Jaden Bray Now Carries One Of WVUs Most Sacred Numbers

Jaden Bray steps up to honor a legendary past and inspire a promising future as he dons a sacred jersey number in this pivotal season for West Virginia football.

FRISCO, Texas - Jaden Bray knows exactly what comes with West Virginia No. 5 this season. It is Pat White’s number, and it is on its way to retirement after the year, which puts Bray in a very visible spot as the Mountaineers open the season.

The retirement ceremony is set for Saturday, Sept. 5, when West Virginia hosts Coastal Carolina in a game that has been labeled a “White Out.” Bray said he feels the weight of it, but he also sees it as an honor.

“I am very grateful and honored to be able to do that,” Bray said earlier today during Big 12 Media Days at the Ford Center in Frisco, Texas. “I'm just going to do the best I can to wear this number for Pat White and all of the past number fives.”

For Bray, the moment became real when he and his teammates were told about White’s jersey retirement. White was there for the announcement, along with Pat McAfee and WVU director of athletics Wren Baker.

White, now on Rich Rodriguez’s staff as an assistant quarterbacks coach, made it clear he wanted Bray to be the final player to wear No. 5.

“Before he even made his speech or anything, the first thing he said was, 'I want Bray to wear it. Can you all please let Bray finish out wearing No.

5?' That was one of my biggest moments, and it meant the world to me,” he said.

“I'm going to do all I can to make sure to wear this number the right way.”

White’s No. 5 will join six other retired numbers in Mountaineer football history: Major Harris’ No. 9, Ira Eerrett Rodgers’ No.

21, Chuck Howley’s No. 66, Sam Huff’s No.

75, Bruce Bosley’s No. 77 and Darryl Talley’s No. 90.

Bray has done his homework on White, too. He said he has watched plenty of highlight clips on YouTube and came away impressed.

“He was something serious, now - super serious. It's crazy how good he was,” he said.

He has also seen firsthand what White still means around West Virginia. When White is out in public, fans recognize him right away, and Bray said the reaction says everything about the quarterback’s place in school history.

“You can see, anytime we step out of the facility people come up to him like he's still playing and want autographs and stuff,” Bray said. “That's something you dream of as a player, and it's just so cool to see what he's done and how much of an impact he's had on the whole state.

“I never told him this, but he's just been a major part of me during my journey, just watching him and just how like he attacks every day and how humble he is,” Bray added.

The reminders are constant inside the football complex, where White’s image is on the walls and where staffers Rasheed Marshall and Noel Devine talk to players about his toughness and his will to win. Bray said those stories all point back to the same traits.

“Rasheed talks about how big Pat was on his career. All the past players on the staff now only talk about him with the highest regard on how he was as a player,” Bray said.

“He was gritty when you get down to it,” he added, pointing to White’s famous peel-back block against Connecticut, a clip that Mountaineer players continue to watch. Bray said that kind of play fits the “hard edge” Rodriguez wants back in the program.

“You wouldn't want your quarterback to do that sometimes, but he was going to go do it. I know that's the kind of guy I would want to go play with.”

Bray, a redshirt senior making his second Big 12 Media Days appearance for WVU, says he is ready for a season in which he finally gets a chance to show what he can do over a full year. Since transferring from Oklahoma State three years ago, injuries and bad luck have repeatedly slowed him down.

“I'm going to try and not put too much pressure on myself or anything like that, but this year is definitely going to be something special,” he predicted. “I'm not really thinking anymore.

I know the playbook. I'm super comfortable with the coaching staff, and they have all the confidence in me to go out there and play, so that takes a lot of pressure off me when you know you've got a staff that believes in you.”

He also said he likes being coached by Rich Rodriguez, comparing him to his former Oklahoma State coach Mike Gundy.

“You can tell they've been around a lot of ball, and they know when players are BS'ing them,” Bray laughed. “You can just tell that they are really smart guys.”

Looking ahead to 2026, Bray said his goal is straightforward: he wants to be healthy and on the field for the regular season finale at Utah on Friday, Nov. 27.

“I’m healthy and I'm just trying to get out there and play,” he concluded.

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