(14) Ohio State 20, (18) Wisconsin 17

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#14OSU (5-1)7031020
#18WIS (3-2)0100717

Final

8:00 PM ET, October 4, 2008
Camp Randall Stadium
MADISON, WI

Familiar foes with similar expectations meet with something to prove

Top 25 Overview
MADISON, WI - 8:00 PM ET
Before the season started, this one was circled as a top-10 clash with BCS implications. Now Ohio State and Wisconsin are both once-beatens trying to get back on track. OSU hasn't paid a visit to Madison since 2003, a 17-10 loss for the then-No. 3 Buckeyes that snapped their 19-game winning streak. The Badgers have won 27 of their past 28 games at Camp Randall.
Complete Top 25 Overview
Scouts Preview
Wisconsin simply does not have a versatile enough offense to take down Ohio State, even in Madison.
Complete Scouts Inc. Preview
Matchup
 W-LPFPAHOMEROADDIVCONF
OSU5-1154974-01-12-02-0
WIS3-2144882-11-10-20-2
· Complete Standings
Record When Scoring... (Since 2001)
 20 OR MORE30 OR MORE40 OR MORE50 OR MORE
OSU68-8-042-0-016-0-04-0-0
WIS52-16-036-6-017-1-05-0-0
 LESS THAN 20LESS THAN 30LESS THAN 40LESS THAN 50
OSU9-9-035-17-061-17-073-17-0
WIS11-15-027-25-046-30-058-31-0
TEAM AVERAGES & NCAA RANKS
OFFENSETMPER GAME AVERAGE / NCAA RANK
Total YardsOSU
 
379.0 / 32nd
WIS
 
333.0 / 43rd
Passing YardsOSU
 
202.0 / 48th
WIS
 
149.0 / 62nd
Rushing YardsOSU
 
203.0 / 16th
WIS
 
201.0 / 17th
Points ScoredOSU
 
21.0 / 52nd
WIS
 
13.0 / 43rd
Full Team Stats: Ohio State | Wisconsin
Individual Leaders
Ohio State Passing
 CMP%YDSTDINT
Pryor56.620941811
Bauser...31.612400
Wisconsin Passing
 CMP%YDSTDINT
Tolzie...64.327051611
Philli...58.36501
Ohio State Rushing
 CARYDSAVGTD
Pryor1627794.87
Saine1457395.14
Wisconsin Rushing
 CARYDSAVGTD
Clay28715175.318
Ball983914.04
Ohio State Receiving
 RECYDSAVGTD
Posey6082813.88
Sanzen...3657015.86
Wisconsin Receiving
 RECYDSAVGTD
Toon5480514.94
Graham5162412.27
Full Player Stats: Ohio State | Wisconsin
STATS LLC

Ohio State hasn't been to Madison in nearly five years, but a nationally televised road game at night in front a sea of hostile fans clad in red shouldn't be anything new to the Buckeyes. They're just hoping for a much different result.

Looking to put its mid-September loss at Southern California in the rear view mirror, 14th-ranked Ohio State returns to the road Saturday night against No. 18 Wisconsin, which is also looking to erase the bitter memory of a road defeat.

The Buckeyes (4-1, 1-0 Big Ten) expected to contend for the national championship behind a veteran defensive unit and a balanced offense, but their first major test of the season -- like many of their high-profile non-conference games in recent years -- was a major disappointment. Ohio State was blown out 35-3 in Los Angeles against the then-top ranked Trojans on Sept. 13, severely damaging its hopes for a third consecutive trip to the BCS championship game in January.

The Badgers (3-1, 0-1) had similar goals, especially after their non-conference trip to California went far better than Ohio State's. Wisconsin beat then-No. 21 Fresno State 13-10 the same night the Buckeyes were trounced by USC, but their Big Ten road opener last Saturday ended in devastating fashion.

