Wisconsin
3-star DL Arthur Scott picks Wisconsin over MSU following official visit this weekend
Michigan State football has been beaten out by the Wisconsin Badgers for a three-star defensive lineman from Ohio.
Arthur Scott of Streetsboro, Ohio announced his commitment to Wisconsin on Sunday morning. Scott revealed his commitment to the Badgers via a post on his social media X account.
Scott took an official visit to Wisconsin this weekend, which apparently went very well for the Badgers.
Scott is a three-star defensive lineman in the 2026 class. He has a recruiting ranking of 86 on 247Sports.
Scott ranks as the No. 115 defensive lineman in the 2026 class, according to 247Sports. He is also listed as the No. 59 player from Ohio in the class.
According to 247Sports, Scott holds offers from 15 schools, but it was Michigan State, Rutgers, Cincinnati and Wisconsin that were considered the favorites for his commitment. He had official visits scheduled with each of those schools, but it’s unclear at this time if he’ll still be taking those visits following his Wisconsin commitment. Should Scott take these additional official visits, he’ll be heading to Michigan State on June 13.
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Wisconsin
Wisconsin football adds in-state JUCO transfer linebacker from Iowa Central
The University of Wisconsin football program dipped into the junior-college ranks for its second transfer portal addition of the offseason, adding a player who’s coming back home to play for the Badgers.
Linebacker Taylor Schaefer, a JUCO standout with deep Wisconsin roots, has announced he’s joining the Badgers for the 2026 season. The expectation is that he’ll have two years of collegiate eligibility remaining.
“Coming Home,” Schaefer wrote.
If the name sounds familiar, it should. Schaefer grew up in Sturgeon Bay, played his high school ball at Southern Door, and built the kind of reputation locally that usually ends with someone wearing Wisconsin colors.
It just took a few detours along the way for that moment to arrive.
Schaefer’s journey reads like the kind of story coaches love to retell on signing day. He wasn’t a national recruit out of high school. He didn’t have a mountain of Power Four offers waiting for him back then, and he didn’t land in the Big Ten conference on his first try. Instead, Schaefer carved out his path to Wisconsin the hard way: first redshirting at Minnesota Duluth, then grinding through developmental reps, and finally transferring to Iowa Central Community College to see if he could push his trajectory upward.
For taking the JUCO route, the return was about as good as it gets.
At Iowa Central, Schaefer didn’t just blend into a roster full of hungry players. He stood out. Over his JUCO career, he piled up 146 tackles, 70 solo stops, 15.0 tackles for loss, and seven sacks in 22 games, including a breakout 2025 season where Schaefer finished with 97 total tackles, 10.0 TFLs, and five sacks in just 10 games for the Tritons. Those numbers don’t happen by accident. They happen because of his motor. The instincts are real, and the physical tools match what the Badgers’ defensive scheme demands.
That production turned him into one of the most widely pursued defensive players in the JUCO ranks who was available in the portal. Schaefer quickly drew heavy interest, picking up scholarship offers from Arkansas, Kentucky, Iowa State, Nebraska, Purdue, Minnesota, and Colorado, among others, a far cry from the attention he received out of high school.
Programs were calling because they saw a linebacker with Big Ten measurables, proven productivity, and frame versatility at 6-foot-4 and around 240 pounds. He moved well enough to play multiple spots and had enough length and power to fit inside or bump out based on the front.
But for all the regional and national interest, the pull of Madison never really faded. Wisconsin was the dream when he was younger. Once the Badgers got Schaefer on campus for his official visit, the conversations in meeting rooms, the coaching staff’s demeanor, and the opportunity to come in and compete for snaps made the decision easier to see coming.
From Wisconsin’s perspective, the fit makes plenty of sense.
There’s no denying that, on paper, inside linebacker is one of the more talent-rich position groups returning in 2026, with Christian Alliegro, Mason Posa, and Cooper Catalano all positioned to play meaningful snaps again. But depth charts aren’t static, especially in Fickell’s program, and you’re always one injury away from seeing your rotation stretched past your comfort level.
