Nevada Football: The Five Best Moments From The 2019 Season

Nevada Football: The Five Best Moments From The 2019 Season Five of the best moments from Nevada’s 2019 season. Contact/Follow @BrandonGBlake & @MWCwire The Five Best Moments From The 2019 Nevada Season The 2019 Nevada Wolf Pack season was one that …

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Nevada Football: The Five Best Moments From The 2019 Season

Five of the best moments from Nevada’s 2019 season.

Contact/Follow @BrandonGBlake & @MWCwire

The Five Best Moments From The 2019 Nevada Season

The 2019 Nevada Wolf Pack season was one that contained some incredible moments for a team that finished with a 7-6 record. With the 2019 football season over, I decided to take a complete look at some of the best moments in the 2019 Wolf Pack football campaign. After finishing my review of Nevada’s season I found five of the best moments from the Wolf Pack’s 2019 season.

Here are my five best moments of the Nevada Wolf Pack’s 2019 season.

5) Talton’s field goal at the end of the game to lift Wolf Pack past San Jose State

On October 12th with Nevada and San Jose State tied at 38 late in the game, the Wolf Pack marched down the field aided by a pair of long runs by running back Devontae Lee to put Nevada in field goal range.

The Wolf Pack turned to freshman placekicker Brandon Talton to win the game on a 40 yard field goal. Talton’s field goal was good from that distance as Nevada outlasted the very gamed San Jose State Spartans 41-38. 

Talton game winning field goal against San Jose State was his third game winning field goal of that season. The other two came against Weber State and well, you will have to  read on for when Talton connected on his other game winning field goal.

 

4) Toa Taua’s stellar performance against Fresno State

Sophomore running back Toa Taua had an up and down season but his signature game of the season came on November 23rd when the Wolf Pack took on Fresno State on the road.

Taua ran for 153 yards and scored a touchdown against the Bulldogs. That touchdown run by Taua was a three yard touchdown run with 12 seconds left in the game to push the Wolf Pack over the Bulldogs 35-28.

The road win over Fresno State was Nevada’s second straight road win after defeating San Diego State two weeks prior. Also, Nevada’s win over Fresno State knocked the Bulldogs out of bowl contention. All in all, a very good night for Nevada due to the stellar performance of Toa Taua

 

3) Nevada defeats San Diego State on the road for the Wolf Pack’s first  ever victory over an AP top 25 team on the road.

The Wolf Pack had never won a game on the road against a AP Top 25 team in program history. But then came Nevada’s contest on the road against San Diego State.

Despite being out-gained on offense by the Aztecs by a count of 309 to 226, the Wolf Pack were able to score 17 points on the usually stout Aztec defense on some big plays on offense. Wolf Pack wide receiver Elijah Cooks threw a 50 yard pass on a trick play that helped set up Devontae Lee’s one yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter to put Nevada up for good 17-13.

The Wolf Pack defense was stellar in containing San Diego State’s run attack as the Nevada defense limited the Aztecs run offense to under three yards per carry. The Wolf Pack defense was able to stop San Diego State’s offense in the final minutes of the game to seal Nevada’s first ever win against an AP Top 25 team on the road. 

The win over San Diego State on the road also made Nevada bowl eligible for the second straight season and gave head coach Jay Norvell a big signature win in his Wolf Pack tenure.

 

2) Brandon Talton’s 56 yard field goal caps off  Nevada’s thrilling comeback to defeat Purdue in the season opener.

In the season opener against Purdue, the Nevada Wolf Pack were down  24-7 to Purdue at the half and in the fourth quarter, the Wolf Pack were down 31-17. In the fourth quarter, the Wolf Pack scored 14 unanswered points to tie the game at 31.

In the final seconds of the game, walk on freshman Brandon Talton connected on a 56 yard field goal at the end of the game to give the Wolf Pack the 34-31 victory. The 17 point comeback was the largest comeback for Nevada since 1996. 

