What Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said after Badgers blowout win vs. Detroit Mercy

What Wisconsin coach Greg Gard said after Badgers blowout win vs. Detroit Mercy

Wisconsin coach Greg Gard addressed the media following the Badgers’ 23-point win over Detroit Mercy on Sunday.

Wisconsin big men Steven Crowl and Nolan Winter were the story of the contest. The two 7-footers combined for 33 points and 15 rebounds off 13-of-19 from the field and 5-of-5 from the charity stripe.

After building a 20-point lead early in the second half, Gard was able to deploy a batch of his bench players to close the contest. Carter Gilmore, Kamari McGee, Markus Ilver, Jack Janicki and Xavier Amos each logged at least 10 minutes in the 23-point triumph.

“Happy for our guys to be able to get through finals week and a few days off this week,” Gard said after the win. “I thought we did a lot of good things, and it was good to go really deep into the bench for some substantial minutes. I think that’ll help not only those individuals, but us collectively going forward because we’re going to continue to need all the help we can get. We’ve got a long road ahead of us.”

That road includes 18 consecutive Big Ten games to close the season. While wings John Blackwell and John Tonje have played exceptionally well to begin the season, the crew’s team defense and consistency down low will prove critical to close the season.

“I thought the two bigs were good and efficient,” Gard said. “We didn’t shoot the three great, but I thought we had really good looks and defensively did a lot of good things to keep the ball out of the paint for the most part. In the first half, they only had one basket at the rim. By and large, a pretty workmanlike effort.”

UW spread the wealth with 22 bench points, 36 points in the paint and 13 assists. The story still revolved around Winter and Crowl. Over the past two wins, the two are accountable for 71 combined points and 29 rebounds.

“I have always known the potential of those two and how complete their games can be,” Gard said. “Steve, over the last two games, has done a better job at being more aggressive and intentional with it. Nolan’s just been hatched so to speak. He’s so young in terms of where he can be and what he can do. You see that size, skill level and athleticism he has, and he has a motor. I don’t know if he realizes how impactful he can be. It’s our job to keep pushing that bar higher for him.”

Wisconsin returns to the hardwood for a Jan. 3 showdown against the Iowa Hawkeyes at the Kohl Center.