Jim Leonhard Faces A Defining NFL Test Badgers Fans Will Watch Closely

New Bills defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard steps into the spotlight with the formidable task of overhauling a seasoned defense eager for Super Bowl success.

Jim Leonhard’s next job comes with a blunt warning label: this is not a clean handoff, and it is not a patient rebuild.

The former Wisconsin Badgers defensive coordinator has landed his biggest NFL opportunity yet, taking over as the Buffalo Bills’ defensive coordinator under new head coach Joe Brady. It’s a major step for Leonhard, 43, who had been with the Denver Broncos since 2024 as defensive backs coach and pass game coordinator under Sean Payton. He was elevated to assistant head coach last offseason and had lined up several interviews for coordinator openings before Buffalo came calling.

But the assignment in Buffalo is a demanding one. ESPN’s Ben Solak argued Leonhard may have the “toughest task” of any defensive coach in the league this offseason, and the reasoning is easy to follow. Leonhard is stepping into a defense that has been shaped for years by Sean McDermott, who had been Buffalo’s defensive mind since 2017 before being fired in January.

That means the Bills are not just changing voices. They’re changing the language of the defense.

Solak pointed out that McDermott’s unit was built around a very specific identity: nickel-heavy, spot-drop zone, and a steady diet of traditional four-man rushes. Even when Buffalo mixed in schematic wrinkles late in McDermott’s tenure, the defense still reflected his fingerprints. Now Joe Brady is in charge on the offensive side, and Leonhard inherits the defense.

Leonhard arrives with a reputation that fits the moment. He spent years as a defensive coordinator at Wisconsin, where he was known as a sharp, modern thinker who leaned into match coverages and simulated pressures. He also spent the last two seasons working with Broncos defensive coordinator Vance Joseph, learning under one of the league’s most aggressive blitz designers.

The change in Buffalo could be substantial. Solak noted that McDermott’s defense was rooted in a 4-3 structure, while Leonhard’s is expected to base out of a 3-4.

That shift could force returning players into new jobs. Pass rushers may have to handle coverage drops.

Run defenders who were used to single-gap duties may suddenly be asked to play 1½ or even two gaps.

That kind of transition also changes the kind of bodies a defense wants. McDermott favored undersized speed linebackers like Terrel Bernard and disciplined zone corners like Christian Benford.

Leonhard may prefer different types. Still, Solak stressed that the fit isn’t as rigid as it sounds, and Leonhard will build around the talent he has.

Leonhard said earlier this summer of defensive tackle Ed Oliver’s role that the base defense may look different, but “the subpackage things are a little bit more familiar to what they’ve done here from a front structure.”

Even so, there’s no getting around the scale of the adjustment. Benford and Oliver are on second contracts and have never played in a defense that wasn’t shaped by McDermott.

For them, this will be the first time learning a new defensive system from scratch. That kind of overhaul usually brings growing pains.

The problem for Buffalo is that there’s no real room for them.

McDermott was let go after six straight seasons in which the Bills won a playoff game, a run that made them only the fourth team in NFL history to do that. But the standard in Buffalo has hardened, and the lack of a Super Bowl appearance hangs over everything. As Solak put it, the message is clear: anything less than the Super Bowl is a failure.

So Leonhard’s mission is bigger than installing a scheme. He has to do it quickly, with a roster built for a different system, and with championship pressure sitting on top of every decision. That’s why Solak sees him as facing the league’s hardest defensive assignment this summer.

In Other News...

Wisconsins New AD Sends Badger Fans A First Message Worth Reading

Shawn Eichorsts first public message to Badger fans arrived soon after Wisconsin hired him as athletic director, and it read like the opening note of a new era. He said he was honored to take the job, pointed to his own Wisconsin roots, and made clear that he understands the pride surrounding Wisconsin Athletics and the expectations that come with it.

Eichorst also laid out the tone he wants for the department, saying it will hold itself to high standards, keep one another accountable and pair its history with innovation. He said he and his family are looking forward to returning to Madison and spending the coming weeks and months listening to fans, memories and suggestions, which gives this hire a more personal start than most. [Read more 🡒]

Wisconsin Just Added Another Nonconference Test Fans Will Want To See

Wisconsins nonconference schedule picked up another late-season home date, with Colorado State set to visit the Kohl Center on Dec. 30. It adds a fresh matchup for Badgers fans and gives Greg Gards group another chance to measure itself against a Mountain West program that has become familiar with roster churn in the offseason.

The Rams head into the year with a different look after losing leading scorer Brandon Rechsteiner to Kansas State, which puts more of the load on returning forwards Kyle Jorgensen and Carey Booth. It also sets up the first regular-season meeting between the programs, a detail that should give the game a little extra edge even before conference play begins to loom. [Read more 🡒]

Wisconsin Heads Into Fall Camp With Too Much Still Up For Grabs

Fall camp is arriving with a lot more questions than Wisconsin usually likes this time of year, and Luke Fickells roster still has several jobs up for grabs. The biggest battles stretch across the offensive line, wide receiver, cornerback, edge rusher and tight end, which means the Badgers are still sorting out not just their starters but the shape of the two-deep as camp opens.

The uncertainty is part of what makes this stretch so important for Wisconsin, because so many of the roster decisions will help define how stable the offense and defense can be once the season starts. Even the quarterback room has some sorting out to do, and the backup running back spot behind Abu Sama III is still open, so fall camp is less about fine-tuning than it is about figuring out who can seize a role before the calendar turns. [Read more 🡒]