In his first start, quarterback Carson Strong shook off the slow start and settled in as he went 30 of 51 passing for 295 yards and three touchdowns in the win over the Boilermakers.

Before that kick, Talton had been named the starting kicker the morning of the game against Purdue and Talton’s longest field goal was when he connected on a 47 yard field goal in high school back in Vacaville, California. 

Talton’s incredible game winning field goal to defeat Purdue was

2) Brandon Talton’s 56 yard field goal caps off  Nevada’s thrilling comeback to defeat Purdue in the season opener.

In the season opener against Purdue, the Nevada Wolf Pack were down  24-7 to Purdue at the half and in the fourth quarter, the Wolf Pack were down 31-17. In the fourth quarter, the Wolf Pack scored 14 unanswered points to tie the game at 31.

In the final seconds of the game, walk on freshman Brandon Talton connected on a 56 yard field goal at the end of the game to give the Wolf Pack the 34-31 victory. The 17 point comeback was the largest comeback for Nevada since 1996. 

In his first start, quarterback Carson Strong shook off the slow start and settled in as he went 30 of 51 passing for 295 yards and three touchdowns in the win over the Boilermakers.

Before that kick Talton had been named the starting kicker the morning of the game against Purdue and Talton’s longest field goal was when he connected on a 47 yard field goal in high school back in Vacaville, California. 

Talton’s incredible game winning field goal to defeat Purdue was definitely a highlight however, that moment was topped by another incredible moment in the Wolf Pack locker room after the game.

 

1)  Talton being awarded a scholarship after the game winning kick against Purdue.

After the Wolf Pack’s thrilling victory over Purdue on the strength of walk-on freshmen place kicker Brandon Talton’s 56 yard field goal, Nevada head coach Jay Norvell decided to reward his young kicker with a scholarship

A fantastic way to cap off an incredible moment in the 2019 season for the Nevada Wolf Pack football team. 

 

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Purdue was angry, and Wisconsin wasn’t prepared

More on Purdue-Wisconsin

Our worst fears here at Badgers Wire were realized. We wrote about the reality that Purdue, after being blown out at home by Illinois earlier in the week, was likely to be mad as hell entering Friday’s game against Wisconsin. We noted the parallel with Purdue crushing Michigan State by 29 before Tom Izzo’s Spartans played Wisconsin one Friday earlier, on January 17.

We did point out that Purdue is a lot worse than Michigan State. Nevertheless, the Boilermakers did figure to bring a lot of heat for this game against Wisconsin.

The Badgers couldn’t handle that heat.

We all know that the timing of each game in a season is a variable no one can predict before the season starts. These things do matter to the extent that while teams might be inconsistent over a five- or 10-game stretch, they will have more (or less) motivation on a specific night.

However, these considerations don’t have to matter. Moreover, it is precisely the job of a coaching staff to make sure players answer the bell regardless of what the opponent does. This is exactly what proves how good — or weak — a team is. Can a team take an angry opponent’s best punch? Is a team ready to fight when the opponent zooms out of the locker room with tremendous energy at the start of a game?

Wisconsin wasn’t ready for this against Michigan State. That was not fun, but at least we could all say that was Michigan State, a quality team.

Wisconsin not being ready for Purdue, though? That is orders of magnitude worse. It’s so much worse than the Michigan State loss not just because Purdue is a far weaker team than the Spartans, but also because Wisconsin just went through a week in which it faced an angry team coming off a blowout. This game against Purdue was a time to show that the Badgers could take that big punch from a steaming-mad team on the road.

They couldn’t… and the sad part is that they were NEVER truly competitive.

What if future Wisconsin opponents are coming off blowout losses? Those teams will be mad as well. Can the Badgers defeat highly motivated teams away from home? They will need to prove that sooner rather than later.

Wisconsin got bullied by Purdue, which is unacceptable

More on Wisconsin-Purdue

I don’t need to sit here and tell you that the Wisconsin Badgers got thrown around like rag dolls by the Purdue Boilermakers on Friday night in West Lafayette. Let Wisconsin coach Greg Gard tell you directly:

“That (3-point shooting) was secondary to how we couldn’t clean up the glass on the defensive end. That ignited Purdue and gave them a lot of confidence. You keep getting cracks at it, you’re eventually going to make a shot. They were quicker to the ball than we were.

