Whatever hope was born out of Wisconsin’s wins over
California and Nebraska-Omaha last week was lost over forty minutes of ugly
basketball Saturday in Milwaukee. Playing without junior forward Mike
Bruesewitz, the Badgers (6-4) lacked energy and poise from the opening tip,
committing 10 first-half turnovers en route to a 34-20 halftime deficit.
Ultimately, that deficit was simply too much to overcome as UW fell to
Marquette 60-50.
“We just got rattled by the pressure a little bit,”
sophomore guard Traevon Jackson said of the first half. “They took advantage of
it.”
Although it looked in the first half as if Wisconsin might
get run out of the gym, a quick start in the second half carved 11 of the 14
points off the Marquette lead and pulled the Badgers within a single possession
with 10:28 left. But while the Wisconsin run certainly woke up the Bradley
Center crowd, UW could not sustain the momentum, missing several opportunities
at the free throw line before finally running out of gas down the stretch.
“They just made a couple plays and we didn’t make plays,”
senior forward Jared Berggren said. “We were close and just didn’t get it done.”
UW climbed back into the game in large part thanks to a
concerted effort to work the ball inside, forcing Marquette (6-2) into early
foul trouble. The Golden Eagles committed 6 fouls in the first 6:26 of the
half, allowing UW to shoot free throws for the final 13-plus minutes of the
game.
“I thought we did a good job of drawing fouls and getting a
chance to go to the free throw line…” UW head coach Bo Ryan said. “For about 12
to 15 minutes of that 2nd half, I really liked what I was seeing.”
Unfortunately, the Badgers could not capitalize, making just
9 of 23 free throws including misses on 5 of their final 6 chances. Senior
forward Ryan Evans was the primary culprit, making just 1 of his 9 chances at
the line. Two of those misses came on crucial 1-and-1 situations in the 2nd
half with UW on a run and trailing by just 4.
“I think it cost us the game tonight…” Evans admitted. “I haven’t
experienced anything like I did tonight but we’ll keep pushing and we’ll get it
right.”
There really weren’t any silver linings for UW in this loss.
Although freshman Sam Dekker made an early impact in his first career start, he
was only able to notch a single point in the 2nd half, finishing
2-for-10 from the field and just 2-for-5 at the free throw line.
Though Wisconsin was able to climb back, Marquette senior
guard Junior Cadougan ultimately kept the Badgers at bay. After a first half
that included just 4 points in 10 minutes, the Toronto native gave the Eagles a
major boost with 14 2nd half points on 5-of-6 shooting.
“Those were very tough shots where he was floating the ball
up in the air,” Ryan said. “Those weren’t layups.”
Former Wisconsin commit Vander Blue also had a big night,
racing out of the starting gates with 15 points by halftime and finishing with
17 points, 5 rebounds, and 4 steals in a team-high 35 minutes. In addition,
Blue was a force defensively, holding Dekker without a field goal after being
switched onto him defensively during the 2nd half.
The Badgers now have 4 losses in non-conference play for the
first time since 2001 and have just three more games before the start of Big
Ten play on January 4th. Unable to get on a sustained run through
the first 10 games of the season, UW needs desperately to turn things around
over the final two weeks of the non-conference season in order to be in a
position to compete in conference play.
At this point, a third consecutive trip to the Sweet 16 does
not seem likely. But under Bo Ryan, the Badgers have never finished worse than
4th in the Big Ten and have reached the NCAA Tournament each and
every year. Now definitely a “bubble” team, Ryan has his work cut out for him
if he wants to keep those streaks alive.
“Every big test we have had we have come up short…” Berggren
added. “We are right there in most of these games but its something we have to
learn real quick because to have 4 losses at this point in the season, that’s not
where we want to be.”
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