4
Wisconsin Badgers Purdue Boilermakers Gameday INSIDE Five things to watch Saturday +2 Rosters +4 September 21, 2013 Camp Randall Stadium Badgers open Big Ten play vs. Purdue GREY SATTERFIELD/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO The Badgers, under first-year defensive coordinator Dave Aranda, unveiled their new 3-4 defensive scheme this year, seeing success in their first three contests. In recent years, the Badgers have been known to run a tradi- tional 4-3 formation, consisting of four down defensive linemen and three linebackers. First year defensive coordinator, Dave Aranda, had a different vision for the defense. Aranda’s first move was to switch to a 3-4 defensive scheme, consisting of only three down linemen and four linebackers. The switch in schemes means that the defensive line will, in many cases, have to take on a double-team, the perfect job for someone like senior nose guard Beau Allen. On the other hand, the linebackers have an increased responsibility to con- tain the outside run attack and fill their assigned gaps, depend- ing on the play. For obvious reasons, the makeover of the defense wasn’t as easy as it may sound. “Anytime you’re switching what you’ve been doing for four years, and you’re doing some- thing brand new that you’ve never done before, it’s a chal- lenge,” said redshirt senior defensive end Tyler Dippel. “I think guys really took advan- tage of the time we had in the spring, just working hard to make sure when it got down to season time we were locked in and ready to go.” The defensive modification required players to take on roles that they may not have had in past years. “It’s been a little bit differ- ent. I’ve been playing on the line of scrimmage a little bit more, playing against tight-ends and fullbacks a little bit more than I have in the past,” red- shirt senior linebacker Ethan Armstrong said.” Armstrong and other outside linebackers have found them- selves adjusting to the offensive spread formations, as well. “The biggest change [defending the spread] is against bigger per- sonnel groups. In the two tight ends, two running backs type of stuff, I’m on the line of scrim- mage a lot more.” Armstrong has handled the change well so far, as he cur- rently stands second on the team in tackles, behind only redshirt senior linebacker Chris Borland. Although UW has only played three games thus far, the new defensive scheme appears to be promising, especially against the ground attack. Two of the three games have ended in shutouts, and the majority of Arizona State’s yards last week- end came through the air. “I think it [3-4 formation] allows us to play our best peo- ple, and be creative in terms of where we’re putting them,” Aranda said. “We will continue to see packages out of that.” In addition, there has been a noticeable change in style of play. “The style of a 3 down [defen- sive linemen] that we run, is a very attacking style,” said Dippel. “Guys have a lot more freedom to play their primary and secondary gaps and to make plays.” Without a doubt, this free- dom and the extra linebacker has provided the Badgers with more explosiveness and speed on the outside when containing the run. Even though there has been a change in the big-picture scheme, nothing is set and stone. Aranda plans to adjust to whatever offense the diverse Big Ten Conference has to offer. “I think what well try to do is fit what our people do best versus what the offense does, so that will dictate the match- ups and looks that you’ll see,” Aranda said. It may only be week four of the season, but thus far the new defensive structure has proved to be a vital piece to the overall success of the team. Badgers roll with new defensive scheme T he Wisconsin football team’s off-field changes have brought with them even greater differences on the field this sea- son. Amidst excitement over a new head coach, new players and even the recently updated scoreboard, possibly the biggest change is the newly constructed defensive scheme. Story by Blake Duffin A production of Tyler Dippel Redshirt senior defensive end Wisconsin Badgers “When it got down to season time we were locked in and ready to go.” Dave Aranda Defensive coordinator Wisconsin Badgers “I think it [3-4 formation] allows us to play our best people, and be creative in terms of where we’re putting them.” Listen to the weekly DAILY CARDINAL SPORTSCAST on dailycardinal.com Eyes tired of reading? Use your ears!

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Page 1: The Daily Cardinal - Gameday, September 21, 2013

Wisconsin BadgersPurdue Boilermakers

Gameday INSIDEFive things to watch

Saturday +2 Rosters +4

September 21, 2013Camp Randall Stadium

Badgers open Big Ten play vs. Purdue

GrEy SaTTErfIElD/Cardinal file photo

the Badgers, under first-year defensive coordinator dave aranda, unveiled their new 3-4 defensive scheme this year, seeing success in their first three contests.

