Wisconsin couldn’t overcome itself or Justin Herbert

By Art Spander

PASADENA, Calif. — He didn’t even make the top 10 in the Heisman Trophy voting, a comedown for Justin Herbert after a cover story in Sports Illustrated. The other guys — the winner, Joe Burrow of LSU, and Jalen Hurts of Oklahoma — had more yards and more attention.

The NFL scouts remained high on Herbert, however. He could throw the ball, which was expected of a top quarterback. And as he proved once more, on a beautiful blue-sky New Year’s Day in the 106th Rose Bowl game, he also could run with it.

Herbert rushed for three touchdowns, the most by a quarterback in a Rose Bowl in 13 years, and carried the University of Oregon to a 28-27 win over Wisconsin — which gave Herbert and Oregon the opportunity by losing three fumbles and throwing an interception.

“We didn’t overcome ourselves,” a downhearted Paul Chryst, the Wisconsin coach, said of the four turnovers.

But Herbert, a 6-foot-6, 235-pound senior who grew up near the Oregon campus in Eugene, overcame his failures and disappointment against Arizona State — a loss that knocked the Ducks out of the chance to play for the national championship but in a way may have been advantageous.

Oregon instead of Oklahoma would have faced LSU in one of the semifinals last weekend. The Sooners were battered, 63-20. Instead, Oregon goes to the Rose Bowl the first day of 2020, gets a thrilling victory on Herbert’s 30-yard run in the fourth quarter and may get a spot as high as No. 5 in the final rankings.

Wisconsin, which appeared to have the majority of the usual sellout crowd of 90,462 on its side — if you lived in the Midwest, wouldn’t you head for California in winter? — also for a long, long while seemed to have the game.

There was a six-play sequence in the first quarter that included a 95-yard touchdown kickoff return by Wisconsin’s Aron Cruickshank, a Herbert interception and another Badger TD, which gave Wisconsin a 10-7 lead.

And Oregon was virtually offensive on offense, their combined passing and running yards total of 204 was the fewest in a Rose Bowl game in 41 years.

But you can’t keep giving the other team the ball. Eventually, you give it the game.

“We would have liked to finish it differently,” said Chryst. Wisconsin finished it, the season, 10-4, Oregon 12-2.

Not surprisingly, Oregon coach Mario Cristobal called Herbert the best college quarterback in the land.

“He can beat you in so many ways,” said Cristobal after a game in which Herbert basically beat the Badgers on the ground, running four yards for a TD in the first quarter, five for one in the second and then the big 30-yarder with 7:41 left in the game.

“You see the legs,” said Cristobal, “you see the arms. But what you don’t see is the leadership and the heart.  And in the end, that was the biggest difference, in my opinion.”

Herbert said of his winning TD dash, “It’s a rare opportunity. It’s something I haven’t experienced very often. But it was great.”

Oregon wasn’t great, but it was effective. The school’s athletic program (Nike U?) is on a roll. The basketball team, No. 5 in the rankings, very well could be better than the football team.

“We go hard now,” said Cristobal, an implication that the team was soft the previous year. “What we do is not kind and cuddly, and it’s certainly not for everybody. We stuck to a blueprint that is as demanding as it gets.”

A blueprint and a quarterback who runs and, most importantly, wins.

S.F. Examiner: Wisconsin cries foul, physical Duke prevails

By Art Spander
San Francisco Examiner

Dead in the water. That's what the coach said late Monday night, and the words seemed dead accurate. Duke was nine points down in the second half of its biggest game of the season, and its biggest man, 6-foot-10 Jahlil Okafor, was on bench with four fouls,

But a Mike Krzyzewski-coached team knows something about basketball because Coach K knows a great deal about the game. He knows who and how to recruit. And his players know that defense wins, which in the end it did.

Read the full story here.

© 2015 The San Francisco Examiner 

Bleacher Report: Duke vs. Wisconsin: Don't Downplay This Blockbuster NCAA Tournament Final

By Art Spander
Featured Columnist

INDIANAPOLIS — So the best 38-1 team in college basketball has taken its unexpected leave. What did you think would happen? That they wouldn’t hold the NCAA final Monday night at Lucas Oil Stadium?

That CBS would show re-runs of The Jackie Gleason Show instead of Duke and Wisconsin on runs down the court?

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2015 Bleacher Report, Inc. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.

S.F. Examiner: Wisconsin looks to be perfect spoiler against Kentucky

By Art Spander
San Francisco Examiner

Second chances don't come often in sports, especially intercollegiate sports, especially in basketball, where the best players barely stay around for one year, never mind two or three. Or four.

The kids at Wisconsin understand that. The coach at Wisconsin understands that.

Read the full story here.

© 2015 The San Francisco Examiner 

Newsday (N.Y.): Stanford gets fast start, shuts down Wisconsin in 2nd half to win Rose Bowl

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday

PASADENA, Calif. -- The new year brought old-style football to the Rose Bowl, the pound 'em, ground 'em game of an earlier era. And Stanford -- contrary to its image as a school that relies on passing -- grounded and pounded relentlessly and effectively.

