University of Wisconsin-Madison
Since 1892 dailycardinal.com
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
l
GAMEDay: minnesota
betsy osterberger/the daily cardinal
Friendly rivalry motivates D-Line duo By Lorin Cox the daily cardinal
Keep your friends close and your enemies closer. Redshirt freshman defensive ends Alec James and Chikwe Obasih embody the timeless quote from ancient Chinese strategist Sun Tzu. Both were recruited to the Badgers out of Brookfield, Wisconsin, a small city of around 40,000 people just west of Milwaukee. James was ranked by ESPN as the No. 1 recruit in the state of Wisconsin, coming out of Brookfield East High School. Obasih was ranked No. 2, from Brookfield Central. The two schools are about four miles apart, facilitating a rivalry that has developed for over half a century. Alec put up 97 tackles, 25 for losses, with 12 sacks and four forced fumbles as a senior, while Chikwe was right there with him, accumulating 101 tackles, 24 for losses, 7.5 sacks and five forced fumbles. From high school rivals to UW teammates, Obasih and James have used each other to motivate themselves to become the best players they possibly can be. The two were always aware of what the other was doing. “I always felt like I had to catch up to him,” Obasih said. “He’s the one who started on varsity as a freshman. It felt kind of good, having a rival and a
school that close to try and get yourself better.” Joining the Badgers in the same class brought the two of them a level of familiarity that not many Wisconsin recruits are able to have. They are now the best of friends, living together and forming a bond that helps them succeed both on and off the field. “It was good because like me, I’m a quiet person,” James said. “I don’t go out of my way to really interact with people if I don’t have to, but just knowing someone, someone who’s more social, it helped.”
“They’re always goofing around, but they know when they have to be serious. It’s all good stuff.” Konrad Zagzebski defensive end Wisconsin Badgers
Obasih echoed his thoughts. “Being close off the field and talking about things like how games went and how practice went afterwards, back at home, I think it helps a lot. You get a sense of support. It’s like, it’s not just you toughing it out on your own,” Obasih said. The D-line duo have come a long way on the field as well. After redshirting as true freshmen, they have seen quite a bit
of playing time this season. This has largely been due to injuries to redshirt senior defensive linemen Warren Herring and Konrad Zagzebski, which has forced coaches to rely on the young defenders. “They’ve been thrown into the fire, and they’ve gotten better every week,” said defensive line coach Chad Kauha’aha’a. “They’ve gone through some growing pains and still are, but they’ve accepted the challenge, and they haven’t backed down.” Their D-line coach is very familiar with the history between the two, and how that has formed the bond that will only help them grow as players. “High school is over, and so they’re like two brothers now,” he continued. “Those two guys are really close, and you know, they sit next to each other in meetings, and they’ve always got something to say to each other. It’s going to be like that for the next three years, and I’m excited to have these guys.” James and Obasih are getting valuable experience now that will build their confidence and help prepare them for bigger roles in the future. Herring and Zagzebski won’t be back next season, leaving a lot of playing time up for grabs. The Badgers do bring back redshirt junior Jake Keefer, who may end up taking one defensive end spot, leaving the other for Obasih and James.
On the interior, redshirt sophomore Arthur Goldberg should take the nose guard spot. If the Brookfield natives are going to step into more significant roles, they need to continue their development. They have come a long way, though, since joining the team as freshmen. “The first thing is the mental part of it. They understand the
“Being close off the field and talking about things ... I think it helps a lot. You get a sense of support.” Chikwe Obasih defensive end Wisconsin Badgers
defense much better than their first year, which is a huge positive for them,” Kauha’aha’a said. “Physically, both of them put on a lot of weight—good weight—but their bodies, they’re still adjusting to their new bodies.” So far, they’ve been coming along nicely. Alec has eight tackles, 1.5 for losses and a pass deflection so far this season, while Chikwe has 17 tackles and 1.5 sacks. Their performances have caught the eyes of their veteran teammates and even defensive coordinator Dave Aranda. He has watched them develop over the last year and a half, and he spoke high-
ly of his two young defensive ends. “Both of those guys are physical players. Their ‘want-to’ is off the charts,” he said. “When they’ve seen the field, there have been little to no missed assignments, and there’s been great production. And so I have no issue at all with those guys being in the game. I know they have the respect of their teammates.” Count Zagzebski in as a teammate who has been impressed. “They’re developing really nicely. The Badger fans have a lot to be excited for the future,” the senior defensive lineman said. He has observed their off-thefield relationship as well. Obasih and James are known for their antics, and sometimes the seasoned defensive lineman has to keep an eye on them. “They’re like two little brothers sometimes. I feel like I’m the older brother telling them to pipe down or be quiet because we have to get serious,” he said. “They’re always goofing around, but they know when they have to be serious. It’s all good stuff.” What started as a friendly rivalry has formed a unique companionship. When they’re not competing at practice or in games, they’re competing at home, challenging each other to a game of FIFA on Xbox. They are very close as friends, and they only get closer as rivals, on and off the field.
“…the great state University of Wisconsin should ever encourage that continual and fearless sifting and winnowing by which alone the truth can be found.”
gameday 2
l
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
dailycardinal.com
12345
Nithin charlly/cardinal file photo
Five things to watch By Zach Rastall the daily cardinal
1
Gordon rewriting the record books
Redshirt junior running back Melvin Gordon continues to strengthen his case for the Heisman Trophy with each passing game, rewriting the record books along the way. Though his single-game rushing record lasted only one week (thanks Kansas), Gordon still became the fastest player in FBS history to
reach 2,000 yards in a season, surpassing the total with an 88-yard run on his 241st carry of the year. Gordon currently sits at 2,109 yards for the season, tied with Ron Dayne for the most in Big Ten and program history. Barring any extremely unforeseen circumstances, he will break that record before the Camp Randall crowd, and try as he may, Samaje Perine won’t be breaking this record the following week. Gordon even still has a realistic chance of breaking Barry Sanders’ FBS-single season record of 2,628
yards. If the Badgers emerge victorious against the Gophers and clinch a spot in the Big Ten championship game, Gordon’s odds of passing Sanders look pretty good.
2
Stave solid under center
Sure, Gordon ran for 200 yards and Tanner McEvoy added a 45-yard touchdown run against Iowa, but it was redshirt junior Joel Stave’s 12-yard run on Wisconsin’s final possession that iced the game for the Badgers. While nobody should be
expecting Stave to venture outside the pocket again for a firstdown scramble anytime soon, Wisconsin fans should be more than content with his play at quarterback this season. Since Stave reassumed his role as starter, the Badgers have gone 6-0 and he has performed relatively well under center. Over the last six games, Stave has completed 60.6 percent of his passes for 713 yards, five touchdowns and just one interception. Stave isn’t going to win you many games with his arm, but when you have a player like Melvin Gordon to carry the offense, you don’t need him to. If he continues to be efficient and complete some passes on third down when he needs to, the Wisconsin offense will continue to avoid being one-dimensional.
