Badgers 2nd Half Comeback Secures Paul Bunyan’s Axe for 13th Straight Year

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Paul Bunyan’s Axe is certainly enjoying its time in Madison, as it decided to stay in the Badgers trophy case for the 13th straight season thanks to an opportunistic defense.

It was a tale of two halves for the No. 6 Wisconsin Badgers (10-2, 7-2 B1G), who struggled to do anything on offense and stop anything the Minnesota Gophers (8-4, 5-4 B1G) were doing heading in to the half.

UW’s defense played both the goat in the first half — allowing 226 yards and all 17 of Minnesota’s points — as well as the hero in the second half. Such is the case when you pick off Mitch Leidner four times and turn those four interceptions in to 14 points.

The Gophers senior quarterback finished his career just like he started it — by getting dominated by UW’s defense:


Leidner Vs. Wisconsin #Gophers pic.twitter.com/INXeEtRd8T

— Elijah Crawford (@El1jahCrawford) November 27, 2016


UW’s victory also evened the all-time series at 59-59-8. It also saved a potential spot in the College Football Playoff.

No pick was bigger than senior Sojourn Shelton’s pick early in the fourth quarter with the Badgers down 17-10. He returned Leidner’s pass to 40 yards and three plays later it was Corey Clement punching it in from two yards out.

Yet, things were far from over given the performance of UW’s defense up until that point. Wisconsin’s defense saw a potentially historic season literally slipping through its fingers, buckled down and took it to Leidner and company.

Minnesota’s great pass protection began to break down, as the team that gave up just nine sacks all season long gave up five sacks on the day to UW. Couple that with a clamp down on the run game and Wisconsin allowed minus-7 yards to the Gophers in the final stanza.

After allowing 113 yards on the ground to Minnesota in the first half, the Badger defense gave up just 13 total yards on the ground in the second half and 60 total yards to the visitors in the second stanza.

Sophomore linebacker T.J. Edwards racked up a game-high 11 tackles after looking like he was in danger of missing most of the game following getting rolled up on during the first play from scrimmage for the Gophers.

Junior linebacker T.J. Watt finished with six tackles, 1.5 sacks and a key quarterback hurry as well.

Somewhat lost in the defensive turnaround was the performance of senior quarterback Bart Houston. He came in to spark Wisconsin a bit in the first half, but he would be called on for far more than a few series in this game.

After Alex Hornibrook hit head-first on the turf following a roll-out late in the second quarter, Houston was called on to lead the offense the rest of the way.

He ended the game 9 of 14 for 193 yards and had the key 16-yard pass on the drive that tied the game at 17-17 with 11:58 to play in the game.

Senior running back Corey Clement got it going in the second half as well, topping the 100-yard mark for the seventh time this season. He finished the game with 100 yards and two touchdowns on 26 carries.

However, all of that almost meant nothing to the senior following a potentially game-changing fumble on the drive following his first touchdown of the day.

Instead, the defense stood up and forced a three-and-out and Wisconsin took the ball 83 yards in three plays with Clement redeeming himself with another two-yard touchdown rumble to make it 24-17 Wisconsin.

It was Wisconsin’s first lead of the game and they would never look back.

Now it is time to look forward, as the Badgers will meet No. 8 Penn State (10-2, 8-1 B1G) in the Big Ten Championship game on Saturday in Indianapolis, Ind.

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Glad Mitch Leidner remembered that he was Mitch Leidner, solid defense in the 2nd half. Nice way to close out the regular season.
 
Budman , in numerous posts has said UW would win B1G . Go ahead and crown me.
 
Yes you did Bud. I believed since they beat LSU, that this was a team that could rise higher than most people expected. The doubters, who made comments about LSU and Michigan State being overrated will of course stand by their statements, and even comment that Michigan and Ohio State were overrated, now that they're out of the Big 10 Championship. Of course, that doesn't matter. What does matter is the Badgers have made it this far.

For those who kept downplaying their accomplishments, week after week, and suggested they'd fold when the time came, these last three weeks are exactly what this whole season has been. A testament to a coach that believe in his assistants, and players, and players that feel the same way about the coaches. Sometimes, you just have to believe you can do anything, if given the chance. They kept finding ways of putting up some points, and stopping their opponents from moving the ball. It's been a season of good old fashioned in the trenches football, Wisconsin style. We've seen this since the days of Alan Ameche, going through people like they were bowling pins.

Now, whether you support the Badgers or want to believe they're overrated doesn't matter any longer. They've earned their spurs, and if they win their next game, they could actually be playing for the most valued prize in the entire nation of college football. Being part of the NCAA Division I playoffs is huge.

I'm going to enjoy the ride, knowing that this team would have been national champion by acclaim, if their offense was better. They would have been an unstoppable juggernaut.
 
You get the feeling that you don't hear too much like this in the Packers' locker room

Check out @BadgerFootball's Tweet:
 
I love the way the Badgers are built, how they go about their business, and how they have grown. This is a team of destiny.
 
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