In recent years, the Badgers have been known to run a tradi-tional 4-3 formation, consisting of four down defensive linemen and three linebackers. First year defensive coordinator, Dave Aranda, had a different vision for the defense. Aranda’s first move was to switch to a 3-4 defensive scheme, consisting of only three down linemen and four linebackers.

The switch in schemes means that the defensive line will, in many cases, have to take

on a double-team, the perfect job for someone like senior nose guard Beau Allen. On the other hand, the linebackers have an increased responsibility to con-tain the outside run attack and fill their assigned gaps, depend-ing on the play.

For obvious reasons, the makeover of the defense wasn’t as easy as it may sound.

“Anytime you’re switching what you’ve been doing for four years, and you’re doing some-thing brand new that you’ve never done before, it’s a chal-lenge,” said redshirt senior defensive end Tyler Dippel. “I think guys really took advan-tage of the time we had in the spring, just working hard to make sure when it got down to season time we were locked in and ready to go.”

The defensive modification required players to take on roles that they may not have had in past years.

“It’s been a little bit differ-ent. I’ve been playing on the line of scrimmage a little bit more, playing against tight-ends and fullbacks a little bit more than I have in the past,” red-shirt senior linebacker Ethan Armstrong said.”

Armstrong and other outside linebackers have found them-selves adjusting to the offensive spread formations, as well. “The biggest change [defending the spread] is against bigger per-sonnel groups. In the two tight ends, two running backs type of stuff, I’m on the line of scrim-mage a lot more.”

Armstrong has handled the change well so far, as he cur-rently stands second on the team in tackles, behind only redshirt senior linebacker Chris Borland.

Although UW has only played three games thus far, the new defensive scheme appears to be promising, especially against the ground attack. Two

of the three games have ended in shutouts, and the majority of Arizona State’s yards last week-end came through the air.

“I think it [3-4 formation] allows us to play our best peo-ple, and be creative in terms of where we’re putting them,” Aranda said. “We will continue to see packages out of that.”

In addition, there has been a noticeable change in style of play.

“The style of a 3 down [defen-sive linemen] that we run, is a very attacking style,” said Dippel. “Guys have a lot more freedom to play their primary and secondary gaps and to make plays.”

Without a doubt, this free-dom and the extra linebacker

has provided the Badgers with more explosiveness and speed on the outside when containing the run.

Even though there has been a change in the big-picture scheme, nothing is set and stone. Aranda plans to adjust to whatever offense the diverse Big Ten Conference has to offer. “I think what well try to do is fit what our people do best versus what the offense does, so that will dictate the match-ups and looks that you’ll see,” Aranda said.

It may only be week four of the season, but thus far the new defensive structure has proved to be a vital piece to the overall success of the team.

Badgers roll with new defensive schemeThe Wisconsin football team’s off-field

changes have brought with them even greater differences on the field this sea-

son. Amidst excitement over a new head coach, new players and even the recently updated scoreboard, possibly the biggest change is the newly constructed defensive scheme.

Story by Blake Duffin

A production of

Tyler Dippelredshirt senior defensive end

Wisconsin Badgers

“When it got down to season time we were locked in and

ready to go.”

Dave ArandaDefensive coordinator

Wisconsin Badgers

“I think it [3-4 formation] allows us to play our best people, and be creative in terms of where

we’re putting them.”

listen to the weekly

DaIly CarDINal SPOrTSCaST

on dailycardinal.com

Eyes tired of reading? Use your ears!

Page 2: The Daily Cardinal - Gameday, September 21, 2013

2 Wisconsin vs. Purdue dailycardinal.coml

1RUNNING AWAY WITH IT

Last year against Purdue, the Badgers trampled the Boilermakers on the ground, gain-ing 467 yards rushing (8.2 yards per rush on 59 carries). Montee Ball put up 247 yards, senior James White had 124, and redshirt sophomore Melvin Gordon had 80 (but on only seven carries).

Simply put, the Boilermakers have had trouble stopping the run in the last several years, which helps explain why they haven’t beaten Wisconsin since 2003.

So far this year, the UW run-ning game has been performing as if every opponent was 2012 Purdue.

Gordon has exploded onto the national scene and is cur-rently second in rushing yards in the FBS despite having run the ball only 37 times (the rest of the top 10 all have at least 50 rushing attempts).

