Badgers hold off No. 2 Indiana for 64-59 upset
Topics: From the Wires, Entertainment News
Wisconsin's Jared Berggren (40) goes in for a dunk against Indiana's Victor Oladipo (4) during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Tuesday, Jan. 15, 2013, in Bloomington, Ind. (AP Photo/Darron Cummings)(Credit: AP)BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP) — Wisconsin played Tuesday night like it always does — defended everything, made big shots and limited the turnovers.
Indiana looked like anything but its usual self.
It was just another chapter in a series filled with strange twists.
Ryan Evans scored 13 points, Traevon Jackson added 11 and the unranked Badgers moved into sole possession of the Big Ten lead with a 64-59 upset at No. 2 Indiana.
“We’re feeling good about ourselves right now,” Badgers forward Jared Berggren said. “It shows we can beat anyone, anywhere, anytime; so I think it shows what we’re capable of.”
Especially if the Badgers (13-4, 4-0) keep playing this way.
Wisconsin has won seven straight and has beaten two top-15 teams in four days. It is the last unbeaten team in Big Ten play.
All the Badgers needed to do against Indiana was hold the nation’s highest-scoring team to its fewest points of the season, its worst shooting performance of the season and end its 18-game home winning streak.
Mission accomplished.
Wisconsin became the first team to win 11 straight in a series with Indiana since the Badgers last did it in 1919, and the first team to win five straight in Bloomington since Purdue last did that in 1923. No team has ever won six straight on Indiana’s home court and only Purdue, from 1908-14, has won 12 in a row against the Hoosiers.
The Badgers just stuck to the game plan.
“We knew that if they got it going in transition they can score in bunches. All you have to do is look at their game films,” Bo Ryan said, acknowledging he coached with flu-like symptoms. “Our goal was not to let that happen, but saying it and doing it, having it as a plan, are two different things. It just so happened to work tonight.”
Indiana (15-2, 3-1) felt ill for another reason.
The Hoosiers scored only three fast-break points and watched the Badgers toss in shot-clock beating 3-pointers. Indiana came into the game averaging a Big Ten-leading 17 assists per game, yet managed only seven against the Badgers.
And instead of pressuring Wisconsin into miscues, the Badgers committed just eight turnovers.
Cody Zeller, who made all eight of his shots and had 18 points in the first half, finished with 23 points and 10 rebounds and made only one basket in the second half. Christian Watford had 11 points, and Victor Oladipo had 10.
“That’s their style of play. We just didn’t defend the dribble well enough, didn’t make enough shots,” Zeller said. “That’s what it boils down to.”



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