“You continue to give `em crack after crack after crack. We rotated guys in. It’s not that we didn’t talk about it for two days straight constantly, knowing that they were the No. 1 offensive rebounding percentage team in the conference, it was going to be a battle and always is. We didn’t do a good job of matching physicality.

“That tells me we weren’t physical enough.”

It wasn’t even close.

Purdue’s number of OFFENSIVE REBOUNDS — 16 — matched Wisconsin’s TOTAL number of team rebounds.

Purdue was plus-14 on the offensive glass, 16-2, and plus-26 overall, 42-16. Brad Davison was Wisconsin’s leading rebounder. That is a bad indicator in and of itself. The fact that Davison had only four rebounds is even worse.

Purdue’s Evan Boudreaux outrebounded Wisconsin’s ENTIRE starting five, 13 rebounds to 10.

When we explained why this result was such a disaster for the Badgers on Friday night, these facts and statistics help illustrate the point. If Wisconsin played its typically rugged defense and lost a 58-54 game which was right there to be won at the end, we could say that this team’s identity was still intact and that it just needed to make a handful of additional plays to win games.

With Wisconsin getting completely outhustled and outmaneuvered for loose balls — Purdue also claimed eight steals in this game compared to only three for Wisconsin — the Badgers lost their identity as a blue-collar team. Wisconsin won’t always shoot well (the Nebraska game was clearly an aberration), but the Badgers had set a good example in January of consistently working hard. Friday night, they did not, and we all saw what happens when Wisconsin doesn’t work hard enough.

This is completely unacceptable, and it needs to lead to a furious, fierce effort on Monday in Iowa City.

No sugarcoating – loss to Purdue a total disaster for Wisconsin

Wisconsin-Purdue reaction

When the news is very bad, there is no point in pretending the news is only moderately bad or slightly bad or possibly bad. No, it’s very bad.

The news is very bad for the Wisconsin Badgers not because they lost to the Purdue Boilermakers on Friday night in West Lafayette. Had Wisconsin played a 58-57 game and failed to make the last shot, the Badgers would have played a game largely in line with what we have seen the past few weeks. The limitations of the team would have persisted, but so would the strengths. We know Wisconsin has a relatively low ceiling, but the encouraging part of the past few weeks is that the Badgers had raised their floor.

Wisconsin did get whacked a week ago by Michigan State, but that was Michigan State. Getting drilled by a Tom Izzo team in East Lansing is expected to happen. For the most part, the version of Wisconsin we had seen since Dec. 28 at Tennessee had shored up its defense and had not been kicked around. That Michigan State game was an exception, an outlier. Wisconsin’s regular performance was much steadier and more dependable than it had been in the first 10 games of the season without Micah Potter. The Badgers were never going to dazzle; the key point to make about their improvement from Dec. 28 through Jan. 21 is that they minimized their weaknesses.

Friday against Purdue, the Badgers looked a lot like the weak team which had no clue on the road against ordinary opponents such as New Mexico, Richmond, and North Carolina State. Getting thrashed by Michigan State wasn’t an indication of erosion. Getting drubbed in a 19-point loss to a 10-9 Purdue team — in a game the Badgers once trailed by 28 — offers no guarantees, but it DOES carry the possibility that this team is in trouble heading to Iowa City for a Jan. 27 game against the Iowa Hawkeyes on Monday.

Wisconsin had dramatically improved on the road in the first half of January. Once again, a road loss at Michigan State didn’t show the Badgers had lost their way in road games. This game, however, represents a definite regression from the standard UW set in the first two weeks of January.

What is also very disappointing and alarming: The balanced offense against Nebraska now looks a lot more like the product of playing Nebraska, not any sort of epiphany the Badgers experienced. The hope was that playing a softer opponent could cultivate confidence in role players which would carry into this game against Purdue.

