Wisconsin Defense Has 3 Breakout Athletes Fans Need To Watch

Meet the overlooked powerhouses of Wisconsin's defense, where size and speed redefine the game without the national spotlight.

Wisconsin’s defense may be the part of the roster that gets the most attention this season, and the unit is loaded with athletes who don’t exactly fit the usual mold. These aren’t the names you’ll see popping up on Bruce Feldman’s freaks list, and they’re not getting preseason national buzz. But the Badgers have a few defenders with rare size-speed combinations and frames that jump off the page.

One of the most intriguing is outside backer Sebastian Clayton, who could wind up being Wisconsin’s best pure pass-rusher. The Badgers need someone to emerge after the graduation of Mason Reiger and Darryl Peterson, and Clayton has the kind of upside that has coaches talking.

“The kid’s a freak. He’s a freak of nature, god has blessed him no doubt genetically.

He has traits that you just can’t coach. The pass-rush, the twitch, the instincts," strength and conditioning director Brady Collins said this winter.

"He works his ass off." Outside backers coach Matt Mitchell was just as direct this spring.

“His get off and his pass-rush, Sebastian might be mad at me, but I think Clayton might be one of my best pass-rushers," Mitchell said. Clayton is now up to 245 pounds on a 6-foot-5 frame, and Mitchell also pointed to progress in “run game dominance.”

Among the entire defense - and maybe the whole team - Clayton stands out as one of the most impressive athletes. If it all clicks this fall, he could be a problem.

The other big athletic wild card is Kansas transfer Jon Jon Kamara, who has drawn praise all offseason while working the STAR spot in Mike Tressel’s defense. Wisconsin’s starting inside linebackers, Mason Posa and Cooper Catalano, are already among the best athletes on the unit, but Kamara gives the Badgers something different as the third inside linebacker.

“He’s a fun one. Compliments those two really well," inside linebackers coach Tuf Boreland said.

"I think Jon Jon, with his athleticism, gives you a third backer that has that ability to play close to the edge but also put him to the field and make plays in space too.” That ability to operate in space is a big reason Wisconsin feels good about keeping coverage flexibility when it uses its three-linebacker package.

Tight end Grant Stec put it this way: "He’s very good at snagging you away from the ball."

For the third spot, Cai Bates is the kind of cornerback Wisconsin hasn’t had around in a while. At 6-foot-3 and 202 pounds, he brings a rare build to the position, along with the recruiting pedigree that came with being a consensus top-125 player and a consensus top-20 cornerback nationally out of high school.

Last season, Wisconsin didn’t have a 6-foot-3 corner on the roster, and its two starting outside corners were 5-foot-11 Ricardo Hallman and 6-foot D’Yoni Hill. Bates has only 26 career snaps, so he’s still unproven, but the tools are obvious.

He remains in the competition for the starting job opposite Arizona State transfer Javan Robinson, and even if he doesn’t win it, Robert Steeples has already hinted there will be room for rotation. “Cai is a bigger corner…got a lot of talent, got a lot of length.

And you know he can run too," secondary coach Paul Haynes said. Steeples added that Bates’ biggest strength is his length and his ability to do “big corner stuff.”

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