3
Defense looking to rebound
Dave Aranda’s unit has unquestionably been a driving force behind the Badgers’ recent success, but the defense struggled in the second half against the Hawkeyes. Wisconsin has averaged 259.3 yards of total offense per game, second lowest in the FBS, but had trouble slowing down junior quarterback Jake Rudock and the Iowa offense. Rudock completed 20 of his 30 passes for 311 yards and two touchdowns and ran for another, helping the Hawkeyes nearly erase a 16-point deficit. Iowa offensive coordinator Greg Davis called a total of 14 first-down passes against the Badgers, a formula that nearly helped them pull off the comeback at Kinnick Stadium. The good news for the Wisconsin defense is that Minnesota relies on its passing game even less than the Badgers. The Gophers are averaging 134.7 yards per game through the air this year, the sixth-lowest total in the country. If the Badgers’ defense is to return to form, they’ll have to do it by stifling Minnesota’s rushing attack.
4
Smash-mouth football
Saturday afternoon’s show-
down in Madison will feature two teams that are a deviation from the norm in today’s world of college football, where passoriented offenses reign supreme. These offenses resemble Big Ten offenses of years past, such as the last time the Gophers won a conference title (1967). The Badgers and Gophers have two of the country’s strongest rushing attacks, ranking third and 25th, respectively. While Wisconsin, of course, is led by Melvin Gordon, Minnesota has a solid running back of its own in David Cobb. Cobb, a senior, has rushed for 1,430 yards and 12 touchdowns on the season, which includes a 145-yard, threetouchdown performance two weeks ago against Ohio State. Cobb left last week’s game against Nebraska with a hamstring injury, but is expected to be ready for this weekend.
5
How the Big Ten West (and Paul Bunyan’s Axe) was won
The rivalry between Wisconsin and Minnesota is the oldest in the entire FBS, but these two teams haven’t played a game of any real significance (beyond winning bragging rights and a gigantic axe) since Barry Alvarez was still patrolling the sidelines in Madison. But this time around, a spot in the Big Ten championship game hangs in the balance. Though Minnesota holds a 59-56-8 lead all-time, the Badgers have won 10 straight and 17 of the last 19 meetings between these two teams, but the days of this rivalry being completely one-sided seem to be numbered. Head coach Jerry Kill has completely revived the Gophers, and should probably be named the Big Ten Coach of the Year regardless of Saturday’s outcome. Both Paul Bunyan’s Axe and Big Ten West supremacy will be on the line when these two teams clash at Camp Randall Stadium, which speaks volumes to just how far Kill has brought the program in less than four years.
gameday dailycardinal.com
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
l
Minnesota’s solid team aims for Indianapolis By Jason Braverman THE DAILY CARDINAL
For a team coming into the season with aspirations simply to be bowl eligible, consistently picked fifth in the West Division in the preseason, Minnesota has a chance to head to Indianapolis for the Big Ten Championship with a win Saturday. After both the Gophers and Badgers won on the road against other West contenders Nebraska and Iowa respectively, the winner of the 124th meeting between the two will win the West and advance to take on Ohio State. Minnesota (5-2 Big Ten, 8-3 overall) leads the overall series against their rivals, but they haven’t been able to win Paul Bunyan’s Axe since 2003, and they haven’t left Madison with a win since 1994. The Gophers haven’t won a conference title since 1967, the longest drought of the 11 Big Ten schools in the conference before the three recent additions. The Gophers are coming off their most impressive win of the season, rallying from 14 down to win at then-ranked No. 23 Nebraska to eliminate the Cornhuskers from the West title race. They also featured a dominating 51-14 rout over
Iowa earlier in November. ing in seven of the Gophers’ 11 Offensively, the team is paced passing touchdowns. With just by their star running back, senior 14 catches, redshirt senior Isaac David Cobb. Cobb’s 1,430 yards Fruechte leads the wide receivers on the ground are good for ninth on the team in receptions and has in the nation in rush269 yards and a score ing, averaging 130 on the year. YPG. He’s eclipsed The Gopher defense the 100-yard mark six has been a strong point times, including two of the team, allowTackles by days of over 200 on ing just 22.5 points per defensive standout the ground. Though game, ranking 30th Damien Wilson. he was forced to leave in the FBS. Senior against Nebraska with linebacker Damien a hamstring injury, Wilson leads the way National the senior should be for Minnesota with passing offense back out on the field 103 tackles, including ranking for the against Wisconsin. 10 for a loss, and four Gophers, out of As a team, they’re sacks, good for best on 128. 123rd out of 124 in the team in all three catthe FBS in passegories. Redshirt junior ing behind redshirt sophomore defensive back Briean Boddyquarterback Mitch Leidner. He Calhoun has also helped chip has just 10 touchdowns on the in on the defensive effort with a year with eight interceptions and team-high four interceptions. averages less than 150 yards per Both Minnesota’s and game through the air. Leidner is a Wisconsin’s strengths lie in threat with his feet though, with their ground game and defense. his best rushing game coming Containing the others’ star runlast week against Nebraska with ning back and forcing them to Cobb on the sidelines, as he ran rely on the passing game will likefor 110 yards and two scores. ly be the main point of emphasis Despite their lack of an aerial for both sides. Whoever can do threat, redshirt sophomore tight it more successfully has a good end Maxx Williams has been able chance of reclaiming the axe and to have a strong season, haul- heading to Indianapolis.
103
gameday
Business and Advertising 608-262-8000 fax 608-262-8100 business@dailycardinal.com l
A special publication of
123
Fall 2014, Issue 12 2142 Vilas Communication Hall 821 University Avenue Madison, Wis., 53706-1497 News and Editorial 608-262-8000 fax 608-262-8100 edit@dailycardinal.com sports@dailycardinal.com l
Editor-in-Chief Jack Casey Managing Editor Jonah Beleckis Gameday Editors Zach Rastall Andrew Tucker Sports Editors Jack Baer Jim Dayton Photo Editors Emily Buck Tommy Yonash Graphics Editor Cameron Graff Social Media Manager Rachel Wanat Copy Chiefs Kara Evenson, Justine Jones Jessie Rodgers, Paige Villiard
Business Manager Brett Bachman Advertising Manager Jordan Laeyendecker Assistant Ad Manager Corissa Pennow Marketing Director Tim Smoot
Gameday is a publication of The Daily Cardinal. Any additional copies can be picked up at the Cardinal offices, 2142 Vilas Communication Hall. The Cardinal is a nonprofit organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales. The Daily Cardinal thanks Hometown News Group for their generous contribution in the production of Gameday. Its members help in sales, printing and publishing of each Gameday issue. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association. All copy, photographs and graphics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without specific written permission of the editor-in-chief. © 2014, The Daily Cardinal Media Corporation ISSN 0011-5398
Ho-Chunk Gaming Madison is a proud sponsor of UW Athletics
LET’S GET A
AND BEAT MINNESOTA!