Nope. It was just the opposite. Wisconsin scored just 15 points in the first half and was thoroughly embarrassed.

We’ll have more on this game on Saturday, but the initial reaction: The news is very bad. There is no point in trying to sugarcoat it.

Wisconsin-Purdue contains meaning beyond Friday night

Wisconsin-Purdue

We have noted that this next four-game sequence is very important for the Wisconsin Badgers. Within these four games, however, Wisconsin faces the more immediate task of making sure it at least gets a split of upcoming road games at Purdue on Friday and then Iowa on Monday.

I talk to Badger fans on Twitter and Facebook (mostly Twitter). When discussing the next four games — at Purdue, at Iowa, home versus Michigan State, at Minnesota — the general response I have received is that a 2-2 split of the four games would be fine. Not great or spectacular, but fine. Phrased differently, a 2-2 split of the next four games would solidify Wisconsin’s place in the NCAA Tournament, whereas a 1-3 mark could knock down the team’s seeding position and create a little more uncertainty about the team heading into the middle of February, with a whole month still left before the Big Ten Tournament. A 2-2 record is certainly not Wisconsin’s goal for these four games — 3-1 is the goal, with 4-0 being a wonderful thing to shoot for — but 2-2 would be a lot better than 1-3. A 2-2 record in these four games would feel like survival, enduring the worst of the Big Ten slate and still standing at the end of it.

I have already given away part of the game in this respect. I have already given you a sense of why this Friday game against Purdue matters a lot. However, I haven’t told the whole story just yet.

Here is the remainder of the story, filling in the added details about why this game matters a lot:

When any team in any sport needs to do well in a four-game sequence or a similarly compressed number of games (in pro sports, a best-of-seven series, for example), getting the first game in that sequence buys time for the rest of the sequence. A classic example of this was the Golden State Warriors winning Game 1 of the 2015 NBA Finals against the Cleveland Cavaliers. The Warriors were outplayed by the Cavs in that game, and on a larger level, Golden State was outplayed in each of the first three games by the Cavs in that series. The Warriors were consistently flummoxed by Cleveland and everything LeBron James was doing.

Yet: Because the Warriors scratched out that ugly Game 1 win, somehow, they were still in striking distance entering Game 4, instead of being down 3-0. When the Warriors, on their fourth try, finally made the adjustments they needed to make, and finally got the breakthrough performance from Andre Iguodala which made all the difference for them in the series, they were back on track. Winning Game 1 bought them time and smoothed the path for them in the series.

Wisconsin and every other college basketball team will not play a best-of-seven series, but in this four-game stretch, it remains important for Wisconsin to win the first game. If UW wins at Purdue on Friday, the pressure is off for Monday at Iowa. It doesn’t make that game less significant, but it does make that game less urgent. A loss at Purdue puts a lot more urgency into the Iowa game for many obvious reasons, the chief one being that Wisconsin would risk starting 0-2 in this four-game bundle, which dramatically elevates the chances of going 1-3 and leaves open the possibility of going 0-4, which would be a true disaster and put UW on the NCAA Tournament bubble.

A win at Purdue immediately calms the waters and lets the Badgers know that even if they lose to Iowa and Michigan State, they can still go 2-2 with a win at Minnesota. Wisconsin would get three bites at the apple in order to reach 2-2 if it gets this first game at Purdue. The Badgers will shape this four-game stretch in a context of opportunity.

If the Badgers lose, they will shape this four-game sequence in a context of burden and pressure.

That’s the fuller meaning of the Purdue game. Let’s see how it all plays out.

Purdue’s volatility magnifies Wisconsin’s consistency

More on Purdue before the Boilermakers play Wisconsin

In the first 10 games of this college basketball season, the Wisconsin Badgers were consistent… in being inconsistent. The Badgers displayed obvious patterns, but those patterns were marked by their volatility. UW played great at home, horrible away from home en route to a 5-5 start through 10 games. Since Micah Potter came aboard, Wisconsin has not become a juggernaut or an elite powerhouse, but the Badgers have certainly developed a much more recognizable and unified personality, compared to the Jekyll-and-Hyde identity of the first 10 games.

