Five stats that defined Wisconsin’s dominant win over Michigan

The Badgers walk all over Michigan in Ann Arbor

After dealing with cancelling all football activities for over a week, two QB’s and at least 13 other players testing positive for COVID-19, and multiple staff members out with the virus, Wisconsin football did what they have done best in the Paul Chryst era: they just played.

The dominance started early and often in Wisconsin’s 49-11 win at the Big House over Michigan. A leave no doubt first quarter in which the Badgers held the football for 11:33 of the opening 15 minutes had UW on top 14-0 after one. The Badgers never looked back en route to a 2-0 start.

With true freshman making major impacts, Wisconsin dominating time of possession, and a scoreline that was reminiscent of last season’s win over the Maize and Blue, here are five stats that defined last night’s performance:

How Wisconsin’s offense can find success against Michigan

How the Badgers will look to attack the Wolverines

When you try and assess blame after a disappointing 1-2 start for Michigan, you can start with a defense that has looked lost at times over the past three weeks.

After allowing 38 points to Indiana and 342 passing yards to Hoosiers QB Michael Penix Jr., defensive coordinator Don Brown has been receiving heat in Ann Arbor. 

Although the Wolverines have had a top-four defense in the country for the past five seasons, they find themselves outside of the top 50 in the country at the moment. Brown has dialed up a heavy dose of man coverage that has not worked well in the early going, and even when mixing in zone against Indiana the Wolverines were a mess against the pass.

Wisconsin’s strategy obviously depends on who is under center. If Graham Mertz is ready to roll on Saturday, expect a heavy dose of the passing game as the Badgers look to get Danny Davis, Kendric Pryor, and Jake Ferguson involved early and often. The Wolverines are just a week removed from giving up over 140 receiving yards to Indiana’s Ty Fryfogle.

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On the ground, watch for how carries are distributed. Senior back Garrett Groshek, and a pair of sophomores in Isaac Guerendo and Nakia Watson, all received double digit carries in week one against Illinois, and it will be intriguing to see who has the trust of Paul Chryst and Joe Rudolph on Saturday.

If QB Danny Vanden Boom makes his first collegiate start, expect unorthodoxy from a relatively traditional coaching staff. Wisconsin will have to get creative, whether it be Groshek in the wildcat, running the football more than they want to, and setting up Vanden Boom for success with quick hitters.

Wisconsin will have to attack over the top against a group of Michigan DB’s that has looked anything but consistent through three weeks. If the Badgers can find a healthy balance in the run game and explode over the top for a few big plays, Wisconsin will come out of the Big House at 2-0.