The Cardinal -- living up to the promise of coach David Shaw, who insisted in a pregame media session: "We're going go run the ball. That's what we do" -- ran it well enough.

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2013 Newsday. All rights reserved.

RealClearSports: Playoffs? Nah, Bowl Games Are Just Fine

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


PASADENA, Calif. — Playoffs? Not to sound like Jim Mora, so let’s paraphrase him. In college football, who needs playoffs?

We have bowl games. We have the BCS. We had an overload of overtime. An abundance of suspense. What else do we need?

You think LSU-Alabama will be any better than Oregon-Wisconsin...

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2012

Newsday (N.Y.): Oregon gets 1st Rose Bowl win since 1917

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


PASADENA, Calif. — Oregon's "Quack Attack'' offense of rapid-fire plays, so effective until the postseason, finally showed up in one of the wildest Rose Bowl games ever, one that broke scoring records and in the end broke Wisconsin's heart.

The Ducks had the ball 11 minutes less than the Badgers, but if they trailed in time of possession they didn't on the scoreboard, opening 2012 with a 45-38 win Monday night in the 98th version of what has been nicknamed "The Granddaddy of them All.''

Read the full story here.

Copyright © 2012 Newsday. All rights reserved.

Newsday (N.Y.): Dalton, defense secure TCU's 13-0 season

By Art Spander
Special to Newsday


PASADENA, Calif. -- Gary Patterson goes home now, goes back to Texas, atop  his figurative mountain, if not atop college football. He goes home knowing that his team, Texas Christian University, will be one of the last two unbeatens and believing it proved a point by keeping high-scoring Wisconsin from getting its usual share of points.

On the first afternoon of 2011, TCU -- outweighed but certainly not outplayed -- defeated Wisconsin, 21-19, in the Rose Bowl yesterday, showing that even though it isn't from a BCS conference (the Mountain West), it deserved to be in  a BCS game.

"This is the climax of 10 years,'' said Patterson, who coached the Horned  Frogs to a 13-0 record. "I've been telling people the last eight years there is parity in college football. I think 10 teams can claim the national championship.

"I'm looking forward to watching the national championship game, because I don't have to sweat, don't have to call a defense.''

That game will be played Jan. 10 in Glendale, Ariz., between unbeaten Oregon and unbeaten Auburn.

After TCU outmaneuvered Wisconsin (11-2) on both offense and defense, the suggestion was made to Patterson that maybe the Horned Frogs should have been involved.

"I'm going to have the opportunity to watch those two teams and see how mine compares,'' Patterson said. "I think we're better. My vote doesn't count.''

Wisconsin was one of the five Big Ten teams to  lose a bowl game on New Year's Day.

The Badgers had the ball for 13 minutes, 10 seconds longer than TCU. They had 385 yards total offense to 301 for TCU, and the Horned Frogs ran for only 82 yards, 28 of those by quarterback Andy Dalton,  who was named offensive player of the game.

TCU linebacker Tank  Carder deservedly got the defensive honor. After Wisconsin scored with two  minutes remaining, Carder slapped away Scott  Tolzien's potential tying two-point conversion pass.

"I was in the right place at the right time,'' Carder said.

After TCU grabbed the subsequent onside kick attempt, Wisconsin's time was  all but done, setting off a celebration among the purple-clad Horned Frogs fans who comprised more than a third of the 94,118 spectators.

When asked about the "Cinderella aspect'' of TCU, which has lost only three games in three years, Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema insisted, "I don't think they're a Cinderella story, because they proved it.''

TCU and Wisconsin, each averaging 43 points, each was held to its lowest  total of the season. But the first quarter was the highest-scoring in Rose Bowl
history, with TCU going ahead 14-10.

After that, the Wisconsin offensive line, averaging about 320 pounds, went nowhere against TCU's 4-2-5 scatter defense, particularly on third downs.

Dalton, who went 15-for-23 for 219 yards and one touchdown, was not sacked.  He was sacked only seven times all season.

"If we were going to win,'' Patterson said, "we were going to have to play a ballgame where we didn't do much to hurt ourselves.''

TCU didn't have a turnover. But neither did Wisconsin.

"I knew how important this game was to Andy [Dalton], because he was very  hard on himself after [losing] the Fiesta Bowl a year ago to Boise State,'' Patterson said.  "Now he's won 44 ballgames. He's the winningest active quarterback in college  football.''

And now TCU is no worse than the second-best team.

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http://www.newsday.com/sports/college/college-football/dalton-defense-secure-tcu-s-13-0-season-1.2581393
Copyright © 2011 Newsday. All rights reserved.

RealClearSports: Tradition No Longer Matters at Rose Bowl

By Art Spander
For RealClearSports.com


PASADENA, Calif. -- Hey, Gramps. Or maybe you would prefer Granddaddy, because that's the way you're always referred to in Rose Bowl literature, as "the Granddaddy of Them All."

Love you -- I'd have to, or I wouldn't have dropped by 57 straight times, planning to make it 58 Friday -- but you're becoming virtually unrecognizable.

Read the full story here.

© RealClearSports 2010