After the Badgers forced five turnovers while racing to a 19-0 halftime lead in Ann Arbor, they fell apart in the second half, giving up four touchdowns in just over 12 minutes and losing 27-25 to Michigan.

"All losses are deflating and when you have high expectations and lofty goals, those things are always going to have a hard-hitting effect on your program," Wisconsin coach Bret Bielema said. "The one thing I want (my players) to understand is that they're a good football team that didn't play well enough today to overcome several blown opportunities."

Ohio State responded to its loss by making a major personnel change. The Buckeyes split snaps between senior quarterback Todd Boeckman and highly touted freshman Terrelle Pryor at USC, but the more mobile Pryor has since taken over the starting role.

He's looked poised in his first two games running the offense, throwing for four touchdowns in a 28-10 win over Troy on Sept. 20, then throwing one and running for 97 yards and two more scores last Saturday in a 34-21 victory over Minnesota.

Against the Gophers, Pryor was aided by the return of running back Chris "Beanie" Wells, who had missed three games with a foot injury. Wells gained 106 yards on 14 carries, giving the Buckeyes a pair of gifted runners to challenge opposing defenses.

"We can provide a spark for the offense," Wells said. "It's great to have a quarterback like that. Our backfield creates a lot of space for offensive success."

Wells was the difference maker last season when Wisconsin played in Columbus. He ran 21 times for 169 yards and scored three second-half touchdowns, rallying top-ranked Ohio State from a seven-point deficit to a 38-17 victory.

Wells hasn't visited Camp Randall Stadium during his three years as a Buckeye, and none of his teammates have either. Ohio State hasn't paid a visit to Madison since a night game on Oct. 11, 2003, a 17-10 loss for the then-No. 3 Buckeyes that snapped their 19-game winning streak.

"This will be really our first big, big test since USC and it's going to be a hostile environment and it's going to be an environment that none of us have ever been in," cornerback Malcolm Jenkins said. "We'll see how we handle it and see how well we play under that pressure."

There may be even more pressure on a Badgers team looking to avoid its first 0-2 conference start since 2002. Wisconsin began Big Ten play 0-3 that season on its way to a 2-6 conference finish.

With No. 6 Penn State visiting Madison next week, the Badgers know they have to move on from the Michigan loss or risk falling out of the Big Ten title hunt altogether.

"We can't let this loss lead to another," linebacker DeAndre Levy said. "We have to forget this game and move onto the next one just like we do every week."

Wisconsin will likely need a better performance from quarterback Allan Evridge to beat the Buckeyes. The senior threw two interceptions and lost two fumbles against the Wolverines, and now will face an Ohio State unit that ranks 12th in the country in total defense (251.8 yards per game).

The Badgers have won 27 of their last 28 games at Camp Randall, including 16 straight since a loss to Iowa on Nov. 12, 2005.

College Football Scores

Other Scores:

Wednesday, October 1st
Louisiana Tech 3 Final
17 Boise State 38
Thursday, October 2nd
Pittsburgh 26 Final
10 South Florida 21
Oregon State 28 Final
15 Utah 31
Friday, October 3rd
8 Brigham Young 34 Final
Utah State 14
Saturday, October 4th
1 Oklahoma 49 Final
Baylor 17
Kentucky 14 Final
2 Alabama 17
4 Missouri 52 Final
Nebraska 17
5 Texas 38 Final
Colorado 14
6 Penn State 20 Final
Purdue 6
7 Texas Tech 58 Final
Kansas State 28
23 Oregon 10 Final
9 USC 44
12 Florida 38 Final
Arkansas 7
13 Auburn 13 Final
19 Vanderbilt 14
14 Ohio State 20 Final
18 Wisconsin 17
16 Kansas 35 Final
Iowa State 33
Western Kentucky 13 Final
20 Virginia Tech 27
Texas A&M 28 Final
21 Oklahoma State 56
Hawaii 32 Final
22 Fresno State 29 OT
24 Connecticut 12 Final
North Carolina 38