Dayton Daily News

No. 4 Wisconsin’s defense is a work in progress

- By Genero C. Armas

The bar is MADISON, WIS. — set high for the Wisconsin defense.

The roster might turn over, but the fourth-ranked Badgers’ D rarely crumbles. Since 2013, Wisconsin is second nationally in both scoring defense (16.1 points) and total defense (282.6 yards).

But to return to that level this year, Wisconsin might need some young or inexperien­ced players to grow up quickly. So far, coach Paul Chryst likes what he has seen in the preseason.

The first test for the team’s unusual defensive blend of top-flight talent up the middle and untested replacemen­ts on the edges comes Friday night against Western Kentucky in the season opener.

“I like what the guys have done. There’s a group that’s played a lot of football on defense that we have an idea of what to expect,” Chryst said after practice on Sunday. “And then we’ll have a number of players where this will be their first snaps.

“I feel like they’re confident and ready for that next challenge, but it is a challenge.”

Wisconsin will rely on a playmaking core up the middle for veteran stability, starting with preseason All-American inside linebacker T.J. Edwards. A key cog since his freshman year, Edwards has more starts (39) than anyone else on defense.

Wisconsin is breaking in new starters at defensive end, outside linebacker and cornerback. At safety, promising redshirt freshman Scott Nelson takes over a starting job alongside four-year starter D’Cota Dixon. Even quarterbac­k Alex Hornibrook has noticed how well Nelson has played in camp.

“Scott’s a playmaker. He’s an opportunis­t,” Dixon said. “He’s much ahead of the game for his age.”

He’ll begin his college career as a starter, as will another redshirt freshman, cornerback Faion Hicks. Sophomore Caesar Williams, who played two games last season, was listed as the other starter on the season’s first depth chart.

Outside linebacker might have the smoothest transition with Andrew Van Ginkel and Zack Baun taking over as the starters. Both players have seen snaps as backups, and Van Ginkel showed his playmaking prowess late last season with a combined two intercepti­ons and a fumble recovery against Ohio State and Miami.

Senior nose tackle Olive Sagapolu, who regularly draws double teams, will anchor a line that will have redshirt freshmen Matt Henningsen and Kayden Lyles starting at end because of injuries to presumed starters Garrett Rand and Isaiahh Loudermilk. Rand is out for the year, while Loudermilk could be back for Big Ten play. Lyles was moved over from offensive line when camp started to help with depth.

It’s a work in progress, though the Badgers do have the luxury of a manageable nonconfere­nce schedule before the conference opener on Sept. 22 at Iowa.

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