Wisconsin, since the arrival of Potter, has become a very steady and competent defensive team with just enough offense to win most of the time. This is what the Badgers generally are. This is what they are likely to remain. They will score in the high 50s or low 60s most nights. They will usually hold opponents in the mid-50s. They will play close games. Nebraska was an exception because of how bad the Huskers are this season. The Illinois home game was an exception; Wisconsin will usually play much better defense in the Kohl Center. Generally, you know what you’re going to get with the Micah Potter Badgers, the team we have seen since the Dec. 28 game against Tennessee in Knoxville.

You do not know what you’re going to get with the team Wisconsin faces Friday night in Mackey Arena.

The Purdue Boilermakers have been all over the map this season. The famous Hollywood sex symbol of the early 20th century, Mae West, left behind this unforgettable quote: “When I’m good I’m very good, but when I’m bad, I’m better,” a declaration for anyone who enjoyed getting into trouble.

That’s not Purdue. When the Boilermakers are good, they are very, very good. They absolutely demolished Virginia, the defending national champions, and Michigan State, the first-place team in the Big Ten, in a pair of supreme blowouts. When they are bad, though, they are AWFUL, as shown in a recent home blowout loss to Purdue and, for that matter, a road blowout loss to Purdue in which they scored only 37 points.

Whereas Wisconsin has become a steady if unspectacular team, Purdue remains locked in the uncertain world of a team which simply can’t impose a specific template on a game with any degree of dependability. The Boilermakers are 10-9 overall, 3-5 in the Big Ten, and just 1-5 on the road. Whereas Wisconsin has found ways to win Big Ten road games against solid opponents, Purdue hasn’t gotten to that point yet. Purdue’s only road win is at Ohio University of the MAC. The Boilermakers got pounded at Nebraska by 14 points. The gap between their best selves and their worst is as wide as the Grand Canyon.

Appreciate what Wisconsin has done over the past month. The Badgers haven’t solved all their problems or fixed all their weaknesses, but they certainly have improved by leaps and bounds. Purdue, on the other hand, plays its best game every now and then but has largely been lost at sea this season, with no course correction.

Wisconsin is more likely than Purdue to play a steady and consistent game; the Badgers, though, have to be ready for the best version of the Boilermakers to emerge Friday night. Such is the unpredictability of facing an erratic opponent.

Three Purdue players Badger fans need to know

Wisconsin takes on Purdue in West Lafayette on Friday evening. Badger fans should be familiar with these three opposing players.

After a historically impressive display of shooting in a victory over Nebraska earlier in the week, the next test for Wisconsin (12-7) comes in the form of a Friday evening affair in West Lafayette against Purdue (10-9).

Matt Painter’s Boilermakers are in the midst of a slump, having dropped four of their last five games and two straight, at No. 17 Maryland and at Mackey Arena against No. 21 Illinois on Tuesday. However, there have been some encouraging performances within that stretch: Purdue annihilated No. 8 Michigan State, 71-42, at home on Jan. 12 and gave No. 19 Michigan all it could handle in an 84-78 double-overtime heartbreaker in Ann Arbor three days before that.

Like essentially all of the teams in the Big Ten this season, this is a squad capable of both beating anyone in the conference, especially at home. Make no mistake, the Boilermakers have the personnel in their rotation to make easy work of Wisconsin if the Badgers go out and have one of the trademark abysmal road performances that we have seen from them plenty this year.

With that said, here are the three players on the other side who Badger fans should keep a close eye on throughout Tuesday’s contest.

