ESPN ranks Wisconsin basketball near the top in the latest 2021 ‘Bracketology’

The Badgers are listed near the top of Joe Lunardi’s latest column

[lawrence-newsletter]Wisconsin basketball has been receiving a ton of pre-season hype from around the major networks. Returning 88% of their scoring from last season’s Big Ten regular season title-winning team and anticipating a starting lineup of five seniors will result in lofty projections.

ESPN college basketball insider Joe Lunardi has released his latest “Bracketology” column, and the Badgers and the Big Ten are well represented. Lunardi has Wisconsin as a two-seed in every UW fan’s favorite region: the west region. The number one seeds are Gonzaga, Villanova, Virginia, and Baylor.

As far as conferences go, it is no surprise to see the Big Ten at the top of the list. The Big Ten has nine teams in the tournament, more than any other conference. UW is one of two Big Ten teams on the two-seed line along with Michigan State. It’s never too early to project next season, and early projections show that Wisconsin fans should be very excited about the sky-high ceiling in 2021.

Scouting Report: 2020 preferred walk-on Carter Gilmore

Wisconsin basketball landed a solid preferred walk-on. Here’s what he brings to Madison

As we continue our BadgersWire scouting report series, we turn to a preferred walk-on who feels like anything but an ordinary walk-on. Class of 2020 forward Carter Gilmore is a player who turned down multiple division one offers, including those from the likes of Depaul and Brown, to play for his home school in Madison.

Calling him a forward really does not tell the whole story. Gilmore looks and feels like a modern point-forward, at least at the high-school level. During his senior campaign, the 6-7 future Badger lead his Arrowhead squad to a 23-1 record. According to wissports.net, Gilmore averaged 26.8 points per game in 25 games while shooting nearly 54% from the field in the process.

Carter Gilmore in one word: “Positionless” — Sure, maybe this is just another way of saying versatile. On tape, the Hartland, WI native looks like he was playing point-center for his Arrowhead squad in high school. He was the anchor of the defense down low and came up with a series of highlight blocks. Gilmore also grabbed rebounds and brought the ball up himself. The best way to utilize Gilmore is an exciting mystery for Wisconsin Head Coach Greg Gard to solve.

Offense: Offensively, Gilmore does a little bit of everything. He’s comfortable taking the basketball up and making plays for others off the dribble. The point-forward stepped into a lot of pull-up threes at the high school level, and according to wissports.net shot 33% from beyond the arc as a senior. As a catch-and-shoot threat, Gilmore still has room to grow at the next level.

The best thing about Gilmore at this stage is his combination of pace and basketball IQ. By pace, I do not mean that he is particularly fast with the rock, but rather that he plays at his own tempo. He’s never hurried on the floor, and always seems to be under control with the basketball in his hands. His handles are sneaky good, especially for a player at his size. You can also expect a few highlight jams from Gilmore; an above-average athlete who has solid leaping ability. His turnovers were high this year at around four per game, but that is to be expected from a player who has the basketball in his hands as much as Gilmore did this season with the Warhawks.

Defense: As a rebounder, Gilmore was tenacious in high school. According to wissports.net, this past season the Arrowhead star pulled down nearly eleven rebounds per contest.

Gilmore’s role defensively at the next level is an interesting one to ponder. He probably lacks the speed to stay in front of most smaller college guards, while also not quite having the size to hang with bigs inside. Answering the question of where he fits best on this end of the floor will lead to Gilmore being a rotation player down the road.

2020-21 projection: On one of the deepest rosters in the country, Gilmore will be a player that can push others in practice to be better versions of themselves. A couple years down the road, do not be surprised if this preferred walk-on, who had multiple division one offers, turns into a hidden gem for the Badgers.

Where Wisconsin basketball’s 2020 class stands with the rest of the Big Ten

There is good reason to be excited about Wisconsin basketball’s 2020 class of five signees and one preferred walk-on. With four-star recruit Ben Carlson, and four three star recruits, the 2020 class is one of the deepest classes in Badger history. …

There is good reason to be excited about Wisconsin basketball’s 2020 class of five signees and one preferred walk-on. With four-star recruit Ben Carlson, and four three star recruits, the 2020 class is one of the deepest classes in Badger history.

The Big Ten recently had a recruiting shockwave sent through the conference when the number one ranked player in the state of North Carolina (according to 247sports) Isaiah Todd decided to decommit from Michigan and  sign with the brand new NBA G-League select squad.

