Ben Bywater’s injury was something he couldn’t bypass

When BYU linebacker Ben Bywater took a big hit on his right shoulder last year during the third quarter at Kansas, he knew he was in trouble, but he never thought it would end his career.

On Wednesday, it did — as he retired from football.

After 36 games, including 24 starts, Bywater’s playing days are over, and it was his lone Big 12 appearance that proved to be his last.

“I hit the guy and it felt like a 50-caliber shot right through my (right) shoulder,” Bywater told the “Y’s Guys” podcast in January. “It just popped.”

The pop required surgery to repair a torn labrum just months after Bywater went under the knife to repair his left shoulder. The body can only take so much, and Bywater’s frame had taken enough.

BYU loses its commander and active career tackles leader (247), but not before Bywater stole the show. An injury to star linebacker Keenan Pili in 2021 increased Bywater’s role with the defense and the sophomore responded by leading the Cougars with 102 tackles.

The following year, with injuries hampering Payton Wilgar and Max Tooley, Bywater carried the load again and finished with a team-high 98 tackles and three interceptions, including a 76-yard pick-six against SMU in the New Mexico Bowl.

Prior to the third quarter collision at Kansas last September, the returned missionary (Guatemala) and finance major was charging full steam ahead toward his dream of the NFL. The Big 12 season was going to be his proving ground to show scouts he could produce similar numbers against better opponents. But 32 tackles into 2023, Bywater was out.

His last blast will forever be a thud in his personal history, but it won’t erase an unprecedented journey full of irreplaceable moments.

Among his 36 games, three of them came in 2020, when Bywater learned what it was like to play in mostly empty stadiums during…


Source link : https://sports.yahoo.com/ben-bywater-injury-something-couldn-233620241.html

Author : Deseret News

Publish date : 2024-07-31 23:36:20

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