1,315

Edelman also is one of just seven wide receivers to ever earn Super Bowl MVP honors.

Suffice it to say, not many people were penciling Edelman's name right under Jerry Rice's in the history books back in 2009, or even in 2012. That Edelman put himself there is perhaps the best way to understand his impact on the Patriots franchise.

Now, Edelman is hanging it up -- and after the absolute beating he's endured in the NFL, there's absolutely no shame in doing so. And retiring a month shy of his 35th birthday won't change the history that he made. A seventh-round converted quarterback turning himself into one of the most important pieces of the greatest dynasty the NFL has ever seen is the type of story that even Hollywood rejects. It's simply too far-fetched, too ludicrous.

It's not possible.

And yet, we saw what we saw, he did what he did, and those three banners hanging above the south end zone at Gillette Stadium aren't there if not for the work of Julian Edelman.

He's been the perfect Patriot, a no-doubter for the team hall of fame (and a legitimate candidate for the real Hall of Fame). He won't be returning to the football field, but he certainly tried. And now that the career is over, it's worth appreciating the story that's been written. There's no way we'll ever see another one like it.

Julian Edelman
Julian Edelman (Photo by Kathryn Riley/Getty Images)

You can email Michael Hurley or find him on Twitter @michaelFhurley.

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