UW linebacker Vince Biegel decided to play another season instead of declaring for the NFL draft. Read and understand why:
In Madison, if you put your ear to the ground, you can hear it. If you close your eyes on a fall night, you can hear it. If you wander down Monroe Street, you can hear it.
Itâs Camp Randall â the home of Badger football, and the heartbeat of Wisconsin.
You never forget the first time you take that field on a Saturday. Itâs loud. Much louder than anything you can really imagine.
The night before my first home game in 2012, we stayed at a hotel down near the stadium, like we always do. I remember laying in bed, struggling to fall asleep, just thinking, I canât believe Iâm playing at Camp Randall tomorrow. Because, you see, it wasnât just a stadium for me, it was a place Iâd dreamt about my entire life. I was born and raised in Wisconsin Rapids, Wis., a tiny town in the middle of the state. Iâve always wanted to represent Wisconsin on the field. I knew that from a young age.
Remember Jim Leonhard? Heâs the first player I think of when I imagine what it means to be a Badger. He was a walk-on from Ladysmith, Wis. He played free safety for the Badgers, and did it as well as anyone I can remember. He stayed all four years and, to me, he embodied the Wisconsin spirit. To be a three-time All-American despite not receiving a scholarship until your senior year was pretty inspiring. It was that 2002 team that Jim starred on that made me a Badger football fan for life.
When it came time to decide where to play in college, I narrowed it down to the two teams closest to my heart: Wisconsin and BYU. The Cougar football program was one I knew well. My dad was a BYU linebacker in the late â80s, and my uncle played halfback there just a few years after.
As it turned out, BYU was very interested in me. Bronco Mendenhall and his staff flew all the way to Wisconsin Rapids to have dinner at my home with me and my family. On their way in, a few assistants on the Badger football staff spotted the BYU coaches and asked where they were headed. They told them they were going up north to see a recruit. While I was eating dinner with the BYU coaching staff, I got a call from Bret Bielema, the head coach of Wisconsin at the time.
I guess news of the BYU visit had made its way to him.
Less than 24 hours later, Coach Bielema was at my dinner table, telling me why Madison was the only place for me.
I didnât need any convincing. I had made up my mind long ago, I just didnât know it. Long before Bronco Mendenhall or even Bret Bielema ever spoke to me, Jim Leonhard, Brooks Bollinger and Barry Alvarez convinced me I wanted to be a Badger.You dream about playing at a school like Wisconsin because you want to be part of the big games. I remember the Rose Bowls in â98 and â99. I wanted to create memories like that. As it turns out, my first opportunity to do that would come on a November night in 2014, when we played against Nebraska.
I remember that it was really cold the morning of the game â Wisconsin in the winter can be very cold. Going into it, we knew this was a game that would be won or lost on the ground, and those are the types of contests that you live for as a linebacker. Nebraska was a good team â a real good team â ranked  No. 16 in the country. But they were coming into our house, and trying to take away our chance at a Big Ten Championship. That wasnât going to happen.
Yeah, we were fired up.
It was a tense first half, with us taking a 24-17 lead. Melvin Gordon had an unreal half, rushing for 238 yards, but the game was still close. We knew, as a defense, that if we wanted to pull away, we were going to have to make a big play. So we got to work on the first possession of the second half. Peniel Jean, a fifth-year senior, came up with a huge interception to give us the ball back and Camp Randall lit up.
I remember as we jogged off the field, I passed Melvin. I noticed that he had this look in his eyes. Thatâs when I thought, Oh boy, here he comes.
Melvin picked apart the Nebraska defense for three touchdowns to start the second half, and by the time the third quarter ended, it was 52-17. The snow was falling in Madison, and I looked around the stadium in awe as the fans did the âJump Aroundâ before the fourth quarter.
Camp Randall was literally shaking  â I could feel the crowd through my legs as I huddled up with my teammates on the field.
We stared at each other, and nobody said a word at first. I tried to look into the eyes of every single player on defense. I said: âDonât forget this feeling! This is why we play!â
The game ended 59-24. The Badger fans serenaded us off the field. Iâm going to remember every second of that night. That feeling of victory in Madison â itâs one of a kind.
The fans are why we play, this place is why we play. Madison is well known as one of the best college towns in America, and itâs easy to explain why. But words donât really cut it. You just have to feel it, to live it.
If you havenât been to a night game at Camp Randall ⌠put that on your bucket list. You wonât regret it. …
The first game of this season will be unlike any other weâve played since Iâve been at Wisconsin. Weâre going to be playing in frigginâ Lambeau Field! For many guys on the team, myself included, this is an opportunity to play in a stadium weâve idolized since birth. Growing up, I was wearing a Brett Favre jersey roughly 90 percent of the time. My first time at Lambeau was when I was six years old. Itâs a place like no other. When you walk up the stairs to your section and see the field for the first time ⌠wow.
The green is more green, the gold is more gold. Itâs a glorious place, and to play there as a college athlete will be an honor for me and my teammates. Itâs a perfect place to start my final season here.
This year is going to be special. Itâs an opportunity to finish what I started as a freshman, and to play for all the people who helped me get here.
Iâll be playing for my teammates. Guys like Leo Musso, who was my roommate since freshman year. If you come into the locker room, our stalls are right beside each other, and itâs been that way since day one. Leo and I have grown up together over the past four years, and Iâm thankful to have him in my life.
Iâm playing for the seniors whoâve come and gone â guys like Chris Borland, Mike Taylor, and Brendan Kelly, who taught me what it means to wear the âWâ on our helmet.
Iâm playing for the kid in Wisconsin Rapids who wants to play linebacker at Camp Randall, but doesnât know if heâll ever be good enough make it.
And most of all, Iâm playing for this state, because it means everything to me.
Itâs our responsibility, and our privilege, to represent the University of Wisconsin. Weâre a group of hard-working young men who werenât necessarily four- or five-star recruits. Weâre not all phenoms coming out of high school. But we arenât afraid to work, and thatâs how we beat people. Every single day we approach this game with the same lunch-pail mentality as the generations of Wisconsin players who came before us. Weâre going to do everything in our power to uphold the tradition of Badger football, and to ensure it lives on long after we leave this town. Iâve played â and lived â the Badger way since day one. I will continue to do so until I walk out of Camp Randall for the final time.
This seasonâs dedicated to you, Madison.
Letâs make it a special one.
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