After serving to lead the Wisconsin Badgers to a win in his first profession begin at quarterback on Tuesday night time within the Assured Price Bowl, Chase Wolf has determined to come back again subsequent season to benefit from the COVID-19 waiver.
The information was first reported by Zach Heilprin of The Zone, giving the Badgers one other potential contender for the beginning quarterback place within the 2023 season.
Primarily a backup throughout his profession, Wolf has seen motion in 12 profession video games at Wisconsin since becoming a member of this system as a three-star recruit out of Ohio within the 2018 recruiting class.
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In his lone begin in opposition to Oklahoma State final night time, Wolf confirmed some promise, finishing eight-straight passes and 11-of-12 throws throughout a stretch within the latter a part of the primary half. Wolf completed the sport 16-of-26 for 116 yards and a landing, with a pair of turnovers within the win.
Whereas these numbers usually are not overly flashy, his gunslinger mentality was on show and it’ll now be fascinating to see if the senior can maintain off a number of freshmen this low season. Wolf will likely be coming into his sixth season in a Wisconsin uniform this spring, and Wisconsin is ready to return freshman Myles Burkett on scholarship and walk-on Marshall Howe. Moreover, Luke Fickell and the Badgers are welcoming three-star quarterback Cole LaCrue as an early enrollee and Oklahoma switch Nick Evers by way of the switch portal early subsequent month.
The Badgers are searching for a brand new beginning quarterback in 2023 after Graham Mertz left this system to switch to Florida. With new offensive coordinator Phil Longo implementing loads of offensive adjustments, Wolf ought to assist present a veteran possibility within the quarterback room, no matter if he wins the upcoming quarterback battle. The 6-foot-1 senior was restricted to simply three video games this season due to a knee harm and it’ll now be attention-grabbing to see if the Badgers nonetheless pursue different quarterbacks within the switch portal after beforehand internet hosting Virginia switch Brennan Armstrong.
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Wolf is certainly one of 4 seniors making the most of the COVID-19 waiver and returning subsequent season. He joins working again Chez Mellusi and cornerback Alexander Smith, in addition to offensive guard Michael Furtney. Senior security John Torchio continues to be contemplating his choices too.
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After a 1-1 introduction to Big Ten play last month (beating Northwestern on Josh Dix’s buzzer-beater and losing to Michigan after a spirited comeback attempt fell short), the proper conference season gets underway for Iowa tonight. No more non-conference distractions — it’s Big Ten opponents from here until March.
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First up? A border battle with Wisconsin, who enters this game with an identical 10-3 record. The Badgers started the season 8-0, including notable wins over Arizona, UCF, and Pitt. They lost three in a row a month ago, including both of their early season Big Ten games, falling to Michigan and Illinois (and sandwiching a road loss at Marquette between those defeats).
The Badgers rebounded with wins over Butler and Detroit Mercy after that brief losing skid, but the Badgers have also been out of action since December 22, enjoying an almost two-week layoff before tonight’s game. Having opened conference play 0-2 and with road games to Rutgers, USC, and UCLA coming up, Wisconsin will be very eager to avoid an 0-3 start to league action.
C Steven Crowl (7’0″, 248; 8.8 ppg, 5.2 rpg, 2.5 apg, 48.9 FG%, 23.8 3FG%)
PREVIEW
The 2024-25 Wisconsin Badgers aren’t quite like the Badger teams of yore, at least in one notable regard: they’re playing at a faster tempo than any Wisconsin team in almost 20 years. This Badger team checks in at 181st in the tempo rankings, which is the fastest Wisconsin has been in the Greg Gard era and the fastest for any Wisconsin team since 2005-06.
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Granted, they’re still the fifth-slowest team in the Big Ten and no one’s going to mistake them for Illinois or Iowa (17th and 23rd, respectively, in the tempo rankings), but still — this is not the same poky Wisconsin team you’ve seen in the past.
The strength of this Badger team is its offense; the Badgers rank 16th in offensive efficiency (third-best in the Big Ten, behind Purdue and Illinois), thanks to an offense that avoids turnovers, shoots reasonably well, and is excellent at getting to the free throw line. Wisconsin turns the ball over on just 13.8% of possessions (15th nationally) and concedes steals on only 6.3% (2nd) of possessions.
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The Badgers have been a decent shooting team — 52.3% in effective FG% (126th), with most of their success coming from inside the arc. Wisconsin has made 55.2% (74th) of 2-point attempts this season, but they’ve been much cooler from outside — only 32.5% (216th) from 3-point range. The Badgers rank 71st in free throw rate, but they’ve been lights out when they get to the stripe, making 85.1% of free throw attempts, best in the nation. Keeping the Badgers off the foul line on Friday night will be imperative for Iowa.
