Wisconsin Transfer Back Faces A Make Or Break Camp

Can Bryan Jackson leverage his transfer to Wisconsin and secure a prominent role in their ground-heavy offense?

Wisconsin’s running back room has room for a player like Bryan Jackson, and that’s what makes the USC transfer worth watching this fall.

Jackson arrives in Madison with a profile that still carries real weight. At USC, he logged 36 carries for 123 yards, a 3.4 yards-per-carry average, and four touchdowns, while adding two catches on three targets for 17 yards. He never quite forced his way into a major role with the Trojans, but the background is still there: a consensus three-star recruit from McKinney, Texas who drew more than 30 offers, including Alabama, Ohio State, Georgia, Oklahoma, Texas and Notre Dame.

Wisconsin wanted him out of high school, and now the Badgers get the chance to use him the way they seem to have envisioned all along. Jackson brings size and force to the position, and he looks like the clear power back in Jayden Everett’s room.

Luke Fickell made that point this spring, saying, “He’s a guy that’s highly touted, got a lot of ability. Learning to use his 235 pounds, run behind his pads a little more," Luke Fickell said this spring.

At the moment, Jackson appears to sit behind Abu Sama and Darrion Dupree on the depth chart. Even so, there’s a real lane for him to matter in a run-first offense, especially because his skill set fits the Badgers’ downhill approach. The 6-foot-2, 240-pound back has the kind of frame that can change how defenses line up when he steps on the field.

That said, the upside comes with some obvious conditions. If Wisconsin’s offense sputters again, Jackson’s chances to make noise shrink fast. A sluggish unit would be a tough environment for an RB3 trying to carve out a role, no matter how much pedigree he brings with him.

And there’s another way this can go, too. Jackson could have the kind of opportunity that helps revive his career, only to leave production on the table if he doesn’t turn touches into something more.

In that version of the season, he doesn’t do much as a receiver, doesn’t consistently win the tough yards, and doesn’t create the bigger plays Wisconsin needs from him. That could open the door for TCU transfer Nate Palmer or JUCO bounce-back Julius Pope to move ahead of him at RB3, which would likely send Jackson back into the portal as a senior at a G6 school.

Everett knows exactly what kind of challenge comes with a bigger back, and he spelled it out this spring: “I think one thing with BJack or bigger backs is understanding how people are gonna attack you," his coach Everett said this spring. "Being a big back, people are gonna make business decisions, DB guys are gonna tackle you low.

From a backer standpoint, they’ll put their face on you. My challenge to him is playing the game more parallel, more square, getting his pad-level down.

And obviously the pass protection piece too, it’s gotta be automatic when you’re in there. I think he’s done an unbelievable job."

Jackson isn’t a lock to pile up 500 yards, but the path to his best season is there. If he gets meaningful goal-line work and makes the most of a limited RB3 role, he could be one of those players Wisconsin fans keep wanting to see more of.

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