Nebraska gives Wisconsin a unique team-building opportunity

Wisconsin and Nebraska

If you look at Wisconsin’s remaining 2020 Big Ten basketball schedule, this Tuesday’s home date with Nebraska is the easiest remaining game on the whole slate. The only other games which are comparably easy are road trips to Nebraska and Northwestern later in the season. The one home game against one of the two bad teams in the Big Ten should be, on paper, the simplest task remaining for the Badgers this season.

In many ways, this might seem like the least important game on the slate. It will certainly attract less national attention, and it will also draw relatively little regional attention among those who follow college basketball throughout the Midwest. Yet, this is precisely the kind of game in which a coach — who just saw his team get ripped apart by the conference favorite (Michigan State) — needs to find solutions which can benefit his team in the long run.

Here is my explanation of that point, relative to Wisconsin coach Greg Gard.

One of the more subtle yet powerful truths of sports is that awakenings — realizations that an athlete can perform at a much higher level than previously thought — can occur in a full range of circumstances. Yes, it is obviously ideal if an awakening in a young or unproven athlete comes against elite opposition. When that happens, the athlete instantly knows he or she can grow and develop into something special on the playing field (or court, or rink).

Yet, these awakenings don’t have to happen against elite opponents. Sometimes, it is in the games which don’t involve huge pressure, and don’t attract considerable media scrutiny, that an athlete busts out and discovers a much higher ceiling of potential than anyone had imagined. The fact that the opponent was mediocre matters less, in these instances, than the fact that an athlete played well and showed progress. The reality of self-improvement becomes its own catalyst, regardless of how good the opponent was.

I invite you to consider, then, what this game could mean for Gard and Wisconsin if Tyler Wahl or Brevin Pritzl have big games against Nebraska. (Hey, maybe both could go off!) What if this is a game in which all five Wisconsin starters score 10 points? What if this is a game in which the Badgers earn 30 free throw attempts and learn that they can move the ball in ways which make their offense less inclined to seek 3-point shots, and post a depressingly familiar 7-of-22-ish shooting number from long distance?

This is precisely the kind of game in which a coach has a chance to tinker with some lineup combinations and explore new ways of getting the best out of every player in the main rotation, which generally runs nine deep?

This isn’t a sexy game. It doesn’t carry the emotional weight of the bigger battles which lie ahead… which is exactly why it is a time to explore ways for this team to grow. We will see how the Badgers look when this game is over. Hopefully, UW will look different… in the best possible ways.

Wisconsin should – and must – beat Nebraska

Wisconsin-Nebrasketball

The good news for the Wisconsin Badgers: They should easily be able to handle the Nebraska Cornhuskers on Tuesday night in the Kohl Center. The bad news: Well, there shouldn’t be any bad news, but if the Badgers somehow lose, they will take a big hit on their resume, wiping away the discernible progress they have made in recent weeks with wins against Penn State and Maryland.

This is not the least pleasant game a team can play when it tries to solidify its NCAA Tournament status (the Badgers are clearly in the tournament right now, but a loss to Nebraska, should it happen, would move them toward genuine bubble territory). The least pleasant game a team can play when chasing an NCAA bid is to play a team like Nebraska on the road. Tuesday’s game is at home. (Wisconsin will have to go to Lincoln later in the season.) So, this isn’t the most uncomfortable situation Wisconsin can face. Nevertheless, it is close to that. This is a time to take care of business and move on to the more challenging games on the schedule, which will be tougher to win, but which won’t carry nearly as much of a penalty.

Nebraska has been good enough to beat Purdue and Iowa at home this season, but away from Lincoln, the Husker hoopsters have not been able to win in Big Ten play. They nearly beat Indiana in December but fell just short. They had a chance to win at Northwestern — one of the two road Big Ten games every good Big Ten team needs to win this season — but failed to get the job done. This is not a good team. It is going nowhere this season. Fred Hoiberg knows he is in the middle of a major — not minor — rebuilding project.

If the Michigan State game this past Friday was set up for a Badger disaster, everything about this Nebraska game on Tuesday sets up Wisconsin for success, and maybe a drama-free night as well. This should be a routine victory. That’s the good news.

The bad news? We shouldn’t have any bad news to discuss on Tuesday night — not if the Badgers do what they ought to.

Unlike football, Nebraska can easily play the long game in hoops

Nebrasketball

The question kept being asked, year after year after year, in the first 16 years of this century: When will Northwestern EVER make it to the NCAA Tournament? When a program has never registered a significant yet less-than-extraordinary achievement such as MAKING the NCAA Tournament (not reaching the Final Four or Sweet 16, but merely getting in), that is the only question which will matter. It will suck up all the available oxygen in the atmosphere. It will consume the attention of the fan base. It will occupy any journalists who cover the program… and necessarily so.

