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QB Sherer, RB Clay Focal Points at Wisconsin Spring Game

As Mark Hasty mentioned Friday, there is much pressure on the Wisconsin Badgers football team this fall. After a disappointing season a year ago, the heat is on to prove it was nothing but a fluke.

To do so, Wisconsin will rely, in large part, on a "new" starting offensive backfield in 2009. 2008's starting running back, P.J. Hill, is gone. Also gone is the guy who started the season as the top quarterback, Allan Evridge.

Wisconsin Discovers Something Called 'Forward Pass', Beats Minnesota With It

Paul Bunyan's Axe will spend another winter in Madison after a game that might not appear on either team's season highlights video.

If you heard that the Badgers were held to 116 yards rushing by the Gophers, you'd probably assume the Badgers lost. But not today. The long-dormant Badger passing game didn't exactly explode today, but Dustin Sherer threw the ball well enough to make up for the largely absent running game.

Okay, it wasn't completely absent. PJ Hill did have 117 yards on 24 carries. And, with a 58% completion percentage, it's not like Sherer has anybody saying "Graham who?" Only the final score counts, though, and Wisconsin had the bigger one, 35-32.

If you only saw the first half of this game, you're little surprised by that. The Badgers fumbled four times in the first half and lost three of them. Minnesota could only turn one of those turnovers into point. though. The Badgers were lucky they were only down 21-7 at halftime.

Luck turned the other way in the second half. Two Wisconsin safeties, one on a fumbled kickoff and the other on a sack of Adam Weber, made the difference not just for the game but for both teams' seasons.

Pickin' on the Big Ten, Week 10

Every Thursday, Pickin' On the Big Ten breaks down action across the conference.

RIGHT: A typical offensive gameplan dreamed up by Woody Hayes.

So now there's one. One team all alone in first place, controlling its destiny. But hey, they have the week off.

The question is, "Has anything really changed in the Big Ten?" and the answer is a qualified "Maybe." The road to the Big Ten championship has run from Ann Arbor to Columbus ever since Murray Warmath hung up his whistle in Minnesota. In eight of the last ten seasons, either Michigan or Ohio State has won at least a share of the conference title; the last time anybody else won an outright title was 2001.

A shakeup in the conference might lead to a change in philosophy. If you can't win the Big Ten without a vertical passing game and the ability to defend same, we've seen the last of "three yards and a cloud of dust." Good riddance. The old-school power running game is ill-suited for the kind of football played in the other BCS conferences. Ball control works great in a game where neither team scores 30 points, but if you're down by ten with five minutes to play, you don't want to (and probably can't) start throwing the ball.

So, while I know Buckeye fans are in pain right now, it's a necessary pain. College football has reinvented itself in the past decade and, as usual, the Big Ten was the last to get the memo.

Sigh. Onward.

Badgers Barf Big-Time; Bielema Bemoans Badness; Band Back; Backers Behave Badly

These are unsteady days here in Wisconsin. The Badgers are on a three-game skid which includes a loss to Michigan that grows less explicable every week. The Brewers made the playoffs for the first time since the early years of the Reagan administration, only to get blown out by the Phillies. Worst of all, last week Aaron Rodgers got hurt on the same day Brett Favre threw for six touchdowns.

The Badgers are a team in disarray. A month ago they were a consensus top-ten team and people were praising them for a gutty win over Fresno State. A month ago nearly everyone thought that Bret Bielema's team was the only thing standing between Ohio State and the Big Ten title. A month ago, everybody was wrong about the Badgers.

Blame is like fruitcake: Somehow, it always seems like there's more than enough to go around. This week's designated hate sink is woebegone quarterback Allan Evridge. He was beyond dreadful last night. His first touchdown run as a Badger (he started his career at Kansas State, where Bielema used to coach) was nullified by his passing statistics: 2 of 10 for 50 yards. One touchdown. One interception. No wonder the UW faithful cheered backup Dustin Sherer when he came in halfway through the third quarter.

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