Wisconsin vs. Illinois: Series history

It is Wisconsin Badger game week and, as we’ll do throughout the season, we are here on Monday to preview Friday’s upcoming…

It is Wisconsin Badger game week and, as we’ll do throughout the season, we are here on Monday to preview Friday’s upcoming contest against the Illinois Fighting Illini.

Up first: the series history between the two schools.

Related: Comments to note from Joe Rudolph and Jim Leonhard’s press conference

The Badgers and fighting Illini first faced off back in 1899 when the Badgers won 23-0. Since then there have been a total of 87 contests between the two schools with the all-time record standing at 42-38-7 in favor of Wisconsin.

Obviously, and this fact won’t be dwelled on, Illinois has a 1-game win streak dating back to last season.

Going through the series here are some numbers to note:

  • The Badgers had a 9-game win streak from 2008-2018 that was snapped last year
  • Illinois’ longest win streak against the Badgers is 6 games from 1987-1992
  • The Badgers’ largest margin of victory in the series is 55-7, Illinois’ is 51-0 and they happened just four years apart in the 1960s
  • Wisconsin boasts more all-time wins, bowl games, bowl record, Heismans, All-Americans, weeks at AP No. 1, first-round draft picks and much more
  • Illinois, though, has more 5 National Championships to the Badgers’ 0 and 15 conference championships to the Badgers’ 14

 

Stay tuned in to BadgersWire throughout the week as we preview the first game on the Badgers’ 2020 schedule.

Why this weird year in college football actually helps the Badgers’ chances

You don’t need me to tell you that this is a weird and challenging year in college football. With limited or no fans at games, contract…

You don’t need me to tell you that this is a weird and challenging year in college football.

With limited or no fans at games, contract tracing protocols, constant COVID-19 testing, altered schedules and more, there is one word to accurately explain the situation: chaos.

During a normal year Camp Randall Stadium would be packed with 80,000 fans and the team would already be through the first quarter of their season.

Related: Three true freshmen who will make an early impact for Wisconsin football

So why, in a chaotic year, are the Badgers actually benefitting from all of this? Because in times of chaos the most buttoned-up and well-prepared people, teams, etc. are the ones that find the most success.

This is obviously about the product on the football field, but it’s also about crisis management and leadership.

You look around the college football landscape thus far and what do you see? Sloppy play, bad clock and game management, blown coverages on defense, bad turnovers and more.

Not that other programs aren’t coached well or have bad leadership, but if there’s one team in the country that brings consistency to the football field, is tremendously-coached, and is fit to deal with chaos more than anybody else it’s the Wisconsin Badgers.

Yes, they have a redshirt freshman in Graham Mertz at quarterback after starter Jack Coan injured his foot. But while teams around them struggle to execute and play under the current circumstances, the Badgers’ consistency and identity will end up playing a huge role in their success.

As Joel Klatt beautifully said last week on The Herd with Colin Cowherd:

“If you’re asking me about which team, fanbase, administration knows themselves better than anybody else in the country, it’s Wisconsin. They know who they are, how they have success, why they have success, and that’s why they do have success year, over year, over year.”

The team and program know exactly who they are, what they need to do to succeed and how to go out on the field and do it.

So while Auburn loses games because of turnovers, UNC gives up 31 points to a bad Florida State team and Oklahoma and Texas look like dumpster fires, it will be Wisconsin, their style of play, their coaching and their identity that deals with the current chaos better than anybody and has one of the more impressive seasons in their program’s history.

Wisconsin jumps two spots in latest AP Poll

After an offseason full of question marks, a decision to cancel the season, the season then getting reinstated and a month of waiting, it…

After an offseason full of question marks, a decision to cancel the season, the season then getting reinstated and a month of waiting, it is finally Wisconsin Badger game week.

Check in to BadgersWire throughout the week as we preview the contest, preview Week 1 in the Big Ten and tell you what the Badgers will need to do to defeat the Illinois Fighting Illini and start their season 1-0.

If you’re a fan of college football you know the SEC, ACC and Big 12 have already completed up to five weeks of their regular seasons, weeks which have seen several highly-ranked teams getting upset and dropping in the national rankings.

Due to this, despite the fact that the Badgers are yet to take the field, the team continued its rise in the AP Poll this weekend and jumped two spots up to No. 14 in the nation.

Their spot at No. 14 is up five spots since Big Ten teams returned to the poll in Week 4, up two spots from their Week 5 and Week 6 rankings and keeps them as the No. 3 team in the Big Ten behind Ohio State and Penn State.

Other notable moves in this week’s poll include Texas A&M jumping from No. 11 to No. 7 after their win against Mississippi State, North Carolina dropping from No. 5 to No. 14, Auburn falling out of the rankings and the trio of Coastal Carolina, NC State and Marshall joining the top 25.

The poll is likely to be shaken up even more when the Big Ten returns to the field this weekend, but even though the Badgers sit at 0-0 they are still receiving praise from Associated Press writers as teams around them lose games and plummet in the rankings.