Join us after the game for our Postgame Rewards promotion, win Rewards Play and prizes!
THE HOTTEST SLOT MACHINES | CASUAL DINING REWARDS CLUB | OPEN 24 HOURS | WELCOMES AGES 18+
12
90 Your Ticket to More 4002 EVAN ACRES RD. MADISON, WI 53718
| 608.223.9576 | HO-CHUNKGAMING.COM/MADISON
FREE $10 REWARDS PLAY FOR YOU AND A GUEST *Valid one per person, cannot be used in conjunction with any other offers. Expiration: 12/06/2014
Code: 14587
Your Ticket to More
39
Casino located near the intersection of Hwy. 12 and I-90.
3
gameday 4
l
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
dailycardinal.com
Mariota, Gordon remain front-runners By Jim Dayton THE DAILY CARDINAL
This is the 11th edition of the Heisman Watch, a weekly feature tracking the candidates for college football’s most prestigious award. For last week’s rankings, check The Daily Cardinal website.
1. Marcus Mariota, Oregon QB (Last Week: 2)
Sigh. As cool as it would be to see Melvin Gordon win the Heisman, realistically the award is going to Mariota. The Oregon quarterback has posted a ridiculous 32:2 touchdown-to-interception ratio. No Heisman-winning quarterback has ever equaled something like that. I said this a few weeks ago, but the one hindrance for Mariota is that his campaign has a lot to lose and little to gain. The Ducks have a trap game on the road this weekend against rival Oregon State before the Pac-12 championship. Mariota’s amazing statistical resume is solidified, but a random loss to the Beavers would knock the Ducks out of Playoff contention. Oregon’s record would then be on par with Wisconsin, and then we could see hung voters between Mariota and Gordon. For suspense’s sake, I hope it happens.
2. Melvin Gordon, Wisconsin RB (LW: 1)
I’m mad at Kansas and Samaje Perine. After the Jayhawks’ joke defense allowed Perine to break Gordon’s week-old rushing record, I’m afraid that dumb voters who only look at raw numbers will say that the 408-yard game against Nebraska is less
impressive if somebody can top it so quickly. But when one considers other factors that require intelligence, Gordon’s demolition of the Huskers is easily the better performance—more yards per carry against a good team in a game that actually mattered. He topped the 2,000-yard mark last week against Iowa, becoming the 17th player in FBS history to officially do so (there’s actually been 23, but there’s a disconnect over whether to include bowl stats in official totals because the NCAA is janky as hell). However, this is no guarantee for his Heisman candidacy, considering only five of the official 17 have gone on to win the Heisman. Gordon has an outside shot at breaking Barry Sanders’ singleseason rushing record. If he’s on pace to do so before the bowl game and Wisconsin wins the Big Ten, then man, will this be a split vote.
3. J.T. Barrett, Ohio State QB (LW: 3)
Let’s make one thing clear: At this point, it’s a two-horse race between Mariota and Gordon, and everybody else is just sort of there. But Barrett is deserving of being the top candidate of the second tier. Barrett, a redshirt freshman, has done a fantastic job filling in for injured superstar Braxton Miller. He ranks second in passing touchdowns with 33, is third in efficiency rating and is tied for fourth in yards per attempt. He’s also pushing 1,000 rushing yards on the season. In order for Barrett to actually leapfrog the two leaders and win
the Heisman, he’s going to need to dominate in the Big Ten title game, have Oregon and Wisconsin both implode and have Mariota and Gordon replaced with Joey Harrington and Brian Calhoun, respectively. In other words, this isn’t happening.
4. Brett Hundley, UCLA QB (LW: 5)
I could have put Hundley at No. 3, but for right now, Barrett has better numbers and Ohio State also has a better shot at making the Playoff. UCLA is a dark horse Playoff team who would need to upset Oregon in the Pac-12 title game to actually get there. I’ve been a supporter of Hundley for a while now even though he doesn’t get much national love. His offensive line is a sieve, yet he still leads the nation in completion percentage. In the primetime matchup last week against USC, the Bruins walloped the Trojans while Hundley shined, throwing for 326 yards and three touchdowns.
5. Dak Prescott, Mississippi State QB (LW: 4)
Dak is still a fringe Heisman candidate, perhaps more so than both Barrett and Hundley, because if Mississippi State somehow makes it into the Playoff (still a real possibility), Prescott will have the distinction of being the most surprising player this season. Barrett is still a pretty big shock, but the other three players above Prescott on this list all had preseason Heisman hype. Though Mississippi State had a promo-
Don’t Get Gobbled Up With the 2015 Housing Search! You Will be Thankful for the Helpful JSM Leasing Team JSM Properties Has a Cornucopia of Apartments to Choose From
Open House Friday, December 5th 12pm-5pm
101 N Mills Street 608-255-3933 www.jsmproperties.com
GRAPHIC BY CAMERON GRAFF
tional campaign for Dak, nobody took his candidacy seriously until the Bulldogs whooped Texas A&M (a win that, in retrospect, doesn’t seem too impressive). So essentially, it’s all about Mississippi State making the Playoff to help Prescott overcome the existing statistical chasm between him and the other prime Heisman candidates. Even still, consider Prescott’s Heisman campaign to be on life support.
6. Trevone Boykin, TCU QB (LW: 7)
TCU was on a bye last week, so what remains fresh in my head is the Horned Frogs almost losing to Kansas. You know, the same Kansas team that I bashed in Melvin Gordon’s blurb. Boykin still has two opportunities to make up for that dismal Kansas game, with a Thanksgiving road date with Texas and a matchup with Iowa State the following week. The Longhorns actually have a pretty good defense, ranking 14th nationally in passing defense, so that’s not exactly a cupcake matchup. I’m not as high on Boykin as most people are, and I include him in these rankings primarily because TCU remains in the Playoff hunt and he’s their star player. He ranks 56th in completion percentage, 32nd in yards per pass attempt and 30th in efficiency rating. Not exactly Mariota-like numbers.