The Wolverines previously had the number one 2020 class in the conference, and even after losing Todd still retain the top spot in terms of the 247sports composite rankings. With three four-star signees each, Michigan and Indiana are the most top-heavy classes in terms of recruiting rankings. Currently, the 247sports class calculator sees the Badgers 2020 class as the third-best in the conference.

According to the 2020 recruiting rankings done by 247sports, there are currently no five-star players in the 2020 Big Ten recruiting classes. With Wisconsin returning five seniors who were all major contributors in 2019-20, and bringing in a top-three Big Ten class, expectations are justifiably high for the 2020-21 Badgers.

For more on the 2020 class, check out BadgersWire’s scouting report breakdown of future Badger ballers:

Ben Carlson Scouting Report 

Steven Crowl Scouting Report 

 Johnny Davis Scouting Report 

Lorne Bowman Scouting Report 

 

Wisconsin basketball offers 2021 shooting guard

Wisconsin basketball is looking to add to an already impressive class of 2021. The Badgers offered 2021 shooting guard Isaiah Barnes yesterday, per his Twitter. Blessed to receive an offer from The University of Wisconsin! ⚪️ #GoBadgers …

Wisconsin basketball is looking to add to an already impressive class of 2021. The Badgers offered 2021 shooting guard Isaiah Barnes yesterday, per his Twitter.

Barnes has seen a meteoric rise over the past few months in his recruiting. According to 247sports, he is an unranked prospect, yet over the past few months has received offers from Kansas, Illinois, Iowa, and other power five schools.

The 6-6 shooting guard has the size, athleticism, and a smooth pull-up jumper to make him successful at the next level. Despite flying under the radar during his freshman and sophomore seasons, the country is waking up to the potential of the Illinois native.

The Badgers already have three 2021 four-star commits in Chucky Hepburn, Matthew Mors, and Chris Hodges. The Wisconsin basketball 2021 recruiting class is currently ranked as the second best class in the country behind USC according to 247sports.

 

Locked On Badgers Podcast: Badgers NFL Draft preview and more with BadgersWire staff writer Ben Kenney

Asher and Ben talk the NFL Draft, the Greg Gard era, and reminisce on memories of going to games as Wisconsin students.

The Locked On Badgers Podcast is a daily Wisconsin basketball and football podcast bringing you short-form, daily coverage of Badgers sports Monday through Friday. On today’s episode, BadgersWire staff writer Ben Kenney joins Asher to talk NFL Draft, Greg Gard, and tell some sports stories from his time as a UW-Madison student.

You can listen to Locked On Badgers Monday through Friday wherever you get your podcasts.

Wisconsin basketball included in another preseason top 10

Wisconsin basketball has been feeling the love during this offseason. The hype surrounding the 2020-21 season has manifested itself in early rankings that see the Badgers as a top ten team. The latest ranking to show UW the respect that comes with …

Wisconsin basketball has been feeling the love during this offseason. The hype surrounding the 2020-21 season has manifested itself in early rankings that see the Badgers as a top ten team. The latest ranking to show UW the respect that comes with returning five of your top six leading scorers was done by CBS Sports college basketball insider Jon Rothstein. 

Rothstein also happens to be the originator of the “Greg Gard, silent assassin” t-shirts that Nate Reuvers and other Badgers wore towards the end of the season in postgame interviews. The CBS Sports insider ranks the Badgers as the ninth-best team in the country in his “Early Rothstein 45 for 2021.” 

Contrary to other early expert rankings, instead of having UW as the top Big Ten team Rothstein sees the Badgers as the third best team in the Big Ten after Iowa and Michigan State respectively. In our BadgersWire way-too-early preseason rankings, we also saw Iowa, Michigan State, and the Badgers as the clear top three, albeit in a different order.

For Iowa, a large portion of their preseason hype comes with the assumption that reigning Big Ten Player of the Year Luka Garza will return to school instead of heading to the NBA draft. While we are still in the way-too-early phase of rankings, expect Wisconsin to be near the top of any preseason predictions both nationally and in the Big Ten conference.

Andy Katz loves the Badgers’ chances in 2020-21

College basketball reporter Andy Katz released his “Power 36” rankings for the 2020-21 season a few days ago and has Wisconsin slotted…

[lawrence-newsletter]

College basketball reporter Andy Katz released his “Power 36” rankings for the 2020-21 season a few days ago and has Wisconsin slotted in at No. 6.

