Yahoo Sports... Buckeyes stun Badgers in
thrilling
finish
Courtesy of Yahoo Sports
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP)—After almost a
year of suspensions, rumors and NCAA trouble in the headlines, Ohio
State
finally made some news on the field.
Braxton
Miller threw a 40-yard
touchdown pass to Devin Smith with 20 seconds left and the Buckeyes
beat No. 12
Wisconsin 33-29 on Saturday night, handing the Badgers their second
consecutive
stunning defeat.
It
was seven days earlier that
Wisconsin was beaten 37-31 at Michigan State on a desperation pass on
the final
play of the game. The latest heartbreak, just like the one that ended
the
Badgers’ run at an undefeated season, wasn’t confirmed until a video
review.
“The
replay booth has definitely not
been our friend the last two weeks,” frustrated Wisconsin coach Bret
Bielema
said.
The
Buckeyes (5-3, 2-2 Big Ten) earned
their biggest win yet in a season shadowed by NCAA problems.
“This
is what Ohio State’s about,”
interim coach Luke Fickell said. “We don’t ever look at ourselves as
underdogs.
This is a huge win, a signature win. This is for this team, this is for
this
program. This is what we expect.”
The
Badgers (7-2, 3-2) drove to the
Ohio State 45—and got an extra play after time elapsed due to a
defensive
facemask call—but linebacker Andrew Sweat hit quarterback Russell
Wilson as he
was throwing to end the game and touch off a wild celebration.
It
was an incredible finish, with four
touchdowns scored in the final 4:39. But the Buckeyes were the last
team
standing after a series of knockdown punches by both sides.
Miller,
a freshman, ran for 99 yards
on 19 carries and scored twice, in addition to completing 7 of 12
passes for 89
yards and a score.
Fickell
said that before Miller went
onto the field for the last possession, the quarterback turned to the
coach and
winked.
“I
felt good about it. That’s what you
need,” Fickell said. “You’ve got to have confidence in what you’re
doing. You
have to have belief in what you’re doing.”
Dan
Herron, in his second game back from
two separate suspensions for accepting improper benefits, rushed for
160 yards
on 33 carries.
“It
was a great feeling,” Herron said.
“We definitely wanted this win very bad. The team kept on fighting and
guys
never gave up and we went out there and got it done.”
Miller
scored on runs of 1 and 44
yards—the latter putting Ohio State up 26-14 with 4:39 left. Herron
rumbled 57
yards on the first play of the second half to set up Miller’s first TD.
The
Badgers came in averaging 47.4
points and 512 yards, but were stymied most of the night. They also
said all
week that they had put the painful loss in East Lansing, Mich., in the
rearview
mirror. But adding in this latest loss, they may have recurring
nightmares.
“(This
is) real tough,” Wisconsin wide
receiver
Nick
Toon said. “We’ve handed them the
game two weeks in a row at the end of the game. You can’t do that.”
Wilson
completed 20 of 32 passes for
253 yards and three touchdowns and
Montee
Ball gained 85 yards on 17
carries with one touchdown. Jared Abbrederis had six catches for 113
yards and
two scores.
Taking
the kickoff to start the second
half, Ohio State immediately got a big play.
Herron
burst through a hole at the
line and past defenders pinching the line, racing 57 yards to the
Wisconsin 18.
He later went 18 yards to the 1, setting up Miller’s first TD run.
After
the kickoff, the Badgers had to
punt. For the second week in a row, things didn’t go as planned.
A
week after Wisconsin had a blocked
punt lead to points in the backbreaking loss at Michigan State, Ohio
State’s
Ryan
Shazier came in completely
untouched to block Brad Nortman’s punt. The ball was downed at the
Wisconsin 1
by Curtis Grant and the Buckeyes were right back near paydirt.
On
Jordan Hall’s third run from the 1,
he stuck his nose in the back of blocking fullback
Zach
Boren and slid into the end zone,
putting the Buckeyes up 17-7.
The
celebration was short-lived. The
Buckeyes forced a punt but Hall promptly fumbled it, with
Andrew
Lukasko recovering at the Ohio
State 27, leading to Ball notching his 21st touchdown of the season
through a
wide hole on the left side.
After
Drew Basil converted a 22-yard
field goal to push the lead to six points, a Wisconsin drive ended at
the Ohio
State 38 on fourth-and-2 when Sweat knifed through to bring down Ball a
yard
short.
Six
plays later, Miller kept the ball
on third-and-2 and raced through a big hole at left tackle, going 44
yards
untouched for the score with 4:39 remaining.
The
Badgers answered with a quick
score in just 44 seconds, with Wilson hitting Abbrederis on a 17-yard
score to
cut it to 26-21 with 3:48 left.
Wisconsin
kicked deep and then held
the Buckeyes on three runs, forcing a punt.
It
took just four plays to cover the
68 yards, with Wilson finding Abbrederis all alone down the left
sideline for a
49-yard score with 1:18 left. A 2-point conversion pass from Wilson to
Ball
made it 29-26.
“Unfortunately,
we scored too fast,”
Bielema said.
But
the Buckeyes came right back,
taking over at their own 48 after a 42-yard kickoff return by Hall.
They
picked up 12 yards on three plays
before Miller took the snap on first down at the Wisconsin 40 with 30
seconds
left. He floated right to avoid a rush, barely sidestepped a potential
tackle
and suddenly noticed Smith wide open in the end zone. Miller stopped
and looped
the ball to Smith who caught it just before two defenders closed on him.
The
crowd of 105,511 went wild.
After
Basil’s extra point, the
Buckeyes kicked off—out of bounds. That gave Wisconsin the ball at its
own 40
with 18 seconds left.
Wilson
threw three incompletions—twice
off the hands of receivers who could easily have made huge plays.
As
a mob of fans waited to rush the
field, it was announced there was a flag on the final play of
regulation. It
was for a facemask against safety
Christian
Bryant.
That
gave the Badgers the ball at the
Ohio State 45 and one final play.
But
the pocket closed on Wilson and
Sweat hit him from behind just as he was releasing the pass, the ball
fluttering to the ground while the field filled with running, jumping
fans
celebrating Ohio State’s 90th homecoming.
“We
knew it was going to be a fight,”
lineman
John
Simon said. “This is a big win
for us. We’re going to enjoy it tonight and get back to work tomorrow.
There’s
a lot of football left.”
The
Badgers are hoping for brighter
days.
“Obviously,
it’s another heartbreaking
loss,” Bielema said.
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