7. Blake Sims, Alabama QB (LW: 8)
Refreshments provided by Silver Mine Subs!
When I recap my Heisman Watch series after the award is handed out, surely Sims is going to be the biggest outlier. I can envision a scenario where he doesn’t even get a vote. He’s really overlooked. But I’ve stuck with Sims because he has routinely made key plays for Alabama all season long. His numbers aren’t amazing, but they’re better than Boykin’s. And yet Boykin has gotten all the hype. Maybe we’re just programmed into thinking that the typical Alabama quarterback is just a placeholder, one who defers to a strong run game and a smothering defense. But Sims has been key to the Tide’s success all season long, even though the star power on this team is at other positions.
8. Jameis Winston, Florida State QB (LW: 9)
Another week, another Winston blurb where I tell you I only have him ranked because everyone else in the media is in love. Seriously, when did 19 touchdowns and 13 interceptions become Heisman-worthy? It seems most media members are infatuated with Winston simply because he hasn’t lost a game yet in his career. While this is to be applauded, the Seminoles have looked vulnerable in practically every game this season. Hell, Will Muschamp and Florida could knock off FSU this Saturday. Don’t rule it out.
9. Amari Cooper, Alabama WR (LW: 10)
Cooper and the three players directly above him on this list all moved up one spot thanks to USC getting destroyed by UCLA last week, effectively ending the microscopic chances of Cody Kessler being considered for the Heisman. I figured I needed to mention that as a justification for moving Cooper up after he got injured last week against Western Carolina. Because of that, he had one of his poorest games of the season, finishing with three catches and 46 yards against an FCS defense that he could have teed off on. Most people love Cooper as a dark horse Heisman candidate. And I get it—he’s really talented and will probably be the first wide receiver taken in next year’s draft. But there are several wide receivers whose stats are better than Cooper’s. Because of that, I really can’t rank him any higher than No. 9.
10. Bryce Petty, Baylor QB (LW: Not Ranked)
Well hello again. I haven’t had Petty ranked in the Heisman Watch since Week 6. The issue is that his 58.3 percent completion rate is garbage. He’s actually had two games with a completion percentage below 50 percent. How can someone realistically be considered for the Heisman if he is susceptible to such bad performances? But Baylor is a fringe Playoff team. Consider it the Trevone Boykin/Big 12 quarterback proposition. One of those two is going to garner serious regional love even though neither is really deserving of the award.
gameday dailycardinal.com
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
l
Camp Randall clash to decide West Division 1
2
By Jack Baer the daily cardinal
A multitude of incentives drive the teams of the Big Ten going into this final weekend of the regular season. The bottom teams play for pride, the middle plays for bowl placement, Minnesota and Wisconsin play for the division and Ohio State plays to gratuitiously humiliate Michigan.
1. No. 7 Ohio State (10 firstplace votes), 140 points
Your official Big Ten East division champions, the Buckeyes will play the winner of Minnesota at Wisconsin next weekend, with a trip to the College Football Playoff potentially on the line (for Ohio State, not the West winner).
2. No. 10 Michigan State, 126 points
at home status for the season, not only would the Gophers take the division over the Badgers, but Melvin Gordon would also lose his chance at breaking the single-season rushing record and any shot at the Heisman. This Saturday should be very scary.
5. Nebraska, 100 points
Don’t let the door hit you on the way out, Nebraska. Back-toback losses to Wisconsin and Minnesota mean the Huskers are officially in “OMG, we’re not an elite program anymore” mode and still facing a very losable road trip to Iowa. The anger from @FauxPelini could get pretty hilarious by the time bowl season rolls around, with Nebraska playing in something like the Pinstripe Bowl.
6. Iowa, 88 points
Easy there, Spartans. You didn’t have to make Gary Nova cry during that 45-3 blowout. Right now, the Spartans are looking at a Citrus Bowl berth, unless they get an at-large bid to one of the Big Six bowls (the Cotton, Fiesta, Orange or Peach). They’re positioned to easily leapfrog the West division champion if it loses to Ohio State in the championship. If Ohio State loses, all hell breaks loose.
Depending on the outcome of next week’s game with Nebraska, the Hawkeyes will either end the season at 8-4 or 7-5. Since winning the 2010 Orange Bowl, Iowa has gone 34-28 and hasn’t won more than eight games in a season. Friendly reminder: Kirk Ferentz is the ninth-highest paid coach in college football and makes more than the likes of Jimbo Fisher, Gus Malzahn and Gary Patterson.
3. No. 14 Wisconsin, 124 points
7. Maryland, 82 points
That Iowa game got a little close for comfort, but the Badgers are still definitely in the Top 3 of the conference and a stone’s throw away from Michigan State. If they make the championship, they will likely be written off nationally in favor of the Ohio State Playoff Contender narrative, but they will have a very real chance at playing spoiler. Speaking of playing spoiler...
4. No. 22 Minnesota, 109 points
Think about what a Minnesota win does. Not only would a decade-long win streak be snapped, not only would the Badgers lose their undefeated
The Terrapins might be the easiest-to-place team in the Big Ten hierarchy. They’re above the very weak half of the conference, but probably aren’t going to touch the Top 5. They’re basically hanging out in the average tier with Iowa. Honestly, most Big Ten fans will probably take that given how worried everyone was when Jim Delany added Maryland.
8. Northwestern, 65 points
Are we back in the “Pat Fitzgerald is a young, charismatic coach on the rise” zone? After a streak of four fairly embarrassing losses, the Wildcats have taken down Notre Dame and Purdue and will be bowl-eligible if they win against Illinois.
3
4
9. Penn State, 56 points
In this season’s post-mortem, we need to figure out what happened to the Nittany Lion offense. Seriously, the level of success Penn State could have seen if its offense was even mediocre is mouth-watering in Happy Valley. Their FBS ranks in offense and defense are 110 and 4. Guess which is which. Michigan needs one more win to become bowl-eligible. They play one more game: Ohio State in Columbus. Have fun with that Brady Hoke, enjoy next year’s stint as a defensive coordinator for a low-tier power conference team.
11. Rutgers, 43 points
The Scarlet Knights lost to Ohio State, Nebraska, Wisconsin and Michigan State by a combined total of 139 to 44. The Knights seemed promising early in the season, but it’s very clear they have a lot of work to do before they’re even considered a mid-level Big Ten team.
12. Illinois, 30 points
Illinois, Purdue and Indiana are the clear Bottom 3 of the conference, but Illinois seems to at least be able to put together a respectable effort against the stronger teams, beating Minnesota (which looks really silly now) and Penn State, along with hanging around Wisconsin.
