8-0 Indiana, 4-4 Wisconsin have different records, same doubts

Reflections on Saturday’s game between the Wisconsin Badgers and Indiana Hoosiers.

The Indiana Hoosiers are 8-0. The Wisconsin Badgers are 4-4. Yet, when these teams meet Saturday afternoon in the Kohl Center, no one should think those two records mean much of anything… and I dare say that Indiana fans would probably agree.

It doesn’t really matter that much that Indiana is 8-0. The Hoosiers have played a tissue-soft schedule with the exception of Florida State in the Big Ten-ACC Challenge. Yes, the Hoosiers deserve substantial credit for easily handling the Seminoles by 16 points, 80-64. That win will travel in winter and be valuable in March. However, the Hoosiers have largely spent the first month of their season fattening up on cupcakes.

North Alabama. Portland State. Troy. Western Illinois. IU has also beaten Louisiana Tech, which just won at Mississippi State, so that’s not quite a cupcake. South Dakota State has a good mid-major reputation. Princeton isn’t particularly good this season, but the Tigers have been a quality mid-major for much of the past quarter-century in college basketball. Nevertheless, the larger point is plain: Indiana generally hasn’t challenged itself. Not that much, at any rate. The Hoosiers have played eight home games, not even a single neutral-site game.

Indiana’s first true road game of the season is this Wisconsin game. Good luck, Hoosiers. Indiana fans know that both teams in this Saturday Big Ten opener — not just one — play under the burden of needing to prove they can play well in all environments. Wisconsin has struggled away from Madison this season, as we saw not just in the North Carolina State loss, but also in Brooklyn. Indiana hasn’t yet lost a game, but Indiana hasn’t yet played away from home, so the Hoosiers — even with their unblemished 8-0 mark — deserve to be doubted to a certain degree.

We have seen this movie before: Indiana, when fully motivated and amped up by an electric Assembly Hall crowd in Bloomington, can beat any team in America. We saw that under Tom Crean, and it can still sometimes be true under Archie Miller. Get the Hoosiers away from Assembly Hall, though, and they often become a shadow of their home-court selves. This sounds pretty familiar.

Wisconsin isn’t the only team with a home-road split personality. Guess which team has to prove it can win away from home on Saturday: It’s not the Badgers.

Three Indiana players Badger fans need to know

Wisconsin kicks off Big Ten play against Indiana in Madison on Saturday. Badger fans should be sure to know these three opposing players.

Wisconsin (4-4) will look to snap its three-game losing streak on Saturday afternoon in its Big Ten opener against Indiana (8-0) in Madison.

The Badgers fell to the Hoosiers in a 75-73 double-overtime thriller in Bloomington in last season’s matchup between these programs and based on the disparity between how the two teams have performed as of late, they could be in for an uphill battle to reverse their fortunes in this one.

Wisconsin is coming off of an ugly 69-54 loss at NC State on Wednesday, while Indiana has yet to lose this season and just earned their most impressive win of the season against No. 17 Florida State on Tuesday. While Bucky has looked like a much more dangerous team at the Kohl Center than on the road so far this season, Indiana boasts a deep and talented rotation that could give Wisconsin some problems, with four players averaging over 12 points per game.

Here are the three players on the other side who Badger fans should keep a close eye on throughout tonight’s contest.

Trayce Jackson-Davis – Forward

2019 stats: 15.5 ppg, 9.4 rpg, 2.3 bpg, 65.6 FG%,

A McDonald’s All-American and the nation’s No. 30 overall recruit in the class of 2019, Jackson-Davis has lived up to the hype so far in his freshman season and looks like a potential one-and-done candidate.

The 6-9 power forward leads Indiana in both rebounds and blocks by a wide margin and is the team’s second-leading scorer. He lives near the rim and isn’t going to stretch the floor, but Jackson-Davis makes the most out of his opportunities in the paint, leading the Big Ten with a 65.6 percent field goal percentage that ranks No. 12 in the NCAA. He also gets to the line a ton, attempting more free throws than anyone else in the conference to this point in the season.

Jackson-Davis has already been named the Big Ten Freshman of the Week twice this season.

Devonte Green – Guard

2019 stats: 15.8 ppg, 2.2 rpg, 3.2 apg, 1.4 spg, 54.0 FG%, 51.9 3P%

Nov 20, 2019; Bloomington, IN, USA; Indiana Hoosiers guard Devonte Green (11) dribbles the ball against Princeton Tigers center Richmond Aririguzoh (34) in the first half at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall. Mandatory Credit: Trevor Ruszkowski-USA TODAY Sports

Indiana’s leading scorer at 15.8 points per game, Green appears to have taken a major leap in his final season in Bloomington based on his play in the five contests he’s appeared in since returning from an injury that kept him out of the Hoosiers’ first three.

The senior guard has always been a fairly reliable three-point shooter throughout his career, knocking down over 40 percent of his looks from downtown as a freshman and junior. However, he has taken his reputation as a sniper to a whole new level this year, drilling 14 of 27 shots (51.9 percent)  from long range and 27 of 50 (54 percent) overall.

Green has been more than just a shotmaker as well, ranking second on the team in both assists and steals.

Justin Smith – Forward

2019 stats: 14.3 ppg, 5.1 rpg, 1.8 spg, 0.5 bpg, 57.3 FG%, 33.3 3P%

Similarly to Green, Smith has taken a big step forward for the Hoosiers this year.

The 6-7 junior swingman is averaging career-highs across the board in points, steals, rebounds, three-point percentage, and field goal percentage. Smith’s scoring average of 14.3 is the third-best on the team and is more than six points higher than his mark last season, while his rebounding average is better than every Hoosier not named Trayce Jackson-Davis.

Smith has also been one of the Big Ten’s better defenders so far, leading Indiana in steals and ranking second in the conference in that category.