Report: Wisconsin backup quarterback Daniel Wright has entered the transfer portal

Report: Wisconsin backup quarterback Daniel Wright has entered the transfer portal

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Wisconsin backup quarterback and former walk-on Daniel Wright has entered the transfer portal, according to a tweet from Evan Flood of 247Sports.com.

The 6-foot, 8-inch signal-caller redshirted last year after joining the program with the class of 2020.

247Sports.com lists the Badgers as the only FBS school to show interest in Wright during his recruitment process, with Sioux Falls being the only school to officially offer the quarterback.

The Sergeant Bluff, Iowa native is now reportedly in the transfer portal with the hope of finding a new location to play out his remaining four years of college eligibility.

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Wisconsin football announces another ‘Stripe-Out’ game at Camp Randall Stadium

Wisconsin football announces another ‘Stripe-Out’ game at Camp Randall Stadium

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The last time the Wisconsin Badgers had fans at Camp Randall Stadium it was the year 2019, a season that saw the team not lose a single contest at home.

One of those fall Saturdays was a Camp Randall ‘Stripe-Out’ against the Michigan Wolverines.

Sep 21, 2019; Madison, WI, USA; The Wisconsin Badgers line up for a play during the third quarter against the Michigan Wolverines at Camp Randall Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

The Badgers won 35-14 that day, dominating Michigan thanks to a 200-yard day from Jonathan Taylor and a 4-turnover day from Jim Leonhard’s defense.

The scene was electric and was not hurt by the Badgers’ stellar play on the field.

Well, it is also a scene that will be returning to the friendly confines in just over five weeks, as a Wisconsin football tweet from earlier today named September 4’s season-opener against Penn State a ‘Stripe-Out’ game.

Like so many others, I cannot wait to see a packed house in Madison for the first time in nearly two years.

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Two more Wisconsin Badgers receive preseason watch list honors

Watch list season is up and running for the 2021 football season

We’ve entered watch list season for the 2021 college football season.

We’ve already seen Wisconsin’s Jalen Berger, Graham Mertz, Jack Sanborn and Paul Chryst receive various honors.

But earlier today, two more Wisconsin Badgers saw their names included in preseason watch lists for position awards.

First, it was Wisconsin star tight end Jake Ferguson on the John Mackey Award Watch List.

Ferguson starred for the Badgers in each of the last three years, totaling 99 catches, 1168 yards and 10 receiving touchdowns.

The future NFL tight end will look to be the first Wisconsin Badger to win the award.

Joining Ferguson on a national watch list was center Kayden Lyles, as he was named to the Rimington Trophy Watch List.

Lyles will look to be the second Badger to win the award after Tyler Biadasz did so in 2019.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

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What ESPN’s Bill Connelly learned about Wisconsin football in 2020

It’s likely Badger nation shares Connelly’s assessment of Wisconsin’s 2020 season

ESPN’s Bill Connelly is the creator of SP+, a ranking used to grade teams based on their returning production, recent recruiting and recent history.

Since Barry Alvarez took over as Wisconsin head football coach, the Badgers have consistently resided near the top of the SP+ ranking. The program has won consistently, improved its recruiting profile and consistently reached the Big Ten Championship game.

Related: ESPN’s SP+ for every opponent on Wisconsin’s 2021 football schedule

Connelly previewed the Big Ten West this morning, outlining each team’s ranking and explaining what we learned from them last season.

For Wisconsin, the ESPN college football writer learned a few significant things last season:

Jim Leonhard is fantastic. When head coach Paul Chryst promoted the former Wisconsin safety to defensive coordinator in 2017, Leonhard had just one official year of coaching to his name. He’s proved the move astute. The Badgers have ranked in the defensive SP+ top 15 in three of four seasons and climbed to fourth last year.

The Badgers stuff the run on early downs and dominate the pass on passing downs. They blitz well — especially with inside linebackers Jack Sanborn and Leo Chenal — and corners Faion Hicks and Caesar Williams can handle the man coverage Leonhard asks of them. Leonhard does have to replace two of four primary linemen, but he could start as many as 10 juniors and seniors overall.

Graham Mertzcould be, too (with help). Talk about all-or-nothing: In four wins, the Badgers averaged 39 points per game, and Mertz, a blue-chip redshirt freshman, produced a raw QBR of 79.6. He completed 20 of 21 passes in his debut against Illinois.