13. Purdue, 21 points
Indiana might be the overall worse team now according to our voters, but at least they can do one thing well: rushing offense. The Boilermakers are bad at everything, ranking outside the Top 75 in every permutation (running/passing, offense/defense).
Order Online FREE DELIVERY!
capitolcentremarket.com c ca ap pito pi ittolc to ollcen enttrem trrem em mar ark arke ar ke ett..co et com com
Big Ten Standings East
Big Ten
Overall
West
Big Ten
Overall
Ohio State Michigan State Maryland Michigan Penn State Rutgers Indiana Wisconsin Minnesota Nebraska Iowa Northwestern Illinois Purdue
7-0 6-1 4-3 3-4 2-5 2-5 0-7 6-1 5-2 4-3 4-3 3-4 2-5 1-6
10-1 9-2 7-4 5-6 6-5 6-5 3-8 9-2 8-3 8-3 7-4 5-6 5-6 3-8
14. Indiana, 11 points
At least Tevin Coleman’s really good. He’s the only bright spot on a team that is just miserable since quarterback Nate Sudfeld went down with a shoulder injury.
• Daily service to Chicago • Charter buses for game day or any day • Group tour packages
800.747.0994 www.vangalderbus.com
OPEN 24 Hours 7 Days A Week
10. Michigan, 55 points
GET TO THE GAME
Safe · Professional · Reliable
Serving Badger Serving Badger Fans Fans Since Since 1984 1984
World Class Boutique Winery •Delicious Semi-Sweet Wines •Award-Winning Dry Wines •Artisan Cheeses & Chocolates
FREsEting
Wine Ta Daily!
Winemaker, Sommelier and Educator Rob Lewis teaches “Food & Wine Pairing” This coupon good for One complimentary glass of wine, and receive a Lewis Station Winery souvenir glass!
217 N. MAIN ST. | LAKE MILLS | (920) 648-5481
LewisStationWinery.com
5
gameday 6
l
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
1
2
dailycardinal.com
3
Week 13 by the numbers 427
0
34
5
Rushing yards by Oklahoma running back Samaje Perine, breaking the FBS record set by Melvin Gordon the previous week. Thanks a lot, Kansas.
Number of carries it took for Perine to reach his total, nine more than it took for Gordon to reach 408 yards. Gordon was better, but both performances were simply historic.
241
Number of carries it took Melvin Gordon to reach 2,000 yards for the season, making him the fastest player to reach the mark in FBS history.
355
Career receptions by East Carolina wide receiver Justin Hardy, an FBS record. Hardy broke the record previously held by Oklahoma’s Ryan Broyles, who finished his career with 349.
0
Seconds remaining when Ikaika Woolsey connected with Marcus Kemp on a 20-yard touchdown strike to give Hawaii a 37-35 win over UNLV. The Rebels had taken a 35-31 lead with 15 seconds left.
Number of seasons in which Michigan has lost at least six games in the seven years since Lloyd Carr’s retirement. One can only assume that Metallica’s “For Whom the Bell Tolls” is played every time Brady Hoke enters Michigan Stadium.
27
Consecutive games won by Florida State, the longest active streak in the country and the longest streak in school history.
28,355
Attendance at Legion Field for Saturday’s Marshall-UAB game, which could possibly be the Blazers’ final home game. UAB is currently considering discontinuing its football program.
Points allowed by Arkansas in its wins over LSU and Ole Miss. According to ESPN Stats & Info, the Razorbacks are the first unranked team to ever shut out AP-ranked opponents in consecutive games within the same season. Beware the Fighting Bielemas.
42
9
43
Total points scored in Wake Forest’s 6-3 doubleovertime victory over Virginia Tech. Neither team scored in regulation, the first time that’s happened since Oct. 22, 2005, according to ESPN Stats & Info.
Total touchdowns this season by Oregon quarterback Marcus Mariota, a Pac-12 record. Mariota broke the record previously held by USC’s Matt Barkley this weekend against Colorado.
Consecutive games in which Marshall quarterback Rakeem Cato has thrown a touchdown pass, an FBS record. The previous record was 38, held by Russell Wilson.
Head on over to The Nitty Gritty! THE #1 PLACE TO CELEBRATE BIRTHDAYS Drink FREE Beer, Speciality Cocktails or Soda all Day on Your Birthday in Your Memento Mug! All Ages Welcome Serving Food Late A Campus Tradition Since 1968 MADISON 223 N. Frances St. 608-251-2521 SUN PRAIRIE 315 E. Linnerud Dr. 608-837-4999 MIDDLETON 1021 N. Gammon Rd. 608-833-6489
4
5
WEEK 14 POLLS ASSOCIATED PRESS
USA TODAY/COACHES
1. Florida State (37) 1,458 2. Alabama (21) 1,445 3. Oregon (2) 1,393 4. Mississippi State 1,301 5. Baylor 1,234 6. TCU 1,233 7. Ohio State 1,163 8. Georgia 1,002 9. UCLA 998 10. Michigan State 971 11. Kansas State 898 12. Arizona 807 13. Arizona State 790 14. Wisconsin 764 15. Auburn 597 16. Georgia Tech 581 17. Missouri 525 18. Ole Miss 398 19. Marshall 384 20. Oklahoma 363 21. Colorado State 346 22. Minnesota 232 23. Clemson 198 24. Louisville 191 25. Boise State 96
1. Alabama (25) 1,474 2. Florida State (30) 1,462 3. Oregon (6) 1,431 4. Mississippi State 1,323 5. TCU 1,259 6. Baylor 1,242 7. Ohio State 1,191 8. Michigan State 1,052 9. Georgia 1,002 10. UCLA 963 11. Kansas State 912 12. Arizona 818 13. Arizona State 783 14. Wisconsin 758 15. Georgia Tech 615 16. Auburn 565 17. Missouri 560 18. Oklahoma 420 19. Ole Miss 390 20. Marshall 383 21. Colorado State 304 22. Minnesota 256 23. Louisville 208 24. Clemson 203 25. Boise State 85
THIS WEEK’S BIG GAMES No. 13 Arizona State at No. 12 Arizona Tucson, Arizona 2:30 p.m. Friday FOX Michigan at No. 7 Ohio State Columbus, Ohio 11 a.m. Saturday ESPN No. 4 Mississippi State at No. 18 Ole Miss Oxford, Mississippi 2:30 p.m. Saturday CBS No. 15 Auburn at No. 2 Alabama Tuscaloosa, Alabama 6:45 p.m. Saturday ESPN 3 Oregon at Oregon State Corvallis, Ore. 7 p.m. Saturday ABC
gameday dailycardinal.com
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
l
7
ONE STOP.
