Wisconsin win over Purdue in 2000 Elite 8 is more relevant than ever

A game which still resonates

It is noticeable how much literature we at Badgers Wire have devoted to the 2000 West Regional final between the Wisconsin Badgers and the Purdue Boilermakers.

We have looked at this game from all sorts of angles, and the ceremony honoring the 2000 Final Four team in the Kohl Center on February 9 gave us a good reason to say even more about the 2000 Purdue game which lifted the Badgers to their first Final Four in 59 years.

As we have reflected on classic Badger moments from past NCAA Tournaments this month, consider all the ways in which the 2000 win over Purdue in Albuquerque still resonates, 20 years later.

When you realize how long it took Bo Ryan to make the Final Four (13 years), one appreciates the value and meaning of the win over Purdue, which gave Dick Bennett his only Final Four after many years in coaching… and denied Gene Keady what would have been his first Final Four after two decades of coaching.

When you realize that one of Wisconsin’s less talented teams just won the 2020 Big Ten championship, the example of the 2000 team — which similarly had a lot of blue-collar workers and no superstars — becomes an enduring manifestation of the values and principles which have fueled Wisconsin’s rise and continued excellence under several head coaches.

When you realize that Virginia beating Purdue last year in the Elite Eight — which led to a national championship — will not be replaced by a new championship moment in 2020, it becomes apparent that college basketball will continue to reflect on a member of the Bennett family beating a member of Gene Keady’s coaching tree, Matt Painter. “Bennett over Purdue” won’t quickly recede into the history books. It will get another year to breathe, as Virginia remains defending champion and Tony Bennett gets a chance to reload.

Wisconsin and Dick Bennett beating Purdue and Gene Keady in the Elite Eight 20 years ago was a central part of the college basketball conversation last March because of the Virginia-Purdue Elite Eight game which called it to mind. After Wisconsin won an unlikely Big Ten title in 2020, and the 2000 Final Four team was honored, it is as though that win over Purdue in Albuquerque doesn’t want to fade away. For a game played 20 years ago, it owns a lot of prominence — certainly more than most.

Against Purdue, Wisconsin can reach a Big Ten milestone this season

More on Wisconsin vs. Purdue

No, a ticker-tape parade won’t be thrown for the Wisconsin Badgers if they manage to defeat the Purdue Boilermakers on Tuesday night in the Kohl Center. However, if you have been paying very close attention to Wisconsin hoops this season, you know this game is very important for one simple reason: Believe it or not, Wisconsin could register its first three-game conference winning streak of the season with a win over Purdue.

Surprised? You shouldn’t be.

This has been the way of the Big Ten this season — not just the home-road splits, but teams fluctuating wildly between their A game and their F game. The Purdue team Wisconsin will face on Tuesday is a perfect embodiment of this pattern. Iowa has exhibited the pattern. Indiana has. Rutgers doesn’t know how to tie its shoelaces away from The RAC in Piscataway, New Jersey. Wisconsin has certainly been part of the Big Ten’s very unpredictable, motion-sickness-inducing basketball campaign.

Go look it up if you’re not sure. Wisconsin split its December Big Ten games. The Badgers won at Ohio State in early January and lost to Illinois. They beat Penn State and Maryland and were on the verge of a three-game winning streak in the league, but they then lost to Michigan State. They stumbled around in late January, losing three of four games, but have since rebounded to beat Ohio State and Nebraska. Here we go, then: Wisconsin can finally stitch together three Big Ten wins in a row on the day after Presidents Day. It has been a long and winding road, but the Badgers have entered a favorable portion of their schedule and are in position to make good use of it.

If they CAN, it speaks well of the team’s ability not only to improve as the season has moved along, but to have survived the rougher patches in the schedule in January, without completely collapsing.

If the Badgers CAN’T beat Purdue — which would mean a season sweep at the hands of the Boilermakers — dreams of a double bye at the Big Ten Tournament would not necessarily be shattered, but they would become a lot less realistic.

Wisconsin has had a hard time handling prosperity this season. UW has been great when its back has been against the wall, but terrible when coming off a decisive victory. If the Badgers can string together good performances, their habits and tendencies might improve in the right direction… at the best possible time of year.