Schaefer arrives as a player who can compete immediately while still offering developmental upside across multiple linebacker roles. He’s long enough to play in space, strong enough to play inside, and athletic enough to push for sub-package work potentially.
This is also the profile Wisconsin wanted in the portal: older, proven, physically ready, equipped for Big Ten football, and wired to embrace competition. He won’t be handed anything, and he doesn’t expect to be. But Schaefer gives the Badgers something their linebacker corps needed: an experienced, versatile defender who plays fast and tackles well.
His path to Madison may have detoured through the Division II ranks and JUCO ball, but there’s nothing accidental about how he got here. The progression has been steady: a redshirt year, a season Schaefer worked his way into the mix, followed by a breakout season, and now a Big Ten opportunity as a result. That’s a three-year arc that says as much about his trajectory as any camp evaluation or high-school film ever could.
This is also the kind of roster-building move that matters for Wisconsin in this particular offseason. You don’t retool a defense solely through high-school recruiting anymore. That’s not possible. Every program now has to explore every avenue, whether that’s the portal, lower-division standouts, or anything else that can bring in proven production and experience. In a win-now college football landscape, those traits matter more than ever.
The hope is that adding a player like Schaefer gives Wisconsin exactly that. He’s ready to compete and ready to continue pushing the room.
For the Badgers, it’s a nice early win in the portal cycle, the type that keeps the roster balanced and the depth chart insulated from attrition. And for Schaefer, it’s a homecoming that’s been years in the making.
Wisconsin still has more work to do when the Division I transfer portal opens on January 2. But adding Schaefer gives the defense another talented piece, another physical presence, and a competitor wired the way Luke Fickell prefers. It’s the kind of move that doesn’t grab national headlines, but often ends up mattering most when the pads come on.
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Wisconsin
How Wisconsin Badgers volleyball fared in NCAA tournament in past years
Kelly Sheffield comments on how Badgers ‘inspire people’ on senior day
Wisconsin coach Kelly Sheffield shared the story of Mimi Colyer seeing an emotional fan during the Badgers’ postgame celebration on senior day.
Wisconsin volleyball now knows what it’s path will look like in the NCAA tournament.
The Badgers are a No. 3 seed in the Texas regional. So the possible road to the Final Four would start in Madison and then go to Austin, Texas, before ending in Kansas City, Missouri.
Here is a look at how Wisconsin has fared in previous NCAA tournament runs during the Kelly Sheffield era:
When did Wisconsin last go to the Final Four?
Wisconsin has gone to the Final Four five times in Sheffield’s previous 12 seasons as head coach at Wisconsin. The most recent trip was in 2023, when the Badgers defeated Jackson State, Miami (Fla.), Penn State and Oregon before losing to eventual national champion Texas.
The other Final Four trips were in 2013, 2019, 2020 and 2021. The 2021 team gave Wisconsin its first ever national championship.
How often has Wisconsin hosted the first weekend of the NCAA tournament?
The top 16 overall teams in the NCAA tournament host the first two rounds. Wisconsin has fit this criteria in all but one of Sheffield’s seasons at Wisconsin. The 2017 Badgers were a No. 6 seed in their region and had to play the first two rounds in Ames, Iowa. (They went on to the regional after sweeping Marquette and host Iowa State.)
The 2020 Badgers were a No. 1 seed in the tournament, but the entire tournament was held in Omaha, Nebraska, due to precautions during the COVID-19 pandemic. UW had a first-round bye in the condensed bracket and reached the Final Four before losing to Texas.
When was the last time that Wisconsin did not reach the second weekend of the NCAA tournament?
Wisconsin has reached at least the regional semifinals in every season during Sheffield’s tenure. The last time that the Badgers were not in the second weekend of the tournament was 2012 — Pete Waite’s last season at UW — which also was the last time that the Badgers missed the tournament in its entirety.
