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2007 Wisconsin Badgers football team
American college football season
American college football season
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| year | 2007 |
| team | Wisconsin Badgers |
| sport | football |
| image | Wisconsin Badgers logo.svg |
| image_size | 125 |
| conference | Big Ten Conference |
| short_conf | Big Ten |
| CoachRank | 21 |
| APRank | 24 |
| record | 9–4 |
| conf_record | 5–3 |
| head_coach | Bret Bielema |
| hc_year | 2nd |
| off_coach | Paul Chryst |
| oc_year | 3rd |
| off_scheme | Pro-style |
| def_coach | Mike Hankwitz |
| dc_year | 2nd |
| def_scheme | [4–3](4-3-defense) |
| mvp | Tyler Donovan |
| mvp2 | Matt Shaughnessy |
| captain | Jonathan Casillas |
| captain2 | Andy Crooks |
| captain3 | Ken DeBauche |
| captain4 | Ben Strickland |
| captain5 | Luke Swan |
| captain6 | 6th captain named each game |
| stadium | Camp Randall Stadium |
| bowl | [Outback Bowl](2008-outback-bowl) |
| bowl_result | L 17–21 vs. [Tennessee](2007-tennessee-volunteers-football-team) |
The 2007 Wisconsin Badgers football team was an American football team that represented the University of Wisconsin–Madison as a member of the Big Ten Conference during the 2007 NCAA Division I FBS football season. In their second year under head coach Bret Bielema, the Badgers compiled a 9–4 record (5–3 in conference games), finished in fourth place in the Big Ten, and outscored opponents by a total of 383 to 301. Against ranked opponents, the Badgers lost to No. 1 Ohio State and defeated No. 13 Michigan. They concluded the season with a 21–17 loss to No. 16 Tennessee in the Outback Bowl. They were ranked No. 24 and No. 21, respectively, in the final AP and Coaches polls.
The team's statistical leaders included running back P. J. Hill (1,212 rushing yards, 15 touchdowns), quarterback Tyler Donovan (2,607 passing yards, 133.96 passer rating), tight end Travis Beckum (75 receptions for 982 yards), kicker Taylor Mehlhaff (105 points scored), and linebacker Jonathan Casillas (57 solo tackles, 96 total tackles).
The team played its home games at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wisconsin.
Schedule
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Game summaries
Washington State
UNLV
The Citadel
Iowa
Michigan State
Illinois
Wisconsin's dreams of an undefeated season were snapped in Champaign-Urbana, as the Illini stunned the 5th ranked Badgers 31–25. A poor showing by the Badgers, combined with excellent efforts across the board for the Illini, sunk the Badgers, who fell to 2–1 in the Big Ten and 5–1 overall despite an incredible effort by QB Tyler Donovan, who completed 27 passes on 49 attempts for 392 yards and 2 TDs. Illinois's defense sacked Donovan twice and forced a pair of INTs (one by Vontae Davis, the other by Kevin Mitchell). Illinois RB Rashard Mendenhall ran wild on the Badgers for 160 yards and 2 TDs on just 19 carries, and QB Juice Williams dissected Wisconsin through the air and on the ground. Williams completed 12 passes on 19 attempts for 121 yards, and ran for 92 yards on 14 carries.
Penn State
Wisconsin RB P.J. Hill fumbled on his very first carry of the game, and Wisconsin simply collapsed in Happy Valley, losing 38–7 to Penn State. Wisconsin QB Tyler Donovan had a bad game, as he threw 2 INTs, was sacked 5 times, and averaged just 1.1 YPC on 11 carries. The Wisconsin defense, put in often impossible situations by the ineptitude of their offense (Wisconsin turned the ball over 3 times and committed 8 penalties), caved under pressure from Penn State. Wisconsin P Ken Debauche punted 6 times on the day.
Penn State RB Rodney Kinlaw ran for 115 yards and a touchdown on 23 carries, and WR Deon Butler caught 7 passes for 93 yards and the only passing touchdown of the day by either team. However, the leading receiver of the game was Wisconsin WR Kyle Jefferson, who caught 6 passes for 124 yards.