Trevion Williams – Forward

Current stats: 11.3 ppg, 7.5 rpg, 1.4 apg, 56.8 FG%

Dec 4, 2019; West Lafayette, IN, USA; Purdue Boilermakers forward Trevion Williams (50) reacts in a game against the Virginia Cavaliers during the second half at Mackey Arena. Mandatory Credit: Brian Spurlock-USA TODAY Sports

Williams has been a revelation for the Boilermakers this season after making a minimal impact as a freshman last year. The 6-9, 270-pound big man out of Chicago has taken a major leap in Year Two in West Lafayette, leading Purdue in both points and rebounds per game despite averaging just 21.2 minutes.

Williams has emerged as one of the top post players in a conference loaded with talent at the position, especially on the glass: he’s pacing the Big Ten in total rebound percentage and is particularly tough to handle on the offensive boards, sitting just behind Rutgers’ Myles Johnson in offensive rebound percentage.

While he’s been solid all season, Williams has really come on strong during the second half, scoring double figures and/or racking up at least seven rebounds in eight of Purdue’s last ten games. He had arguably the top individual performance of Big Ten play to this point in the season on Jan. 9 at Michigan, putting up an absurd stat line of 26 points on 16-28 shooting to go along with a whopping 20 boards in the Boilermakers’ double-overtime loss.

Purdue loss to Illinois makes life harder for Wisconsin

The Wisconsin Badgers were not done any favors by the Purdue Boilermakers last week. If you recall, we wrote about the fact that Purdue hammered Michigan State before the Spartans met Wisconsin. This put Michigan State in a bad mood and gave the …

The Wisconsin Badgers were not done any favors by the Purdue Boilermakers last week. If you recall, we wrote about the fact that Purdue hammered Michigan State before the Spartans met Wisconsin. This put Michigan State in a bad mood and gave the Spartans a wake-up call. Michigan State led by more than 20 points before ultimately beating Wisconsin 67-55 this past Friday. Purdue, with a 29-point drubbing of Michigan State, put Wisconsin in a bad spot.

Entering another Friday night Big Ten game this week, Purdue has once again put Wisconsin in a tough spot… but this time, Wisconsin isn’t playing a team Purdue crushed a few days earlier. Wisconsin is playing the Boilermakers themselves after Matt Painter’s team got smashed at home by the Illinois Fighting Illini.

Yes, Wisconsin’s opponent figures to be mad, much as Michigan State was one Friday earlier, but Purdue isn’t nearly as good as Michigan State. Purdue isn’t putting another team in Wisconsin’s way. Purdue IS the team in Wisconsin’s way. It should make for a fascinating game in Mackey Arena, as the Badgers begin a very difficult four-game stretch with three road trips and one home date against Michigan State.

This is one of the great variables of any sports season. Everyone knows when two teams will cross paths, but no one can know how those two teams will be playing when they ultimately collide. Wisconsin was fortunate to visit Penn State when the Nittany Lions were slumping, but last Friday at Michigan State and this Friday at Purdue are examples of playing teams which have just been embarrassed, which is exquisitely bad luck for UW.

The Badgers will simply have to play through this misfortune, and not allow Purdue’s anger after the Illinois loss to fuel the Boilermakers in West Lafayette.

What will this game show about the Badgers? Here is a simple answer: It is one thing to beat an ordinary (but not terrible) opponent. It is another matter to beat that ordinary opponent when it has extra motivation and desperation on its side. Wisconsin is catching Purdue when the Boilermakers face what is close to a must-win situation. Beating Purdue on a night when the Boilermakers might be playing for their postseason existence will show that Wisconsin can take an opponent’s best punch and withstand a difficult challenge. If Purdue plays on Friday night with the passion normally associated with an NCAA Tournament game, and Wisconsin still thwarts the home team in Mackey Arena, the Badgers will know that they have evolved to a considerable degree… much greater than anyone might have imagined on Christmas Day.

Purdue and Michigan live on the other side of the Big Ten coin

Thoughts on Purdue and Michigan

Some things have not changed in the Big Ten this basketball season. Michigan State is at the top. Nebraska and Northwestern are struggling. Maryland and Minnesota are inconsistent. Yet, many aspects of this conference are different. Rutgers and Illinois are near the top of the league. Penn State could make the NCAA Tournament. Fresh faces are moving up the ladder in the conference.