Purdue has at least looked respectable against the run, giv-ing up only 4.4 yards per rush to its opponents this year. This has also come against two decent rushing offenses in Cincinnati and Notre Dame. However, Purdue has shown a propensity for wearing down on defense through the game, allowing just 17 points total in the first half but 56 in the second.

If the Boilermakers want any hope of victory, they will have to prevent Gordon and compa-ny from putting up their usual video game numbers and will have to do it in all four quarters.

2NEW COACHES PACING

THE SIDELINESWisconsin wasn’t the only

program to go through a coach-ing change in the Big Ten this offseason, as Purdue fired Danny Hope after four years of mediocre football.

Hope’s replacement is Darrell Hazell, who led Kent State to an 11-3 record last year and won the 2012 Mid-

American Conference Coach of the Year. This shocking turn-around made Hazell an often-mentioned candidate for sev-eral coaching positions, ulti-mately landing at Purdue.

Hazell, a former Ohio State assistant under Jim Tressel, is known for employing a diverse offensive attack, mixing in sev-eral different formations to keep the defense guessing.

This unpredictability from the Boilermaker offense, com-bined with defensive coordina-tor Dave Aranda’s aggressive defensive philosophy, could lead to a chaotic gridiron when Purdue has the ball.

Hazell is also known for being a fiery motivator, bring-ing a confidence never before seen to the historically bad Kent State program.

Purdue has shown so far this season that it is a bottom-tier Big Ten team, but looked good against Notre Dame last week, keeping the Fighting Irish nervous until the end of the fourth quarter. This could mean Hazell is finally getting his offense into a groove and showing the swagger brought to Kent State.

3QUARTERBACK IN

ACTION Joel Stave did not look good

against Arizona State, complet-ing only 15 of 30 passes for 187 yards and missing several open receivers downfield.

If Stave continues to struggle against Purdue, particularly in the second half, it might final-ly be time for head coach Gary Andersen to give redshirt senior Curt Phillips a shot at leading the offense.

Fortunately for Stave, Purdue has not looked very good at guarding the pass, having allowed over 250 yards passing per game in its first three games.

This has come against teams that are not known for a strong throwing game, with Cincinnati and Notre Dame preferring to run the ball and Indiana State being an FCS team.

The Boilermaker secondary

has for the most part looked below average, with the only standout being senior corner-back Ricardo Allen, who was awarded second team All-Big Ten by the press in 2012.

With Allen figuring to guard redshirt senior wide receiver Jared Abbrederis for most of the snaps, this could be the game where Stave needs to dis-cover a second target in the receiving corps to be effective.

Look for redshirt sopho-more Jordan Fredrick, junior Kenzel Doe, or redshirt senior Jeff Duckworth to have a big game if Abbrederis is unable to beat Allen on his usual play-action deep routes.

4TESTING THE SECONDARY

The secondary has been a bit of an Achilles heel for Wisconsin in the last few years. While everybody looked good against bottom-of-the-barrel UMass and FCS oppo-nent Tennessee Tech, last week’s matchup with Arizona

State exposed a lot of issues in pass coverage.

Penalties for pass interfer-ence were rampant, and one particular stretch at the end of the third quarter and start of the fourth saw Badger cornerbacks get beaten badly, setting up the ASU touchdowns that quickly erased an eight-point lead.

Purdue has so far struggled to run the ball, even getting stuffed against FCS opponent Indiana State.

In total, the Boilermakers have run for fewer yards than freshman running back Corey Clement.

This means the lion’s share of Purdue yards will be expected to come through the air, putting the fate of Wisconsin’s defense in the secondary’s hands.

Purdue senior quarter-back Rob Henry’s main target in the passing game has so far been junior running back Akeem Hunt. Junior tight end Gabe Holmes, a decent NFL prospect and Purdue’s lead-ing receiver for the first two games, is out for the year with a dislocated wrist from prac-

tice. Wisconsin native Justin Sinz will replace Holmes.

5HANGOVER FROM THE

ARIZONA STATE FIASCOThe Badgers seem to have

taken last Saturday night’s deba-cle with class, showing in inter-views they have accepted there is nothing more to say about the referees’ incompetence and that it is best to move on to preparations for Saturday’s game.

However, it’s worth asking if any lingering malice could show up in the event of a particularly bad call by the Big Ten referees.