On defense, Wisconsin doesn’t force many turnovers (15.5% of opponent possessions, 296th nationally), but the Badgers have been good at contesting shots, denying offensive rebounds, and keeping teams off the free throw line. Opponents have an effective FG% of just 47.3% against Wisconsin (67th) and the Badgers have been adept at contesting both 2-point shots (48.5%, 101st) and 3-point tries (30.2%, 60th). Opponents have rebounded only 27.9% of their missed shots (106th) this season as well.
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After losing standout forward Tyler Wahl to graduation and fellow forward AJ Storr to the transfer portal, the Badgers hit the portal themselves and landed John Tonje, a skilled forward from Missouri (by way of Colorado State) who has been a difference-maker for Wisconsin this season. Tonje leads the team in scoring (19.2 ppg), ranks third in rebounds (5.0 rpg), and has been the team’s best outside shooter (23-of-62, 37.1%). Tonje also gets to the free throw line a lot (100 attempts already this season) and hardly misses when he gets there (94%). He’s been everything the Badgers could ask for out of the portal.
He joined a Badger team that returned an experienced backcourt in Max Klesmit and John Blackwell. Blackwell (14.2 ppg) and Klesmit (11.2 ppg) are two of the other three Wisconsin players averaging double figures in scoring, though neither has been able to find a consistent outside shot yet (both shooting around 28% from long range). Like Tonje, they’re very good at the free throw line (86.7% for Klesmit, 80.4% for Blackwell).
Up front Wisconsin has been starting a pair of twin towers this season in Nolan Winter (6’11”) and Steven Crowl (7’0″). Winter (6.0 rpg) and Crowl (5.2 rpg) and they’ve combined to average 20 ppg this season. Both bigs also have some floor-stretching capabilities — they’ve each attempted 20+ 3-pointers this season — though Winter is the more dangerous of the two from deep; his 34.4% 3-point clip (11-of-32) is actually second-best on the team.
Carter Gilmore and Xavier Amos (both 6’7″) have been getting a fair amount of minutes in the forward rotation as well, but any lineup with both Winters and Crowl will pose some definite matchup headaches for the Hawkeyes, who may need to utilize Riley Mulvey and Even Brauns for longer stretches during this game if Iowa’s other forwards have difficulty against Wisconsin bigs.
Michigan State hockey added Charlie Stramel for the 2024-25 season after the forward spent two seasons in Madison playing for the Wisconsin Badgers.
Things didn’t end well between Stramel and the Badgers, leaving a bad taste in the mouth of the new Spartan. That taste got a little sweeter on Thursday.
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Stramel scored the game winning goal for his new team on his new home ice on Thursday to defeat his former team, while he shines for his new team, a welcomed addition to the Michigan State program.
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Wisconsin is hosting East Carolina transfer cornerback Andrew Wilson-Lamp on an official visit this weekend, according to 247Sports’ Matt Zenitz.
The veteran cornerback played three seasons at West Virginia before transferring to ECU for the 2024 season. He’s in the portal with one year of eligibility remaining.
Ranking Wisconsin football’s transfer portal class by projected 2025 impact
Wilson-Lamp originally joined West Virginia as a four-star wide receiver recruit in the class of 2021, ranked as the No. 37 receiver in the class and No. 8 player from his home state of Ohio. He tallied just 14 tackles and three pass deflections in three seasons with the Mountaineers.
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He then broke out as a primary starter at ECU in 2024, notching 23 tackles, two pass deflections, one interception and one forced fumble.
The cornerback officially entered the portal on Thursday, according to Zenitz. East Carolina finished its 2024 season with a Military Bowl win over NC State on Dec. 28. Players in bowl or College Football Playoff games are granted five days to enter the portal after their season concludes. That allowed Wilson-Lamp to depart after the winter window officially closed.
Zenitz reported Wilson-Lamp’s scheduled visit to Wisconsin just one hour after reporting his entry into the portal.
Ex-ECU and West Virginia cornerback Andrew Wilson-Lamp is visiting Wisconsin this weekend, his agency @3strandsports tells @CBSSports/@247Sports.
Wisconsin remains in pursuit of several transfer cornerbacks. The program is looking to bolster a position that lost considerable talent during the winter transfer window, including star freshman Xavier Lucas (pending his official entry). Wilson-Lamp is the most experienced of the Badgers’ remaining top targets. The program appears to have legitimate traction in his recruitment given the timing of his official visit.
For more on Wisconsin’s transfer targets and reported visits, bookmark our 2024 transfer offer, visit and commitment tracker.
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