Thursday, December 27, 2018

Miami/Wisconsin recap

It was a disappointing season for the Wisconsin Badgers, but they put together their best defensive effort of the season, dominating the Miami Hurricanes 35-3, Thursday in the Pinstripe Bowl. With the win, the Badgers became the first Big Ten team ever to win five straight bowl games. And it isn’t like Wisconsin is beating poor programs. Outside of Western Michigan, Wisconsin won twice against Miami and once each against Auburn and USC in that span. Star running back Jonathan Taylor ran for 205 yards on 27 carries against a defense that only allowed 127 yards on the ground per game. Wisconsin’s offensive line had its best game of the year, paving the way for the Badgers to run for 333 yards. Jack Coan, starting for the injured Alex Hornibrook, only completed six passes in the game, but completed a huge pass to Kendric Pryor for 35 yards for a touchdown on the opening drive to set the tone for the game. With the win, Wisconsin finished 8-5, its 10th consecutive season with at least eight victories. It was also the second consecutive bowl victory over Miami, following a 34-24 win in the Orange Bowl last season. In the last nine games, Wisconsin alternated wins and losses. The 35 points are the most number of points scored in a bowl game since the 2012 Rose Bowl (38), and the most number in a bowl victory since the 1999 Rose Bowl (38).

The Badgers outgained the Hurricanes 406-169, and Wisconsin really had a chance to win by more, but Rafael Gaglianone missed a pair of field goals in the first half. Bucky’s defense only allowed six first downs and of the 169 yards by Miami, 62 came on one play. The Badgers snatched Miami’s turnover chain and forced five Hurricanes turnovers and Wisconsin had a 2-to-1 edge in time of possession. This was the biggest margin of victory in Badgers bowl history. The game started out well for Wisconsin, as Coan led the Badgers down the field and he tossed a 35-yard touchdown to Pryor. That was followed by Eric Burrell picking off Malik Rosier on Miami’s first play, which set up Taylor’s touchdown. The game turned midway through the third. After a long punt return by DeeJay Dallas, Miami had a chance to cut it to 14-10, but T.J. Edwards picked off Rosier. After that, it was all Badgers. It was a disappointing season, especially after losing the axe in the regular season finale to Minnesota, but it ended on a major high note.

There were only highs in this one, and it starts with No. 23. Taylor ran for 205 yards and Wisconsin ran for 333 yards as a team. The Hurricanes only allowed 3.3 yards per carry going in, and they were only allowing 127 yards per game on the ground. Even without star defensive lineman Gerald Willis, Miami still had great defenders everywhere. Wisconsin shoved it down their throats, early and often. On the opening possession, Taylor ran it the first four plays, and gained 28 yards. His 2,194 yards is the second most rushing yards in a single season in Wisconsin history, only trailing Melvin Gordon’s 2,587 in 2014. Amazingly, he now has 4,171 total rushing yards in his first two years, which is already fifth in school history. He is just 2,235 yards shy of Donnel Pumphrey’s “record.” He just finished his sophomore season. His two year total is the third most in NCAA history in a two-year span. Taylor tied Brent Moss for the 10th most rushing touchdowns in a season with 16. He is remarkable.

Wisconsin’s offensive line took the challenge of playing a terrific Miami front and dominated the matchup....even without possible first round pick David Edwards. Wisconsin guards Beau Benzschawel and Michael Deiter left with a bang. Edwards and center Tyler Biadasz also may leave, but will take time to decide. It was nice to see Taiwan Deal and even Chris James get in the game and play well, each averaging five yards per carry. It was physical domination from the opening drive. Kudos to the offensive line.

It was easily the best performance by the defense this season. The three points allowed was the fewest allowed since surrendering three against Western Kentucky in the season opener. It was the fewest points allowed against a major conference opponent since shutting out Minnesota in the regular season finale last season. Freshman nose tackle Bryson Williams, playing for the injured Olive Sagapolu, is becoming a real good nose tackle. He will be starting alongside Garrett Rand and Isaiahh Loudermilk next year in what should be a much-improved defensive line.