On the flipside, a frustrat-ed Badger team looking for a punching bag, combined with a so-far pretty weak Purdue defense could lead to a fair-ly cathartic beatdown. Don’t expect Andersen and offensive coordinator Andy Ludwig to take their foot off the gas in the event of an early big lead.

It might also be worth listen-ing to what the student section has to say, just for entertain-ment’s sake.

gameday

Five things to watchcompiled by

Jack Baer

GREY SATTERFIELD/cardinal File Photo

1 2 3 4 5

Page 3: The Daily Cardinal - Gameday, September 21, 2013

ldailycardinal.com Wisconsin vs. Purdue 3

By James DaytonThe Daily CarDinal

A college football fan could get used to last week. Conference play began in a limited fashion, replacing the boring cupcake schedule we had seen so far. ESPN annoyed us with their constant hype of Alabama vs. Texas A&M, but we all sat down to watch the polarizing Johnny Football take on the reigning champions.

While this week doesn’t have the marquee matchups from last Saturday, it still has some games worth watching.

No. 23 Arizona State at No. 5 Stanford

If you’re still reeling from last week’s knee/fumble/ref-eree nonsense and are loathing Arizona State because of it, you might be in for a treat this week-end. The Sun Devils (2-0) head to northern California to take on one of the Pac-12’s marquee teams, Stanford (2-0).

The No. 23 Sun Devils are a solid but certainly not spectac-ular team. Quarterback Taylor Kelly carved up the UW second-ary for 352 passing yards last week, but compiled a medio-cre completion percentage. Likewise, running back Marion Grice may have scored four touchdowns, but his yards per carry average was a dismal 3.8.

The No. 5 Stanford Cardinal (singular, not plural) has looked a little shaky in its first two games against San Jose State and Army. However, Stanford has made the halftime adjust-ments to put the games out of reach with plenty of time to spare. The team has benefited from superb coaching for the past several seasons.

Houston vs. RiceThey may not be in the same

conference anymore, but the Houston Cougars (2-0) and Rice Owls (1-1) still have cross-

town bragging rights to play for this weekend.

The annual Bayou Bucket Classic will be played at the Texans’ Reliant Stadium. The rivalry has existed since 1971. The Cougars lead the all-time series by a heady 27-11 margin and have largely dominated over the past decade.

However, Rice could change that this year. The Owls received some national air time three weeks ago against Texas A&M—Manziel on national TV, who’d have thought—and moved the ball in a dominating fashion, pil-ing up over 500 yards of total offense, including over 300 on the ground. It should be noted that the A&M defense was miss-ing six starters due to suspen-sion. Regardless, such a perfor-mance is no easy task.

Two weeks ago against Temple, Houston struggled to capitalize on their opportunities, going 1-for-8 in the red zone. They kicked five field goals to squeak out a 22-13 win against a Temple team that remains win-less. The prolific Houston offens-es that once operated under Kevin Kolb and Case Keenum appear to be temporarily gone, and this may be what allows Rice to earn their first Bayou Bucket win since 2010.

Michigan State at No. 22 Notre Dame

One of the most notable rival-ries in college football, Michigan State and Notre Dame have met 75 times dating back to 1897. An on-and-off rivalry for the first half of the 20th century, the two teams have met nearly every sea-son since the Megaphone Trophy was instituted in 1949.

This Saturday, the Spartans (3-0) face their first test of the year with this road matchup against the No. 22 Fighting Irish (2-1). The Spartans have yet to play anybody worth discussing, but find themselves on the cusp

of the AP Top 25 after taking care of three inferior opponents.

The Irish seem far removed from the regular season domi-nance—and luck—of last year that carried them to the nation-al championship game. In the highly touted matchup against Michigan two weeks ago, Notre Dame spent much of the game in comeback mode before ultimate-ly losing 41-30. Then last week, they needed a big fourth quarter rally to defeat lowly Purdue.

For Badgers fans, this game is worth watching to see wheth-er or not the Spartans are true threats in the Big Ten race.

Auburn vs. No. 6 LSU Auburn has been pretty ter-

rible since the Cam Newton-led national champions of 2010. But it’s hard to beat a classic

SEC rivalry, one that dates back to 1901.

