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UW Report Card

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by Kevin Hagstrom
Monday, November 12, 2007

Game ball goes to: Tyler Donovan, QB, Wisconsin

In his final game before the Camp Randall faithful, senior quarterback Tyler Donovan was simply dazzling. He completed 14 of 27 passes for 245 yards and a touchdown and added a season-best 49 yards and a score on the ground.

His ability to create on the run helped keep the aggressive Michigan defense on its heels. It also allowed Wisconsin to build a 17-0 lead before the feisty Wolverines could get going.

In spite of taking a brutal hit to his throwing hand when it collided with Obi Ezeh's helmet on a follow-through, Donovan said he could have gone another four quarters if the situation required.

 

Overall: A

All facets of the game contributed mightily to Wisconsin's decisive 37-21 victory over Michigan.

The Badgers had their way on offense, amassing 477 total yards and 237 on the ground despite the absence, minus a few snaps, of P.J. Hill. They also controlled the ball for nearly two-thirds of the game.

Defensively, Wisconsin forced more than three turnovers; it induced Michigan quarterback Ryan Mallett to throw off-balance and off the mark 25 times.

On special teams Taylor Mehlhaff made all three of his field goal tries. Between Mehlhaff and punter Ken DeBauche, Michigan was pinned at or inside its own 20-yard line 11 times.

 

Offense: A

It's hard to go wrong here when just about everything went right. Tyler Donovan had his best performance of the season (turnover free), as did receiver Paul Hubbard and running back Zach Brown.

Donovan avoided would-be sacks with elusive spins and fleet feet and also added a dimension not yet seen this season to his game: He passed on the run.

Hubbard finished with 134 yards on seven receptions, including some key third-down receptions to keep the chains moving, while Brown capped a career day rushing (108 yards) with two touchdowns to put the game away.

 

Defense: A-

Staked to a 17-point lead and not having to face Mike Hart, the Wisconsin defense shut down Michigan's rushing attack and forced freshman Ryan Mallett to try to win the game with his arm.

Mallett finished 11-of-36 with two interceptions largely because of the pressure the Badgers front four was putting on him and the coverage by the secondary.

The only real chinks in the armor were a 97-yard touchdown pass from Mallett to Mario Manningham when Shane Carter got caught biting a bit too hard and a 26-yard score to Adrian Arrington.

Other than those plays, Wisconsin kept Michigan in front of it and stuffed the Wolverines repeatedly.

 

Special Teams: A-

Given that Wisconsin did essentially nothing wrong on special teams (aside from a fumble when the ball hit off Josh Nettles' shoulder, who was back in coverage of a punt), it makes the grade.

Senior kicker Taylor Mehlhaff picked up four more touchbacks in his final home game and Ken DeBauche averaged 45 yards per punt to help set up Michigan inside its own 20-yard line four times.

The return game, although not spectacular, did a decent job in that there were no fumbles or penalties. David Gilreath averaged 25.3 yards per return and fullback Bill Rentmeester even brought one back 24 yards.

 

Up Next: Minnesota Gophers (1-10, 0-7 Big Ten)

Arguably the worst team in major division college football, and certainly the worst at defense, the Minnesota Gophers meet Wisconsin for the 117th time in the Battle of the Axe.

Last weekend the Gophers played tight with the Hawkeyes, losing 21-16. But redshirt freshman quarterback Adam Weber threw another interception. He now leads the Big Ten with 17 this season.

Facing an improved offense in Wisconsin, Minnesota's seniors could very well be in for a game and season to forget.

Anonymous (November 12, 2007 @ 7:34am):

Beat UM's second team offense. These grades should be "incomplete". A win's a win, but to grade the defense is disingenuous.

frank rojas (November 12, 2007 @ 10:54am):

If UM can't provide good backup players, they are not a good team. UW had backups playing at several key positions too including running back, O and D-line, and end. We whipped them.

Anonymous (November 12, 2007 @ 11:13am):

not sure I'd give the defense an A-...

Anonymous (November 12, 2007 @ 12:08pm):

Defense was satisfactory given the state of UM offense. they did just enough. I'd give them a B-. All in all, UM stil plays for B10 title this year and UW does not so what does that say?

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