Wisconsin’s secondary may have found a new answer in the transfer portal, and the Badgers are betting that Bryce West can step right into a major role.
West lands at No. 20 on Badger247’s ranking of the top 30 players who could shape Wisconsin’s 2026 season, a list built around playing time, past performance and positional depth. The third-year cornerback arrives with real pedigree, a track record at Ohio State and a clear path to snaps in Madison.
A former four-star recruit from Glenville High School in Ohio, West was one of the top defensive backs in the 2024 class. The composite had him as the No. 9 corner in the country and the No. 64 player overall. He signed with Ohio State over Michigan, Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma and Oregon, then spent his first two college seasons working through a complicated start in Columbus.
His early career was slowed by injury, which kept him out of most spring work before his true freshman year. He redshirted that season while learning behind a veteran Ohio State secondary that included Denzel Burke and Davison Igbinosun.
West then saw more action in 2025, appearing in seven games as a rotational piece and on special teams while serving as the Buckeyes’ backup nickel. He also moved between outside corner and nickel during spring and fall camp, flashing the speed and versatility that made him such a highly regarded prospect.
By the time he entered the transfer portal this past winter, 247Sports listed him as the No. 73 corner available. West now has three years of eligibility left at Wisconsin.
The fit with the Badgers is obvious. Wisconsin lost slot/nickel corner Geimere Latimer, who played 422 snaps last year and ranked second at the position behind Ricardo Hallman’s 713.
With Latimer now at West Virginia, West is positioned to take over that spot. Raphael Dunn handled second-team reps behind him for much of the spring.
Position coach Robert Steeples made it clear in the spring that West’s versatility is a major reason Wisconsin wanted him.
"With Bryce, we do get an extremely versatile player," Steeples said. "He can run, he's physical so he can set the edge, and he's got a great depth of experience in coverage.
Once again, he's another guy who doesn't lack in confidence. So when you say, 'how will Bryce be used?'
I think it will be, just find a way to get him on the field and keep him on the field. Per opponent, that will change.
The good thing is that the offense has been able to give us multiple looks, so we've been able to move him around. Wouldn't quite say he's a Swiss-army knife, he's just an extremely versatile cornerback.
Just find a way to keep him on the field and keep him around the action."
That kind of usage could make West more than just a replacement at slot corner. The question now is how much more Wisconsin can ask him to do. He’s a 5-foot-11, 198-pound redshirt sophomore, and the Badgers are hoping his snap count climbs well beyond what he handled in 2025.
West’s move to Wisconsin came after a path that looked like it might lead to a bigger role at Ohio State. Instead, he’s now set to be a key piece for Luke Fickell’s team this fall, with the chance to fill a major vacancy and maybe even do more than that.
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