Last Saturday afternoon may have felt like the end of the world
to the Badger faithful. At virtually the same moment (5:26 pm), UW lost its
lead on Michigan State and lost its point guard to an ACL tear.
End of the world scenario, right?
Wrong.
First lets address what happened at Camp Randall. Sure,
losing to Michigan State on the last play of the game (again) is tough to
swallow. Having that loss snap a 21-game home win streak that dated back to
2009 made it that much worse.
But at the end of the day, Wisconsin is still one road win
(at Indiana) away from clinching a spot in the Big Ten championship game. No
matter what happened today, that was going to be the case.
Once the sanctions against two of UW’s leaders division foes
were announced this summer, the Badgers knew that the road to Indianapolis lie
simply in victories against Illinois, Purdue, and Indiana. The first two stops
having been successfully completed, Wisconsin is still right where they needed
to be heading into the month of November.
Should the Badgers have won at least one or two of the three
games they’ve lost (by 3 points each) this year? Absolutely. But even if they
had, they would still be in the position they are in right now. Nothing was
lost in overtime on Saturday.
In fact, it might serve as a focusing mechanism if anything.
No longer can Wisconsin even dream of a decent bowl bid without the Big Ten
title. In a manner that is clearer than ever before, it is “Rose Bowl or bust”
“Obviously its not good at all,” UW senior running back
Montee Ball said. “But we still have everything in front of us.”
More concerning is the injury Wisconsin freshman quarterback
Joel Stave suffered on the opening play of the 2nd half. Sacked on a
second rush, Stave immediately knelt down clutching his left arm and was seen
after the game with that arm immobilized in a sling. Given the continued
ineffectiveness of former starter and current backup quarterback Danny O’Brien,
the Badgers are surely concerned about the impact Stave’s injury will have
going forward.
While Bielema didn’t go into much detail, he did admit that
the loss of Stave put Obrien in a tough situation Saturday.
“It really didn’t matter what quarterback was in there,”
Bielema said after the game. “But the change of the quarterback changes the
game itself.”
Thankfully for Obrien, Stave, and the Badgers, a bye week
looms ahead. With the pivotal game against Indiana on the horizon, that off
week will be crucial for UW to get healthy and get ready to continue their
quest to get back to Pasadena for a third straight year.
“I think the options we had before today are still there…”
Bielema noted. “We can’t lose anybody that doesn’t want to believe in finishing
this thing out the right way.”
The same mantra holds true for the Gasser injury.
Sure, the Badgers lose arguably their most consistent
presence on the floor, the only player on the roster to have started for an
extended stretch in each of the last two seasons. But at the same time, redshirt
freshman George Marshall is more than capable of plugging that gap.
Marshall is a completely different player than Gasser and is
sure to have his fair share of growing pains as he adjusts to life in the Big
Ten. But he is also capable of giving the Badgers a level of explosiveness at
the point guard position that is simply not in Gasser’s game.
Where the injury will hurt this season is in the depth
department. Setting aside the Bruesewitz injury (which he should be back from
around Thanksgiving), UW will now be left with at least two new starters and
just one player (sophomore Frank Kaminsky) with meaningful game experience
available off the bench.
In the backcourt even that experience is non-existent as
Traevon Jackson will likely be thrust into the backup role having had just 92
minutes of playing time at the college level.
But while depth could be an issue, the easy remedy to that
lies in a surprise player, perhaps the emergence of freshman Zac Showalter or a
significant contribution from junior Duje Dukan. Thanks in large part to the
versatility of freshman Sam Dekker, the Badgers can fill the void left by
Gasser’s injury as much with the “bigs” as with the guards, perhaps moving
Dekker into the two guard spot to give UW a small, athletic starting five.
Beyond this season, the Gasser injury could (assuming a full
recovery) become a small blessing in disguise. With another guard set to join
the team next year (Bronson Koenig), UW can now build a bit of the depth in the
backcourt that has been sorely lacking in recent years. One look at Jordan
Taylor’s minutes last season and its obvious that Wisconsin hasn’t had a viable
option off the bench in quite some time.
Gasser going down obviously sends Wisconsin outside the
ranks of the top 25 at this point. With Indiana, Michigan, Michigan State, and
Ohio State all bringing back rosters more than deserving of their top-15
rankings, it figures to be a monumental task for head coach Bo Ryan to get his
Badgers into the top-4 in the Big Ten for the 12th straight season
under his command.
But if there is a coach out there capable of turning this UW
team into a contender when March rolls around, it is Bo Ryan. Having never
finished outside the top-4 in the Big Ten while at Wisconsin, Ryan is a master
at getting the most out of his limited resources.
Now faced with losing his starting point guard on the eve of
the season, Ryan faces his toughest task yet as the Badger head coach. Is it a
tough task? Sure. But by no means is it a task the school’s all-time winningest
coach is unable to handle.
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