The linebackers were all over the place. Senior T.J. Edwards led the Badgers with nine tackles, with one tackle for loss and his 10th career interception, which ties him with David Greenwood for seventh in school history. He also recovered a fumble. Fellow senior Andrew Van Ginkel had eight tackles, two tackles for loss, a sack and a forced fumble. Junior Chris Orr, playing in place of the injured Ryan Connelly, had eight tackles, a tackle for loss and an interception. The front seven also helped stymie a really good Miami ground attack. Travis Homer and DeeJay Dallas, who combined to rush for 1,578 yards and 10 touchdowns and averaging 6.1 yards per carry, were held to a combined 24 yards on 14 carries. The team stats don’t look that bad, rushing for 121 yards on 23 carries, but 90 of them were by quarterback Malik Rosier, including a 62-yard scamper. Outside of that 62-yarder, Miami was held to 59 yards on 22 carries, less than three yards per carry. Sensational performance by the front seven.

Miami does not exactly have Aaron Rodgers under center, but the secondary played well also. Playing without senior safety D’Cota Dixon, the secondary picked off two passes and held Miami to 48 yards passing on six completions. They set the tone on the first offensive snap for the Hurricanes, as safety Eric Burrell picked off a Rosier pass and returned it inside the 10, which set up the second Badgers touchdown. Cornerback Caesar Williams picked off a pass late that set up the knockout touchdown.

Finally, hats off to the seniors. With the exception of kicker Rafael Gaglianone, the senior class had a great send-off Thursday night. Gaglianone did tie Ron Dayne for second most points scored in school history. I mentioned both senior running backs (Deal and James) averaging more than five yards per carry, combining for 78 yards on 15 carries. I mentioned the great play of the linemen and linebackers, who also went out with a bang. Fullback Alec Ingold ran five times for 11 yards and scored a touchdown for the Badgers.

This was a much-needed performance after an underwhelming season. Wisconsin will be one of the leaders for the Big Ten West once again. This is a nice boost going into 2019. The Badgers will likely have a quarterback competition, and it will be interesting to see the improvement among the defenders and who Wisconsin will lose to the NFL. Onto 2019...

Packers Mock Draft 12.27

We have reached the final week of the regular season, and with the Green Bay Packers at 6-8-1, they have been eliminated from playoff contention and all they have to look forward to is the draft. The Packers have 10 draft picks, as of now, and plenty of cap space. Green Bay should be right back into the thick of things next season. It will be interesting to see what the Packers do in free agency.

1a. Noah Fant, TE, Iowa (previous: Josh Allen)

As much as I would like Josh Allen to fall to Green Bay, I have a hard time seeing him falling outside the top 10, and Green Bay is slated to pick in the middle of the first round at the moment. The Packers need to draft a tight end of the future this year, and Fant is an outstanding prospect. Jimmy Graham is 32, and last three seasons, Green Bay has signed who many thought was the best tight end in free agency: Jared Cook, Martellus Bennett and Graham. It is about time Green Bay drafted one to be a target for Aaron Rodgers moving forward. It can’t be easy on No. 12 when he has a different tight end every year. Noah Fant could be that guy. He is a good receiving tight end, catching 39 passes for 519 yards and a team-high seven touchdowns. In 2017, Fant led the Big Ten with 11 touchdown grabs. His size and athleticism are outstanding and he is a solid blocker. Green Bay sure does love drafting Iowa guys as well, having drafted Josh Jackson, Micah Hyde, Mike Daniels, Bryan Bulaga, among others in recent years.

