Badgers successful at stopping Hunt
By Ben Hubner | Nov. 5, 2006Stopping running back Tony Hunt was the No. 1 priority for the Wisconsin defense Saturday against Penn State, and holding him to 35 yards helped seal the 13-3 victory.'
Stopping running back Tony Hunt was the No. 1 priority for the Wisconsin defense Saturday against Penn State, and holding him to 35 yards helped seal the 13-3 victory.'
In 2003 it was Ohio State. Wisconsin students marked their calendars for the home game against defending National Champion Ohio State. In primetime, in the pouring rain, in a tie game, Lee Evans out-ran the nation's fastest defensive back, Chris Gamble, and caught a 79-yard touchdown in stride for the winning score in a much-anticipated, unforgettably monumental upset.
Finally finding themselves in a tight game, the No. 17 UW football team stepped up their game in the second half to defeat Illinois 30-24.'
The 7-1 UW football team is home for the Halloween weekend this year to play Illinois as they try to avoid a truly frightening result: A loss to the 2-6 Fighting Illini.
The UW football team heads to Purdue Saturday for one of the tougher challenges of the season.'
The Wisconsin football team used great play calling and an aggressive offense to beat the Gophers 48-12 Saturday.'
A Division I athlete on a college campus doesn't have to do or say a whole lot to be considered down-to-earth. He has to nod indiscriminately to fans as he passes, dole out verbal salutations with liberty and award a select but sizable few a high-, '
The Badgers realized quickly enough that they were beating themselves in the first half of Saturday's game against Northwestern, and righted the ship in the second half, scoring 24 unanswered points.'
Guest columnist Ben Hubner comments on Northwestern's chances of upset the Badgers at Camp Randall Saturday.'
In Saturday's 52-17 win against Indiana, the Badgers executed everything they wanted to on offense and scored with the frequency and ease that they can only conceive of in practice.'