Before, During & After the Sale. See us for your NEW, USED OR CERTIFIED PRE-OWNED VEHICLES. Call (920) 648-2388 to schedule a test drive today. Our CHEVROLET SERVICE CENTER has been helping people just like you keep their cars running great, call (920)
648-2388 for routine maintenance or car repair. NEED A PART? Let us find it for you!
SALES HOURS: Monday thru Thursday 9 am - 8 pm Friday 9 am - 6 pm Saturday 9 am - 5 pm
General Manager Mike Manthei
SERVICE HOURS: Monday & Tuesday 7:30 - am - 5:30 pm Wednesday 7:30 am - 8:30 pm Thursday - Friday 7:30 am - 5:30 pm Closed Weekends
Service Manager Casey Cavegn
Lakeland
920.648.2388 1.800.569.2199
DAY WEDNES R IS SENIO DAY 10% OFF
Chevy – Buick
321 East Tyranena Park Rd., Lake Mills • www.lakelandchev.com For All Your New or Pre-Owned Vehicle Needs @ lakelandchev.com
Wisconsin’s Bowl Outlook Here’s where the Badgers are likely to end up as the final games of the season shake out.
Minnesota
Badger Win
Badger Loss
Big Ten Championship Badger Win
Badger Loss
B1G Champs
Citrus or Outback or Outback Holiday Bowl Bowl
Orange, Cotton, Peach or Fiesta Bowl
MARK KAUZLARICH/CARDINAL FILE PHOTO
No. 3 Oregon faces a trap game this weekend on the road against pesky rival Oregon State.
Rivalries fill slate of big games in Week 14 By Matt Tragesser THE DAILY CARDINAL
Week 14 remains one of the most important weeks in the college football season as in-state rivalries and crucial division games are played. This week several teams will look to clinch their division and wrap up their last game of the season.
No. 3 Oregon at Oregon State
On paper, this matchup seems rather lopsided as Oregon State is unranked and is second to last in the PAC-12 North division. However, this may be the game that ruins Oregon’s chances of being invited to the College Football Playoff and perhaps ruin Marcus Mariota’s Heisman odds. While a win is imperative for the Ducks to get invited to the College Football Playoff, there is a chance that Wisconsin running back Melvin Gordon can solidify himself as the top Heisman candidate if Mariota produces a weak showing, which makes this game one of the more notable games this week. Oregon comes into this matchup ranked No. 3 in the country while boasting one of the most prolific offenses in the entire country. Led by quarterback Mariota, who has accumulated 41 total touchdowns this season, the Ducks will look to shred a mediocre Oregon State defense. Though Oregon State has no true strength on either side of the ball, they have been a relatively scrappy team this season. Two weeks ago, the Beavers upset No. 6 Arizona State 35-27 at home when Arizona State was expected to run all over this struggling team. Oregon State quarterback Sean Mannion led the Beavers to the win as he tossed two touchdowns and threw for over 250 yards, but has struggled overall this season only throwing for 12 touchdowns as well as seven interceptions. With a home matchup and a chance of ruining Oregon’s flaw-
Best Keg Prices in Town! 916 Regent Street, Madison 608.255.5839
Call us or Reserve Online! www.regentliquor.com follow us on facebook
less season, look for the Beavers to play to the fullest extent and shake up the College Football Playoff rankings once again.
No. 15 Auburn at No. 2 Alabama
Ah, yes. The acclaimed Iron Bowl. Who can forget Chris Davis’ 109 yard field goal return touchdown as time expired last year? No. 15 Auburn will travel to Tuscaloosa this week in hopes to repeat the success they found last season against the Crimson Tide. Nick Saban will find any way to halt a repeat, however, as the Crimson Tide must win this game in order to keep their College Football Playoff hopes alive. Alabama will look to exploit Auburn’s defense with their balanced offense as their rushing and passing attack have been exceptional this season. Wide receiver Amari Cooper has emerged as a Heisman candidate as he has caught 90 balls for 1,349 yards and 11 touchdowns. At the same time, the rushing attack has also been a strength as running back T.J. Yeldon has accumulated nearly 800 yards with 6 touchdowns. While Alabama’s offense has been a major strength for the team, the Crimson Tide’s defense has proven to be another vital asset as they are second in the country in points allowed, with 14.5 points per game, and have the No. 5 total defense in the country. Simply put, Alabama is solid on both sides of the ball, which explains why they are a top 5 team. Although Auburn comes in ranked at No. 15, and with a heavy offensive attack with quarterback Nick Marshall and running back Cameron ArtisPayne, the Crimson Tide should defeat the Tigers and avenge last year’s loss.
No. 18 Ole Miss at No. 4 Mississippi State
Who would of thought that the two Division 1 teams in Mississippi would be in the top half of the SEC and both be ranked in the top 25? This Saturday the Rebels come into Starkville in hopes to win the Golden Egg Trophy, and to destroy the Bulldogs’ chances of reaching the College Football Playoff. So far this season, the Bulldogs have heavily relied on Heisman candidate Dak Prescott. The dual threat quarterback has passed for 2,174 yards with 23 touchdowns, while adding 891 rushing yards and 12 touchdowns
on the ground. Aside from a close loss to Alabama in Tuscaloosa, Mississippi State has showcased a strong team as they have beaten three top 10 teams and have shown a high-caliber offense as they are ranked No. 9 in total offensive yards, as well as a stout defense, ranked No. 11 in points allowed. Ole Miss started the season strong beating off Alabama and Texas A&M, but had a rough two game stretch as they fell to two Top 25 SEC opponents and an abysmal showing against unremarkable Arkansas this past Saturday. Senior quarterback Bo Wallace has led the Rebels all season as he has passed for 2,789 yards and thrown for 22 touchdowns, but the Rebels’ defense has been terrific, ranking in the top 5 statistically in many defensive categories. This matchup should be a lowscoring affair as both defenses are rated very highly and offensive superstars Prescott and Wallace should be kept in check. However, due to the Rebels horrid showing last Saturday against Arkansas, look for Prescott and the Bulldogs to pull away with the Golden Egg Trophy and solidify their spot in the College Football Playoff.
