Wisconsin star safety Hunter Wohler named to third preseason watch list

Wisconsin star safety Hunter Wohler named to third preseason watch list

Wisconsin safety Hunter Wohler was named to the preseason watch list for the 2024 Wuerffel Trophy on Thursday.

The trophy is ‘college football’s premier award for community service.’ It is Wohler’s third significant preseason watch list, along with the Jim Thorpe Award (best defensive back) and Bronko Nagurski Trophy (best defensive player).

Related: Top storylines as the Wisconsin Badgers begin fall camp

The nomination period for the 2024 Wuerffel Trophy ran from May 22 to June 14 with nominations coming exclusively from FBS programs’ media relations staff. The trophy is then given to the athlete who shows ‘Sustained, measurable and documented community service to others in need’ on a ‘local, statewide, national or international’ scale.

Wohler is among the list of notable players nominated including Arizona QB Noah Fifita, Florida QB Graham Mertz, Georgia DB Malachi Starks, Iowa LB Jay Higgins, LSU OT Will Campbell, Ohio State C Seth McLaughlin and Oklahoma State QB Alan Bowman.

Wohler enters 2024 as Wisconsin’s unquestioned defensive leader after a breakout 2023 campaign. His 120-tackle, 5.5 tackle-for-loss, 1.0-sack, 2-interception, 6 pass-deflection 2023 season cemented his place as one of the best defenders in the sport. That profile should only grow in 2024.

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Wisconsin star safety named to 2024 Jim Thorpe Award watch list

Wisconsin star safety named to 2024 Jim Thorpe Award watch list

Wisconsin star safety Hunter Wohler was named to his second watch list on Wednesday, this for the 2024 Jim Thorpe Award.

Wohler is now on the watch list for this award, given to the nation’s best defensive back, and for the Bronko Nagurski Trophy given to the nation’s best overall defensive player.

Related: Everything to know about the Wisconsin Badgers quarterback room entering 2024 fall camp

Other notable nominees for the Jim Thorpe Award include Ohio State‘s Denzel Burke and Caleb Downs, Iowa‘s Sebastian Castro, Arizona’s Tacario Davis, Kentucky‘s Maxwell Hairston, Michigan‘s Will Johnson, Alabama‘s Malachi Moore, Notre Dame‘s Benjamin Morrison and Xavier Watts, Oregon‘s Jabbar Muhammad, Georgia‘s Malaki Starks and Purdue’s Dillon Thieneman. It’s a star-studded group of some of the nation’s top defenders.

Wohler enters 2024 after a breakout 120-tackle, 5.5 tackle-for-loss, 1.0-sack, 2-interception, 6 pass-deflection 2023 season that squarely put him on the map as one of the nation’s best defensive players, let alone just in the Big Ten.

He is expected to replicate that production this season as Wisconsin looks to make a significant jump in year two under head coach Luke Fickell.

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Kirk Herbstreit calls Wisconsin 2024 opponent a College Football Playoff dark horse

Kirk Herbstreit calls Wisconsin 2024 opponent College Football Playoff dark horse

ESPN’s Kirk Herbstreit made headlines during his appearance on the Pat McAfee Show on Tuesday when he called the Rutgers Scarlet Knights a dark horse to make the 2024 College Football Playoff.

“Someone is going to come out of that conference that you really didn’t expect,” Herbstreit said. “Whether that’s an Iowa, who knows if [Dylan] Raiola and Nebraska…Whoever has the most manageable schedule. Rutgers has a schedule that by Big Ten standards and this new Big Ten world that we’re in, they can make a little bit of a run.”

Related: Position battles to follow as Wisconsin Badgers begin 2024 fall training camp

Herbstreit is certainly onto something. Rutgers has the easiest strength of schedule in the Big Ten this season, that while returning most of its production from a strong 7-6 2023 team and adding a potential upgrade at quarterback in Minnesota transfer Athan Kaliakmanis.

For Herbstreit’s forecast to come true, however, that would likely mean Rutgers finding wins against some of the stronger programs on its schedule — including Wisconsin.

The tougher games on Rutgers’ 2024 schedule are against Washington, Nebraska, Wisconsin and USC. The Scarlet Knights should be prohibitive underdogs in each of them, barring unforeseen injury or an early-season collapse.

A 10-2 mark with wins against two of those four teams would certainly enter the Scarlet Knights into the playoff discussion. Somehow winning three of those four could make the team a near-lock.

But most roads that include Rutgers as a playoff dark horse include it defeating Wisconsin on Oct. 12 — something the program has never done.

Rutgers on paper could look like a potential contender. This has happened in the past — a lower level program in the conference having a perfect storm of a veteran team and an easy schedule. Most of the time, the mid-level program ends up falling short against the top teams it plays.