1b. Jaylon Ferguson, EDGE, Louisiana Tech (previous: Fant)

Amazingly, Green Bay is sixth in the league in sacks with 43. Mike Pettine has done a tremendous job manufacturing pressure from what he has on the defense, but think what he could do with a premier pass rusher. In Ferguson's bowl game, he broke Terrell Suggs’ record for most sacks in a career, with 45 sacks, including 17 this season. Ferguson also had 26 tackles for loss this season and 67.5 in his Louisiana Tech career. The Packers have waited far too long to draft an edge rusher high, and they need to take one with one of their two first round picks. Clay Matthews was actually solid this year, but his days are gone as an elite pass rusher and he is a free agent following this season. Matthews would actually be better off moving to inside linebacker if retained. Nick Perry only played in nine games, and was ineffective even when on the field. Other than his game-sealing sack and forced fumble against Chicago week one, he was missing in action. Brian Gutekunst needs to rebuild the linebacking core, and this is a good start.

2. Bobby Evans, OT, Oklahoma (previous: Ferguson)

While Bryan Bulaga has played extremely well this season, he may be cut at the end of this season due to his tendency to get hurt. He has played 13 games so far this year, and could return for one more season until his contract ends at the conclusion of next season. Regardless if he is brought back for one more season or is cut this offseason, the team will need a tackle to replace him long-term. The Oklahoma product had an outstanding season in 2017 at right tackle and has followed that up with a nice 2018 season at left tackle. He has the length and athleticism to be a great offensive tackle. He could start day one or wait a year and fill in after Bulaga moves on.

3. Parris Campbell, WR, Ohio State (previous: Isaiah Prince)

Randall Cobb could be on his way out, which would mean the Packers would need a new wide receiver to work in the slot. In this mock, Aaron Rodgers would be excited about the first two days, gaining two more weapons at his disposal. Last year, they drafted big and fast receivers, Equanimeous St. Brown, Marquez Valdes-Scantling and J’Mon Moore. St. Brown and Valdes-Scantling and have played well as rookies and I think will make a big jump in their second year. Geronimo Allison will also return. Campbell dominated in the slot in 2017, averaging 11.4 yards per slot target, which was fifth in the country. He caught 79 passes for nearly 1,000 yards this year and 11 touchdowns. Against rival Michigan, he hauled in six passes for a whopping 192 yards and a touchdown in the blowout victory.

4a. Kenny Willekes, EDGE, Michigan State (previous: Jon’Vea Johnson)

With Matthews a free agent, Perry unable to stay healthy and most other pass rushers ineffective, it would be wise to use multiple picks on pass rushers. After using a first on Ferguson, Brian Gutekunst takes the Michigan State pass rusher in the fourth. The former walk-on has followed up a solid sophomore season with a tremendous junior season in which he led the Big Ten (seventh nationally) in tackles for loss with 20 and his nine sacks tied for fifth in the conference. For his efforts, Willekes was named the Smith-Brown Big Ten Defensive Lineman of the Year. Being just a redshirt junior, it is unclear if he will declare after Michigan State battles Oregon in the Redbox Bowl. He has a tremendous motor, and would be a great pick in the middle of the fourth round.

4b. Chris Johnson, S, North Alabama (previous: N/A)

The Packers need an overhaul at safety, especially after trading Ha Ha Clinton-Dix to Washington this season. Kentrell Brice has struggled, and I doubt Tramon Williams is back in 2019. I have no doubt the Packers will sign at least one starting safety in free agency, and possibly two. Even if they were to sign two, Green Bay could use depth, especially after what happened this season. This season, Johnson registered 47 tackles to go along with three break-ups and two interceptions.

5. Alex Bars, OT/OG, Notre Dame (previous: Corbin Kaufusi)

Green Bay’s guards have not had as good of a year as many Packers fans have hoped. In the mid-rounds, count on the Packers to take an offensive lineman. Cole Madison has not played one snap for the team and may not ever play for the Packers. Bars may help make up for that. He played great against Michigan, but then in late September was lost for the season with a torn ACL and MCL. That could knock him down a bit, but he hopefully will be good by camp next summer. Bars would be a great pick if that is who they select at this spot.

6a. David Montgomery, RB, Iowa State (previous: Karan Higdon)

Green Bay traded Ty Montgomery after his fumble on the kickoff return that may have cost the Packers a win in Los Angeles. After Aaron Jones and Jamaal Williams, the Packers will have an open competition for the final running back spot. After a really nice sophomore campaign, he followed that up with an even better junior season. While not having as many yards as he did in 2017, he ran the ball fewer times and still had nearly 1,100 yards and 12 touchdowns on 4.7 yards per carry. He has also caught 67 passes in his Iowa State career. Montgomery is only a junior, so he will likely return to school, though.

6b. Cole Tracy, K, LSU (previous: Kaden Smith)

Mason Crosby has been a great kicker for the Packers for 12 seasons, but we are at a point in time where he is being paid too much to be as inconsistent as he has been this season. This year, he is 30-for-37 (81 percent), but missed some makeable kicks, including four field goals against Detroit and the potential game-tying field goal against Arizona. The 81 percent is actually better than his career average, and he actually has made his last eight attempts, but he will 35 by the time next regular season begins and he will get paid nearly $5 million in 2019 if kept. Cutting him would save the organization $3.6 million. Tracy came to LSU from Division II Assumption College, where he was 27-of-29 as a junior. With the Tigers, he has gone 25-of-29 with three of his four misses coming from 50 and beyond.

7. Jazz Ferguson, WR, Northwestern State (previous: Calvin Throckmorton)

I have to homer it up here. I had him taking his brother with their second first round pick, so why not take the other Ferguson brother here? Ferguson is a big body like they drafted last year. If he can run in the 4.4s, he will go higher. After leaving LSU, the former 4* wide receiver went to Northwestern State. All he did there was shatter the school record for single-season receiving yards (1,117) and receiving touchdowns (13), not to mention finishing second in receptions (66). Having more weapons come in and compete the better. He’d likely fight with J’Mon Moore and perhaps Jake Kumerow for a roster spot.

Saturday, December 22, 2018

Pinstripe Bowl Preview: Miami vs. Wisconsin

After limping their way to a 7-5 regular season, the Wisconsin Badgers will play a familiar foe in the Pinstripe Bowl: the Miami Hurricanes. It will be played at legendary Yankee Stadium on Thursday at 4:15 CST on ESPN. In case you have forgotten, the same two teams met last year during bowl season in a slightly more prestigious bowl game, as the Badgers went to Hard Rock Stadium and defeated the Hurricanes 34-24 in the Orange Bowl. This year, you could call it the ‘Disappointment Bowl,’ as the two teams started the year with great aspirations, only to each go 7-5. The teams started the year in the top 10, but went downhill after that.

Wisconsin started the year with two convincing wins over overmatched competition, Western Kentucky and New Mexico, before being upset by BYU 24-21. That was the start of not only a bad season for Wisconsin, but a poor one for kicker Rafael Gaglianone as well, as he missed a potential game-tying field goal in the closing seconds. Wisconsin found its footing with two straight wins, including a huge win at Iowa when Alex Hornibrook found A.J. Taylor over the middle for 17 yards with less than a minute to play. But the Badgers would alternate wins and losses the remainder of the season, including losing the axe for the first time since 2003 with a 37-15 loss to Minnesota. The Badgers were devastated by injuries/suspensions to key players, including their quarterback, No. 1 wide receiver, entire secondary and 2/3 of their defensive line. We never saw what the team was capable of after the losses before the season of starting defensive end Garrett Rand (out for season), No. 1 wide receiver Quintez Cephus (suspension, sexual assault trial) and Isaiahh Loudermilk (missed part of season, was never fully healthy). That does not even count the transfers of defensive backs Dontye Carriere-Williams and Patrick Johnson. During the season, Hornibrook, nose tackle Olive Sagapolu, outside linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel, right tackle David Edwards and the entire opening night secondary missed at least a portion of the season. Against Miami, Sagapolu, Rand and Cephus are all out, as well as inside linebacker Ryan Connelly.

As for the Hurricanes, ‘the U’ started out with a blowout loss to LSU, but would rebound with five straight victories. That would be proceeded by four straight losses mid-season and Miami’s dreams of a second straight New Year’s 6 bowl appearances were dashed. But the Canes would end the season with two straight victories, including a dominant 24-3 win over ACC Coastal Division champion Pittsburgh.

This is the sixth meeting between the two schools, including the third in bowl season. Wisconsin has won three of the previous five matchups, including the last two, in the 2009 Champs Sports Bowl and last year’s Orange Bowl. Overall in postseason play, the Badgers have won their last four, including a pair of wins in New Year’s 6 bowls. Miami, on the other hand, has lost seven of its last eight bowls, with the only win coming in the Russell Athletic Bowl against West Virginia in 2016.

When Wisconsin runs...

Wisconsin is led by the Doak Walker Award winner Jonathan Taylor, who leads the nation in rushing with 1,989 yards on the ground. The last time we saw Taylor play, he had a solid, but a disappointing effort for him, as he ran for just 120 yards on 19 carries in the loss to Minnesota. But the week before that, he ran for 321 yards in a come-from-behind triple overtime win at Purdue. With 11 yards against Miami, he will become the third Badgers running back (fourth season) to reach the 2,000 yard mark. Taylor averages nearly 166 yards on the ground per game, and with 118, he would tie Ron Dayne’s 2,109 yards in his freshman year for the second most rushing yards in a season in Wisconsin history. Melvin Gordon’s program-record mark of 2,587 is out of reach, but second place would be a huge honor for No. 23. He is one shy of tying Brent Moss for the 10th most rushing touchdowns in a season in school history. Amazingly, Taylor is just 34 yards away from 4,000 in his career already, which is sixth in school history. I don’t expect him to stick around for all four years, but if he were to, he would shatter the NCAA record for most all-time career rushing yards.

Taylor is 49 yards away from James White for fifth in school history. and barring injury, he will cruise into second place next season. Enjoy him while he lasts. In last year’s game, he ran for 130 yards on 26 carries. As a team, Wisconsin averages 268.4 rushing yards per game, which is seventh nationally, and only behind Memphis and UCF in terms of teams that don’t run the triple option. The 6.3 yards per carry ranks fourth, only behind Clemson, Oklahoma and Memphis, and two of those teams made the College Football Playoff.

Defensively, Miami ranks 24th in the country, allowing 127.5 yards on the ground per game. The Hurricanes are the third best rush defense the Badgers have faced this year, after Iowa (8th) and Michigan (17th). In the two games against those two teams, Wisconsin ran for an average of 196.5 yards per game and 5.4 yards per carry. In wins this year, Miami has allowed just 632 yards and 2.5 yards per carry. In losses, the Canes defense allowed 898 yards and 4.1 yards per carry. One key may be getting to 120 yards on the ground. When giving up more than that mark, Miami is 1-5, but is 6-0 when allowing fewer than 120 rushing yards. The task became a bit more difficult with All-America defensive tackle Gerald Willis out with a hand injury. Without him, the Canes could have a tough time stopping the Taylor Express. Miami leads the country in tackles for loss per game with 10.5. Willis had 18 tackles for loss, which was top 15 in the country. Fellow defensive lineman Jonathan Garvin was not too far behind with 16. Four players on the Canes have at least 13 tackles for loss. The Badgers will have their hands full with the other three, but I believe Wisconsin will neutralize them and allow Taylor to have a nice game.

Edge: Wisconsin

When Wisconsin passes...

Many thought Hornibrook would carry the strong play from last year’s Orange Bowl into the 2018 season, but that hasn’t happened. In last year’s bowl meeting, the quarterback had arguably the strongest performance of his career, going 23-of-34 for 258 yards and a career-high four touchdowns in earning Orange Bowl MVP, leading the Badgers to the 10-point win. But it has been all downhill since for the junior quarterback. He has missed three and a half games with concussions, and after coming back to start in the regular season finale against Minnesota, he was not good. He threw for 189 yards with two touchdowns and three costly interceptions.

It remains to be seen if he’ll get a chance to break Bevell’s record since his poor play this year has made it likely that Paul Chryst will have a quarterback competition in 2019 between Hornibrook, Jack Coan, Chase Wolf and incoming freshman Graham Mertz. But days ago, it was announced that Coan would burn his redshirt and will be playing his fifth game (fourth start). The sophomore has completed 61 percent of his passes this season for 442 yards with four touchdowns and two interceptions. He is 1-2 as the starter, with his only win coming in the triple-overtime thriller at Purdue. In that game, Coan threw two late touchdowns to force overtime. This season, he has not thrown for more than 160 yards in a game. He does have some solid receivers at his disposal, led by wide receiver A.J. Taylor, who caught 30 passes for 508 yards and three touchdowns. Mr. Reliable Jake Ferguson caught 34 passes for 441 yards and four touchdowns. Danny Davis, who is coming off a 10-catch performance against Minnesota, led the team with 40 catches, despite missing the first two games of the season. Five players caught at least 20 passes for the Badgers this season. A.J. Taylor had a big game in last year’s meeting with eight catches for 105 yards and a tremendous one-handed touchdown grab, while Davis had three touchdown catches.

Eight players have at least one interception for Miami, with three having three picks. Last year, Sheldrick Redwine was victimized quite a bit in the Orange Bowl, but he had three interceptions this year. Trajan Bandy has had a tremendous year for the Hurricanes. While in coverage, he has only allowed 45 percent of passes to be caught and just a 58.8 passer rating against him. His PFF rating of 88 is ranked 13th in the country for cornerbacks. Eleven Miami players have at least a half a sack this year, led by Joe Jackson’s 8.5. Their 37 sacks ranks 11th in the country. Overall in pass defense, they are No. 1 in fewest passing yards allowed per game and No. 3 in opponent’s quarterback rating. Miami has only allowed 10 touchdown passes and has picked off 15 passes. Coan will need to take care of the ball and make clutch throws to keep the chains moving. It will also be interesting to see how the Canes respond to the loss of defensive coordinator Manny Diaz, who took the head job at Temple earlier this month. He will coach in the game, but who knows if he will be all-in for it.

Edge: Miami

When Miami runs...

Miami has a two-headed monster at running back with Travis Homer and Deejay Dallas. Both running backs have at least 100 carries with both also averaging at least 5.8 yards per rush. They have combined to rush for 1,578 yards and 10 touchdowns and average 6.1 yards per carry. Both also have big play ability, as each have a touchdown of at least 70 yards. Wisconsin has not been good at stopping the run this year, so they will have their hands full with this rushing attack, especially without linebacker Ryan Connelly, who was a semifinalist for the Butkus Award. Quarterback N'Kosi Perry is also a runner, having rushed for 158 yards and a touchdown on the season.

The Badgers will once again be without starting defensive linemen Garrett Rand and Olive Sagapolu, along with Connelly. The rush defense has improved as the season has gone along, but it is still not great. They give up 158 yards on the ground per game, but is 72nd in the country in rush yards allowed per carry at 4.4. They were near the 100s in both categories a few months ago, but they still have a long ways to go. The defensive line and T.J. Edwards will need to play great in order to contain Homer and Dallas. This will be a defense similar to what we will see next year, as only three of the defensive starters will be seniors since Sagapolu and Connelly will be out.

Edge: Miami

When Miami passes...

Freshman N’Kosi Perry appears to have wrestled the starting job away from senior Malik Rosier. At the beginning of the season, the two played a similar number of snaps, but it seems as though Perry is the guy heading into the bowl game. Although, Perry did struggle in the win against Pittsburgh, completing 6 of 24 passes for 52 yards. Even with Perry, quarterback is a sore spot for the Hurricanes. Perry's quarterback rating of 118.5 ranks 104th. Miami’s quarterback has completed 51.6 percent of his passes this season, but has thrown as many touchdowns as Wisconsin’s signal caller without as many mistakes. His yards per attempt is even worse at 5.9, which ranks 116th. Leading receiver Jeff Thomas was dismissed from the Miami football team last month. He had 563 yards receiving and three touchdowns, and had one catch for 48 yards in the meeting last season. In the season-opening loss to LSU, Thomas had five grabs for 132 yards. Next up for Miami is junior Lawrence Cager, who caught 20 passes for 352 yards and a team-high six scores. although he does not have one since Oct. 6. He also has not had more than one catch in a game since Oct. 13. Last year, he had career-highs in catches (4) and receiving yards (76) against the Badgers. The security blanket is freshman tight end Brevin Jordan, who has 30 catches for 275 yards.

Defensively, Wisconsin has struggled. This unit is a far cry from what the Hurricanes had to face last season. Gone are the starting cornerbacks, starting defensive ends and starting outside linebackers. We knew it would be a bit of a rebuild on that side of the ball, but the unit has struggled more than people thought it would going in. The already young unit has been depleated with injury and departures this season. I already mentioned the transfers of Carriere-Williams and Johnson, but every starting defensive back from opening night has missed at least one game with each starting safety missing at least three. Freshman Rachad Wildgoose was pressed into duty, and has been inconsistent, like you might expect for a true freshman. The secondary has only picked off 10 passes on the season, and none in the final three games. What probably contributed to the lack of interceptions is that Wisconsin has only sacked opposing quarterbacks 18 times, which is good enough for 112th in the nation. Part of that is Andrew Van Ginkel playing banged up, but should be good to go for the bowl game, but Jim Leonhard has had a hard time generating pressure. Miami’s offensive line has allowed 26 sacks, which is middle of the pack in the country. This is an interesting matchup. This is valuable experience for a young secondary, which has three freshmen and one sophomore among their top five defensive backs.

Edge: Push

Special Teams

The special teams have not been so special to the Badgers this year. Even the usually reliable Rafael Gaglianone has struggled mightily this year, going 10 of 15 on the year, which matches his worst year by field goal percentage in his career. This is coming off a fantastic year in 2017, in which he made 16 of his 18 attempts. What is even more surprising is that he is having a down year despite only attempting three field goals from beyond 40 yards. His long this season is only 42. For Miami, Michael Badgley has moved on to the Los Angeles Chargers, so freshman Bubba Baxa has stepped in and done a decent job. After going 1-of-2 against LSU in the opener, he has made seven of his last nine, but is just 1-of-3 from 40+ on the season. Per usual, Wisconsin’s punting game is a disaster, ranking near the bottom of the conference. Zach Feagles in back at punter for Miami, and he is decent, better than Wisconsin’s punters at least. Miami has a better return game as well. Dallas returned a punt for a touchdown last game. Aron Cruickshank will eventually break one for Wisconsin as a kick returner, so it might as well be this game, right?

Edge: Miami

Overview

Miami has a great defense and a real good ground attack, but like many bowl games, who is more motivated to be there? Both of these teams started out the season ranked in the top 10, but they finished 7-5 and nowhere near the goals they set for themselves. In 2009, the teams met in the Champs Sports Bowl with the temperatures in the 40s. Miami did not look like it wanted any part of the cold weather. All people heard about was Miami’s speed before the game. As it turned out, the only time we saw that speed was when the Canes players were running to the heaters. The weather will favor the Badgers, and it could depend on if the Southern school wants any part of the 20 or 30-degree temps. It will be a slugfest, but I think there will be too much Jonathan Taylor, as he runs for 150 and multiple scores and the Badgers beat the Canes for the second year in a row.

Prediction: Wisconsin 24, Miami 20