No. 13 Arizona State at No. 12 Arizona
Both of these desert teams obliterated their opponents this past Saturday and will look to keep up their high scoring as the Sun Devils and Wildcats both look to improve to 10-2. This matchup becomes an intense one as the teams play for the Territorial Cup, which is the oldest rivalry trophy in college football. While both teams’ chances have slowly diminished in reaching the College Football Playoff, the winner will go to the Pac-12 championship, pending a UCLA loss. Quarterback Anu Solomon has lead the Wildcats in their passing attack as he has thrown for over 3,000 yards and 25 touchdowns and in October he led Arizona to beat No. 2 Oregon in Eugene. Arizona State also boasts a relatively talented quarterback as Taylor Kelly has tossed 14 touchdowns and only five interceptions while missing three games this season. This game should be a barn burner as both teams have a mediocre defense and have very similar overall team strengths and weaknesses.
8
l
gameday
Wisconsin vs. Minnesota
Wisconsin Badgers
Minnesota Golden Gophers
team roster
Jordan, A.J. Stave, Joel Doe, Kenzel Gaulden, Devin Hillary, Darius McEvoy, Tanner Clement, Corey James, Alec Caputo, Michael Gillins, D.J. Shelton, Sojourn Fredrick, Jordan Gaglianone, Rafael Sanders, Krenwick Peavy, Jazz Reynard, T.J. Armstrong, Thad Jamerson, Natrell Bondoc, Evan Houston, Bart Senger, Connor Wheelwright, Robert Dixon, D’Cota Love, Reggie Cadogan, Sherard Rushing, George Baretz, Lance Connelly, Ryan Musso, Leo Ramesh, Austin Jean, Peniel Andersen, Chasen Kinlaw, Caleb Hudson, Austin Ogunbowale, Dare Brookins, Keelon Gordon, Melvin Tindal, Derrick Straus, Derek Deal, Taiwan Floyd, Terrance Landisch, Derek Cummins, Connor Figaro, Lubern Jacobs, Leon Obasih, Chikwe Watt, Derek Ferguson, Joe Spurling, D.J. Endicott, Andrew Neuville, Zander Rosowski, P.J. Kelliher, Brady Hayes, Jesse Watt, T.J. Trotter, Michael Steffes, Eric Herring, Warren Austin, Matt Traylor, Austin
CB QB WR CB CB QB RB DE S QB CB WR K WR WR CB QB WR S QB/P QB WR ILB WR OLB WR WR OLB S RB CB ILB RB DB RB S RB CB FB RB CB ILB WR S OLB DE FB S FB K LB P LS OLB TE ILB TE NG ILB TE
6-0 6-5 5-8 5-10 5-11 6-6 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-3 5-9 6-4 5-11 6-1 6-0 5-9 6-3 5-11 6-1 6-4 5-10 6-2 5-10 6-3 6-3 6-1 5-11 6-3 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-0 5-9 6-2 5-11 5-10 6-1 5-11 6-0 6-0 5-10 6-0 6-1 6-0 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-1 5-10 5-9 6-5 6-3 6-8 6-3 6-5 6-0 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-3
HUNTING I SPORTING CLAYS I GUN SHOP I RANGE I CORPORATE EVENTS I THE PUB
1 2 3 4 5 5 6 6 7 7 8 9 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 15 16 16 17 17 18 19 19 20 21 22 22 23 23 24 25 25 26 28 29 30 31 31 32 34 34 36 36 37 38 38 39 41 42 43 44 45 46 46
Milford_GameDay_Final.indd 12
190 220 176 187 188 222 217 259 212 201 178 214 231 193 187 175 215 180 201 218 183 201 206 214 232 190 195 225 194 247 194 221 180 205 188 209 213 174 230 216 191 231 200 179 230 268 236 210 212 175 226 186 247 229 247 220 259 294 218 248
RS JR RS JR SR RS JR RS JR RS JR SO RS FR RS JR FR SO RS JR FR FR RS FR JR RS SO FR FR RS SO RS FR SO FR RS SO RS SR FR SR FR RS SO RS FR RS SR FR FR FR RS SO RS FR RS JR FR RS JR FR RS JR SR RS SR FR SO RS FR RS JR RS FR RS FR SO FR FR RS FR RS JR RS FR RS SR RS SO RS SR FR RS JR
47 48 48 49 49 50 52 53 54 55 55 56 56 57 58 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 66 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 78 82 84 86 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 99
Biegel, Vince Cichy, Jack Fumagalli, Troy Arneson, Sam Schweitzer, Justin Harrison, Josh Maxwell, Jacob Edwards, T.J. Costigan, Kyle Denlinger, Trent Dooley, Garret Fischer, Ben McGuire, James Ruechel, Ben Panos, George Schobert, Joe Trotter, Marcus Udelhoven, Connor Marz, Tyler Williams, Walker Deiter, Michael Connors, Brett Benzschawel, Beau Gault, Jaden McNamara, Aiden Voltz, Dan Ball, Ray Hemer, Ben Lewallen, Dallas Biegel, Hayden Kapoi, Micah Schmidt, Logan Havenstein, Rob Stengel, Jake Maly, Austin Erickson, Alex Eckert, Sam Meyer, Drew Zagzebski, Konrad Patterson, Jeremy Keefer, Jake Sheehy, Conor Goldberg, Arthur Hirschfeld, Billy Russell, Jack Adeyanju, James
OLB ILB TE TE OLB OLB OL OLB OL OL DE LB LS ILB OL ILB ILB LS OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL WR TE WR TE P DE NG DE DE NG DE K DE
dailycardinal.com
team roster
6-4 6-2 6-5 6-4 6-1 6-0 6-6 6-1 6-5 6-6 6-2 6-0 6-0 6-2 6-5 6-2 6-0 5-11 6-5 6-7 6-5 6-6 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-3 6-7 6-4 6-6 6-6 6-4 6-4 6-8 6-3 6-5 6-0 6-5 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-3 6-6 6-0 6-2
244 220 246 244 208 223 295 229 319 308 238 211 216 224 301 240 226 211 321 320 317 311 291 310 315 311 324 274 321 303 323 300 333 203 250 196 220 187 277 326 269 279 290 271 176 262
