Raiders FB Alec Ingold made one of the biggest plays of the game by just being lucky

Former Wisconsin FB Alec Ingold gave us a classic lesson: Tails Never Fails

Jon Gruden knew what he was doing when naming former Wisconsin FB Alec Ingold as a captain of the Las Vegas Raiders for the 2021 season. In Week 1’s Monday Night Football thriller against the Baltimore Ravens, Ingold made one of the biggest plays of the game just because of his captaincy and a little bit of luck.

With the game headed to overtime and the NFL’s overtime rules still making very little sense, winning the coin toss became imperative for two offenses who had just stormed down the field in the fourth quarter. Ingold trotted out to midfield and all he had to do was let his opponent pick heads. The coin landed on tails, and the Raiders got the football and should have had the win on their first possession of overtime. A couple of turnovers later, Las Vegas got their win on a long touchdown grab by Zay Jones.

Immediately after the game, Ingold took to Twitter with a classic message:

Tails, indeed, never fails.

Podcast: Wisconsin football keeps DC Jim Leonhard as he turns down the Packers

The Badgers keep their DC in Madison

On today’s “Locked On Badgers” podcast we get into Wisconsin keeping their defensive coordinator Jim Leonhard after the Green Bay Packers made a run. Per Tom Oates of the WSJ, Leonhard was the top candidate but turned the job down for a number of reasons:

We react on today’s show:

You can find “Locked On Badgers” wherever you get your podcasts, with new episodes covering Wisconsin basketball and football every week.

WATCH: Jaguars LB Joe Schobert picks off Mitch Trubisky in the end zone

The former Badger comes up with a clutch INT

While the Chicago Bears are looking to shore up a playoff spot, the 1-13 Jacksonville Jaguars are thinking about the No. 1 pick at this stage of the season.

Don’t tell former Wisconsin linebacker Joe Schobert that, though. The Badger alumnus pulled off an athletic interception just before halftime to keep the score knotted at 10. Packer fans will also be happy Schobert is doing what he can to keep the Bears out of the playoffs:

Meet Wisconsin football’s class of 2021, the highest-ranked group in school history

Meet every member of Wisconsin’s class of 2021, the best group in program history

Today wasn’t about surprises, last-minute changes, or veering from a plan that had been set over the past few months. Instead, the first day of the early signing period was about a celebration of the tremendous class of 2021 that Wisconsin football was able to lock in.

Of the 21 commits in the class, the Badgers signed all 21 today, with the final signature coming just under an hour ago by WR Markus Allen. For the third straight year, led by hard work from the entire staff, Wisconsin football signed the highest-ranked group in program history. Director of Player Personnel Saeed Khalif, who oversees recruiting, mentioned in this afternoon’s press conference that the Badgers want to be considered as a “blue blood program.”

Signing the class of 2021 will go a long way in achieving that goal. According to 247Sports rankings, the Badger class is No. 16 overall nationally, No. 3 in the Big Ten, and includes a top-15 player overall in five-star OT Nolan Rucci.

With all 21 names now signed on the dotted line, here is a look at every member of Wisconsin’s newest class of Badgers:

BadgersWire Roundtable: Wisconsin-Indiana score predictions

Score predictions before a top-20 matchup in Madison

Wisconsin football is back in action today as the 2-1 Badgers play host to the 5-1 Indiana Hoosiers. It’s been a long pair of weeks since Wisconsin’s ugly loss at Northwestern, and UW has a chance to put that behind them today at Camp Randall.

The No. 12 Hoosiers lost their leader in QB Michael Penix Jr. to a torn ACL last week in their 27-11 win over Maryland, and turn to Jack Tuttle for his first career start under center. With Wisconsin as arguably surprising 14-point Vegas favorites despite looking the way they did last week, here is how our BadgersWire team sees this one playing out:

Ben: The Badgers are 14-point favorites in this contest and it feels way to steep. Even though Indiana comes in with a backup at quarterback, they are a well-coached and extremely talented team. The game will come down to whether Graham Mertz can take care of the football and avoid another multi-turnover performance. I think the Badgers do enough on defense to limit Tuttle, Jalen Berger has a game and Wisconsin wins a close one.

Wisconsin 23   Indiana 21 

Asher: Sure, the 14-point favorite number feels way too steep, but this also feels like a spot where Wisconsin is primed for a bounce back. Indiana losing their leader and starting QB, Graham Mertz taking responsibility for his struggles and bouncing back today, and the Badgers getting offensive weapons back in WR’s Danny Davis and Kendric Pryor (we think, you never truly know in 2020) all points in favor of UW. I think Jack Tuttle performs well under center to keep the Hoosiers in it, but Wisconsin stops the run as they have been doing all year and Mertz plays closer to his week one self than his Ryan Field display.

Wisconsin 34   Indiana 21 

Graham Mertz is “ready to grow” after his first taste of adversity

Everything looked easy in week one for redshirt-freshman QB Graham Mertz at a time when it had every reason to be a struggle. His first collegiate start came five weeks ago, even though it may feel like five years ago, and he looked like anything …

Everything looked easy in week one for redshirt-freshman QB Graham Mertz at a time when it had every reason to be a struggle. His first collegiate start came five weeks ago, even though it may feel like five years ago, and he looked like anything but an inexperienced signal caller making his first Big Ten start.