The Badgers have reached the regional final or farther in each of the last seven tournaments.
Year-by-year NCAA tournament outcomes for Wisconsin volleyball in Kelly Sheffield era
- 2024: Lost in regional final to Nebraska
- 2023: Lost in national semifinal to Texas
- 2022: Lost in regional final to Pittsburgh
- 2021: Won national championship vs. Nebraska
- 2020: Lost in regional final to Texas
- 2019: Lost in national championship to Stanford
- 2018: Lost in regional final to Illinois
- 2017: Lost in regional semifinal to Stanford
- 2016: Lost in regional final to Stanford
- 2015: Lost in regional semifinal to Florida
- 2014: Lost in regional final to Penn State
- 2013: Lost in national championship to Penn State
Rewatch Wisconsin volleyball’s 2021 national championship win
Wisconsin
Wisconsin football insider: Why a third-quarter interception proved costly in Badgers’ pursuit of Axe
MINNEAPOLIS – A look back at Wisconsin’s 17-7 loss to Minnesota on Saturday, Nov. 29, in the Battle for Paul Bunyan’s Axe.
Big picture
This one hurt for Wisconsin on a few fronts. First, they missed a chance to build on a run of two wins over ranked opponents in a three-game span by getting a road win over a beatable opponent. Second, they went home without the Axe for the second straight season. Third, they wasted an effort by the defense that resulted in just 218 total yards for the Gophers. The loss leaves Wisconsin with a 4-8 mark for the season and a 2-7 record in the Big Ten that ties it for 14th. Last year they tied for 12th in the 18-team conference.
UW schedule | Standings | Box score
Turning point: Minnesota turns interception into points
The first two times Wisconsin turned over the ball, the defense and/or special teams bailed out the offense. The Badgers weren’t so fortunate the third time. Safety John Nestor undercut a route toward the sideline for Trech Kekahuna with about 6½ minutes to go in the third quarter and returned the interception 68 yards to the Badgers 16.
Three plays later redshirt freshman quarterback Drake Lindsey hit tight end Jameson Geers for a 13-yard touchdown with 5 minutes 4 seconds to go in the third quarter. It was the only score of the second half and it gave the Gophers a 17-7 edge against a team that reached that point total just three times this season. In other words, the sequence left the Gophers in really good shape.
Thumbs up: Jackson Acker’s concentration pays off; Ben Barten blocks another field goal
- Tight end/fullback Jackson Acker’s tight-rope act along the sideline in the end zone resulted in a 1-yard touchdown pass from Carter Smith.
- Ben Barten blocked his second field goal of the season, a 38-yard attempt in the first quarter that kept the game scoreless. His block against Washington on Nov. 8 prevented the Huskies from tying the game in the fourth quarter.
- Linebacker Cooper Catalano led the Badgers with 10 tackles, which moved him into second place on the team with 61 stops.
- Right guard Kerry Kodanko, who came on for Colin Cubberly last week, started his final game and played throughout.
Thumbs down: Badgers’ struggle with punt game, creating turnovers
- Punter Sean West, who entered play averaging 51.2 yards per punt, averaged 29.2 yards in four punts. His punts of 35 and 11 yards in the second quarter helped flip the field in Minnesota’s favor.
- The Badgers failed to create a turnover, meaning they did not create a turnover on the road this season.
- Mason Posa took the blame for Darius Taylor’s 49-yard touchdown run in the second quarter.
Up next for Wisconsin: Signing day, transfer portal
The Badgers won’t have to wait for long to dive into the offseason. Wednesday marks the beginning of the early signing period for high school recruits. Wisconsin has 13 commits it will try to keep in the fold over the coming days.
Badger players won’t be able to officially enter the portal until Jan. 2-16, but some will likely announce their intention to do so well before them. Expect Wisconsin to be active in the portal again.
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