Article from SDS: https://www.saturdaydownsouth.com/sec-football/1-transfer-portal-who-could-benefit-every-team-2021/
For Mizzou:
Mizzou — Bradrick Shaw, Cal RB
OK, so get this. Shaw is 24 years old. He was in the 2015 class. So was Saquon Barkley, who just finished his third year in the NFL. Shaw, who spent 5 years at Wisconsin and 1 at Cal, is using the free year of eligibility to find a new home in Year 7 of college. Why not Mizzou, where Larry Rountree leaves a major hole to fill. Tyler Badie wasn’t really used as a true complement to Rountree, and at his size, I wouldn’t bank on that changing in the second year of Eli Drinkwitz’s offense.
Back in the day, Wisconsin fans were fired up about Shaw being the next great Badger back after he had 457 rushing yards and 6 touchdowns backing up Corey Clement in 2016. Then the younger Jonathan Taylor showed up and took over. Yeah, I said the “younger” Jonathan Taylor (by 2 years). But still, Shaw worked his way back from a torn ACL and now healthy after a somewhat lost year at Cal, he could be the between-the-tackles back that has typically thrived in Drinkwitz’s system.
For Mizzou:
Mizzou — Bradrick Shaw, Cal RB
OK, so get this. Shaw is 24 years old. He was in the 2015 class. So was Saquon Barkley, who just finished his third year in the NFL. Shaw, who spent 5 years at Wisconsin and 1 at Cal, is using the free year of eligibility to find a new home in Year 7 of college. Why not Mizzou, where Larry Rountree leaves a major hole to fill. Tyler Badie wasn’t really used as a true complement to Rountree, and at his size, I wouldn’t bank on that changing in the second year of Eli Drinkwitz’s offense.
Back in the day, Wisconsin fans were fired up about Shaw being the next great Badger back after he had 457 rushing yards and 6 touchdowns backing up Corey Clement in 2016. Then the younger Jonathan Taylor showed up and took over. Yeah, I said the “younger” Jonathan Taylor (by 2 years). But still, Shaw worked his way back from a torn ACL and now healthy after a somewhat lost year at Cal, he could be the between-the-tackles back that has typically thrived in Drinkwitz’s system.