Interestingly, after Northwestern made the NCAA Tournament in 2017, the Wildcats have acted like a program which has lost its way. It is as though the chase of the NCAA Tournament animated everyone in that program so much that the attainment of the goal left everyone drained and confused. Northwestern is stumbling around in the dark, tripping over rakes and slipping on wet mops. The current reality of Northwestern basketball isn’t pretty. Yet, it is hard to say that the program exists in a state of crisis… because it is dealing with an unprecedented situation: trying to deal with the greatest moment in program history, which occurred a modest three years ago.

When the history of success at a program is so minimal over a very long period of time, it is difficult to say that the current coach is the central problem (even if that might be true). A coach’s flaws and limitations might matter in an immediate sense, but the larger reality of the program demands patience (unless — and this is the only exception — an obviously and massively better coach can be brought aboard to take the program to the next level).

Nebraska basketball — often referred to as the combination term “Nebrasketball” (which is so much easier to say than “Nebraska basketball”) — is not very good this year under first-year head coach Fred Hoiberg. It is very possible that Nebraska won’t be very good next season, either. Yet, this isn’t a crisis — not when Nebraska labors under a burden similar to Northwestern’s.

The Cornhuskers are the only Power Five conference program (as a result of Northwestern’s 2017 NCAA Tournament win over Vanderbilt) without an NCAA Tournament victory. As was the case with Northwestern, people in and around Nebrasketball are asking that one question, over and over and over: When will the Huskers win their first NCAA Tournament game?

When there is no history of previous NCAA Tournament success, a new coach cannot be expected to turn around the ship immediately. There is a history dating back multiple decades in which Nebraska has reached the Big Dance, but there has not yet been a single instance of the Huskers winning a game in the round of 64 in America’s favorite bracketed tournament.

Fred Hoiberg doesn’t inhabit the same world Scott Frost does. Yes, there is disappointment and frustration and dissatisfaction in Lincoln, but the reasons for the disappointment are different.

In football, the fundamental reality of Nebraska’s situation is that the Huskers are not where they SHOULD be (at least in the minds of Nebraskans).

In basketball, the fundamental reality of Nebraska’s situation is that the Huskers are not where they COULD be. There is a huge difference between those two realities.

Scott Frost is trying to bring Nebraska back to a familiar place of prominence, back to something Nebraskans once enjoyed for several decades without any prolonged interruption.

Fred Hoiberg is trying to do something in Lincoln which has literally NEVER been done before.

If Fred Hoiberg hasn’t turned around Nebraska after three seasons on the job, his tenure won’t be in especially huge trouble. More importantly, people won’t worry if Nebraska has reached a dead end as a program. It’s hard to reach a dead end when consistent progress and improvement have been so foreign to a program’s entire existence. Football elicits a lot more worry about what will happen if Scott Frost, who came home to “mama” when his alma mater called, can’t fix things in the next two years or so.

No, the outlook for Nebrasketball isn’t great, but Fred Hoiberg will get all the time he needs. This isn’t “just like football.” Not even close.

LOOK: Ohio State basketball’s win over Nebraska in stunning photos

Ohio State put an end to its losing streak, controlling the game against Nebraska throughout. Here are some stunning images of the action.

The Ohio State basketball team finally got its first win of the new year, taking it to the Nebraska Cornhuskers from start to finish in an 80-68 win Tuesday night. It was a much better showing for a Buckeye team that had fallen on hard times.

The action was more decisive, intent, and purposeful for Ohio State and we’ve captured a lot of some of the memorable moments from Tuesday night in the Schott in stunning photos.

Take a scroll down through sixteen high-resolution images that capture the night Ohio State got back on the winning track. Hopefully we’ll be able to encapsulate more images of winning moments in the near future.

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WATCH: Head coach Chris Holtmann Nebraska postgame press conference

Ohio State rolled Nebraska Tuesday night to put a stop to a 4-game losing streak. Here are four things we learned.

Ohio State got the monkey off its back. Finally, after a four-game losing streak that dated back to the West Virginia game on December 29, the Buckeyes got back into the win column — its first since the turn of the new year.

OSU did it by shooting the ball much better, making better passes, and by not turning the ball over as much. Head coach Chris Holtmann was in a much better mood when he met with the media following the game Tuesday night, and thanks to the Columbus Dispatch’s YouTube channel, you can listen to his entire comments below.

Click and listen to Holtmann discuss the status of the suspension of Luther Muhammad and Duane Washington, his team’s better offensive performance, the challenge of playing against Nebraska, and more.

Ohio State’s next game is Saturday against Penn State. It’ll be a challenge. They all are in the Big Ten.

