01222013

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Sports Editor Nick Korger nkorger@badgerherald.com

C1 | Sports | Spring 2013 Registration Issue

Right On Cue

SPORTS HERALD SPORTS ON THE RADIO

Ian McCue: With a surpring start to conference play, what’s the biggest reason for UW basketball’s 4-1 record?

Column, C12

Need more sports? Check out Nick Korger, Kelly Erickson, Ian McCue and Sean Zak every Sunday from 4-5 p.m. on 91.7 WSUM’s “The Badger Herald Sports Hour” for ridiculous UW athletics banter and awful jokes.

HERALD SPORTS ON THE WEB badgerherald.com/sports Twitter: @bheraldsports Email: sports@badgerherald.com

Jen Small The Badger Herald

Montee Ball wrote his name in yet another record book at the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. The Doak Walker Award winner and Ameche-Dayne Big Ten Running Back of the Year became the only player in Rose Bowl history to score a touchdown in three different Rose Bowls.

Wisconsin wilts in 99th Rose Bowl Stanford triumphs 20-14 thanks to late interception on tipped pass at line Ian McCue Football Beat Writer PASADENA, Calif. — All it took for the Wisconsin football team’s third straight Rose Bowl to slip away was one misguided pass from the hands of quarterback Curt Phillips, a pass that sealed a 20-14 victory for No. 6 Stanford Tuesday evening. The fateful throw came

as the Badgers (8-6, 4-4 Big Ten) drove down the field behind bruising runs as the clock trickled closer to the two-minute mark in the fourth quarter. All that momentum evaporated when Stanford (12-2, 8-1 Pac-12) defensive end Josh Mauro tipped a pass from Phillips intended for tight end Jacob Pedersen that instead landed in the hands of nickelback Usua Amanam. “You’re at midfield or close to midfield with a chance to win the Rose Bowl,” interim head coach Barry Alvarez said. “I just felt like maybe we were a team of destiny. “So I just felt like somehow

we were going to find a way to score.” The fifth-year senior signal caller said Stanford defenders shut off his first two targets on the play, making Pedersen — who had the option to curl inside or head toward the sideline — his man. But according to Phillips a miscommunication and a poor throw on his part ended the potential game-winning drive a yard into Stanford territory. “It’s extremely frustrating, there’s no doubt in my mind we were going to win that game,” Phillips said postgame as he fought back tears. “So it’s tough, but it’s been a hell

of a ride the whole time, I’ve really enjoyed it.” Phillips’ final drive marked one of the only signs of offensive success for the Badgers in the second half, as their 14 points all came in the opening 30 minutes. With the Cardinal defense keeping a muzzle on any offensive production from the Badgers early, speedy tailback Melvin Gordon took a jet sweep 15 yards around the right edge to establish the foundation for the remainder of the drive. A tipped ball somehow found its way into the arms of Jared Abbrederis, and Ball finally found a path to the end zone

to cut Stanford’s lead to 14-7. After Stanford’s Jordan Williamson slid a 47-yard field goal through the uprights, Wisconsin looked set to take a 14-point deficit into halftime. But Phillips sprinted 38 yards down the left to give his team renewed hope of a score before the break. With less than 30 seconds left in the first half, the fifth-year senior found a diving Jordan Fredrick in the front of the end zone to lower the deficit to three points. Yet Phillips’ impressive drive proved for naught, the game marred by the electrifying comebacks that

ended in heartbreaking defeat that defined Wisconsin’s 2012 campaign. “It’s heartbreaking. You’d like to send out guys like Montee the right way, and we couldn’t get it done today,” linebacker Chris Borland said. “Like Coach (Alvarez) said earlier, it’s kind of been a microcosm of our whole season. We’ve faced some adversity, fought back and came up short.” The surprising offensive fireworks of the first half transformed into a grind-itout defensive battle where neither team scored in the

