Wisconsin Tops Michigan State, 42-39, in Inaugural Big Ten Football Championship Game
Badger QB Russell Wilson named Grange-Griffin Championship Game MVP
INDIANAPOLIS
(AP) - This time, Wisconsin got the stop it needed against Michigan
State - and a big break to wrap up its second straight Big Ten crown.
Montee
Ball scored four touchdowns, including a 7-yard score with 3:45 left in
Saturday night's first Big Ten championship game, giving the
15th-ranked Badgers a 42-39 come-from-behind victory over No. 11
Michigan State.
Wisconsin (11-2) now heads to the Rose Bowl where it will face Pac-12 champion Oregon on Jan. 2.
The
Badgers turned the tables on Michigan State (10-3), which won the first
meeting in October on a long, last-second deflected touchdown pass.
On
Saturday, it was the Badgers who scored late, forced a punt and managed
to run out the clock when the Isaiah Lewis was called for running into
the kicker, giving the Badgers a first down with 1:37 left in the game
and Michigan State out of timeouts.
Ball was spectacular early,
topping 100 yards in the first quarter, and efficient late, scoring
twice in the fourth quarter to rally the Badgers. His 38 TDs scored
this season are one short of Barry Sanders' FBS mark (39).
But
Russell Wilson was named the game's MVP after going 17 of 24 for 187
yards with three touchdowns and no interceptions. Wilson also broke an
NCAA record by throwing a TD pass on the Badgers' opening possession,
giving Wilson 37 consecutive games with a TD pass, one more than Graham
Harrell's previous mark at Texas Tech.
The loss ruined a pregame prediction by Michigan State coach Mark Dantonio that his team would win and earn the Rose Bowl bid.
It
wasn't for lack of trying. Dantonio's team ran a fourth-down pass play,
called a fake extra point and even got an impromptu lateral for a score
- just in the first half.
Kirk Cousins made most of it work.
Only one of his 17 first-half passes hit the ground in the first half,
and he wound up 22 of 30 for 281 yards, three touchdowns and one
interception.
But it was his ability to fool the normally stout Badgers' defense that nearly got the Spartans to Pasadena, Calif.
On
fourth-and-1 in the second quarter, he got Wisconsin to bite on a fake
pitch and hooked up with a wide open B.J. Cunningham for a 30-yard TD
pass to cut the deficit to 21-14.
On its next possession,
Michigan State receiver Keith Nichol, who wrestled the Hail Mary pass
across the goal line to beat Wisconsin in October, beat the Badgers
again. This time, he caught a short pass from Cousins and just before
stepping out of bounds lateraled to Cunningham, who ran the final 4
yards for a TD. Michigan State then called for a fake extra point that
Brad Sontag ran in to make it 22-21.
Not enough?
After
playing conventional football for most of the next two quarters and
still leading 36-34, the Spartans lined up two different players in the
Wildcat formation, ran a reverse and drove for a 25-yard field goal to
make it 39-34 with 8:31 left in the game.
But just like the first meeting, the Badgers answered.
Wilson
led Wisconsin on an eight-play, 64-yard scoring march, converting a
fourth-and-6 when Wilson scrambled, threw back across the field and
Jeff Duckworth made a spectacular adjustment to haul in a 36-yard pass.
On the next play, Ball burst up the middle for a 7-yard TD, his fourth
score of the night Wilson scrambled again on the conversion, finding
Jacob Pedersen to give Wisconsin a 42-39 lead.
Keshawn Martin had a career high nine receptions for 115 yards, the second 100-yard game of his career.
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