His description of his ranking of the Badgers reads “The Badgers got a piece of the Big Ten regular-season title in their final game at Indiana. They will be picked with Iowa to make another run by returning the core of the team, a full season from Micah Potter and a heralded recruiting class.”

Katz shares a sentiment with countless college basketball writers and analysts that the team returning nearly their entire team from this past season, welcoming in an impressive recruiting class and Micah Potter being able to play the full season all together points to a year with a lot of potential for Head Coach Greg Gard’s team. Unlike the other writers, though, Katz has the Badgers ranked in the top-10 ahead of teams like Kansas, Kentucky, Virginia and Duke.

The Badgers are the second-highest-ranked Big Ten team in the new rankings behind only Iowa who is pegged in at No. 5. The other Big Ten teams included by Katz are Michigan at No. 8, Michigan State at No. 12, Rutgers at No. 13, Illinois at No. 21, Indiana at No. 31, Purdue at No. 33 and Ohio State at No. 35.

The only teams placed ahead of Gard’s unit in order are Gonzaga, Baylor, Villanova, Creighton and, again, Iowa.

Though rosters are bound to change a lot before the season tips off, Katz’s ranking of Wisconsin gives Badger fans something to look forward to in today’s uncertain time.

Locked On Badgers Podcast: The greatest Wisconsin Basketball team of all time

Asher discusses what he feels is the undisputed greatest Wisconsin basketball team of all time

[lawrence-newsletter]The Locked On Badgers Podcast is a daily Wisconsin basketball and football podcast bringing you short-form, daily coverage of Badgers sports Monday through Friday. On today’s episode, Asher talks about the greatest Wisconsin basketball team of all time, and details why Greg Gard has been such a contentious figure in Madison.

You can listen to Locked On Badgers on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, and wherever else you find your podcasts, Monday through Friday.

The Athletic’s Seth Davis ranks Wisconsin much higher than you may think in his early top-25

The Badgers were ranked much higher than you think in The Athletic’s college basketball rankings.

[lawrence-newsletter][lawrence-auto-related count=2]The managing editor of The Athletic’s college basketball site recently ranked Wisconsin much higher than you may think. Seth Davis released his “early top-25” rankings this morning, and of the rankings from major publications, ranked Wisconsin as high as I have seen.

The Badgers came in at number four overall, and were the highest-ranked Big Ten team of five. Gonzaga took the number one overall spot in the rankings. Among the Big Ten squads, Iowa came in at the number eight spot, Michigan State entered in at 13, and Indiana and Ohio State rounded out the top-25 at the 23rd and 24th spots respectively.

NCAA Basketball: Wisconsin at Indiana
Mar 7, 2020; Bloomington, Indiana, USA; Wisconsin Badgers forward Nate Reuvers (35) and forward Micah Potter (11) celebrate during a timeout in the second half against the Indiana Hoosiers at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

The fourth spot is the highest ranking for the Badgers in terms of early season top-25’s among major networks and publications. Most early rankings have set the precedent that Wisconsin is the team to beat in the Big Ten Conference this coming season.

ESPN includes a Badger when ranking the top 25 college basketball players for 2020-21

A Badger is included in ESPN’s rankings of the best college basketball players in 2020-21

The Big Ten Conference was all over ESPN’s recent list of the top 25 players in the country for 2020-2021. ESPN insider John Gasaway had two Big Ten ballers in his top 10, including Iowa Hawkeye star Luka Garza ranked as the top player in the country.

Garza was neck-and-neck with Dayton star Obi Toppin for the Wooden Player of the Year Award, ultimately losing out to Toppin for college basketball’s top honor. The Hawkeye big man averaged 23.9 points per contest to go along with 9.8 rebounds last season.

Illinois guard Ayo Dosunmu was ranked as the eighth-best player, although the Illini star still has to answer the questions that the NBA Draft is asking. Dosunmu has yet to verbally say he is staying for his junior season, and his teammate Kofi Cockburn just announced his decision to declare for the NBA Draft.

The Badger that was included in the list was not Wisconsin’s leading scorer Nate Reuvers, but instead Big Ten sixth man of the year snub Micah Potter. The Ohio native was ranked as the 18th-best player in college basketball for next season. Potter averaged 10.1 points per game and 6.2 rebounds this past year after making his Badger debut in December. The Ohio State transfer will be a major piece for a 2020-21 Badger squad that has Final Four aspirations. ESPN sees him as the best returning Badger next season on a squad that returns 88% of their minutes from this past year.