Jonathan Davis says Greg Gard ‘knows he’s got some things to change’ moving forward

Jonathan Davis says Greg Gard ‘knows he’s got some things to change’ moving forward

Wisconsin guard Jonathan Davis has become the first Wisconsin player to speak on the tumultuous last few months within the Wisconsin basketball program.

During an interview with WXOW sports anchor Declan Levy, the Badger guard had a few interesting things to say about the much-publicized audio leak, his relationship with head coach Greg Gard and whether he ever considered transferring.

His answers make sense when you think back to the leaked audiotape and consider the thoughts of last year’s senior class. The players expressed problems they had with how Gard operated and said they don’t have much of a relationship, if any, with the coach.

In all honesty, those are still things that need to change, even with assistant coach Alando Tucker and most of the senior class gone from the program.

However, Davis noted Gard has made a concerted effort to meet with players and incoming recruits and work on those relationships — something the sophomore guard said the head coach has done a “much better job at.”

This is probably a sentiment we’ll hear as the season nears and gets underway, as it’ll undoubtedly be a question posed to every player and coach made available to the media.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

A Wisconsin transfer portal addition will be fully eligible for the 2021-22 season

A Wisconsin transfer portal addition will be fully eligible for the 2021-22 season

Wisconsin fans have seen the NCAA’s inconsistencies in allowing transfers to be eligible for an upcoming season, most recently with former Ohio State big man Micah Potter missed a chunk of Wisconsin’s 2019-20 campaign.

This offseason the program was extremely active in the portal, adding guard Jahcobi Neath from Wake Forest, Chris Vogt from Cincinnati and guard Isaac Lindsey from UNLV.

Well, the program and its fanbase will not experience the same Micah Potter saga again as CBSSports’ Jon Rothstein recently tweeted that Vogt will be fully eligible for the upcoming season since he is a college graduate.

Vogt averaged 8.4 points per game, 4.9 rebounds per game and 1.4 blocks per game during his two years at Cincinnati—that while shooting 62 percent from the floor and just 49 percent from the free-throw line.

Basketball season is still months away, but at least there’s good news this week regarding Vogt’s ability to play when the season does get underway.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.

Wisconsin is on the bubble in ESPN’s latest ‘bracketology’

From 1998-99 to 2016-17, the Wisconsin Badgers did not miss an NCAA Tournament. The majority of those years were during Bo Ryan’s

From 1998-99 to 2016-17, the Wisconsin Badgers did not miss an NCAA Tournament.

The majority of those years were during Bo Ryan’s term as head coach, arguably the greatest stretch of basketball the school has ever seen.

Despite a down year in 2017-18 under Greg Gard, the team still seems to find its way into the dance every March. But heading into the 2021-22 season, the outlook isn’t nearly as high as we’ve seen in the past.

Earlier today, ESPN’s Joe Lunardi released his latest bracketology and squarely ‘on the bubble’ are your Wisconsin Badgers.

The program joins Washington State, Northwestern and Oklahoma as Lunardi’s ‘first four out,’ sitting behind his ‘last four in’ of Syracuse, Colorado State, Saint Mary’s and Creighton.

While expectations will be checked for the 2021-22 Badgers, an NCAA Tournament appearance should still realistic for Greg Gard and his extremely young basketball team.

Contact/Follow us @TheBadgersWire on Twitter, and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Wisconsin news, notes, opinion and analysis.