ROSE BOWL, page C3

UW defense bends, breaks Badgers allow two touchdowns on first two drives, hold long drives to field goals Kelly Erickson Football Beat Writer PASADENA, Calif. — Before either Stanford or Wisconsin even arrived in Pasadena, much less Los Angeles for the 2013 Rose Bowl, it was already predicted to be a defensive battle. Both the Cardinal and the Badgers run-heavy offenses were balanced by tough defenses known for shutting down even some of the most efficient opposing offenses. And the 20-14 win for Stanford in the 99th Rose Bowl didn’t disappoint. Overall, the Badgers only allowed the Cardinal 344 total offensive yards, split between 187 rushing yards and 157 passing yards — holding right around their season average of 322.6 per game. But before UW could settle into its own offense, Stanford posted two touchdowns on its first two drives of the game — its only two of the game. “Their first two scores they came out and they did some trick stuff, some reverses … I think they caught us by surprise with those plays,” junior defensive tackle Beau Allen said. “But from there we adjusted on the sidelines and we just all came together as a defense. We just said, ‘We’re not going to let them score again.’ I thought we did a good job from there.” From that point, Stanford

wouldn’t touch the end zone again — but it did find a way to score. On the next drive the Badgers forced a three-andout, which then led to a UW touchdown on the following drive. Prior to halftime Wisconsin forced another Stanford three-and-out, but not before it scored a field goal to take a 17-14 lead into the half. But the defense was just getting started. Through four drives in the third quarter the Badger defense forced four punts — two of which were the result of a three-and-out. “Quite frankly I thought our defense played very, very well in the second half,” interim head coach Barry Alvarez said. “Gave them a couple of field goals. Both defenses picked it up, made adjustments and picked it up.” Wisconsin’s defense became increasingly suffocating throughout the second half until the fourth quarter when it bent too far. Starting on its own 29, the Cardinal used eight rushes — seven from senior running back Stepfan Taylor and one from freshman quarterback Kevin Hogan — and only three passes to work their way down to the Wisconsin 5-yard line. While the Badgers held them out of the end zone, Stanford notched its second

DEFENSE, page C3

Jen Small The Badger Herald

First team all-Big Ten outside linebacker and redshirt senior Mike Taylor recorded three tackles against Stanford in the Rose Bowl. Wisconsin’s defense allowed 8.2 yards per first down play in the game.

Cardinal defense tips game result Stanford’s height on defensive line alters Phillips’ passing lanes, causes interception Nick Korger Sports Editor PASADENA, Calif. — There weren’t any surprises New Year’s Day at the Granddaddy of Them All. Two teams, two old-school styles of football and two relentless defenses graced the field in a low-scoring, smashmouth affair that many saw coming. But, on one particular afternoon, No. 6 Stanford’s defense (12-2, 8-1 Pac12) shined brighter than anything Wisconsin (86, 4-4 Big Ten) could put on the field, dictating the

tempo of the game and batting down critical passes in a 20-14 Cardinal win. “We were defeated by a very good Stanford football team,” interim head coach Barry Alvarez said. “They didn’t surprise me how they played, as you saw that on films, they’ve been very consistent all year.” Stanford’s talented front seven in the 3-4 defense constantly bruised Wisconsin’s run game and never allowed much of an offensive tempo, as the Badgers allowed the Cardinal to record four tackles for a loss and five

running plays for no gain. One of those plays was a fourth and goal for Wisconsin at Stanford’s 1-yard line, a play where Mequon, Wis., native and Cardinal senior defensive end Ben Gardner slipped off of a block by Badger left tackle Ricky Wagner and stuffed running back James White in the backfield. One of the few key moments of the game, the play resulted in a turnover on downs in the opening drive of the second quarter and robbed the Badgers of a critical touchdown at a juncture of the game where they were

down 14-0. Perhaps the biggest difference in the game was the height of the Cardinal’s down defensive linemen, as defensive ends Gardner and Henry Anderson each recorded a pass breakup and got their hands in the passing lanes when they weren’t harassing Badgers quarterback Curt Phillips. Gardner (six tackles on the game) and Anderson (three tackles) had perhaps the best height of any defensive end duo UW had faced the entire season,

TIPS, page C5


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