Published November 08, 2009 12:31 am - No. 24 Wisconsin relied on pure power, and it worked perfectly against Indiana yet again.
No. 24 Wisconsin holds off Indiana rally 31-28
By Michael Marot, The Associated Press
BLOOMINGTON
—
No. 24 Wisconsin relied on pure power, and it worked perfectly against Indiana yet again.
John Clay ran for 134 yards and a touchdown, Montee Ball scored two TDs and the Badgers even ran out the clock on the Hoosiers' late rally, holding on for a 31-28 victory Saturday.
"That's Wisconsin football," Ball said. "Run the football and just beat your opponents up and that's what we did."
It seemed about that simple, though Wisconsin's overpowering performance should have been no surprise to the Hoosiers (4-6, 1-5 Big Ten).
A year ago, the Badgers left Bloomington with three 100-yard runners and 441 yards on the ground. On Saturday, Clay and Ball both topped 100 yards and the team finished with 294 yards rushing. That gives Wisconsin (7-2, 4-2) 735 yards rushing in its last two games against Indiana and five straight wins in the series.
Clay did the damage in the first half, running 15 times and averaging nearly 9 yards per carry. He missed the entire second half, 27 yards short of becoming the conference's first 1,000-yard runner this season, because of a concussion.
That gave Ball a chance to be the workhorse, and the freshman thrived. He carried 27 times for 115 yards, scored the decisive touchdown on a 3-yard run with 8:18 to go and sealed the victory with 30 yards rushing on the final series.
Wisconsin quarterback Scott Tolzien was precise with his execution of the Badgers' run-first, pass-only-when-necessary — or when Indiana obviously stacked the line of scrimmage — strategy. Tolzien had one TD pass and finished 11 of 20 for 194 yards, including a key 17-yard pass to Nick Toon on third-and-8 with about 2½ minutes left. The play prevented Indiana from getting the ball back with a chance to tie or win the game.
"Our kids did enough to win, John Clay in the first half was a machine, and Montee Ball is kind of like the energizer bunny," coach Bret Bielema said. "Every time he got a rep, he just kept grinning and smiling and gaining momentum."
The loss was another big blow to Indiana's fading bowl hopes.
The Hoosiers have lost three conference games this season by a combined total of seven points and must win their final two games — at No. 11 Penn State and home against rival Purdue — to become bowl-eligible. They've lost three in a row and six of seven.
"We know what we've got to go do, we've just got to go do it," quarterback Ben Chappell said. "It's now or never, so we better buck up and do the little things and if not, we're not going to get where we want to be."
Wisconsin dominated the first half. It had 196 yards rushing and kept the ball for 42 of the final 59 plays.
Somehow, though, the Hoosiers were still within 24-14 at halftime — close enough to make a late charge.
When Terrance Turner caught a 6-yard TD pass for his first score that stood — he had a touchdown wiped out by replay last week at Iowa — the Hoosiers were within 24-21 with 12 minutes to go.