Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Watson, Shaw make case for spot in tailback rotation

- Jeff Potrykus

MADISON – One week into preseason camp, Jonathan Taylor and Garrett Groshek appear to be Wisconsin’s top two tailbacks – talented, tough and dependable.

The No. 1 question regarding the tailback spot appears to be who will emerge as the third option?

UW practiced in full pads for the first time in camp Thursday and the staff looked at both fifth-year senior Bradrick Shaw and redshirt freshman Nakia Watson.

Shaw, who hasn’t played since suffering a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee in the 2017 regular-season finale, got some work early. Defenders tried to avoid taking runners and receivers to the ground so Shaw didn’t absorb full hits. He appeared to move much more forcefully and confidently than in the spring, though.

UW coach Paul Chryst said before the opening of camp the staff would be cautious with Shaw, and Thursday was proof of that. Still, it was a good first step in Shaw’s long comeback attempt.

Watson, who got off to a slow start in the spring before showing confidence in the final week, ran hard again Thursday.

“He definitely needed it,” linebacker Chris Orr said of Watson taking a redshirt year last season. “I would say he is

now.

“Last year you could tell he was kind of thinking and trying to find the perfect lane. Now he is just putting his nose down and running, the type of running you saw in him as a recruit before he got here.”

Loudermilk returns; Rand sits

Defensive end Isaiaah Loudermilk, who missed two practices after suffering a minor injury to his left arm, participat­ed in a limited role Thursday.

Meanwhile, fellow defensive end Garrett Rand was given a day off. Rand missed the 2018 season after suffering an Achilles injury in summer workouts.

“I’m taking care of my body today,” Rand said, adding his Achilles felt fine. “I was feeling a little sore so I (thought): ‘I’ll just back off for a bit.’

“It’s not the season yet so I don’t want to screw anything up because I’ve been out for a full year. I don’t want that to happen again. We’re just being safe.”

New-look offensive line

Center Tyler Biadasz and left tackle Cole Van Lanen, both held out of spring practice while recovering from off-season surgery, were limited Thursday.

That forced offensive line coach Joe Rudolph to reconfigure his No. 1 line.

That unit had Tyler Beach at left tackle, Kayden Lyles at left guard, Jason Erdmann at center, Josh Seltzner at right guard and Logan Bruss at right tackle.

Extra points

❚ Keeanu Benton, a 6-foot-4, 315pound freshman from Janesville Craig High School, got plenty of work as the No. 2 nose tackle.

❚ Freshman linebacker Leo Chenal has effectively used his power on blitzes. He used quickness during a one-onone pass-rush drill. Working against Seltzner, Chenal appeared to use a swim move to avoid Seltzner’s attempted block and breezed into the backfield.

❚ Safety Eric Burrell had an active day in drills and 11-on-11 work. He used a bull-rush to overpower tight end Jake Ferguson in a one-on-one pass-rush drill and defended three passes. He broke up a pass from Chase Wolf and intercepte­d a pass thrown by Jack Coan and another from Graham Mertz.

❚ Safety Scott Nelson, Orr and Groshek made up the trio of blockers in front of punter Anthony Lotti during practice.

 ?? RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Bradrick Shaw missed the 2018 season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.
RICK WOOD / MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Bradrick Shaw missed the 2018 season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.

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