What Luke Fickell said after Wisconsin’s loss to Nebraska extended losing streak to four

What Luke Fickell said after Wisconsin’s loss to Nebraska extended losing streak to four

Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell addressed the media following the Badgers’ 44-25 loss to Nebraska on Saturday.

The Badgers’ season may have reached its lowest point in the contest. UW allowed the Cornhuskers to pick up nearly 475 yards on offense and score 20 consecutive points spanning the second and third quarters. The team has lost four consecutive conference games to drop to 13th in the Big Ten.

Luke Fickell addressed the loss bluntly after the game.

“This is getting old,” Fickell said. “I don’t have any excuses. We didn’t play well. We didn’t play well in the complementary football that we have to on the road in particular. We played really, really poorly, especially tackling-wise in the second half.”

With a must-win game against Minnesota fast approaching, Wisconsin will need to regroup quickly if it wishes to have any shot of clinching its 23rd straight bowl game.

“We have to challenge ourselves,” Fickell said. “We have to look real deep in a short week and find out who’s with us and who’s willing to lay it all out on the line. … I don’t have a problem having blind faith. When you struggle like that, I’m sure there’s guys that have some doubts in their minds. … You’re going to have to find ways to pick yourself back up and have some faith in the process.”

The challenge for the Badgers, however, seems to be the pressurized situations. As fans have witnessed against Penn State, Oregon, Iowa and Nebraska, events can unravel quickly.

“We can play really, really well, and then we get to a situation where things don’t go well and can’t find a way to regroup or have the poise to make adjustments,” Fickell said. “I don’t have an answer. I can’t put a finger on it other than go back to work and make sure you know who you have with you.”

The one bright spot, though, was quarterback Braedyn Locke. The Texas native threw for 292 yards and three touchdowns in the loss in arguably his best individual performance of the 2024 slate.

“He managed what we asked him to manage, and he took the shots when we needed to take shots, and he made some good decisions,” Fickell said. “Those are the kind of things we need to continue to build upon. But it’s hard to see through right now.”

All focus now turns to Minnesota in what will be Wisconsin’s final game of the regular season. If Wisconsin wins, it secures a bowl bid. If it loses, the season becomes a full-on disaster.

“I don’t know if there’s any more pressure on us than finding a way to get up and go back at it to play a rivalry game that’s as important as anything we do all year,” Fickell said. “Are there other things that lay in the balance? Yeah, there are, but I don’t think those are things that are going to be in the forefront of what we have to do.”

Wisconsin and Minnesota will kick off on Friday at noon ET, 11 a.m. CT at Camp Randall Stadium.

LOOK: Another Wisconsin playmaker will sport a single-digit jersey number in 2024

LOOK: Another Wisconsin playmaker will sport a single-digit jersey number in 2024

Wisconsin wide receiver Vinny Anthony will switch his jersey number from #86 to #8 this fall, according to The Zone’s Zach Heilprin.

After starting in three of UW’s 13 contests a season ago, Anthony will likely play behind C.J. Williams as one of the backup outside receivers in 2024. Bryson Green and Will Pauling are poised to captain Wisconsin’s loaded wide receiver group as well.

The Louisville, Kentucky native enters his third season in Madison following a 10-catch, 99-yard output in 2023. After reeling in his first career catch vs, Ohio State on Oct. 28, Anthony made catches in each of his final four contests to close the season.

Wisconsin also features the 6-foot rising junior on its special teams unit; Anthony returned nine punts for 85 yards and 11 kicks for 217 yards as a sophomore.

The Badgers welcome three-star freshman wide receiver Kyan Berry-Johnson this fall and will look to secure a commitment from three-star class of 2025 WR Muizz Tounkara later this summer.

With bouts vs. Alabama, USC, Penn State and Oregon on Wisconsin’s 2024 slate, Luke Fickell’s squad will need all the playmaking it can find on its offensive unit to remain in games against the nations best. Given his speed on the outside, Anthony should make a handful of splash plays this season on both offense and special teams.

Grading the wide receiver additions in the 2022 class

Wisconsin took two wide receivers in it’s 2022 recruiting class. I breakdown Wisconsin’s recruiting process and grade the newest wide receiver additions.

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The Wisconsin badgers signed 14 scholarship players during the early signing period of the 2022 recruiting cycle this past Wednesday. And while that number is subject to change, Wisconsin’s class currently ranks 44th in the country, and 11th in the Big Ten – with an average recruiting ranking of (0.87), per 247 sports.

In part three of a position by position recruiting evaluation series, I will be handing out grades for each position from the early signing period.

So, without further ado, here is my wide receiver evaluation.

WIDE RECEIVER: B-

Commits (2): Tommy McIntosh, Vinny Anthony

Total offers: (15)

Wisconsin didn’t exactly bring in anything that puts them over the top in this wide receiver class, but they did make some really solid additions.

Wisconsin is going to be looking at a total makeover of their core receivers for next season. They’ll be without Danny Davis, Kendric Pryor, and Jack Dunn. That leaves a significant amount of snaps needing to be filled.

Chimere Dike and Markus Allen are the leaders in the clubhouse to fill those roles, but who earns snaps behind them is anyone’s guess at this point.

It was imperative that Wisconsin add multiple players at this position, and thankfully they did.

 

Tommy McIntosh:

Tommy McIntosh out of DeWitt, Michigan is a three-star recruit per 247 sports.

Rankings: 772nd nationally, 114th WR, 21st ranked player in MI.

McIntosh is a big bodied (6-foot-5) downfield threat who recorded 64 receptions for 1,328 yards and 22 touchdowns as a senior.

The thing that makes McIntosh so enticing is that he runs a 4.4-second 40-yard dash and has a 36-inch vertical leap – those are things you can’t teach.

He’s in a different mold than any other pass-catcher already in the receiving room, and it’s easy to see the upside here if he’s able to put it all together. A player with his kind of size could really help impact the game as a run blocker – which we know is something UW frequently asks of it pass-catchers.

McIntosh is a player who could develop into a downfield threat that would make for a tough match-up on the boundary.

 

Vinny Anthony:

Vinny Anthony is another high upside three-star recruit out of Louisville, Kentucky.

Rankings: 709th nationally, 100th WR, 5th ranked player in KY.

As a senior Anthony recorded 49 receptions for 1,108 yards with 16 touchdowns.

Vinny Anthony is a strong route runner, but what really stands out is his ability to high point the ball. This is also a player that could potentially help as a return man down the road – which is an area the program has been lacking.

Vinny Anthony has the makings of a nice possession receiver for UW, and has the quickness and size to play either inside or out on the boundary.

Conclusion:

I am a fan of these additions to the wide receiver room, however, it’s impossible to know what they’ve got right now. Both are high risk, high reward type of players at this point – but sometimes that’s what you’re going to have to shoot for to find a Cephus level difference maker in the passing game.

Wisconsin is never going to be a destination school for a wide receiver, but they got two players here with good size and athleticism.

Other evaluations: QB | RB

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POLL: Super 25 High School Football Top Star, Week 13

Which performance was the best this past week from a player on a Super 25 ranked team? Vote for the Super 25 Top Star!

Here are the candidates for this week’s Super 25 Top Star. All nominees play on a team ranked in the top 25 or from a regionally ranked team. Vote now in the poll below.

SUPER 25TOP 25 | REGIONAL | How the Super 25 Fared

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