RS SO SO RS FR SR FR RS SR FR FR RS SR RS SO RS FR FR RS SR RS SR FR JR RS SR RS SO RS JR RS SO FR FR FR FR RS FR RS SO RS JR RS FR RS SR RS FR FR RS SO RS SR RS JR RS JR RS SO FR RS JR RS SR FR RS JR FR RS SO FR JR RS JR
1 1 2 2 3 3 4 5 5 6 7 7 8 9 9 11 12 12 13 13 14 14 15 15 16 16 17 18 18 18 19 19 19 20 21 22 22 23 24 25 25 26 26 27 28 29 29 30 31 31 32 33 33 34 34 35 36 37 37 38 39 40
Maye, K.J. WR Laster, De’Niro LB Thompson, Cedric DB Roden-McKinzy, DimonicQB Wells, Derrick DB Gibson, Jerry TE Jones, Donovahn WR Streveler, Chris QB Wilson, Damien LB Levine, Grayson DB Leidner, Mitch QB Travis, Demarius DB McGhee, Daletavious DB Keith, Alex DL Carter, Eric WR Johnson, Antonio DB Reger, Will WR Poock, Cody LB Celestin, Jonathan LB Gant, Desmond WR Fruechte, Isaac WR Cosgrove, Connor WR Jones, Marcus DB Rhoda, Conor QB Montgomery, Steven DB Jones, Jeff RB Hutton, Logan WR Perra, Jacques QB Santoso, Ryan K/P Westerhaus, Peter LB Dicke, Cedric LB Conway, Michael WR Moore, Gary DT Kirkwood, Donnell RB Holland Jr., Melvin WR James, Craig DB Borchardt, Jeff WR Sardinha, E.J. WR Smith, Rodney RB Wright, Devon WR Jordahl, Payton LS Smith, Brian WR Campbell, De’Vondre LB Cobb, David RB Myrick, Jalen DB Boddy-Calhoun, Briean DB Tuszynski, Louis WR Wipson, Chris LB Murray, Eric DB Banham, Cole RB Edwards, Berkley RB Harte, Andrew K McKelvey, John DB McElfresh, Logan P Matilus, Jephete FB Williams Jr., Rodrick RB Johnson, Cavonte DB Mortell, Peter P Parks, Josh RB Carpenter, Emmit K Wozniak, Nate TE Starks, Alexander DB
5-10 6-4 6-0 6-0 6-0 6-3 6-3 6-2 6-2 5-11 6-4 6-2 6-1 6-3 5-11 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-1 6-3 6-3 6-0 5-8 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-1 6-3 6-6 6-3 6-3 6-5 6-4 5-10 6-3 5-10 6-0 6-1 5-11 6-0 6-2 6-4 6-5 5-11 5-10 5-11 5-11 6-2 6-0 5-9 5-9 6-0 6-0 6-1 6-1 5-11 5-11 6-2 5-10 6-0 6-10 5-11
195 230 208 225 201 223 200 219 240 210 237 211 208 245 176 209 190 235 209 206 202 175 173 212 206 198 180 210 245 230 216 216 300 206 191 175 196 191 200 196 214 216 241 220 209 190 192 216 195 187 190 189 207 200 230 247 199 192 187 196 265 203
JR RS FR SR FR SR FR SO RS FR SR SR RS SO JR RS FR JR RS FR JR FR SO FR FR RS SR RS SR SR RS FR RS JR FR RS SR FR RS FR RS JR RS SO RS FR FR RS SR FR FR RS FR RS SO FR RS SR FR RS FR RS JR SR SO RS JR RS SO RS FR JR RS SR RS FR RS FR RS SO FR RS JR JR RS SO RS JR FR FR RS FR RS FR
40 41 41 42 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 48 49 49 50 52 52 53 55 55 56 57 58 59 60 62 63 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99
Hartman, Jared Thomas, Miles Eldred, Christian Schultz, Dominic Juenemann, Justin Hartmann, Tyler Kirsch, Jacob Ayinde, Adekunie Botticelli, Cameron Bisch, Alex Anderson, Davis Oldenkamp, Matt Ramlet, Dave Scarver, Noah Lynn, Jack Epping, Zac Timms, Yoshoub Rasmussen, Luke Cockran, Theiren Mayes, Connor Rallis, Nick Williams, Everett Olson, Tommy Dixon, Ray Leidner, Matt Weyler, Jared Christenson, Jon Campion, Josh McAvoy, Luke Bobek, Brian Hayes, Isaac Carr, Justin Fahning, Chad McAvoy, Kyle Bjorklund, Joe Lenkiewicz, Marek Helfort, Ernie Mayes, Alex Bush, Foster Lauer, Ben Pirsig, Jonah Marmer, Aaron Anyanwu, Duke Hart, Nick Wolitarsky, Drew Goodger, Drew Gentry, Isaiah Pisek, Lincoln Lingen, Brandon Elmore, Gaelin Williams, Maxx Krizancic, Conner Peppers, Demaris Kafo, Julien Ndondo-Lay, Robert Perry, Ben Legania, Harold Ekpe, Hendrick Richardson, Steven Ekpe, Scott Amaefula, Michael Stelter, Andrew
LS FB P LB K FB RB DB DL TE DB TE LS TE LB OL DL OL DL OL LB LB OL LB OL OL OL OL OL OL OL DL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL OL WR TE TE WR TE WR TE TE DL TE WR DL DE DL DL DL DL DT DL DL DE
6-3 5-11 6-3 6-1 6-0 6-3 5-11 6-0 6-5 6-6 6-1 6-6 6-2 6-5 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-7 6-6 6-5 5-11 6-1 6-4 6-3 6-2 6-4 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-2 6-2 6-2 6-6 6-5 6-5 6-5 6-5 6-6 6-5 6-7 6-9 6-3 6-4 6-5 6-3 6-5 6-4 6-4 6-5 6-6 6-4 6-2 6-3 6-4 6-5 6-5 6-4 6-5 6-0 6-4 6-2 6-4
235 235 189 231 165 255 210 198 290 250 186 250 235 250 238 318 294 278 255 306 228 230 306 209 277 284 305 317 285 302 320 265 286 308 305 292 278 297 304 315 320 213 250 236 226 269 193 269 244 268 250 199 287 225 260 263 313 251 291 293 249 265
RS JR JR SR RS JR RS FR RS SO RS SO RS FR RS SR RS SR FR FR RS SR RS FR RS SO RS SR RS SO FR RS JR FR RS SO FR SR RS FR RS FR FR RS JR RS JR RS JR RS JR RS SO JR RS FR RS JR RS JR RS SR RS JR RS FR RS JR RS SO RS SO RS JR RS SO RS FR SO SR FR JR FR FR RS SO FR RS FR FR RS JR RS SR RS SR SO FR JR SR FR
Milford Hills JOIN US AT THE PUB! The Pub at Milford Hills is a full service dining destination. We offer an expansive Pub Menu featuring wild game dishes and American style cuisine, combined with over a dozen tap beers and top shelf liquor creating an atmosphere sure to please all senses. OPEN DAILY FOR LUNCH, FRIDAY FISH FRY & WEEKEND BREAKFAST
Johnson Creek, WI
I
T 920.699.2249
I
milfordhills.com
11/21/14 9:27 AM