Auburn (3-0) put together a fantastic two-minute drill last weekend to beat Mississippi State, 24-20. The drive covered 88 yards in just 12 plays and ended on a 10-yard touchdown pass. The win broke Auburn’s 10-game SEC losing streak.

LSU (3-0) has steadily risen in the polls since the season began, going from No. 12 to No. 6. Its signature win came in the open-er, a 37-27 victory over then-No. 20 TCU at Cowboys Stadium. Since then, LSU has beaten up on small time opponents.

Expecting Auburn to go out on the road against LSU and come away with a win is rather unfair. However, we’ll learn if they can be a formidable force in the SEC.

gamedayTHIS WEEK’S BIG GAMES

(23) Arizona State at (5) Stanford,

6 p.m. Saturday

Houston vs. Rice, Houston, Texas,2 p.m. Saturday

Michigan State at (22) Notre Dame, South Bend, Ind.

2:30 p.m. Saturday

Auburn at (6) LSU,Baton Rouge, La.

6:45 p.m. Saturday

WEEK 4 POLLS AP TOP 25

1. Alabama (59) 14992. Oregon (1) 14133. Clemson 13474. Ohio State 13305. Stanford 12416. LSU 11347. Louisville 10928. Florida State 10589. Georgia 105110. Texas A&M 100111. Oklahoma State 84812. South Carolina 82113. UCLA 75714. Oklahoma 69215. Michigan 67216. Miami (FL) 64117. Washington 49618. Northwestern 48719. Florida 41220. Baylor 35521. Ole Miss 30022. Notre Dame 27723. Arizona State 22924. Wisconsin 8725. Texas Tech 60

Dropped from rankings: TCU 24, Nebraska 23

Others receiving votes: Michigan State 59, Fresno State 27, UCF 25

USA TODAY/COACHES

1. Alabama (61) 15492. Oregon (1) 14773. Ohio State 13984. Clemson 13315. Stanford 13146. Louisville 11287. LSU 11218. Florida State 11139. Texas A&M 103310. Georgia 102211. Oklahoma State 90812. Oklahoma 83913. South Carolina 81114. Michigan 74315. UCLA 69916. Northwestern 58217. Miami 55918. Florida 39819. Baylor 37520. Washington 36121. Notre Dame 33122. Ole Miss 30323. Arizona State 17624. Michigan State 13125. Fresno State 75

Dropped from rankings: Nebraska 15, Wisconsin 18, TCU 24

Others receiving votes: Nebraska 55, Wisconsin 53, Texas Tech 49, Georgia Tech 37

NATIONAL OUTLOOK

Spartans battle rival Irish in South Bend

Michigan State hits the road this week to play notre Dame, who is coming off a lackluster performance against Purdue last week.GREY SATTERfIELD/CarDinal File PhoTo

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Page 4: The Daily Cardinal - Gameday, September 21, 2013

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inside the game

the matchup noteworthycoachestime/media

gameday4 Wisconsin vs. Purdue dailycardinal.com

Adams, Kendrick

Foster, Tylor

Webster, Cody

Anderson, Jacob

McCartney, Sam

Feichter, Landon

Lucas, Will

Freytag, Kurt

Budzinski, Micah

Williams, Jules

Schmidt, Jesse

Kitchens, Justin

Strauser, John

Lorenzen, Henry

Daniels, Johnny

Bednar, John

Replogle, Jake

De Boef, Jack

Miles, Antoine

Kugler, Robert

Davis, Cody

Ayers, Chuck

Isaac, Ryan

Pamphile, Kevin

Long, Charlie

Cermin, Cameron

Roos, Jordan

Smith, Devin

King, Jason

Prince, J.J.

Davis, Josh

Tretter, Jason

Warburg, Joey

Foy, Trevor

Rouse III, Michael

Yancey, DeAngelo

Carter, Sterling

Norwood, Myles

Knauf, B.J.