The good news for Rutgers: those top teams are no longer named Ohio State, Penn State and Michigan. The bad news: it’s hard to see 2024 becoming the first time the Scarlet Knights ever defeat the Badgers.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

Preseason Previews

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

Wisconsin Position Previews: Quarterback — Running Back — Wide Receiver

WATCH: Wisconsin football begins 2024 training camp at UW-Platteville

WATCH: Wisconsin football begins 2024 training camp at UW-Platteville

Training camp in preparation for the 2024 football season is officially underway for the Wisconsin Badgers.

The team is again starting its preseason session nearby on UW-Platteville’s campus before returning to the Madison facilities on Aug. 12. The Badgers have 31 days during this fall period before they kick off their 2024 season at home against Western Michigan.

Related: Position battles to follow as Wisconsin Badgers begin 2024 fall training camp

Wisconsin’s social media team is there through it all. The documented portions of the day’s activity thus far have included a 6:30 a.m. wakeup call, players all arriving at the facility and the start of the team’s warmup routine.

The start of training camp is always a significant time in the college football calendar. It means the start of August, the final days of summer and the start of the true countdown before the season kicks off.

Tuesday’s start to training camp begins the countdown at 31 days.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

Preseason Previews

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

Wisconsin Position Previews: Quarterback — Running Back — Wide Receiver

Badgers OC Phil Longo: Year two of air raid at Wisconsin will be ‘vastly improved’ over 2023

Badgers OC Phil Longo: Year two of air raid at Wisconsin will be ‘vastly improved over first one’

Wisconsin offensive coordinator Phil Longo is optimistic about how his offense will perform in its second year in Madison.

“Year two is typically going to be vastly improved over the first one,” Longo said when meeting with the media on Monday in advance of the Badgers starting 2024 training camp practice.

Related: Position battles to follow as Wisconsin Badgers begin 2024 fall training camp

His conclusion is based on the premise that continuity leads to better results. That continuity includes returning starters — such as both tackles, the right guard, two receivers, the tight end and the primary running back. It also includes players who did not start in 2023 but still spent the season within the new system, including three starting linemen and several top receiving options.

Importantly, that continuity also refers to Longo’s relationship with head coach Luke Fickell and the rest of his offensive coaching staff. The 2023 offseason included change at every possible corner of the program. This offseason was not that, which Longo thinks is aiding the team’s preparation for the upcoming season.

“The difference is we have so many people now, so many players in these rooms that know everything,” Longo said. “So the learning curve for this year for the new guys is not what it was last year. We still had coaches learning. I mean, I didn’t even know where the restroom was until April…And I had not worked with [Fickell] on a day-to-day basis. This year, there’s none of that.”

Longo is working to improve a Badger offense that finished No. 93 in scoring offense (23.5 points per game) and No. 71 in total offense (381.2 yards per game) in 2023.

He is looking for a similar second-year jump to the one that North Carolina experience from his first season as OC in 2019 to his second in 2020. The Tar Heels finished No. 31 in scoring offense (33.1 points per game) and No. 12 in total offense (474 yards per game) in 2019, then No. 9 in scoring offense (41.7 points per game) and No. 5 in total offense (537.3 yards per game) in 2020.

The Tar Heels were already a strong offensive team when Longo arrived, hence the strong early results. Wisconsin was far from that, and needed a top-down overhaul to adapt to the new system

Looking at 2023 in hindsight does point toward the Badgers needing a longer adjustment period than previously thought. That includes more time in the system and natural continuity within the building, but also a reworked roster built around an entirely new way of doing things.

It’s logical to believe those reasons will lead to a better 2024 output.

But the big question surrounds how much better the output will be. And importantly, is that improvement enough to prove Fickell and Longo’s long-term vision for the program.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

2024 Preseason Previews

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

Wisconsin Position Previews: Quarterback — Running Back

Wisconsin DC Mike Tressel highlights two potential breakout players on Badgers defensive line

Wisconsin DC Mike Tressel highlights two potential breakout players on Badgers defensive line

Wisconsin defensive coordinator Mike Tressel met with the assembled media on Monday before the Badgers hit the road to begin 2024 training camp at UW-Platteville.

One big topic of conversation was the team’s defensive line, arguably its biggest weakness entering the 2024 season.

Related: Position battles to follow as Wisconsin Badgers begin 2024 fall training camp

Tressel highlighted two players who may correct that statement, players who have taken significant steps forward this offseason: redshirt senior James Thompson Jr. and redshirt sophomore Curt Neal.

Thompson Jr. projects to lead the room after recording 29 tackles, 5.5 tackles for loss and 3.0 sacks in 2023. Neal, meanwhile, should take advantage of available snaps after tallying only 13 tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss as a redshirt freshman a season ago.

The two players project to lead a room that added two transfers this offseason in Elijah Hills (Albany) and Brandon Lane (Stephen F. Austin). They both enter with plenty of experience at the FCS level, but each need to prove it in the Big Ten.