If some teams are moving up, that generally means other teams have to move down. If the rise of Rutgers and Illinois forms half of this portrait of displacement and reshuffling in Big Ten basketball, the decline of two other teams forms the other half.

Enter Purdue and Michigan.

If it feels very weird to see Illinois and Rutgers near the top of the Big Ten standings in late January, it feels equally weird to see Purdue and Michigan buried in 10th and 11th place on the morning of Wednesday, January 22. Both teams are two games under .500 in the conference, though Purdue (3-5) has played two more league games than Michigan (2-4).

How dependable have Purdue and Michigan been in recent years? The Boilermakers were a top-four seed at the Big Ten Tournament in each of the past six years. Purdue double-byes at the Big Ten tourney weren’t as regular as Wisconsin double-byes, but almost. Michigan reached each of the last three Big Ten Tournament championship games, winning two. The program lost its way in 2015 and 2016, but has been a major national factor in five of the past seven college basketball seasons, with two national title game appearances, three Elite Eights, and five Sweet 16s.

These two programs are annually expected to be in the mix as Big Ten title contenders, but right now, they aren’t. Both will need to author a significant — and rapid — turnaround if they want to have the slightest chance to make things interesting in early March. Purdue, with five conference losses, has — one could argue — already played its way out of the conversation.

If you want to understand why Rutgers and Illinois have thrived this season, one must start with an examination of how Steve Pikiell and Brad Underwood have made huge forward strides in cultivating players while making necessary self-adjustments in how they go about their business. Yet, the improvements of unlikely Big Ten contenders can’t be mentioned without noting the fall of Purdue and Michigan. We will see if the second half of the season brings renewed clarity from the Boilermakers and Wolverines.

Michigan State face-plant at Purdue sends message to Badgers

More on the Big Ten race

We said this earlier in January: There is no elite team in the Big Ten. We noted that Michigan State, though unbeaten in conference play, had played almost all of its conference games at home. Michigan State’s one road game in the league entering Sunday at Purdue was a game at Northwestern, one of the two terrible teams in the conference alongside Nebraska.

Michigan State, in other words, had not yet been challenged on the road in Big Ten play, due to its home-game-heavy schedule to start the conference season.

Guess what happened when the Spartans and Tom Izzo had to play a decent — but not even especially good — opponent on Sunday in West Lafayette? Michigan State was DEMOLISHED by Purdue, not merely beaten. The Boilermakers were 9-7 entering the game, but like the 9-7 Tennessee Titans, they looked like world-beaters against the first-place team in their conference. (Sports are funny that way.)

The Michigan State-Purdue result confirms our thesis at Badgers Wire: There is indeed no elite team in the Big Ten. Michigan State is not a Goliath looking down on everyone else. The Spartans are not a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament. They look a lot more like a 3 or 4 seed than a 1 or a 2 seed.

Guess what, then, Wisconsin fans? The Badgers can win the Big Ten. No, I wouldn’t BET on that, but I would certainly say that UW can make a run at the conference championship.

Yes, the loss to Illinois could really hurt the Badgers in two months, when we look at the final Big Ten standings, but Illinois is currently holding a second-place position in the Big Ten. Do you think the Illini will hold that position? If Illinois can be second now, Wisconsin can be second at a later point in time… and if Wisconsin can be second, it can make its way to first place.

Remember: The Badgers have won two Big Ten road games, and not against Nebraska or Northwestern. Wisconsin has beaten the kinds of teams Michigan State has not yet shown it can beat in the Big Ten away from East Lansing. If Wisconsin keeps winning some rock fights on the road in the conference, and Michigan State gains the same “Jekyll and Hyde” identity so many other Big Ten teams have in road games compared to home games, the Badgers will be in the thick of the hunt at the very end, in early March.

The Big Ten is wide open. Wisconsin can be part of the party. Don’t let anyone tell you this league is unwinnable for the Badgers.