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Wisconsin RB Chez Mellusi carted off with serious leg injury vs. Purdue

On3 imageby:Andrew Graham09/22/23

AndrewEdGraham

NCAA Football: Georgia Southern at Wisconsin
Jeff Hanisch-USA TODAY Sports

Wisconsin running back Chez Mellusi suffered an apparently severe injury to his lower left leg in the fourth quarter against Purdue on Friday night. He was ultimately carted off the field after trainers placed an air cast on his leg.

With the Badgers trying to burn clock holding a 30-17 lead with fewer than eight minutes remaining, Mellusi took a routine carry up the middle. Upon getting wrapped up and tackled by Purdue’s Kydran Jenkins, Mellusi’s lower left leg got caught under Jenkins, at which point it appeared to give way in catastrophic fashion.

The FS1 broadcast only showed one replay of the injury due to the graphic nature.

Before the cart took Mellusi to the locker room, his teammates came out and showed their support for him.

Mellusi was getting a lot of use this season, but now the load falls to Braelon Allen

In the first half of last week’s game against Georgia SouthernWisconsin used Mellusi at running back more than Braelon Allen. Of course, that changed in the second half as Allen wound up rushing for a game-high 94 yards and two touchdowns to help the Badgers to the 35-14 victory.

Playing Mellusi was a surprising decision considering Allen’s success through his first two years. According to head coach Luke Fickell, though, the third-year running back was “dinged up.”

And while he wasn’t going to be necessarily a game-time decision, Fickell pointed out how well Allen battled and broke out in the second half.

“Change of pace a little bit,” Fickell said of the decision to play Mellusi more to start. “Braelon was dinged up a little bit. But that’s what I’m as proud [as] anything. He didn’t bat an eye at it, whether it was being dinged up a little bit or, ‘Hey, this is the route we’re gonna go based on where you are physically.’

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“He thinks he feels a lot better. And like I said, I’m not saying he was going to be a game-time decision. But he got dinged up a little bit in practice. I can honestly tell you, I’m proud of the way he fought through, the way he handled even today, and it showed in the second half.”

Through three games, Allen and Mellusi split carries fairly evenly. Mellusi has 40 carries so far while Allen has 36. Having that type of two-headed monster is huge for Phil Longo’s offense, and Fickell said the flow of the game was a big reason for that in the early going.

“I’m not saying it’s right or it’s better or whatever it is, but there’s a flow to things. And I think he’s mature,” Fickell said. “He understands that. He’s disappointed, he obviously wants to touch the ball a lot more and feels like more than just selfishly, feels like he can be more of an impact.