Thompson Jr., Neal, Lane and Hills are likely to be the top four in a rotation that also includes redshirt seniors Ben Barten and Cade McDonald, redshirt freshman Jamel Howard and a host of talented incoming freshmen.

The position’s future in the next few years is certainly brighter than its status as a potential weakness entering 2024. But the possible emergence of the two players Tressel mentioned may change that ‘weakness’ status.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

2024 Preseason Previews

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

Wisconsin Position Previews: Quarterback — Running Back

Wisconsin HC Luke Fickell: QB Tyler Van Dyke’s adversity at Miami ‘has made him who he is’

Wisconsin HC Luke Fickell: QB Tyler Van Dyke’s adversity at Miami ‘has made him who he is’

Wisconsin head coach Luke Fickell knows what former Miami transfer quarterback Tyler Van Dyke brings to the table.

Van Dyke was Fickell and offensive coordinator Phil Longo’s prized transfer addition this offseason as the two coaches worked to recraft the Badgers roster with the goal of a resurgent 2024 season. He joins the program with years of starting experience and plenty of accolades. His collegiate career, however, has been anything but a linear path.

Related: These 13 Badgers can become household names as the 2024 football season goes on

The Glastonbury, Connecticut native first joined the Hurricanes program as a four-star recruit in the class of 2020. He spent little time before a breakout redshirt freshman season in 2021 that included a 62.3 completion percentage, 2,931 passing yards, 9.0 yards per attempt, 25 touchdowns and only six interceptions.

That season earned him ACC Rookie of the Year honors and the billing of one of the best young quarterbacks in the sport. Then the path got rocky.

Miami fired head coach Manny Diaz after the 2021 season and hired former Oregon head coach Mario Cristobal. That turnover eventually led to three offensive systems in as many years for Van Dyke. His efficiency plummeted as a result. Instead of a progression after a strong debut, the veteran quarterback regressed over the next two seasons as Miami went just 12-13. A 2,703-yard, 19-touchdown, 12-interception 2023 campaign was Van Dyke’s last at Miami before he entered the transfer portal this offseason and committed to Fickell and the Badgers.

The Badgers head coach joined CBS Sports HQ during Big Ten media days this week and discussed Van Dyke’s arrival in Madison, and specifically how his experience at Miami will help him grow and adapt in the Badgers’ offensive system.

“Tyler Van Dyke is a guy that’s been in three systems. He’s had three different offensive coordinators at Miami. He’s had to battle through a lot of ups and downs,” Fickell explained. “To me, that’s made him who he is. That’s given him the humility to get back up and continue to grow. He’s had to handle some of those adversities, and it showed when he walked in the door at our place. Because he was really humble, he was really embracing to all things and understood that this is going to be a competition.”

 

Fickell sells the quarterback battle as at true competition between Van Dyke and redshirt sophomore Braedyn Locke. That is unlikely to be the complete truth given Van Dyke’s pedigree and the program’s decision to bring him in this offseason.

The rest of the comment should carry weight. Wisconsin enters 2024 after an adversity-filled 2023 campaign.  The program is in desperate need of a resurgence, a sentence that can also be applied to Van Dyke’s current situation and career path to this point.

There is an undercurrent of optimism that the Badgers’ stable offensive system with a strong offensive line, good rushing attack and terrific cast of weapons will allow the veteran quarterback to refind his 2021 form. If that happens, 2024 could be a turning point for both Van Dyke and for the Wisconsin program.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

Wisconsin HC Luke Fickell reflects on year one with the Badgers, changes for year two

Wisconsin HC Luke Fickell reflects on year one with the Badgers, what can change in year two

Wisconsin head coach Luke Fickell was a center of focus at Big Ten media days this week in Indianapolis, Indiana.

He still carries the air as one of the top up-and-coming coaches in college football. He also currently leads a brand in Wisconsin that has been a staple toward the top of the Big Ten for the last 30 years, though has slipped significantly in recent seasons. Fickell and the Badgers’ trajectory entering 2024 is a significant discussion point around Big Ten circles as the conference expands to 18 members.

Related: The 6 most likely scenarios for Wisconsin’s 2024 football season

The decorated head coach joined Big Ten radio on SiriusXM during media days earlier this week and reflected on his first year with the Badgers — a 7-6 season that fell short of every expectation.

“In year one you think you know. And I was reminded when I got into Week 3, 4, 5 that you really don’t know,” Fickell said. “I don’t know that I could’ve done a whole lot of things different. To create adversity to find out what you really have to see how guys within your program handle things, it’s unique. If there was one think I’d go back on, we didn’t go live nearly as much last year. So I didn’t know some of the deficiencies maybe we had athletically, tackling-wise defensively. Otherwise, all of the things that came out were because of adversity.”

