March moments which helped Wisconsin: Syracuse-Indiana 2013

Syracuse helped Wisconsin

We have spent much of the past 10 days looking back at significant March basketball games involving the Wisconsin Badgers, and we will continue to do that here at Badgers Wire to get you through a March without an NCAA Tournament in 2020.

However, it is also worth looking at March moments from the recent past which did not involve the Badgers. These moments greatly benefited the UW hoops program in ways which weren’t easy to see at the time.

We know that Michigan State is still chugging along under Tom Izzo, so it is pointless and lacking in substance to identify a Michigan State loss as being uniquely beneficial to Wisconsin. Michigan State’s overall standing as a program hasn’t been harmed by past March losses. It missed a chance to win a championship in specific seasons, but the Spartans are still… the Spartans. They are still really good. They are not in a position where they were once really good, then suffered a loss, and then struggled to recover. They have not endured a clear downturn which Wisconsin has taken advantage of.

Other Big Ten programs, however, HAVE endured that precise downturn. We will look at some March moments which represented significant negative turning points for them… and positive turning points for the Badgers.

Our first installment: the 2013 East Regional semifinals in Washington, D.C., between the Indiana Hoosiers and the Syracuse Orange.

Keep in mind that Indiana was a No. 1 seed in the 2013 NCAA Tournament. The Hoosiers, under Tom Crean, had a loaded team with multiple future NBA players. The previous year, in 2012, the Hoosiers were a Sweet 16 underdog. They played top-seeded Kentucky well in a very emotional and entertaining game. One could see at the end of the 2012 season that Indiana was going to be a beast in 2013. The Hoosiers lived up to the billing in the regular season, but they needed to deliver the goods in March to reach the Final Four and fully restore the program.

When they lost to Syracuse in 2013, flummoxed by Jim Boeheim’s 2-3 zone — Cody Zeller simply REFUSED to take the free-throw line jump shot a good team needs to take (and make) against a zone — Indiana lost its last, best chance to be great under Tom Crean. Yes, Indiana did make the Sweet 16 three years later, in 2016, but the Hoosiers were back in the underdog role they had in 2012 versus Kentucky. Indiana was no match for top-seeded North Carolina in the 2016 Sweet 16, and the Hoosiers haven’t been back to the Sweet 16 since. Crean is messing around at Georgia and failing to find the answers for the Bulldogs in the SEC.

Indiana losing to Syracuse in 2013 is an outcome the Hoosiers have truly never recovered from. It is one of several significant events which created a Big Ten power vacuum below Michigan State. Wisconsin stepped into that vacuum very clearly, and is still reaping the benefits years later, in a new decade.

Did Julian Edelman give away Tom Brady’s football future?

Tom Brady, Julian Edelman and Jimmy Fallon had courtside seats Saturday for North Carolina-Syracuse.

Ahh, the lives of entertainers and athletes. They can be found almost anywhere and everywhere. Even in Syracuse on Feb. 29.

Syracuse faced North Carolina in an ACC game on Saturday and there was an impressive trio in attendance: New England Patriots QB Tom Brady and WR Julian Edelman were with late-night NBC host Jimmy Fallon.

Edelman seemed to enjoy himself, too, mouthing to the camera the impending free-agent quarterback wasn’t leaving New England. “He’s coming back” the former Super Bowl MVP wideout appears to be saying.

Legendary Orange coach Jim Boeheim shook hands with the G.O.A.T. at the Carrier Dome.

Brady is friends with Adam Weitsman, the owner and Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of Upstate Shredding-Weitsman Recycling in Central New York, and was invited to the Carrier Dome and brought Fallon and Edelman with him.

 

5 standouts from the 2020 Senior Bowl for the Bills

5 standouts from the 2020 Senior Bowl.

A week of practice for more than 100 college seniors from across the nation culminated on Saturday with the 2020 Senior Bowl, where the North had a dominating 34-17 victory over the South team. The North won the game with a strong run game, and a great front-four that was rotated throughout the game.

Could the Bills be interested in any standouts from the game?

Let’s look at who stood out during the Senior Bowl and helped their draft stock before the NFL combine:

North defensive lineman Alton Robinson. Credit: Vasha Hunt-USA TODAY Sports

EDGE Alton Robinson, Syracuse

This is the beginning of the edge rushers that will be discussed because the North created consistent pressure with just four men. Not many people outside of Central New York saw Alton Robinson play during his time at Cuse but he had 19.5 sacks in his career, who has a variety of moves and a great motor.

During the Senior Bowl he had two sacks, the first was against the elusive Jalen Hurts where Robinson bullied his matchup and dragged Hurts down. His second was against Steven Montez where Montez escaped the initial pressure but, Robinson tracked him down and finish the sack.

The Buffalo Bills need more players who can pressure the quarterback, and Robinson is projected as a Day 3 pick, so he should be on the radar of Brandon Beane and Sean McDermott.

 

Notre Dame Basketball Earns Much-Needed Victory at Syracuse

Hubb would go on to hit a game-tying three to knot things up at 84 before he hit a pair of free throws that ultimately made the final 88-87 difference.

After dropping both split-ACC contests this season in the opener at North Carolina and the early December home affair with Boston College, Notre Dame needed an ACC win in the worst way possible.

Factor in the Irish had won just three of their previous 21 regular season conference games dating back to March of 2018 and the need for a win was only that more obvious.

Thanks to shooting 15 of 31 beyond the arc (48.4%) the Irish were able to get by Syracuse for the third straight time in the Carrier Dome, 88-87.

Notre Dame had been shooting just 33.8% from three-point range entering Saturday so it was pleasant change of pace for the now 10-4 overall and 1-2 in ACC-play, Fighting Irish.

12 of those 15 three’s came from Prentiss Hubb and TJ Gibbs who had six each and combined for 43 points. John Mooney did his standard double-double thing, scoring 28 while pulling down 14 rebounds.

Leading 70-69 with just over five minutes left Hubb had a bad moment, bumping into Joe Girard and getting hit with a technical foul.

Girard would then score the next ten Syracuse points starting with the two free-throws for the technical and the Orange took a 79-75 lead with 3:37 to go.

Juwan Durham has a put-back before a pair of free-throws by Hubb brought the Irish within an 82-81 deficit with 1:51 to go.

Hubb would go on to hit a game-tying three to knot things up at 84 before he hit a pair of free throws that ultimately made the final 88-87 difference.

Notre Dame improves to 10-4 on the year and 1-2 in ACC play while Syracuse falls to 1-2 in the ACC and saw their three game winning streak end.

Notre Dame returns to action Wednesday night when they’ll take on the Wolfpack of North Carolina State in Raleigh.