In three losses, however, the Badgers averaged 6.7 points. Mertz’s QBR: 24.6. He got less help than expected from a rotating RB corps, and leading receivers Danny Davis III and Kendric Pryor barely saw the field. Wisconsin was entirely overmatched against good Iowa, Northwestern and Indiana defenses.

Davis and Pryor return, along with sophomore Chimere Dike and tight end Jake Ferguson. Mertz should have fewer bad moments, but the run game has a lot to prove.

The Badgers are projected to finish at the top of the Big Ten West in nearly every available projection. As Connelly outlines, a lot of that will come down to whether Graham Mertz can lead the offense to more of the “all” piece of “all-or-nothing.”

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Stay tuned for updates on Connelly’s SP+ rankings throughout the 2021 college football season.

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Analyzing Graham Mertz’s performance in wins vs. his performance in losses last season

Bill Connelly recently graphed out Graham Mertz’s performance in wins last season vs. his performance in losses…What can those graphs tell us about how he’ll rebound in 2021?

ESPN’s Bill Connelly, the creator of SP+, is a central voice in college football analytics and analysis.

One of his recent Tweets requires attention: an in-depth view of Wisconsin Badger quarterback Graham Mertz’s performance in wins last season vs. his performance in losses.

On a surface level, it makes sense why Wisconsin struggled along with their quarterback. The right image is full of incompletions and turnovers and actually features 33 more pass attempts than the left image.

For context, Wisconsin won four games last season (left) and lost three (right). That gives all the indication needed to understand why the offense was so stagnant some of those days.

But why did we see such a stark difference between Mertz’s performance in wins vs. that in losses? Aside from Bill’s correct point about how Northwestern, Indiana and Iowa complicated the game for him, here’s what I saw:

First, that 33-pass disparity led me to one theme: the running game. Wisconsin wasn’t a great running team last season, but the difference between the output in wins and losses was huge.

As I referred to above, the left picture is what Wisconsin’s ideal, on-schedule offense looks like. The right, then, is the disoriented mess we saw for weeks during the heart of the schedule.

Second, there are numerous factors at play aside from the defensive efforts of the Badgers’ opponents. There was no health at wide receiver, Mertz had to run to the sideline to get every play and this was a freshman quarterback who was thrust into the starting job without much time to prepare.

But the biggest thing that stood out to me was what I outlined above: rushing success, as it normally does, dictated what the team was able to do on offense, and therefore dictated whether they won games.

After three years of all-time great stuff from Jonathan Taylor, the 2020 regression was clearly large enough to stop the offense in its tracks and make things nearly impossible on Mertz.

Now heading into 2021 with an impressive backfield crew of Jalen Berger, Chez Mellusi, Braelon Allen and more, Wisconsin fans should expect to see a lot more of the lefthand chart compared to the right.

The offense will find its schedule easier, Mertz will regain his rhythm and this will be an impressive offense to watch throughout the season.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

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Wisconsin’s Paul Chryst lands inside the top 85 in latest ESPN list

What do you remember from Paul Chryst’s days playing for the Badgers?

ESPN’s Adam Rittenberg ranked every coach in the FBS yesterday. But he didn’t look at their work on the sideline, instead ranking each coach based on their time as collegiate players.

Some, including Mississippi State’s Mike Leach, did not play football college and brought up the bottom of the ranking.

But from Jim Harbaugh, to Pat Fitzgerald, to Mike Gundy, there are some pretty impressive college resumes roaming the sideline.

Wisconsin head coach Paul Chryst played two years for the Badgers back in the late 1980s. While the team didn’t find much success, Chryst finished his career with 22 games played, 173 receiving yards, 1 receiving touchdown and 113 passing yards during his time under center.

Rittenberg’s ranking lists Chryst as the No. 82 collegiate player of all FBS coaches.

Here’s what he had to say about the Badger head coach:

One of several FBS coaches leading his alma mater, Chryst played quarterback, tight end and on special teams for some subpar Badgers squads in the late 1980s. He earned three letters at Wisconsin and caught 18 passes for 173 yards and a touchdown.

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247Sports sees Wisconsin winning the Big Ten West in 2021

Yet another Wisconsin–Ohio State Big Ten Championship may be on the horizon…

With approximately 50 days separating us from the kickoff of the Big Ten football season, schedule projections and matchup analysis are starting to appear across the college football landscape.