Completing his first 17 passes against Illinois in week one en route to a 49-7 win, the “Kansas Kannon” was firing on all cylinders. Then, as has been the case for so many programs at all levels, COVID-19 hit Mertz and the Badger program and the hype train ground to a halt. It was the first test of adversity for the young QB off the field, and although he didn’t look like the week one world beater, Mertz took care of the football and the Badgers steamrolled to a week four victory at Michigan in their return.

Enter Ryan Field and Northwestern in act three for “Mertz mania,” a nemesis that just seems to have Wisconsin’s number no matter who puts on the red and white. The Wildcats roughed up Mertz in a 17-7 crushing loss for the Badgers, and now are in the drivers seat for a Big Ten West title. Adversity for Mertz hit him on the field for the first time in his young Badger career.

Four first half turnovers later, including two interceptions from the young quarterback, Wisconsin trailed 14-7 at halftime in a game that felt as though the Badger offense lacked any and all rhythm. At the end of the 17-7 loss and a second half that somehow felt even worse offensively for an undermanned UW team than the first, Mertz could have had every excuse in the book for his four total turnovers.

The surprise news that Danny Davis and Kendric Pryor, Mertz’s top two targets, were out for undisclosed reasons would be at the top of the list. Instead, the Kansas native did what leaders do and took responsibility while using this as a learning moment in his young career.

“Northwestern is a great veteran defense and they knew what was coming with our progressions,” said Mertz postgame. “It was something I would love to get back, but now it’s just taking them as a learning experience and growing from it.”

This is the type of game that almost every QB at a new level will have as a first-year starter. It’s about how you respond that writes your legacy. Mertz is already looking forward to keeping the one item in Madison that matters most to Badger fans: The Axe.

“Im excited to see where this team takes the next step,” said the Badgers QB. “Its going to be a great team from this point on. We are going to go get the axe, we are going to keep the axe.”

Mertz has the chance to put words into action next Saturday against Minnesota, and no matter who is on the field you can bet No. 5 likes his chances.

“Its next man up here we always preach that, I never lost any confidence,” said Mertz when asked about losing his top two targets.

Everything is not going to look like the cakewalk that was week one for Mertz, but neither a performance like that or a performance like this is going to dictate who he is. When a loss falls largely on No. 5, he will be the first to take the responsibility that he took today. He has made it clear, even after an afternoon like this, that Wisconsin has their leader of the future.

 

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:

Podcast: How Michigan football will match up with Wisconsin

The Badgers will meet the Wolverines this Saturday in primetime

On the latest episode of Locked On Badgers, Asher is joined by Locked On Wolverines host Isaiah Hole to break down this Saturday’s Wisconsin vs. Michigan primetime matchup.

Isaiah and Asher discuss whether or not Jim Harbaugh will keep his job at the end of the year, how the Wolverines will attack the Badgers on both sides of the ball, and who ends up winning on Saturday.

You can listen to Locked On Badgers wherever you get your podcasts, with new episodes out Monday through Friday.

Can Graham Mertz play this Saturday?

The answer to every Badger fans biggest question at the moment

With news this morning that Wisconsin football is trending towards playing against Michigan this weekend, the next big question at the front of all Badgers fans minds is can starting QB Graham Mertz play?

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The redshirt-freshman QB initially tested positive for COVID-19 on October 24 per the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, and the Big Ten has a strict 21-day policy for returning to play. With Mertz’s first test coming on October 24, this Friday, November 13, would be his 21st day in conference protocol. UW has not confirmed this timeline, but if the initial report about when Mertz tested positive is true it would hold up. He would be eligible to play in games starting then, and would be eligible to play in this Saturday’s Michigan game. Would that be likely without any practice time? Turns out Mertz can be on the field before Friday.

Per Big Ten protocol, if the Kansas native is cleared by a school cardiologist he can begin an “activity progression” 15 days after his initial positive, which would have been yesterday, November 8. If each step of this progression is cleared by a team physician, Mertz can be back at practice this Wednesday through Friday in preparation for the Wolverines.

Here is how Wisconsin football can still make the Big Ten championship game

The Badgers still have a path to the postseason

All is not lost for the 2020 Badgers, even as Wisconsin football announced today that they are canceling the Purdue game due to the continuing COVID-19 outbreak. Wisconsin football currently has 27 cases, with 15 players and 12 staff members having tested positive in the past two weeks.

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The Badgers currently sit at 1-0, having played the Big Ten opener against Illinois just two weeks ago. It feels as though it has been years since we saw the brilliant debut of QB Graham Mertz and a dominant win over the Fighting Illini at Camp Randall. After a long two weeks for the program, which resulted in the cancellation of games against Nebraska and this Saturday’s game against Purdue, Wisconsin’s season is still alive.

According to Big Ten protocol, the Badgers need to get to six games in order to be eligible for the Big Ten championship game, unless the average number of regular-season games played by all conference teams falls below six. If the average falls below six, the minimum would then become two fewer games than the average.

So, how does Wisconsin get to six games? They play their remaining five on the schedule, starting with November 14 at Michigan. That obviously would require some luck. Remember, it is not only about the Badgers having to avoid any COVID-19 outbreaks, but also about their opponents avoiding an outbreak. If Wisconsin does get to six games, and ends up at 5-1 or better, all signs point to them heading to the Big Ten championship game, barring a 6-0 champion of the Big Ten West or a 5-1 team holding a tiebreaker over UW.

Wisconsin would also get Mertz back against the Wolverines if he recovers from COVID-19 and is cleared by a cardiologist.

The season may be teetering on the brink, but there is still hope for Badger football playing for championships in 2020.