Ohio State basketball beats Nebraska. Three things we learned.

Ohio State basketball got back in the winning column Tuesday night as it rolled over Nebraska at home. Here are 3 things we learned.

The Ohio State basketball team finally experienced the sweet taste of victory in 2020. It had lost four games in a row and looked like a shell of itself against West Virginia and once the Big Ten teams started elbowing their way into the schedule.

What’s a bit ironic is that the Buckeyes did it as a shell of itself — with two starting guards missing from the lineup. Both Luther Muhammad and Duane Washington, Jr, were suspended prior to the game for “failure to meet program standards and expectations.”

The team responded and hit the Cornhuskers on the chin with the Buckeyes separating early and rolling the rest of the way through the remainder of the game. It all led to an impressive 80-68 win in front of the home crowd.

Here are three things we learned.

Next … Better shooting

Does LSU’s unprecdented season make it the best team of the last 50 years?

LSU is the national champ so let the debate begin where the 15-0 Tigers rank among all-time greats.

College football has seen its share of dynasties. This isn’t about multiple years, rather single-season accomplishments. In this age of 14- and 15-game marathons that start in August and end in mid-January, there is an argument that LSU has completed the greatest season of this era. Or, many eras. While the game is college football, conferences realigning and schedules extending make it almost implausible to come up with an apples to apples measuring stick. Will limit this to teams from that played after 1970.

1971 Nebraska

Malcolm Emmons-USA TODAY Sports

The Huskers’ defense held opponents to a remarkable 8.2 points per game while scoring an average of 39 per contest. On Thanksgiving Day, the Huskers beat No. 2 Oklahoma 35-31 in a “Game of the Century.” Nebraska then walloped another  No. 2, Alabama, 38-6, in the Orange Bowl.

WATCH: Chris Holtmann Nebraska preview press conference

Ohio State head basketball coach Chris Holtmann met with the media Tuesday to discuss the team’s upcoming game against Nebraska.

Ohio State is putting the finishing touches on efforts to end a four-game losing streak tomorrow night when it hosts Nebraska in the Schott. With a surprising and disappointing 1-4 record in the conference, it’s one the Buckeyes need desperately. Hopefully a little home cooking will help.

Head coach Chris Holtmann met with the media in Columbus today to discuss the state of his team and to preview the matchup with a Cornhuskers squad that has some pretty good wins on the season.

In case you missed any of Holtmann’s comments, you can listen to them by clicking on the below video of his entire press conference courtesy of the official Twitter feed of the Ohio State Buckeyes.

He discusses the confidence of his team, the lessons that the youngsters are learning, the health of Kyle Young, and more.

The Buckeyes tip-off against Nebraska Tuesday night at 6:30 PM.

Wisconsin decade in review: Badgers vs Nebraska

Wisconsin vs. Nebraska

As the 2019 season brings to a close another decade of college football, Badgers Wire has been engaged in a series of reflective pieces. “Record Review” is another series examining how the Badgers have fared against the rest of the Big Ten Conference this decade. Next up is an examination of the Badgers’ record against one of the more recent additions to the Big Ten, Nebraska. This is a series Wisconsin has controlled since the Cornhuskers joined the league. Let’s take a look at the numbers. 

Using Stassen, Badgers Wire pulled up every result against Nebraska in the 2010s. The vast majority of the meetings between these two teams have taken place since 2011, a direct result of Nebraska’s new Big Ten membership. Prior to the past decade, UW and NU met twice in the 1970s (1973 and ‘74), in which the two schools split, and twice in the 1960s (1965 and ‘66), both Wisconsin losses. Then they also met in 1901 in Milwaukee. So, 2011-2019 represents 64 percent of their total meetings. This decade belonged to Wisconsin against the Cornhuskers. 

The Badgers have lost only once since in the decade to Nebraska. That loss came in 2012, and they avenged it by beating the absolute hell out of Nebraska in what has been NU’s only appearance in the Big Ten Championship Game. So, as gut-wrenching as the 30-27 loss was for Wisconsin in the 2012 regular season, beating the Huskers in a conference title game more than made up for it. 

If Nebraska head coach Scott Frost has the success he had at UCF, it’s only a matter of time before the Huskers will be competing with Wisconsin, Iowa and Minnesota for the West Division crown. Yet, Frost hasn’t shown he can move the Nebraska program forward. Wisconsin needs to stay the course and not give ground to a Nebraska program that can recruit with the best of them when the program is firing on all cylinders. 

Wisconsin has done a great job of keeping Nebraska quiet and impotent. Maintaining that reality in the 2020s — never giving the Huskers a chance to kick-start their attempt at a revival with an upset of the Badgers — is an important task for UW football.