WATCH: Hype video from Wisconsin Football’s practice

This evening, Wisconsin Football’s Twitter account released a hype video featuring photos from today’s practice.

This evening, Wisconsin Football’s Twitter account released a hype video featuring photos from today’s practice.

The video highlights ‘pictures’ of several Badgers including Jack Coan, Jack Sanborn, Jon Dietzen, Kendric Pryor, Collin Wilder, Graham Mertz, and Jalen Berger. Even though the video mostly shows players doing drills, it does feature a nice catch from wide receiver A.J. Abbott over cornerback Dean Engram in the endzone.

Although Wisconsin may not yet be practicing in full pads, seeing photos from practice makes me extremely excited for the start of the season. Hopefully, there will be more clips and news from practice in the coming weeks to give a better idea of what the team will look like this season.

The Wisconsin defense ranked in the top five in power five of this stat by PFF

Last year, the Wisconsin defense was nothing short of amazing for most of the season. They had star players in key positions like Chris Orr at linebacker, Zack Baun at edge rusher, as well as Eric Burrell and Reggie Pearson at safety.

Last year, the Wisconsin defense was nothing short of amazing for most of the season. They had star players in key positions like Chris Orr at linebacker, Zack Baun at edge rusher, as well as Eric Burrell and Reggie Pearson at safety.

Pro Football Focus tweeted the top five power five defenses last season in defensive touchdowns. Wisconsin ranked at fourth tied with the Oregon Ducks at four defensive touchdowns behind Missouri and Utah with five, and Illinois with six. Wisconsin had 21 total turnovers with 11 interceptions and 10 fumble recoveries that led to a plus-three turnover margin overall for the Badgers.

The Badgers defense has been consistently rated highly by analysts and other coaches, yet it is a very underrated aspect of this Wisconsin team. This team even had three big parts of their defense from last season return for this year in Reggie Pearson, Jack Sanborn, and Eric Burrell before the postponement of the season. It will be tough to not watch them play this fall, but it will be promising to see how some of our recent highly rated recruits perform in the coming years.

Badger linebacker on the watch list for the 2020 Chuck Bednarik Award

The watch list for the 2020 Chuck Bednarik Award–the award given to the defensive player of the year in college football–dropped today…

The watch list for the 2020 Chuck Bednarik Award–the award given to the defensive player of the year in college football–dropped today and Wisconsin junior linebacker Jack Sanborn was included on the list.

Sanborn will be looking to become the first Badger to ever win the award in its 26 year history, that obviously if the Wisconsin Badgers are able to play football this fall.

The Illinois native enters the season after an impressive 2019 campaign during which he recorded 80 tackles, nine tackles-for-loss, 5.5 sacks, three interceptions and one forced fumble.

With Chris Orr now gone to the NFL Sanborn is in line to become the “quarterback” on defensive and lead Jim Leonhard’s unit as they try to recreate what was an impressive 2019 campaign.

Notable names to recently win the award include Ohio State’s Chase Young, Alabama’s Minkah Fitzpatrick, Pittsburgh’s Aaron Donald, LSU’s Tyrann Mathieu and Patrick Peterson and Nebraska’s Ndamukong Suh.

Four Badgers included in College Football News’ preseason All-Big Ten team

College Football News released their preseason All-Big Ten team this week and four Badgers were included in their squad…

College Football News released their preseason All-Big Ten team this week and four Badgers were included in their squad.

They four are tackle Logan Bruss, defensive lineman Isaiahh Loudermilk, linebacker Jack Sanborn and punt returner Jack Dunn.

This after Paul Chryst had three 2019 end-of-year all-conference players in running back Jonathan Taylor, center Tyler Biadasz and linebacker Zack Baun.

The outlet also predicted each game in the Big Ten schedule and had the Badgers finishing the season at 10-2 (7-2 Big Ten) with losses coming at Michigan and at Iowa.

So, if their record prediction and All-Big Ten nods are any indication, College Football News believes the Badgers will have little trouble recreating the production of Jonathan Taylor, Quintez Cephus, Chris Orr, Zack Baun and others as they look to finally get over the hump and win a Big Ten championship.

The five most important players on the 2020 Wisconsin Badgers

The 2020 college football season is right around the corner and teams around the country have began their in-person preseason programs…

The 2020 college football season is right around the corner and teams around the country have began their in-person preseason programs.

The Wisconsin Badgers, one of those teams holding weight room workouts, head into 2020 without many of their key contributors and most important players from the 2019 unit, those being Jonathan Taylor, Chris Orr, Tyler Biadasz and Zack Baun to name a few.

If you’ve been a college football fan for more than two years, though, you know that the key to a program succeeding year-in and year-out is having new guys come and fill the shoes of departed players.

Here, in order, are my top-5 most important players on the 2020 Wisconsin Badgers.

 

No. 5: Running back [Insert name here]

Syndication: Unknown
Badgers running back Nakia Watson pushes Michigan State safety Xavier Henderson aside on 19-yard run in the first half. NCAA Football Michigan State At Wisconsin. Credit: Mike De Sisti, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel-Imagn Content Services, LLC

The Badgers enter 2020 with Jonathan Taylor’s 2255 scrimmage yards and 26 total touchdowns gone to the NFL and big shoes to fill.

But that’s what the Badgers do, cycle in running backs like it’s been the same player all along.

On Twitter yesterday I saw the perfect description of what the Wisconsin running back system is:

“Wisconsin running backs don’t graduate – they just burn up like a Phoenix and are reborn with a new name and immediate eligibility.” I could not have chosen better words.

Now the only real question Paul Chryst and his staff have is who will their Phoenix be this year–Nakia Watson or Jalen Berger.

No matter who is the starter or who leads the team in carries, though, the position will be a pivotal one to the team’s success this year (as it is every year) because of the way Wisconsin plays football.

Normally the running back position isn’t one of the most valuable on the team–as in some cases much of their success can be attributed to offensive line play and the quarterback’s ability to not let the defense stack the box.

For the Badgers, though, an offense without a ground game and a great running back always seems to be no offense at all.

Chryst and offensive coordinator Joe Rudolph will need Watson or Berger to carry the load and (make a step towards being able to) recreate Taylor’s insane production.

 

Next…No. 4 who is getting some NFL love before he enters his senior season

College Football News predicts Wisconsin football’s win total in 2020

A look at the Badgers in 2020 from CFN

[lawrence-newsletter]College Football News has been tackling season previews for major conference contenders as the season inches closer. Wisconsin football’s preview was put up a few weeks ago, and features keys to success and a prediction for how the Badgers season will play out: College Football News Wisconsin Preview 

Wisconsin, according to CFN, are projected to be a nine win team. The main reason is the fact that they have a tough schedule, with very little automatic wins included. It is an interesting schedule for the Badgers, and something we will dive deeper into as the season approaches here at BadgersWire. Although the Badgers do not have a game on the schedule that should be a surefire loss, they also do not have many definite wins. Even early season home contests against Indiana and App. State are no walks in the park.

It will be intriguing to see how the Badgers season does play out, but if the CFN prediction of a three-loss regular season holds true, 2020 could be an up and down year in Madison.

 

Badger linebacker on the watch list for the 2020 Lott Impact Trophy

The watch list for the 2020 Lott Impact Trophy has been released and Wisconsin junior linebacker Jack Sanborn is a member of the list…

The watch list for the 2020 Lott Impact Trophy has been released and Wisconsin junior linebacker Jack Sanborn is a member of the list.

The trophy–one first awarded to Georgia linebacker David Pollack in 2004–is given to the defensive IMPACT player of the year, with IMPACT being an acronym for Integrity, Maturity, Performance, Academics, Community and Tenacity.

Were Sanborn to receive the honor he would become the first Badger to do so, and the second ever, after J.J. Watt was the recipient in 2010.

Other notable names on the list of winners include Alabama and long-time Philadelphia Eagle linebacker DeMeco Ryans, Boston College linebacker Luke Kuechly, UCLA linebackers Anthony Barr and Eric Kendricks, Michigan linebacker/safety Jabrill Peppers and most recently Auburn defensive tackle Derrick Brown.

Sanborn enters his junior season after leading the team with 80 tackles last year but without fellow defensive stars in Chris Orr and Zack Baun alongside him. If his production from his first year as a starter is any indication, the Deer Park, Illinois native could be in for an impressive campaign as the quarterback and leader of Jim Leonhard’s defense.

The one stat on defense that will define Wisconsin’s 2020 season

Last month I laid out the one stat on offense that will define the Badgers’ 2020 season. Today, we’re looking at the defensive side of…

Last month I laid out the one stat on offense that will define the Badgers’ 2020 season. Today, we’re looking at the defensive side of the football and finding the one area that will dictate whether Jim Leonhard’s defense is able to repeat their impressive 2019 campaign.

Badger fans know well that the 2018 season was a disappointing one on the defensive side of the football. A combination of youth in the secondary and injuries to key contributors handcuffed a unit that ended up finishing the season with more than 150 rushing yards-per-game allowed and almost 350 total yards-per-game allowed.

The 2019 unit, then, bested the squad from the year before in nearly every category, finishing the year only allowing 101 rush yards-per-game, a 51.7 completion percentage, 187 pass yards-per-game and 288 total yards-per-game.

What was the biggest difference between the two teams, aside from many of the key contributors returning for the 2019 season?

Two things that in the big picture are directly related to each other.

No. 1: a full 1.1-yard difference in their opponents’ rush yards-per-attempt.

No. 2: a more-than 10 percent difference in the rate at which their opponents converted their third down chances.

Like Wisconsin’s offensive attack, Leonhard’s defense prides itself on being tough against the run and controlling the opponents’ ground game.

In 2018, for various reasons, the defense got ran over and, as a result, saw the entire field open up for opposing teams to use run fakes and get young corners to make mistakes on the outside.

Specifically, that year Leonhard’s defense gave up 4.4 yards-per-attempt on the ground and, as mentioned earlier, 155 rush yards-per-game.

Those tallies are both the highest any Badger defense has allowed since the 2005 squad gave up 4.5 yards-per-rush and 165.8 yards-per-game on the ground. For reference, since 2005 the Badger defense have allowed more than 140 rush yards-per-game one time other than 2018 and more than 130 just three times.

Comparing it now to 2019, the team gave up just 3.3 yards-per-attempt and 99.8 yards-per-game on the ground, both impressive numbers by anybody’s standards and a massive improvement from the previous year.

This improvement played a large role in the 6.5-point difference in opponents scoring-per-game and, therefore, the difference between a 10-4 record (with two losses coming against Ohio State, one of the best teams statistically in the last 15 years) and an 8-5 record.

If that was too many numbers and not enough about what it meant to the unit specifically, the insane rushing numbers the Badgers gave up in 2018 handcuffed the young secondary, kept the opposing offense on the field, allowed opponents to control the game like the Badgers so often do with their rushing attack and, finally, allowed teams to have success in stat No. 2 that will be so important to the 2020 season: third down conversion percentage.

The two stats are correlated because when an opposing team is able to run the ball in early-down situations and set up third-and-short chances, their conversion rate will understandably be a lot higher.

And what has been made clear for years now, specially in the Badgers’ case, winning the time of possession battle and controlling the game with the ball in your offense’s hands is how you win football games.

The first step in this is getting the defense off the field by stopping the opponent on third down.

I mentioned the difference above but, specifically, the 2018 defense gave up a 37.43 percent conversion rate on third down. The 2019 team? 27.27 percent.

This ten percent increase equated to the total of 19 extra conversions by the opponent, or 19 more chances for teams to score and keep Jonathan Taylor and the Badger offense off of the field.

Does stopping the opponent on third down start with stopping the run on first and second down? Absolutely. But a ten percent difference is significant no matter how long the conversions are.

Looking forward to 2020 now, Leonhard will need to try to recreate the production of now-NFL linebackers Chris Orr and Zack Baun and find ways to stop opposing offenses without those two players leading the defense.

Will it be an easy task to find 24 sacks, 33.5 tackles-for-loss and 153 total tackles? No, it won’t. But on the bright side the unit now has future-NFL linebacker Jack Sanborn quarterbacking the defense, a great run-stopping safety tandem in Eric Burrell and Reggie Pearson and an up-and-coming defensive tackle Keeanu Benton who showed flashes of absolute dominance last season as only a true freshman.

The phrase “ball control” sounds at times like a secret Big Ten saying that really just means play old-school football and shame the Big 12 and PAC 12 for not playing a lick of defense.

It really matters though and, as pointed out above, was one of the biggest differences between a struggling 2018 defense and an absolutely dominant 2019 one (again taking into account that their worst performances came against Ohio State, one of the best offenses statistically in college football history).

Only time will tell but if the 2020 squad is able to recreate the production from last season and give quarterback Jack Coan more chances to put points on the board, we could be in for a special season in Madison,

A Badger linebacker named a top-5 2021 NFL Draft prospect at his position

ProFootballFocus tweeted the top five linebacker prospects for the 2021 NFL Draft and Wisconsin inside linebacker Jack Sanborn was…

ProFootballFocus tweeted the top five linebacker prospects for the 2021 NFL Draft and Wisconsin inside linebacker Jack Sanborn was No. 5 on their list.

PFF hasn’t been the only outlet showing love to the Illinois native as TheDraftNetwork.com has him as the No. 68 overall prospect for the upcoming draft and No. 6 at his position.

Sanborn is only a junior, though, so hearing his name called early next April is not a forgone conclusion.

After seeing a massive freshman-sophomore year jump in production after winning a starting job last season, Sanborn is in for a monster year in Jim Leonhard’s defense after Chris Orr and Zack Baun–two linebackers and leaders of the unit–graduated and entered the NFL.

Specifically, Sanborn played sparingly as a freshman and finished the year with four games played, seven tackles and one forced fumble.

Last season, then, he started alongside Orr at middle linebacker where he played in 14 games and recorded 80 tackles, nine tackles-for-loss, 5.5 sacks, three interceptions and one forced fumble.

If PFF and TheDraftNetwork’s way-too-early NFL Draft analysis are any indication, those numbers could be still on the rise as Sanborn steps into the role as the leader and “quarterback” of the defense this season.

FPI gives the Badgers a great chance to reach the 2020 College Football Playoff

ESPN’s Seth Walder published an article this morning which looked at the recent Football Power Index projections and summarized what…

ESPN’s Seth Walder published an article this morning which looked at the recent Football Power Index projections and summarized what they say about who is most likely to reach the 2020 College Football Playoff.

Not surprisingly the top-3 teams are Clemson, Alabama and Ohio State.

The fourth team in the ranking though? The Wisconsin Badgers.

That’s right. FPI thinks the Badgers have the fourth-highest shot to make the CFP ahead of teams including LSU, Georgia, Oklahoma and Penn State.

Specifically, FPI gives Wisconsin a 34 percent chance to reach the playoff and a 6 percent chance to make the National Championship Game.

What is the reason behind these rankings seeing the Badgers reverse their recent late-season fortunes and finally break through into the playoff?

The first is the return of quarterback Jack Coan, the nation’s No. 8-ranked passer in terms of QBR in 2019 and No. 7 in completion percentage.

The second is the return of the team’s entire secondary and defensive line production from a season ago. As outlined in the projection for coach Paul Chryst‘s 2020 defensive depth chart, the team is one of the most experienced and skilled in the nation on the defensive line and in the secondary. Furthermore, the linebacking core, led by junior Jack Sanborn, is one of the team’s strengths every season even when they lose 1-2 players a year at the position to the NFL.

Other factors playing into the ranking, as noted by Walder, include the Badgers avoiding having to play Ohio State during the regular season and an otherwise tough but manageable schedule, one which allows them to still be in the running for the CFP even if they were to have one loss after falling to the Buckeyes in the Big Ten Championship.

National Championships aren’t usually in the preseason projection for the Wisconsin football team. This year though, with the experience at quarterback and on defense, the talent all over the field and a schedule that caters to a favorable national ranking, a College Football Playoff appearance will be in the sights for Chryst and his team.