Stash
Staff member
- Messages
- 78,383
- Reaction score
- 102,329
Not a quarter inch. Are his arms short too? LOL
What is the height and weight of Williams?
6'5" 320 lbs.
Not a quarter inch. Are his arms short too? LOL
What is the height and weight of Williams?
Hard to sayHistory says probably 2 will be.....but based on all reports it does seem like at least 4 of them should be starters in the near future. Maybe 5 if you count Robinson.
How bad did his play dip as the hip stuff wore on him?
6'5" 320 lbs.
Like I said....Kid was rated as a 1st rounder. Played thru injuries last season and dropped. Very happy it happened that way though as we got the best center in the draft in the 4th round. Im STILL giddy and giggling about that one! LOL
Hopefully his injuries won’t permanently take the edge off some of his quickness. Thats what I’ve heard is the biggest concern
24. Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin*
HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 321 | Previously: 24
I wrote about Biadasz's rise in November, after he helped blow up the Iowa defense to the tune of 300 rushing yards. He has proved to be the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April. The fourth-year junior moves extremely well -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and anchors well in pass protection. I really like watching the Wisconsin offense on tape.
Tyler Biadasz, C
So how can my top-ranked center be considered a first-round sleeper? Because there is usually just one center in Round 1 each year, and he's usually picked in the back half. Teams don't always have a need there.
Biadasz is the real deal, though -- a 6-foot-3, 321-pound fourth-year junior who has started 31 straight games for the Badgers. He's a good athlete who is already advanced technically. He can pull and use his athleticism to get on the edge and plow defenders ahead of running back Jonathan Taylor, who last week made his Big Board debut. Biadasz had hip surgery after last season, but he has shown no ill effects. He's a really solid interior lineman. -- Kiper
Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin
I put Biadasz in my list of first-round sleepers last month, but his play since has shown that he's the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April, if he enters the draft. The fourth-year junior is an integral part of an excellent Badgers running game, which just put up 300 yards on Iowa. He moves extremely well for his 6-3, 321-pound size -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and he anchors well in pass protection. Biadasz, who has started 36 games, has gotten better each season. -- Kiper
Bigger than I thought. So maybe tackle is better for him.
When I saw Badass still there in the 4th I wanted either him or Eason and then we got Robinson which was a solid pick. Then I see a trade and we selected him and I was just ecstatic.
Badass was not 100 percent last season due to that hip surgery and that is where Kiper was wrong later on. As the season carried on it played on his hip but some rest and a good offseason should help him regain that power in his base he originally had. That is why he dropped to the 4th.
Otherwise he was the captain on that line for 3 years and touted as the heart and soul of Wisconsin's offense and Mel was originally right.
He had both hip and shoulder surgeryIt could have been the surgery that spooked some teams. I dont actually know but according to Tyler the surgery was more of a clean up surgery than anything major.
https://www.buckys5thquarter.com/20...yler-biadasz-nfl-draft-surgery-offensive-line
24. Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin*
HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 321 | Previously: 24
I wrote about Biadasz's rise in November, after he helped blow up the Iowa defense to the tune of 300 rushing yards. He has proved to be the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April. The fourth-year junior moves extremely well -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and anchors well in pass protection. I really like watching the Wisconsin offense on tape.
Tyler Biadasz, C
So how can my top-ranked center be considered a first-round sleeper? Because there is usually just one center in Round 1 each year, and he's usually picked in the back half. Teams don't always have a need there.
Biadasz is the real deal, though -- a 6-foot-3, 321-pound fourth-year junior who has started 31 straight games for the Badgers. He's a good athlete who is already advanced technically. He can pull and use his athleticism to get on the edge and plow defenders ahead of running back Jonathan Taylor, who last week made his Big Board debut. Biadasz had hip surgery after last season, but he has shown no ill effects. He's a really solid interior lineman. -- Kiper
Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin
I put Biadasz in my list of first-round sleepers last month, but his play since has shown that he's the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April, if he enters the draft. The fourth-year junior is an integral part of an excellent Badgers running game, which just put up 300 yards on Iowa. He moves extremely well for his 6-3, 321-pound size -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and he anchors well in pass protection. Biadasz, who has started 36 games, has gotten better each season. -- Kiper
That would be crazy. Ruiz would be plug and play and start for us for the next 8 years.So you wouldn't trade him for Ruiz?
Yeah I don't know about Biniducci.....all the other picks do have a shot at making the roster.Hard to say
But all should make the roster and 5 as tleast will get playing time
You're putting a lot of pressure on our future, starting center.He reminds me of Phil Costa.
Two surgeries and being unable to participate in the combine will have that effectI wonder what changed. What caused him to drop out of Mel's first round prediction?
He didn’t even perform at the combine at all, right?Kiper dropped Frederick from the 1st to the 3rd within about 1 day due to his combine performance...
Two surgeries and being unable to participate in the combine will have that effect
Hip surgery after the 2018 season. His play in 2019 dropped off a fair bit as he recovered from the hip. He says the hip is fine but no one really knows because he hasn’t had workouts or released medicals (that I know of)Oh so he's been under the knife twice already.
Let's not break out the anointing oil just yet.
A few weeks back when Fred Beard retired I posted a thread about the centers.
24. Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin*
HT: 6-foot-3 | WT: 321 | Previously: 24
I wrote about Biadasz's rise in November, after he helped blow up the Iowa defense to the tune of 300 rushing yards. He has proved to be the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April. The fourth-year junior moves extremely well -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and anchors well in pass protection. I really like watching the Wisconsin offense on tape.
Tyler Biadasz, C
So how can my top-ranked center be considered a first-round sleeper? Because there is usually just one center in Round 1 each year, and he's usually picked in the back half. Teams don't always have a need there.
Biadasz is the real deal, though -- a 6-foot-3, 321-pound fourth-year junior who has started 31 straight games for the Badgers. He's a good athlete who is already advanced technically. He can pull and use his athleticism to get on the edge and plow defenders ahead of running back Jonathan Taylor, who last week made his Big Board debut. Biadasz had hip surgery after last season, but he has shown no ill effects. He's a really solid interior lineman. -- Kiper
Tyler Biadasz, C, Wisconsin
I put Biadasz in my list of first-round sleepers last month, but his play since has shown that he's the clear top center in this class and a potential top-20 pick in April, if he enters the draft. The fourth-year junior is an integral part of an excellent Badgers running game, which just put up 300 yards on Iowa. He moves extremely well for his 6-3, 321-pound size -- he can pull to get to the edge with ease -- and he anchors well in pass protection. Biadasz, who has started 36 games, has gotten better each season. -- Kiper