Sinz, Justin

Schott, Will

Morris, Ryan

Holmes, Gabe

Mikesky, Shane

Woods, Jordan

Phillips, Jalani

Bade, Patrick

Gaston, Bruce

Latta, Greg

Watson, Ryan

Howard, Ra’Zahn

Ellington, Grant

Panfil, Evan

DeBusk, Ryan

McDaniel, Eric

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Wisconsin Badgersteam roster

Harris, Normondo

Hunt, Akeem

Garcia, Andy James

Curry, Jonathan

Clark, Leroy

Carvajal, Carlos

Richards, Taylor

Byars II, Keith

Logan, Austin

Etling, Danny

Bush, Gary

Ibarra, Ruben

Gregory, Robert

Mostert, Raheem

Brown, Anthony

Monteroso, Dan

Robinson, Sean

Burke, Matt

Lang, Landau

Parker, Austin

Appleby, Austin

Berzinskas, Erich

Marshall, Bilal

Mizani, Ashkan

Henry, Rob

Hudson, Garrett

Macarthy, Dolapo

Torwudzo, Charles

Domhoff, Ti

Posey, Cameron

Gray, Aloyis

Dawkins, Dalyn

Allen, Ricardo

Hunte, DaWan

Johnson, E.J.

Green, Keyante

Williams, Frankie

Cottom, Brandon

Taylor, Phil

Lewis, Antoine

Feichter, Evan

Yancey, David

Herman, Jimmy

Meadows, Thomas

Williams, Armstead

Pulliam, Evan

Anthrop, Danny

Polk-Campbell, Dezwan

Thompson, Johnny

Hartley, Pete

Ezechukwu, Danny

Griggs, Paul

Johnson, Race

Marzec, Kyle

Gilliam, Joe

Link, Collin

Purdue Boilermakersteam roster

gamedayA special publication of

Fall 2013, issue 12142 Vilas Communication Hall

821 University AvenueMadison, Wis., 53706-1497

News and Editorial608-262-8000 l fax 608-262-8100

[email protected]@dailycardinal.com

editor in ChiefAbigail Becker

managing editorMara Jezior

gameday editorDevin Lowe

Sports editorsBrett BachmanJonah Beleckis

Photo editorsJane Thompson

Courtney Kessler

graphics editorsHaley Henschel

Chrystel Paulson Copy Chiefs

Rachel Wanat, Maya Miller Kayla Schmidt, Vince Huth

Business and Advertising608-262-8000 l fax 608-262-8100

[email protected]

Business managerJake Sattler

advertising managersDan Shanahan

Erin Aubrey marketing executive

Cooper Boland Social media managerSam Garigliano Design managerLauren Mather

© 2013, The Daily Cardinal Media Corporation

ISSN 0011-5398

GameDay is a publication of The Daily Cardinal. Each reader is enti-tled to one complimentary copy. Any additional copies must be picked up at the Cardinal offices, 2142 Vilas Communication Hall. The Cardinal is a nonprofit organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales.

Capital Newspapers Inc., is the Cardinal’s printer. The Daily Cardinal is printed on recycled paper. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association.

All copy, photographs and graph-ics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without specific written permission of the edi-tor in chief.

Wisconsin Badgers (2-1 overall) vs. Purdue Boilermakers (1-2 overall)

Series: The Badgers lead the all-time series 43-29-8

time: 2:30 p.m. tV: ABCRadio: WiBA (1310 AM, 101.5 FM in Madison); WTMJ (620 AM in Milwaukee); WOKY (920 AM in Milwaukee)

Wisconsin’s gary andersen (first year as head coach: 2-1) and Purdue’s Darrell hazell (first year as head coach: 1-2)

Wisconsin has won seven straight games against Purdue, last losing in 2003.

YOUR DREAM IS OUT THERE. GO GET IT. WE’LL PROTECT IT.

Daniel Pacetti Agency6402 Odana RdMadison, WI 53719(608) 310-8000www.facebook.com/danpacettiagency

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Auto, Home, Business, and Life.

Product availability varies by state.

