Top 5 Big Ten Week 4 games and predictions

Week 4 of the season sees some big time Big Ten matchups as conference play gets underway. Let’s see the top five Big Ten games this week.

Week 4 kicks off Big Ten conference play for a number of teams. Some of these matchups have a lot riding on them for such an early junction of the season. Whether that be high expectations of winning the conference or teams looking to get things figured out, there is no shortage of intrigue this week.

As always, there are some games that don’t move the needle much. The Illinois Fighting Illini hosting Chattanooga, Northwestern hosting Miami (Ohio), Penn State getting a tune up against the Central Michigan Chippewas, and Purdue hosting Florida Atlantic University all leave something to be desired.

The other matchups do get a lot of national coverage as well with the Big Ten getting airtime on FOX, FS1, ESPN, and ABC. Let’s get into five of the most intriguing matchups in the Big Ten this week with a prediction of what shakes out.

Ohio State vs Wisconsin Prediction, College Basketball Game Preview

Ohio State Buckeyes vs Wisconsin Badgers prediction and college basketball game preview.

Ohio State Buckeyes vs Wisconsin Badgers prediction and college basketball game preview.


Ohio State vs Wisconsin Broadcast

Date: Saturday, January 23
Game Time: 4:00 ET
Venue: Kohl Center, Madison, WI
Network: CBS

[jwplayer RCmcqQEC]

All of the CFN Fearless Predictions

Ohio State (11-4) vs Wisconsin (12-3) Game Preview

For latest lines and to bet on college basketball, go to BetMGM


Why Ohio State Will Win

The Buckeyes are crushing from three.

They might have lost to Purdue last time out, but they still hit 14 threes. Okay, so it took 35 tries to get there, but it was their fourth straight game and fifth of the last six with double-digit made threes.

Wisconsin is strong at defending overall and it’s decent at stopping the three, but it’s not amazing at it. What it doesn’t do is force a whole lot of mistakes and take the ball away enough, and Ohio State is one of the best teams in the country at not screwing up. But …

Why Wisconsin Will Win

Wisconsin is even better at not messing up – it’s third in the nation and tops in the Big Ten in the fewest turnovers per game.

That defense is still the defense. It leads the conference, it’s still great at slowing everything down to a stop at times. Yeah there were issues against Michigan – everyone has issues against Michigan – but it clamped down allowing fewer than 70 points in every game but three.

Ohio State doesn’t force mistakes, and it doesn’t move the ball around well enough. You have to do both to get past the Badgers.

What’s Going To Happen

Ohio State will want to get moving, and the Badgers won’t let that happen. The biggest problem will be the lack of made threes from the Buckeyes. They don’t have to generate at least 30 points from beyond the arc to pull this off, but that’s when things are working.

Wisconsin has yet to allow anyone to hit ten three-pointers this year.

Ohio State vs Wisconsin Prediction, Line

Wisconsin 72, Ohio State 67
Bet on college basketball with BetMGM
Wisconsin -4.5, o/u: 134
ATS Confidence out of 5: 3

Must See Rating: 3.5

5: A red button for butler-delivered Diet Coke
1: Diet Coke out of a can with a straw

[protected-iframe id=”361699434b6d70baf15f631ed2408ac1-97672683-92922408″ info=”https://www.googletagservices.com/tag/js/gpt.js” ]

Wisconsin forged an achievement Ohio State has never pulled off

Wisconsin over Ohio State

During Final Four week, I wondered how many times a Pac-12 or Big Ten school had won the Rose Bowl and reached the Final Four in the same college sports cycle, comprised of the football season in the fall moving into basketball for the winter. How many times did a Pac-12 or Big Ten school party on New Year’s Day (or January 2) in Pasadena, and then book a spot at the Final Four roughly three months later?

Here is the list of schools which have pulled off the feat, and the list of instances in which this has occurred:

USC won the 1940 Rose Bowl and reached the 1940 Final Four.

Illinois won the 1952 Rose Bowl and reached the 1952 Final Four.

Michigan has done this several times: The Wolverines pulled off this dynamic double in 1965, 1989, and 1993. In 1989, Michigan won the Rose Bowl and then won the NCAA Tournament.

UCLA won the 1976 Rose Bowl and reached the 1976 Final Four.

Wisconsin won the 2000 Rose Bowl and reached the 2000 Final Four.

No school has forged this feat since the Badgers did it 20 years ago.

A few other teams MADE the Rose Bowl and reached the Final Four in the same year — California in 1959, UCLA in 1962, Michigan in 1992 — but in only seven college sports cycles — 1940, 1952, 1965, 1976, 1989, 1993, and 2000 — did a team win the Granddaddy and make the Final Four a short while later. With Michigan having done this three times, only FIVE schools are on this very select list.

Wisconsin is on it. Ohio State, you might have noticed, is not.

We know that Michigan State is amazing in basketball, with a few great football seasons thrown in over the past 40 years (1987, 2013, 2015), and that Michigan had a really good run from 1969 through 2007 in football, with some superb basketball seasons in the mix (1976, 1989-1993, 2013, 2014, 2018, 2019). We know that USC is a football giant in the Pac-12 and that UCLA is a basketball blue-blood with 11 national titles.

Yet, we know that in terms of combined football and basketball excellence among Big Ten and Pac-12 programs, Ohio State is number one. We don’t have to pretend otherwise. The Buckeyes are the program of Paul Brown and Woody Hayes and Jim Tressel and Urban Meyer in football. They are the program of coaches Harold Olsen, Fred Taylor, and Thad Matta in basketball.

Ohio State has 11 Final Fours to Michigan’s eight. The Buckeyes — since the introduction of the Associated Press College Football Poll in 1936 — have won eight college football national titles to Michigan’s three. If we were to include the history of college football dating back to the late 1800s, when the game was more primitive and hadn’t yet been redefined by the forward pass and other enhancements, one could make the case that Michigan’s all-time history dwarfs Ohio State’s, but since World War II (a reasonable marker of both time and modernity), Ohio State has been the better program, combining basketball and football. It certainly has left Michigan in the dust in football over the past 12 years since Lloyd Carr left Ann Arbor. Michigan has been slightly better in men’s basketball in that same time period, but not hugely.

Ohio State has set so many high standards in Big Ten and national collegiate athletics. Yet, when looking at the shared history of the Rose Bowl and the Final Four, Wisconsin has pulled off the dynamic double in the same college sports cycle.

Ohio State has not.

That’s pretty cool.

That’s it. That’s the tweet.