The latest came from the 247Sports’ Big Ten panel, as they predicted the final standings in each Big Ten division and cast votes for player and coach of the year.

Unsurprisingly, Wisconsin is yet again favored to finish near the top of the Big Ten West. In the eyes of 247Sports, they are actually the favorite to win the West and return to the Big Ten Championship Game

Their standings projection is as follows: Wisconsin, Iowa, Minnesota, Northwestern, Nebraska, Purdue and Illinois.

Though Ohio State was their clear Big Ten Champion, a Big Ten Championship matchup with the Buckeyes is all Badger fans can ask for heading into 2021. What happens in that game, then, is anyone’s guess.

A few more Badger-related things to note from the article is Graham Mertz fell No. 6 in their Big Ten Player of the Year prediction and Paul Chryst fell No. 2 behind Ryan Day for Coach of the Year.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

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Where Chez Mellusi falls in 247Sports’ ‘Transfer Portal Top 150’ rankings

Where do you see Chez Mellusi fitting into the 2021 Wisconsin offense?

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The biggest transfer news of the Wisconsin Badgers’ offseason came in two parts: first, the departure of quarterback Jack Coan and second, the addition of former Clemson running back Chez Mellusi.

Coan moving on made a lot of sense, as the former starter missed the entire 2020 season with a foot injury and wouldn’t have started under center in favor of Graham Mertz in 2021.

But the Mellusi addition is significant. Freshman running back Jalen Berger did not carry the ball more than 15 times in a game last season and is still developing as a running back.

Adding the former Clemson back and former four-star recruit to the mix both adds talent to the unit, but also creates depth in the case that Berger is unable to carry the ball 25-30 times per game.

Earlier today, Clint Brewster of 247Sports put together the Transfer Portal Top 150—ranking every transfer entering the 2021 football season.

The top five consists of LB Henry To’o To’o moving from Tennessee to Alabama, RB Eric Gray from Tennessee to Oklahoma, WR Arik Gilbert from LSU to Georgia, WR Wan’Dale Robinson from Nebraska to Kentucky and RB Mike Jones Jr. from Clemson to LSU.

Now-Notre Dame quarterback Jack Coan can be found at No. 83. Then down at No. 133: Wisconsin Badger running back Chez Mellusi.

The former Clemson back has 20 collegiate contests under his belt, those appearances seeing him carry the ball 71 times for 426 yards and catch the ball 5 times for 38 receiving yards.

Mellusi figures to be a big piece of a Badger backfield that underwhelmed in 2020. His specific role is not yet known, though it’s safe to say we will be seeing a lot of him come the fall.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

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Wisconsin football 2021 projected defensive depth chart, summer edition

With offense recently released, here is the summer edition of our projected defensive depth chart for the 2021 Wisconsin Badgers:

Wisconsin’s 2020 defense played at a Big Ten-winning caliber, something we’ve grown accustomed to seeing recently under defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard.

Inside linebackers Leo Chenal and Jack Sanborn combined for a whopping 98 tackles, 2 interceptions, 2 forced fumbles, 10 tackles-for-loss and 4 sacks. They’ll likely be back at an all-conference level when the season kicks off in September.

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The secondary experienced some up-and-down performances, but the entire group returns minus Eric Burrell.

The only real question on the unit is what happens at defensive end with Isaiahh Loudermilk and Garrett Rand both gone to the NFL. There are many options to fill their shoes and recreate their impact, we just are yet to see who exactly those players will be.

Here is the summer edition of our depth chart projection for the 2021 Wisconsin Badgers:

Wisconsin football 2021 projected offensive depth chart, summer edition

Wisconsin’s offense is set to bounce back in a big way after an up-and-down 2020 campaign

For those counting at home, we are nearing the 50-day mark of the countdown towards Wisconsin’s 2021 football season.

After the interviews, images and highlights from the team’s spring session, there hasn’t been much coming out from the program about where the team stands. But training camp will start soon enough, as the real countdown begins for September 4’s season-opening contest.

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Wisconsin’s 2021 offense will be full of familiar faces after a disappointing 2020 season. What we seek now is a step forward from the youngsters with high ceilings and health from the critical veterans on the outside.

Here is your summer depth chart projection for the 2021 Wisconsin Badgers: