Wisconsin top defensive lineman likely to miss entire 2024 season

Wisconsin top defensive lineman likely to miss entire 2024 season

Wisconsin will likely play the 2024 season without veteran defensive lineman James Thompson Jr.

Reports surfaced last week that Thompson would be out indefinitely with an upper-body injury. Confirmation came on Monday during Luke Fickell’s game-week press conference for Week 1 vs. Western Michigan.

Related: Wisconsin releases two-deep depth chart for Week 1 vs. Western Michigan

“I don’t know that we’ll have (James Thompson Jr.) for the year,” Fickell said. He specified the veteran defensive lineman had surgery last week and has a 4 to 5 month recovery timeline.

Thompson’s injury is a significant blow to a critical position on the Wisconsin defense. The redshirt senior totaled 29 tackles, 5 1/2 tackles for loss, three sacks and two pass deflections in 2023. He was one of the team’s better linemen last season and was expected to break out further in 2024.

The Badgers added transfers Elijah Hills (Albany) and Brandon Lane (Stephen F. Austin) at the position this offseason. The group is led by those two, plus returning contributors Curt Neal, Ben Barten and Cade McDonald. The Badgers were set to go six-deep at the position before losing Thompson,  their No. 1 option. The team’s depth and performance both take massive hits with this news.

Wisconsin’s first game-week depth chart lists Neal and Barten as the two starters and McDonald and Hills as the primary backups. Lane is sure to play a big role as will true freshman Dillan Johnson.

Defensive coordinator Mike Tressel may need to get creative to offset the loss of Thompson. That, or someone within the room emerges as difference-making option. The team will need the group to perform with preseason No. 3 Oregon, No. 5 Alabama, No. 8 Penn State, No. 23 USC and No. 25 Iowa on the schedule.

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How much are tickets for Wisconsin football vs. Western Michigan?

Wisconsin’s Friday night opener against Western Michigan still has cheap tickets available:

The Wisconsin Badgers open their 2024 football season on Friday night against the Western Michigan Broncos.

The game begins a pivotal 2024 season for Luke Fickell and his program. The schedule is a gauntlet, though the Week 1 matchup projects to be an easy one.

Related: 10 reasons Wisconsin fans should be optimistic or pessimistic entering 2024 season

Wisconsin’s opening games against Western Michigan and South Dakota are important tune-up opportunities before Alabama visits town in Week 3. Those easier matchups are also great opportunities to see the team play. Ticket prices for the Alabama game, road trip to USC and home battles with Penn State and Oregon are all pricey.

Wisconsin’s Friday night opener against Western Michigan, meanwhile, still has cheap tickets available:

Kickoff: 9 p.m. ET, 8 p.m. CT (Friday night)

Lowest price: $6

Top price: $786

Check out all available tickets on StubHub.

For more, here is how much tickets are going for on StubHub for every Wisconsin football game this season.

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Wisconsin opens 2024 football season against No. 7 team in MAC preseason poll

Wisconsin opens 2024 football season against No. 7 team in MAC preseason poll

Wisconsin football opens its 2024 football season on Friday, Aug. 30 at home against the MAC’s Western Michigan Broncos.

Western Michigan enters 2024 after consecutive losing seasons — 5-7 in 2022 and 4-8 in 2023. It also does so ranked No. 7 in the recent MAC preseason coaches poll.

Related: Reasons why Wisconsin football will or won’t make College Football Playoff in 2024

The Broncos (60 votes) were ranked behind Eastern Michigan (64 votes), Ohio (81 votes), Northern Illinois (92 votes), Bowling Green (92 votes), Toledo (109 votes) and Miami (OH) (119 votes).

Overall, the team enters the 2024 season as ESPN SP+’s No. 106-ranked group in the nation, with the No. 99-ranked offense and No. 96-ranked defense. It shouldn’t be much of a challenge for a supposedly improved Wisconsin Badgers team.

Western Michigan is one of two easier nonconference opponents on the Badgers 2024 schedule — the other being South Dakota (FCS). Luke Fickell’s team then begins a gauntlet schedule with a nonconference game against Alabama before a Big Ten slate that includes games at USC, vs. Penn State, at Iowa, vs. Oregon and at Nebraska.

Starting the season strong is a must for Fickell and the 2024 Badgers. Not only is a 2-0 start a requirement, but the team must look improved overall and ready for the upcoming challenging slate of games.

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

Best images from the Kentucky baseball win over Western Michigan

Here are some of the best images from Kentucky baseball’s 10 – 8 victory over Western Michigan.

On Friday, the Kentucky baseball team began their NCAA Tournament journey. After winning a share of the SEC regular season championship, they were awarded the number two overall seed and a spot hosting one of the regionals.

Their first game was against the Western Michigan Broncos, and they got a 10 – 8 victory to kick things off. They offense was very good, as it’s been most of the year, but the pitching struggled in the middle innings, giving up all eight runs in a two-inning span.

Related: Kentucky lands transfer Scott Rouse

Kentucky has never made it to a College World Series, and has a team capable of making a run this year. They have an offense capable of exploding in any game, but will need their pitching to hold up.

Still, they started this NCAA Tournament with a win. It was a game with lots of offense on both sides, but the Cats came out on top. Here are some of the best images from the game.

Kentucky baseball opens regional with a win over Western Michigan

Kentucky baseball opened the Lexington regional with a 10 – 8 win over Western Michigan.

Kentucky baseball had a great season, and earned the number two overall seed in the NCAA Tournament. They also get to host a regional site in Lexington. The games began on Friday, and Kentucky got a win over Western Michigan, but it wasn’t easy.

The Wildcats are, of course, the top seed in Lexington, and they got to open things up with the fourth seed of the region in Western Michigan. The winner would play the winner of the second game of the regional.

Related: Multiple Wildcats named to All-SEC teams

Kentucky got off to a great start on Friday. A James McCoy homerun in the second inning got them out to a 3-run lead, then the Cats added four more in the third. It would be 8 – 0 after four.

In the fifth, Kentucky’s pitching began to falter. The Broncos scored five runs in that inning and Dominic Niman was pulled. Fortunately, the Wildcats answered with two runs of their own in the bottom of the fifth, because Western Michigan scored three more in the sixth. That would be all, though, and Kentucky would hold on for a 10 – 8 final.

McCoy had two hits and three RBIs for the Wildcats while Mitchell Daly drove in two. Kentucky’s pitching in the middle innings struggled badly, but the bullpen threw three scoreless to close the game out.

Betting line revealed for Wisconsin football’s Week 1 matchup vs. Western Michigan

Do you like the #Badgers to cover in Week 1?

Wisconsin football opened as a 23.5-point favorite in its Week 1, 2024 contest against Western Michigan, odds via DraftKings Sportsbook.

The game kicks off a gauntlet schedule for the 2024 Badgers. The team faces Alabama in non-conference play before Big Ten matchups at USC and Iowa, plus home against Nebraska, Penn State and Oregon.

Related: Which Big Ten football team has the toughest 2024 schedule?

Its Week 1 contest against the Western Michigan Broncos will be one of the easiest on the schedule.

The Broncos went 4-8 in 2023 in head coach Lance Taylor’s first year at the helm. His team is currently ranked No. 106 in the nation by ESPN SP+ entering the 2024 season.

Luke Fickell and the Badgers will have something to prove in Week 1 after a disappointing 7-6 2023 season. Phil Longo’s offense needs to take a jump in year two, and will rely upon veteran transfer quarterback Tyler Van Dyke to do so.

Week 1 against one of the nation’s lowest-ranked opponents will be a good opportunity to start the season strong. The opening betting line reflects that matchup.

DraftKings is yet to release an over-under.

[gambcom-standard rankid=”3005″ ]

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

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CBS Sports links QB Brendan Sullivan to Iowa via Tim Lester’s Western Michigan ties

Could Brendan Sullivan become an Iowa Hawkeye? CBS Sports thinks the signs from Tim Lester’s background at Western Michigan could make it so.

Let’s call a spade a spade: Cade McNamara has a mighty uphill climb to return to his true form after two season-ending injuries in each of the last two years he has played. His mobility during spring ball was suspect at best even with roughly four months before the season begins.

The Iowa Hawkeyes need quarterback depth and possibly even someone to push for the starting job. After Deacon Hill and Tommy Poholsky hit the transfer portal, Marco Lainez is alone alongside McNamara in the QB room.

Lainez has a high upside, but he has very limited playing time: mop up duty in last season’s bowl game. He is getting first team reps while McNamara rehabs, but it could be a stretch to imagine him being thrust into the starting role.

That leaves Iowa with a need for QB depth at worst and a hidden gem to take over the starting role at best. While it is late in the game to bring a quarterback in, one in the transfer portal has ties to Iowa and could make sense. CBS Sports believes Northwestern transfer Brendan Sullivan could rekindle his connection with Tim Lester and join the Hawkeyes.

If I had to bet on a likely outcome, I’d look at Brendan Sullivan. Sullivan was viewed as the likely favorite to win Northwestern’s starting QB job this fall but made a surprising decision to enter the portal. Sullivan is from Michigan, and when he was still a three-star prospect going through the recruitment process, one of the schools that offered was Western Michigan. Western Michigan’s head coach at the time? Current Iowa offensive coordinator Tim Lester. – Tom Fornelli, CBS Sports

Relationships matter now more than ever in college football with the transfer portal. Sullivan has that with Lester. Obviously there was an interest from Lester to bring Sullivan to Western Michigan. That feeling could still exist and even be exacerbated by Iowa’s glaring QB need.

Brendan Sullivan was the No. 49 QB in the class of 2021 on the 247Sports composite. Last year, Sullivan was 63 of 99 for 714 yards with six touchdowns to two interceptions. He is a career 68.7% passer with a two-to-one touchdown-to-interception ratio. He also has ran for 257 yards in his collegiate career.

Lester’s new offense can be enhanced by a quarterback with more mobility. Sullivan is objectively more mobile than McNamara and more experienced than Lainez. Could the Wildcat be headed to Iowa City.

Follow us @HawkeyesWire on X and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Iowa news, notes and opinions.

Follow Riley on X: @rileydonald7

Unpacking Future Packers: No. 31, Western Michigan Edge Marshawn Kneeland

Up next in the Unpacking Future Packers draft preview series is Western Michigan edge rusher Marshawn Kneeland.

The Unpacking Future Packers Countdown is a countdown of 100 prospects that could be selected by the Green Bay Packers in the 2024 NFL draft.

Rashan Gary, Lukas Van Ness, Preston Smith, Kingsley Enagabare, Brenton Cox Jr. That’s a solid foundation of edge rushers that the Green Bay Packers have in place. 

Even with those pieces in place, a team can never have enough talented edge rushers. That’s why it would not be shocking to see Brian Gutekunst add another body to the mix during the 2024 NFL Draft.

A potential target on Day 2 of the upcoming draft is Marshawn Kneeland. The Western Michigan defensive end checks in at No. 31 in the Unpacking Future Packers Countdown.

A Michigan native, Kneeland recorded two sacks during his first season on campus. The following season Kneeland recorded 8.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks. During the 2022 campaign, Kneeland recorded 10 tackles for loss and 1.5 sacks. In his final season as a Bronco, Kneeland recorded 57 tackles, 7.5 tackles for loss and 4.5 sacks. 

Along with being a standout on the gridiron at Godwin Heights High School, Kneeland competed in track and field. The Western Michigan product showcased his athleticism at the NFL Scouting Combine when he posted a 35.5-inch vertical, a 9-11 broad jump, a short shuttle of 4.18 and a 3-cone time of 7.02. 

“Marshawn Kneeland’s greatest strength is his pure athleticism at the defensive end position,” Steve Helwick, a contributor for SB Nation’s Hustle Belt, said. “He moves incredibly fast for his 6 ‘3”, 267-pound frame and possesses top-notch agility for the position in this draft class. Kneeland’s sack totals at Western Michigan may not jump out on the page, but he catapulted his draft stock by exhibiting one of the best combine performances in Indianapolis, earning elite grades in a multitude of events including vertical jump, broad jump, 40-yard dash, shuttle, and 3-cone drill. These types of athletes aren’t exactly a dime a dozen, and his combine performance showed why Kneeland could potentially land in the second round.”

Kneeland is the Energizer Bunny on steroids. He rushes the quarterback with non-stop energy. He has powerful, active hands that he utilizes to get into the chest plate of offensive linemen and drive them back with his power. To go along with his 4.5 sacks, Kneeland recorded 37 pressures this past season. 

“Kneeland offers an impressive mixture of speed and power as a pass rusher, showing an excellent ability to explode through blockers with his leg drive,” Helwick said. “Kneeland placed quarterbacks under duress quite often at Western Michigan last fall but didn’t always finish the job. Possessing a lower sack total than other defensive ends in the conference landed him on the All-MAC Second Team as opposed to the First Team, but he has all the tools available to improve his pass-rushing at the next level. Using his power to follow through and finish tackles, as well as enhancing his technique can make him an all-around lethal defensive end upon reaching the NFL. Considering all the pressures he generated in Kalamazoo, his potential to thrive as a pass rusher is clear.”

Kneeland is powerful at the point of attack and stays balanced. He sets a firm edge and holds his ground. He does a good job of using his long arms to keep himself clean and forklift offensive linemen out of the way. Over the past two seasons, Kneeland recorded 17.5 tackles for loss and 59 run stops (PFF). 

“Containing the run is Kneeland’s calling card on the field,” Helwick said. “Kneeland knows how to set the edge very well, and with his top-tier speed for a defensive end, he can keep pace with running backs directed toward the boundary. He’s never really out of a play, showing tremendous ability to recover from a good block or being out of position. The combination of speed and power makes him a stellar tackler against a wide range of running back archetypes, and he demonstrated that facet of his game with 57 tackles last season and 26 tackles for loss across his last three years at Western Michigan.”

Fit with the Packers

The 2024 season could be Smith’s swan song in Green Bay. That will open the door for Van Ness to slide into Smith’s starting role opposite Gary. 

With that potential departure in mind, Gutekunst may add another edge rusher to the mix to make for a more seamless transition. 

Kneeland is adept at putting pressure on the quarterback and is equally as impactful against the run. 

“By drafting Kneeland, an NFL team gets a fantastic foundation of a defensive end to work with,” Helwick said. “Kneeland is exceptional in his speed, agility, strength, and overall athleticism. As previously mentioned, he is a very disruptive run defender and opposing running backs were very aware of his eternal motor in college. There are still refinements needed to his pass-rushing technique such as bend and hand placement, but those are fixable with granular coaching and mentoring at the NFL level. Overall, there is a lot of promise within Kneeland and he can immediately bolster a team’s run defense, and long-term, he can thrive as a premier pass rusher.”

The Packers need to shore up their run defense. That’s a tale as old as time. Kneeland could help remedy Green Bay’s leaky run defense. The Western Michigan product would also give Jeff Hafley another player who can hunt the quarterback. 

With the current roster makeup, Kneeland would likely play sparingly during his rookie season. Fast forward a year and those snaps could see a massive uptick if the 2024 campaign is indeed Smith’s final season in Green Bay. 

With his size, strength and relentless play style, Kneeland has the makings of a disruptive force. Given the fact that the Packers have four picks on Day 2 of the draft, Kneeland could be a potential target in that range, as the Packers look to build a dominant front seven. 

Western Michigan DE Marshawn Kneeland set to visit Jaguars

The Jaguars are reportedly using one of their top 30 visits to bring in Western Michigan defensive end Marshawn Kneeland for a closer look.

Western Michigan pass rusher Marshawn Kneeland is set to meet with the Jacksonville Jaguars on a Top 30 visit, according to Ryan Fowler of The Draft Network.

Per Fowler, Kneeland has already visited with the Kansas City Chiefs and has visits scheduled with the Jaguars, New Orleans Saints, Buffalo Bills, San Francisco 49ers, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Carolina Panthers.

While every NFL team had access to just about every prospect at the 2024 NFL Scouting Combine, each club is allowed to bring in 30 players for a “Top 30” visit.

Kneeland has no shortage of interest after racking up 28 tackles for loss during his collegiate career at Western Michigan. At the combine, he turned heads with a 119-inch broad jump, 35.5-inch vertical jump, and 4.75 40-yard dash at 6’3, 267 pounds.

The Jaguars are in need of more pass rushing talent with both Dawuane Smoot and K’Lavon Chaisson set to become free agents. While the duo of Josh Allen and Travon Walker combined for 27.5 sacks, the rest of the team combined couldn’t hit half that total.

Last week, Daniel Jeremiah of NFL Network ranked Kneeland as the No. 48 prospect in the 2024 NFL draft.

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Saints schedule Top-30 visit with Western Michigan combine standout

The New Orleans Saints have scheduled a Top-30 draft visit with Marshawn Kneeland, an NFL Scouting Combine standout from Western Michigan:

The New Orleans Saints have scheduled their second Top-30 prospect visit of the 2024 NFL draft, after lining one up previously with Northern Iowa defensive tackle Khristian Boyd. Next up on the docket is Western Michigan defensive lineman Marshawn Kneeland, per Ryan Fowler of Bleacher Report.

Kneeland was one of the 321 total players invited to this year’s NFL Scouting Combine and was also a participant at the 2024 Senior Bowl. At the combine, Kneeland weighed in at 6-foot-3 and 267 pounds and stood out as an exceptional athlete in pretty much every event. He ranked highly amongst his peers at the defensive end position:

  • 40-yard dash: 4.75 seconds (19th)
  • 10-yard split: 1.66 seconds (tied-18th)
  • Vertical jump: 35.50 inches (8th)
  • Broad jump: 9 feet 11 inches (T-14th)
  • 3-cone drill: 7.02 seconds (1st by 0.28 seconds)
  • 20-yard shuttle: 4.18 seconds (1st)
  • Bench Press: 21 reps (T-8th)

It is worth noting that he has been listed at defensive tackle in other rankings, which would only help his case. In terms of Relative Athletic Score, a measure created by Kent Lee Platte, Kneeland ranked 75th out of 1,620 defensive tackles from 1987 to present day, with a 9.54 out of 10.00.

Kneeland is an extremely disruptive defensive lineman with 37 total pressures, 6 sacks, 38 tackles, and 2 forced fumbles this past season. He also has NFL size for a defensive lineman, a similar frame to Cameron Jordan who is listed at 6-foot-4 and 287 pounds. Kneeland will absolutely be an intriguing prospect in this draft process, and he may see a substantial rise in draft stock due to his combine success.

He also has other Top-30 visits scheduled with the Kansas City Chiefs, Buffalo Bills, San Francisco 49ers, Jacksonville Jaguars, Tampa Bay Buccaneers, and Carolina Panthers, so it is extremely clear that he is garnering attention in the pre-draft process. He’s currently seen as a second-round draft prospect.

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