 

Fickell’s reflection comes after Wisconsin remade its entire linebacker room via the transfer portal this offseason. New additions ILB Jaheim Thomas (Arkansas), ILB Tackett Curtis (USC), ILB Sebastian Cheeks (North Carolina), OLB John Pius (William & Mary) and OLB Leon Lowery (Syracuse) are expected to provide major contributions beside returning starters ILB Jake Chaney, OLB Darryl Peterson and others.

The new-look room expects to be a significant improvement upon 2023’s group. That inside linebacker starting unit from 2023 included Jordan Turner and Maema Njongmeta, players who are gone to Michigan State and the NFL respectively.

Despite Fickell’s comment, defense was not the problem for the 2023 Badgers. The group finished the season ranked No. 21 in the nation in scoring defense and No. 7 in ESPN’s SP+.

Wisconsin’s 7-6 record came mostly thanks to Phil Longo’s new air raid offense scoring only 23.5 points per game, ranked No. 93 of 133 programs in the sport. It fell far below the expectations and headlines entering the season.

Now, the Badgers did bolster the unit via the portal this offseason, headlined by the additions of former Miami QB Tyler Van Dyke, Oklahoma RB Tawee Walker, Boston College WR Joseph Griffin Jr. and Michigan State WR Tyrell Henry.

Longo’s offense will be the key to Wisconsin improving upon its 7-6 record from 2023 — much more so than Fickell and DC Mike Tressel’s defense.

The Badgers start their quest for a statement season on Aug. 30 when Western Michigan visits Camp Randall Stadium.

Fickell’s comments point toward some differences in this year’s training camp, and a thought process behind some of the team’s transfer moves this offseason.

Contact/Follow @TheBadgersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin Badgers news, notes and opinion.

Big Ten Team Previews: Indiana Hoosiers — Purdue Boilermakers — Illinois Fighting Illini — Northwestern Wildcats — Minnesota Golden Gophers — Nebraska Cornhuskers — Iowa Hawkeyes — Rutgers Scarlet Knights — Maryland Terrapins — Michigan State Spartans — USC Trojans — UCLA Bruins — Washington Huskies — Michigan Wolverines — Penn State Nittany Lions — Ohio State Buckeyes — Oregon Ducks — Wisconsin Badgers

Big Ten Position Previews: Quarterbacks — Running Backs — Wide Receivers — Offensive Lines — Tight Ends — Defensive Line — Linebackers — Cornerbacks — Safeties

PHOTOS: Former Wisconsin RB Braelon Allen’s first NFL training camp

PHOTOS: Former Wisconsin RB Braelon Allen’s first NFL training camp

Former Wisconsin running back Braelon Allen officially began his first season of professional football this week as the New York Jets kicked off their training camp in preparation for the 2024 NFL season.

The Badger great was the No. 134 overall selection by the Jets in the fourth round of the 2024 NFL draft. He was one of three former Badgers selected, along with Tanor Bortolini (Indianapolis Colts) and Isaac Guerendo (San Francisco 49ers, via Louisville).

Related: Every former Wisconsin Badger currently on an NFL roster after 2024 draft

Allen projects to enter the 2024 season as the primary backup to Jets star running back Breece Hall. He should see a majority of the snaps in goal-line and other short-yardage scenarios.

The former Badger has already grabbed a few headlines upon entering the NFL, first by becoming the youngest player in the league and the first ever born in 2004. He’ll likely stay in the spotlight as the Jets command the nation’s attention with veteran quarterback Aaron Rodgers back healthy for possibly a final season.

Before Allen and the Jets begin preseason action on Aug. 10 against the Washington Commanders, here is an initial look at the former Wisconsin star at the team’s training camp:

PHOTOS: Wisconsin Badgers at 2024 Big Ten media days

PHOTOS: Wisconsin Badgers at 2024 Big Ten media days

Wisconsin Badgers head coach Luke Fickell and select player representatives spoke to the assembled media at 2024 Big Ten media days on Tuesday.

Fickell was one of the first at the main podium. He conducted more of a press release than a press conference, as his opening statement took up 13 minutes of the available 15-minute time slot.

Related: Where Wisconsin lands in USA TODAY Sports 2024 Big Ten football preseason poll

He continued with a smaller, non-televised press conference before player representatives safety Hunter Wohler, left tackle Jack Nelson and linebacker Jake Chaney all took to the podium.

The media days event included news, including Wisconsin making player personnel director Max Stienecker the youngest general manager in the Power 4. It also included a large inflatable Oregon Duck mascot floating down the White River, plus more useful insight into what to expect when the Badgers take the field on Aug. 30 to kick off their 2024 season.

The event marks the beginning of true preseason preparation with the season now a little more than a month away.

Before the Badgers travel to UW-Platteville to conduct training camp, here is a look at Fickell and the team’s leaders representing the program at the new-look Big Ten media days: