Indiana
Wisconsin isn’t getting better. That’s the biggest problem for Luke Fickell in Year 1.
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Five days before Wisconsin’s season opener, back when soaring enthusiasm reflected sky-high expectations, Luke Fickell pondered a question: What does success for Badgers football look like in Year 1 of a new regime?
Fickell, in his pragmatic way, didn’t want to put a record on that success. But he made it clear that he expected his team to play its best at the end of the year. Achieving that goal meant embracing the process, learning how to be consistent and growing each week. And then he delivered this quote:
If we’re in any similar areas in Week 1 to Week 8, then we won’t be playing our best ball at the end of the year. And if you’re not, it’s really hard to be successful and look at a season as being successful.
As Wisconsin players walked off the field Saturday afternoon at Memorial Stadium, having lost 20-14 to a bad Indiana team, it was difficult to say the Badgers were better in any one area than they were when the season began. Wisconsin squandered a golden opportunity to stay in the hunt of a mediocre Big Ten West Division race thanks to poor execution across the board, which allowed Indiana — 2-21 in conference games since 2021 — to beat the Badgers in Bloomington for the first time in 21 years.
We’re past the Week 8 marker. And nine games into Fickell’s first campaign with Wisconsin, the Badgers are nowhere close to where they thought they would be and don’t seem to have the answers for how they crawl out of this hole.
“I think that’s what keeps you lying awake at night, at least it does me,” Fickell said after the game. “Are you finding a way to play your best ball at the end of the year? Are you trending in the direction of getting better? There’s a lot of factors to getting better, but consistency has a lot to do with it. Execution has a lot to do with it.
“If you go out there and you get beat, you get beat. It stinks, but it’s a part of the game. Give them credit. They battled their butts off, they made some big plays, they did a really good job at creating energy and we didn’t.”
Injuries have taken their toll on Wisconsin. There’s no denying that fact. Wisconsin played Indiana without its top two running backs (Braelon Allen and Chez Mellusi), one of its top wide receivers (Chimere Dike) and its starting quarterback (Tanner Mordecai), among others. Kicker Nathanial Vakos was battling an undisclosed injury, which prevented Fickell from sending him out on three field goal attempts of more than 50 yards. But Fickell refused to use those injuries as an excuse, citing a lack of execution by players who should be prepared well enough to perform.
The next football team you find that hasn’t endured injuries during the season will be the first. Good teams find ways to win in spite of adversity. And these Badgers are not playing like a good team.
“I didn’t expect this,” safety Hunter Wohler said. “With the talent we have and the locker room we have, obviously there’s high expectations coming into the year. We haven’t been good on Saturdays. All the work we put in, in the offseason and each individual week, for it to not translate on Saturday, it hurts. We’re going to have to find a way. We have three games to pull this thing together and make something happen.”
It was easy to try to explain away the Badgers’ first three defeats. Wisconsin lost its first road game to Washington State but made a game of it in the second half early in the transition to a new scheme. Wisconsin failed to score a touchdown at home against Iowa, but the Hawkeyes had a stingy defense and knocked Mordecai out in the middle of the game with a broken right hand. Wisconsin lost to undefeated Ohio State but trailed by just a touchdown in the fourth quarter.
This one was indefensible. Indiana’s only victories this season had come against winless FCS foe Indiana State and a two-win Akron team in four overtimes. The Hoosiers entered the day minus-67 in second-half point differential during Big Ten games this season, the worst of any FBS team in conference play.
Frustration clearly wore on the face of Fickell, who is not used to losing. He went 4-8 in his first year at Cincinnati and then won at least nine games in each of the next five seasons. Fickell is still searching for a way to elevate Wisconsin out of a funk that is now spanning the better part of four consecutive seasons. He said he was hard on the team during his postgame speech in the locker room.
“But I also understand they’ve been through a lot,” Fickell said. “From last year maybe and the year before and the ups and the downs. We just can’t continue to revert back maybe into some of the things that we’ve always done. Finding ways to finish is what this game is all about. Regardless if we didn’t play well enough, we all can see that.
“But we still had an opportunity to find a way to win the game at the end. That’s becoming a reoccurring theme for us, and as a coach, I’ve got to find a way to get us over that hump. It’s not just on making plays. It’s on, ‘Hey, what’s the recipe to finding ways to finish?’ And we haven’t done a good enough job of that.”
Safety Austin Brown was asked whether the losing had taken a toll on Fickell and responded: “I’d say yeah for sure. I think it’s taking a toll on all of us.”
Where will the answers come from, if not this season, then in the future? As the Big Ten moves to an 18-team league and no divisions next season, success will be harder to come by, not easier. Wisconsin’s 2024 schedule features league games against USC, Penn State and Oregon, in addition to Alabama in nonconference play.
Wisconsin needs help through recruiting and the transfer portal because the current personnel hasn’t shown enough consistency. Perhaps another year understanding the nuances of different schemes will help. But, as this season has demonstrated, nothing is guaranteed. All the excitement in the world hasn’t prevented Wisconsin from falling to 5-4 overall and 3-3 in the Big Ten.
GO DEEPER
Wisconsin takeaways: Run game struggles, pass attack not enough in deflating loss at Indiana
Wisconsin’s Air Raid offense under offensive coordinator Phil Longo has yet to regularly showcase its potential. Without Allen or Mellusi, Wisconsin was forced to turn to Nos. 3 and 4 tailbacks Jackson Acker and Cade Yacamelli, who combined to carry 21 times for 96 yards against the Big Ten’s worst run defense. Longo put the game on quarterback Braedyn Locke, who threw the ball 41 times. He has passed at least 39 times in each of his first three career starts.
Locke has flashed at times since replacing Mordecai and has five touchdowns with just one interception. But he has completed only half of his throws and too often hasn’t given his receivers a chance to make a play. During one stretch in the first half against Indiana, he had six passes broken up while completing just five. He missed receiver Will Pauling in the right flat on a fourth-and-2 late in the game that led to a critical turnover on downs with Wisconsin trailing 17-14.
“I think everybody needs to kind of take a look in the mirror and make a choice on what it’s going to be,” Locke said. “I think that we’ll all respond from this and that you’ll see a different team.”
Wisconsin is averaging just 23.6 points per game. Longo hasn’t had a season in which his offense averaged fewer than 32.8 points per game in any season that he was an offensive coordinator over the past 11 years, during stops at Division II Slippery Rock, FCS Sam Houston, Ole Miss or North Carolina. You’d have to go back to 2007 at Minnesota Duluth (22.5 points) to find a worse year offensively for Longo.
Wisconsin’s defense, meanwhile, caved when it mattered most. The Badgers allowed the Hoosiers to roll right down the field on their first drive for a touchdown, surrendering big passing plays on a pair of third-and-long situations. When Wisconsin trimmed the deficit to 10-7 late in the second quarter, Indiana scored a touchdown again. And late in the game, the defense couldn’t get off the field and allowed a field goal to account for the final score. Wisconsin actually out-gained Indiana 344-261. But too many penalties and mistakes at critical times cost the Badgers, as has been the case in multiple games this season.
“It’s always the little things that spiral into being big things,” inside linebacker Maema Njongmeta said. “Whether it’s a penalty here or giving them opportunities down the field, third down after third down. Or not running your feet hard enough on a tackle so they get five instead of three. Those things add up over a game, over a quarter. There’s death by a thousand cuts.”
As Year 1 approaches its conclusion, it’s clear Wisconsin isn’t playing its best football, and that is on everyone in the program. The hope is that Fickell can eventually author the kind of turnaround he was brought to Madison to achieve, even though it clearly will take longer than he or the Badgers wanted.
(Top photo: James Black / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Indiana
Indiana DT James Carpenter Thankful His ‘Incredible Ride’ Made Him A Hoosier
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – He wasn’t here long, and he is one of several one-year Indiana wonders who have taken the Hoosiers to unprecedented heights in their 10-win 2024 dream season.
The brief and glorious ride that defensive tackle James Carpenter has been on in an Indiana uniform is close to its final act.
The final game of the regular season for Carpenter and his teammates is Saturday when Indiana hosts Purdue in a 7 p.m. ET kickoff.
It won’t be Indiana’s last game as the postseason beckons, but it might be the last chance for Carpenter to bask in the appreciation of home fans who have grown to love him and some of the other Hoosiers – new and old – who have taken Indiana to a possible College Football Playoff berth.
Carpenter will be out of eligibility after the 2024 season. Other prominent Hoosiers, transfers or not, such as quarterback Kurtis Rourke, running backs Justice Ellison and Ty Son Lawton, wide receivers Myles Price and Ke’Shawn Williams, center Mike Katic, defensive linemen Lanell Carr Jr. and Jacob Mangum-Farrar and safety Josh Sanguinetti, are among the senior-plus players who are nearing their post-college football futures.
For Carpenter, coming to Indiana and being an integral part of the Hoosiers’ 10-1 season has confirmed to him (and many of his transfer teammates) that they made the right choice to try their luck in the Big Ten after playing at a so-called lower level in the Sun Belt Conference.
“It’s really just having a chip on our shoulder. Most of us that have transferred here, we were under-recruited guys who didn’t get recruited by the schools we wanted to coming out of high school,” Carpenter said.
“So I think we’ve always kind of had that chip on our shoulder coming here, We saw a lot of stuff about how we were too small. We weren’t going to be able to play in the Big Ten. We’ve used that as motivation for us” he said.
That fuel has pushed Indiana’s defense to impressive heights. The Hoosiers have the best run defense in the nation, giving up just 76.1 yards per game. Indiana is third in total defense at 261 yards per contest. The Hoosiers also rank third nationally in first downs allowed (167).
Carpenter said that defensive coordinator Bryant Haines keeps things fresh by adding layers to the defensive base principles each week.
“Coach Haines and Coach (Pat) Kuntz (defensive line coach) have definitely added a lot of different stuff. Different fronts, different pass rush schemes, a lot of different blitzes and unique looks,” Carpenter said. “They put a lot on our plate, and we welcome that.”
Carpenter – who has 29 tackles, including five sacks and nine tackles for loss – also cited a good rapport with fellow defensive tackle CJ West, himself a transfer from Kent State.
As they have grown accustomed to one another, Indiana’s run defense and push up front in pass rushing situations have become that much tougher for opponents to handle.
“In camp, we usually build upon the base level stuff. Then, each week, we’re putting in a bunch of new blitzes, different looks,” Carpenter explained. “A bunch of guys have been in the system long enough, we work well together. So they can throw a lot at us, and we’re going to go out there and execute.”
At a minimum, Indiana will have a bowl game after its regular season finale against Purdue. However, Saturday might be the last chance for Carpenter to play at Memorial Stadium, a happy place for him as he’s concluded a college career near the top of mountain after he was barely recruited out of high school in Roanoke, Va.
Curt Cignetti believed in Carpenter. He was one of his first recruits at James Madison and brought him to Indiana, where both men have enjoyed career highs not known before.
Carpenter will walk on the Memorial Stadium turf on Saturday thankful for his time as a Hoosier.
“It’s definitely going to be a little bit of an emotional moment,” Carpenter said. “It’s been an incredible ride. It’s definitely going to hit me when I’m out there with my parents, but I’ll just save that for that moment.”
A moment Carpenter earned by covering himself in glory in his one season in an Indiana uniform.
Indiana
What Are The Scenarios After Indiana Dropped In The College Football Rankings?
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana’s football rise into the national elite has been such a dizzying, intoxicating ride that it felt like it might never end.
Alas, No. 2 Ohio State dealt the Hoosiers a reality check with a dominant 38-15 victory Saturday at Ohio Stadium.
Most Indiana observers understood that a splash of water in the metaphorical face of Indiana football was likely when the College Football Playoff rankings came out.
Once revealed? It was a pretty cold splash that hit the Hoosiers late Tuesday night.
Indiana (10-1) fell to the No. 10 spot in the rankings. Six one-loss teams (Ohio State, Texas, Penn State, Notre Dame, Miami, SMU) and two two-loss teams (Georgia, Tennessee) are ahead of the Hoosiers. Indiana is rated the worst of the one-loss Power Four conference teams.
Because of the way the College Football Playoff bracket is constructed, Indiana is the last team in the 12-team field. Two teams ranked lower than Indiana would make the field as projected conference champions.
It’s a precarious position for Indiana as its margin for error has been exhausted. Still, there are plenty of happy and heartbreaking outcomes to consider as the college football season gets closer to its pre-Playoff climax.
Here’s a few scenarios to consider after the College Football Playoff committee set the latest pecking order Tuesday.
The best-case scenario
• If Indiana wants to go for the glory? Apart from the obvious win Indiana needs over Purdue, Hoosiers fans can hope for a Michigan win over Ohio State and a Maryland victory at Penn State. That would put Indiana into the Big Ten championship game against Oregon. A win in that game would give Indiana a bye into the College Football Playoff quarterfinals.
However, the risk in that is that if the Hoosiers were to lose, they could be out of the CFP field altogether depending on what happens elsewhere. High reward, but high risk, too.
For Indiana to get back into the playoff hosting picture? The Hoosiers probably need at least two of the following results: Georgia loses at home to Georgia Tech on Friday night, Tennessee loses at Vanderbilt, Miami loses at Syracuse, SMU loses to California at home or Notre Dame loses at Southern California on Saturday.
After the upsets that took place in Week 13? Stranger things have happened.
The most realistic good scenario
• If your best-case scenario is to beat Purdue, but lose the risk of incurring a second loss by missing the Big Ten championship game? It’s as simple as beating the Boilermakers on Saturday night. Given that Indiana are currently 28.5 point favorites, that is a solid probability.
However, Indiana is looking over its shoulder, too. No. 12-ranked Clemson lurks behind the Hoosiers and has a chance at a quality win when the Tigers host rival South Carolina Saturday. Though the Gamecocks are also lurking in the No. 15 spot, it would do Indiana a world of good to have South Carolina get Clemson off Indiana’s rear bumper.
The worst-case scenario
• This is simple: Indiana loses to Purdue. Barring a litany of upsets elsewhere, a loss to the Boilermakers would be a mortal blow to the Hoosiers’ CFP hopes.
Another worst-case scenario would be if Indiana beat Purdue, but Texas A&M beat Texas to make it to the SEC championship game and then pulled a major upset in that contest against Georgia.
That would put the Aggies in the CFP field as a bid-stealer and knock every other team down a notch. If Indiana was still on the bubble, this would cause it to burst.
The most realistic bad scenario
• Indiana beats Purdue, but not convincingly. A two-touchdown win or less is going to reflect poorly on the Hoosiers. Like it or not, style points matter.
If Indiana squeaked by the Boilermakers, in combination with a Clemson win over South Carolina and no upsets in front of them, it would be high time for Hoosiers fans to start to sweat.
Add in an Alabama win over Auburn and/or an Ole Miss victory over Mississippi State? The Hoosiers might survive it all, but the conference championship games and the reveal of final rankings on Dec. 8 would be a white-knuckle experience for Indiana.
The most ambiguous scenario
• Indiana beats Purdue, but once again, not convincingly. However, some of the teams ahead of Indiana also lose.
Any loss by either Georgia or Tennessee would be trouble for either team as it would be their third defeat. SMU has had a great season, but the Mustangs would take a hit if they lost at home to California. Similarly, Miami has just one loss, but the Hurricanes have won their share of close shootouts during the season.
Add in wins by Clemson, Alabama and Ole Miss? Perhaps toss in a Texas A&M victory over Texas that would put the potential bid-stealing Aggies in the SEC championship game? The CFP committee would have one heckuva Gordian knot to untangle going into the conference championship games.
Indiana
Warde Manuel reveals how College Football Playoff committee views outcome of Indiana vs Ohio State
A Top-5 showdown highlighted the Week 13 slate as Indiana and Ohio State squared off at The Horseshoe. Ultimately, the Buckeyes got a blowout victory over the Hoosiers, and all eyes turned toward Tuesday’s College Football Playoff rankings to see how the committee viewed that outcome.
Of course, Indiana wasn’t the only top-ranked team to fall last week. Multiple others did, as well, which likely helped the Hoosiers stay in the Top 10. According to committee chair Warde Manuel, IU has the resume to be the No. 10 team in the country.
Manuel pointed out it wasn’t all bad for Indiana in last week’s matchup. The Hoosiers had some good moments, notably the opening drive. Although they dropped five spots, Manuel said IU still did enough to be in the Top 10.
“We viewed Indiana – they played well at times against Ohio State,” Manuel said on the CFP rankings reveal show on ESPN. “And Ohio State pulled out a victory and really came on in the second half of that game. But we were impressed with some of the things that Indiana did. And they dropped five, but we still felt that their body of work was strong enough to remain in the Top 10.”
Indiana’s strength of schedule was a key point of conversation entering last week’s game. The Hoosiers’ schedule ranked No. 106 in the country through Week 12, according to ESPN, which was the second-weakest of the College Football Playoff Top 25. After the Ohio State game, though, IU’s schedule now ranks No. 51.
Of course, the numbers also back up Indiana’s case to be one of the top teams. The Hoosiers rank No. 9 in the nation in scoring defense and No. 2 in scoring offense. That’s why, after Saturday’s game, Curt Cignetti scoffed at a question about whether they should still be in the 12-team field before answering with a wink and smile.
“Is that a serious question?” Cignetti said in his postgame press conference, with a smirk. “I’m not even gonna answer that one. The answer’s so obvious.”
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