Northern Illinois
Indiana
Ohio State
At one point in the game, Wisconsin led Ohio State 17–10, but a big 4th quarter from the Buckeyes offense and defense secured an eventual Ohio State victory. The game snapped a 2-game winning streak by the Badgers over Ohio State (from the 2003 and 2004 seasons) and improved Jim Tressel's record to 2–3 against Wisconsin.
Michigan
Wisconsin pounded Lloyd Carr's Michigan team 37–21 for their second consecutive home win over the Wolverines, and Bret Bielema's second win over a ranked opponent (his first was against Michigan State). Carr benched both QB Chad Henne and RB Mike Hart so they would both be healthy against Ohio State next week.
Wisconsin rattled off 17 unanswered points to open the game; starting with a Travis Beckum touchdown reception off a 10-yard pass from Tyler Donovan, a Taylor Mehlhaff field goal, and a 2-yard TD run by Donovan. Michigan answered with a 12-yard touchdown pass from Ryan Mallett to WR Mario Manningham for their only score of the first half. Wisconsin got another Mehlhaff FG with 0:15 remaining in the half and led 20–7 at halftime.
Both teams had a sluggish third quarter; the only points scored by either team came on a 19-yard FG by Taylor Mehlhaff for Wisconsin. However, Wisconsin and Michigan scored a pair of touchdowns apiece in the 4th quarter; Michigan getting a record setting 97-yard touchdown reception by Mario Manningham and a 26-yard TD pass from Mallett to WR Adrian Arrington and Wisconsin answering with a pair of touchdown runs by RB Zach Brown.
Wisconsin's starting RB P.J. Hill managed a grand total of 14 yards on 5 carries. Zach Brown, his backup, ran for 108 yards on 28 carries with a pair of TDs. Wisconsin WR Paul Hubbard made 7 receptions for 134 yards, and TE Travis Beckum caught 6 passes for 106 yards with a touchdown reception.
The Badgers improved to 8–3 on the year, and face 1-10 Minnesota next week in Minneapolis. With a win over Ohio State next week, Michigan could win the Big Ten outright.
Minnesota
Tennessee
Personnel
Roster
- Paul Chryst – Offensive coordinator/quarterbacks
- Mike Hankwitz – Defensive coordinator
- Dave Doeren – Co-defensive coordinator/inside linebackers/recruiting coordinator
- Del Alexander – Wide receivers
- Bob Bostad – Tight ends/run game coordinator
- Kerry Cooks – Defensive backs
- Henry Mason – Associate head coach/wide receivers/assistant recruiting coordinator
- Randall McCray – Defensive line
- Bob Palcic – Offensive line
- John Settle – Running backs
Regular starters
| Position | Player |
|---|---|
| Quarterback | Tyler Donovan |
| Running back | P. J. Hill |
| Fullback | Chris Pressley |
| Wide receiver | Luke Swan |
| Wide receiver | Paul Hubbard |
| Tight end | Travis Beckum |
| Left tackle | Gabe Carimi |
| Left guard | Andy Kemp |
| Center | Marcus Coleman |
| Right guard | Kraig Urbik |
| Right tackle | Eric Vanden Heuvel |
| Position | Player |
|---|---|
| Defensive end | Mike Newkirk |
| Defensive tackle | Jason Chapman |
| Defensive tackle | Nick Hayden |
| Defensive end | Matt Shaughnessy |
| Outside linebacker | DeAndre Levy |
| Middle linebacker | Elijah Hodge |
| Outside linebacker | Jonathan Casillas |
| Cornerback | Allen Langford |
| Strong safety | Aubrey Pleasant |
| Free safety | Shane Carter |
| Cornerback | Jack Ikegwuonu |
Team players selected in the 2008 NFL draft
References
References
- "2007 Football Cumulative Statistics". University of Wisconsin.
- "2007 Wisconsin Badgers Schedule and Results". Sports Reference LLC.
- (September 16, 2007). "A high-five effort". Green Bay Press-Gazette.
- "Game-by-Game Statistics". University of Wisconsin-Madison.
- "2008 NFL Draft Listing - Pro-Football-Reference.com".
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