Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Sexton shines in new role on O-line

Njongmeta came through a lot on his way to Badgers success

- Jeff Potrykus Maema Njongmeta Zac Bellman

MADISON – Entering his fifth season in the Wisconsin football program and expected to start for the second consecutiv­e season, Maema Njongmeta is armed with experience and hindsight.

“The lessons that I have learned and the person I have become,” the redshirt senior inside linebacker said, “it has been a blessing.”

There were times, however, when his journey from a freshman who was on the travel roster in 2019 to experience­d starter felt cursed.

Njongmeta’s time at UW has been laden with adversity

To review:

Njongmeta, a standout from Adlai E. Stevenson High School in Illinois, didn't play a game as a freshman in 2019 but traveled with the team because the staff wanted him to experience life on the road in the Big Ten.

The hope was that he would be a contributo­r in 2020. However, with COVID-19 delaying the start of the 2020 Big Ten season, Njongmeta endured a health scare.

He tested positive for COVID and doctors feared the virus had caused myocarditi­s, an inflammation of the heart muscle.

Doctors found Njongmeta had a sack of liquid around the heart, and he was eventually cleared to play.

“I happen to have that naturally,” he said. Neverthele­ss, Njongmeta played in just one game that season, the Duke's Mayo Bowl. He played in six games in 2021 but opened

Arrowhead senior Garrett Sexton committed to Penn State in April as a 6-foot-7, 270-pound offensive line prospect, an outcome even he could have not foreseen as a 6-5, 195-pound sophomore quarterbac­k.

The commitment to a Power 5 school after his junior season was the culminatio­n of a remarkably quick position shift to left tackle.

“It was all whirlwind there, but I'm excited about it,” Sexton said after Arrowhead's 21-14 victory over Marquette on Friday night.

The first time Warhawks head coach Matt Harris saw the true potential of his then-junior varsity quarterbac­k was on the basketball court after Sexton's sophomore football season. Harris said the tenacity with which Sexton played reminded him of one of his former players while coaching at

spring ball in 2022 on the No. 3 defense.

“I think it is a journey that has been a testament to God’s work in my life,” he said. “I mean, just coming in and traveling as a freshman and feeling really good about my career. And then the next year being sidelined for months with injury and feeling really bad about my career.

“The next year being uncertain if I would keep playing football, to last year in spring ball being third string and being super uncertain about football.”

Njongmeta gradually worked his way up the depth chart in 2022 and eventually started in 11 of 13 games. He endured some rough moments early in the season but finished as the team’s leading tackler with 48 solo stops and 95 total stops. His total of 11⁄ tackles for loss was the No. 2 mark on the team, behind outside linebacker Nick Herbig.

“Having a season like the one that I did,” he said, “I think my journey has been up. It’s been down. I just tried to stay constant through all of that and find things, like my faith, my family.”

Lead by word and deed? Njongmeta is comfortabl­e doing either

Njongmeta is expected to be in the starting lineup again this season, beginning with the Sept. 2 opener vs. visiting Buffalo.

A veteran who is loquacious and personable, Njongmeta is positioned to provide leadership in the locker room as well as on the field, particular­ly for younger players.

“I think he really is comfortabl­e in that role,” said defensive coordinato­r Mike

Tressel, who also coaches the inside linebacker­s. “He always has been a team leader. But that role has grown since he had as much success as he had on the field last year.

“He is continuing to improve his football IQ and instincts and experience. But don’t put too much pressure on yourself. Last year the expectatio­ns were…people didn’t really know who he was. Now you have a good year, your name is in the media a little bit and all of a sudden you can sometimes put a lot of pressure on yourself.

“Just work on relaxing and playing, and he is doing a good job of that.”

Njongmeta appears comfortabl­e chatting up anyone. During interviews he can playfully deflect any questions about his recent right-thumb injury for several minutes and quickly pivot to an informed discussion of the game he loves.

He is eager to lead in 2023.

“I think there is always power in being able to share your story,” he said. “But one thing I’ve learned is that you come in and there are so many guys who want to help you, but sometimes there are things you’ve just got to go through yourself.

“I remember I had guys who told me all these things that I now find myself telling other freshmen. You don’t listen and I don’t think it is a bad thing. I think there is a healthy amount of skepticism you should have when you’re a freshman.

“You can be there for the guys, but sometimes you’ve got to let them learn and then have them come back to you.

“And when they come back what do they generally say? Hey man, I should have listened to you.”

Njongmeta smiled after finishing that thought.

“It is maddening,” he said. “I get why my dad is bald, why he ripped his hair out.”

 ?? MIKE DE SISTI / THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Badgers linebacker Maema Njongmeta, right, and tailback Chez Mellusi share a laugh while interviewi­ng each other during media day earlier this month.
MIKE DE SISTI / THE MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Badgers linebacker Maema Njongmeta, right, and tailback Chez Mellusi share a laugh while interviewi­ng each other during media day earlier this month.
 ?? MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL ?? Wisconsin linebacker Maema Njongmeta stops Illinois running back Chase Brown short of the goal line in a game last October. Njongmeta was the Badgers’ leading tackler last season.
MARK HOFFMAN/MILWAUKEE JOURNAL SENTINEL Wisconsin linebacker Maema Njongmeta stops Illinois running back Chase Brown short of the goal line in a game last October. Njongmeta was the Badgers’ leading tackler last season.
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