01 Jordan, A.J.

02 Hill, Nick

02 Stave, Joel

03 Doe, Kenzel

04 Abbrederis, Jared

05 Hillary, Darius

06 Clement, Corey

06 James, Alec

07 Arnold, Brett

07 Caputo, Michael

08 Shelton, Sojourn

08 Watt, T.J.

08 Williams, Isaiah

09 Fredrick, Jordan

10 Gaulden, Devin

10 Phillips, Curt

11 Peavy, Jazz

11 Reynard, T.J.

12 Armstrong, Thad

12 Southward, Dezmen

13 Houston, Bart

13 O’Neill, Conor

14 Hammon, Nate

14 Senger, Connor

15 Duckworth, Jeff

16 Ferguson, Joe

16 Love, Reggie

17 Cadogan, Sherard

17 McEvoy, Tanner

18 Baretz, Lance

18 Ogunbowale, Dare

19 Musso, Leo

19 Wheelwright, Robert

20 White, James

21 Jean, Peniel

22 Lewis, Jeffrey

22 Washington, Jakarrie

23 Jackson, Vonte

23 Ponio, Jerry

24 Brookins, Keelon

25 Gordon, Melvin

26 Johnson, Matt

26 Straus, Derek

27 Zulger, Kyle

28 Hubley, Matt

29 Floyd, Terrance

30 Landisch, Derek

30 Ramesh, Austin

31 Cummins, Connor

31 Etienne, Hugs

32 Jacobs, Leon

34 Obasih, Chikwe

34 Watt, Derek

36 Armstrong, Ethan

36 Spurling, D.J.

37 MacCudden, Kevin

38 Steffes, Eric

39 Kelliher, Brady

41 Fumagalli, Troy

41 Hayes, Jesse

42 Walker, Alex

43 Trotter, Michael

44 Borland, Chris

45 Herring, Warren

46 Traylor, Austin

47 Biegel, Vince

48 Cichy, Jack

48 Pedersen, Jacob

49 Arneson, Sam

50 Harrison, Josh

51 Dippel, Tyler

52 Miller, Carl

54 Costigan, Kyle

54 Rademacher, Jake

55 Denlinger, Trent

55 Dooley, Garret

56 McGuire, James

57 Ruechel, Ben

58 Ninneman, Jacob

58 Schobert, Joe

59 Trotter, Marcus

60 Miller, Matt

60 Udelhoven, Connor

61 Marz, Tyler

62 Williams, Walker

67 Gill, Chris

70 Voltz, Dan

71 Ball, Ray

72 Hemer, Ben

73 Lewallen, Dallas

74 Biegel, Hayden

75 Matthias, Zac

76 McNamara, Aiden

77 Gilbert, Bryce

77 Keeler, Jackson

78 Havenstein, Rob

79 Groy, Ryan

81 DeCicco, Brock

82 Stengel, Jake

84 Maly, Austin

85 Endicott, Andrew

85 Wozniak, Brian

86 Erickson, Alex

87 Hemer, Ethan

87 Mason, Marquis

89 Hammond, Chase

90 Meyer, Drew

91 Nethery, Brett

91 Zagzebski, Konrad

92 Muldoon, Pat

93 Keefer, Jake

94 French, Kyle

94 Schmidt, Logan

95 Goldberg, Arthur

96 Allen, Beau

97 Kelly, Brendan

97 Russell, Jack

98 Salata, Stephen

99 Adeyanju, James

WR

LB

QB

WR

WR

CB

RB

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CB

TE

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6-2

6-5

5-8

6-2

5-11

5-11

6-4

5-11

6-1

5-9

6-5

6-1

6-4

5-10

6-3

6-0

5-8

6-3

6-2

6-4

6-0

6-1

5-10

6-0

6-1

6-3

6-3

6-6

5-11

5-11

5-10

6-2

5-10

5-11

6-2

5-9

6-1

6-1

5-10

6-1

6-1

6-0

5-11

6-0

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6-1

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5-11

6-2

6-2

6-2

6-2

5-10

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6-5

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178

225

225

170

190

187

210

239

185

206

172

235

200

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180

217

182

172

194

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217

230

196

175

209

197

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236

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195

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195

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199

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193

207

171

235

192

198

196

230

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196

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225

245

231

225

225

220

252

230

233

236

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239

205

246

294

243

233

208

240

254

234

270

213

315

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297

227

216

225

282

230

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275

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321

322

294

313

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281

318

390

305

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327

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166

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285

224

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185

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278

269

265

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6-4

6-2

6-5

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6-4

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6-5

6-1

6-6

6-2

6-1

6-2

6-2

6-2

6-0

6-5

5-11

6-5

6-7

6-5

6-3

6-7

6-4

6-6

6-6

6-5

6-4

6-2

6-6

6-8

6-5

6-5

6-3

6-5

5-9

6-4

6-0

6-6

6-4

6-5

6-3

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6-3

6-3

6-3

6-1

6-4

6-3

6-3

6-6

6-0

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