1980 Wisconsin Badgers football team

1980 Wisconsin Badgers football
Conference Big Ten Conference
1980 record 47 (35 Big Ten)
Head coach Dave McClain (3rd year)
Defensive coordinator Jim Hilles (3rd year)
Home stadium Camp Randall Stadium
1980 Big Ten football standings
Conf     Overall
Team W   L   T     W   L   T
#4 Michigan $ 8 0 0     10 2 0
#15 Ohio State 7 1 0     9 3 0
#17 Purdue 7 1 0     9 3 0
Iowa 4 4 0     4 7 0
Minnesota 4 5 0     5 6 0
Indiana 3 5 0     6 5 0
Wisconsin 3 5 0     4 7 0
Illinois 3 5 0     3 7 1
Michigan State 2 6 0     3 8 0
Northwestern 0 9 0     0 11 0
  • $ Conference champion
Rankings from AP Poll

The 1980 Wisconsin Badgers football team was an American football team that represented the University of Wisconsin–Madison in the 1980 Big Ten Conference football season. In their third season under head coach Dave McClain, the Badgers finished in a tie for sixth place in the Big Ten Conference (Big Ten), compiled a 4–7 record (3–5 against Big Ten opponents), and were outscored by their opponents by a combined total of 211 to 138.[1] The team played its home games in Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wisconsin.

The team's statistical leaders included John Josten with 622 passing yards, John Williams with 526 rushing yards, Tim Stracka with 462 receiving yards, and Jess Cole with 30 points.[2] Tim Stracka also ranked sixth in the Big Ten with 16.5 yards per reception.[3]

Schedule

Date Opponent# Rank# Site Result Attendance
September 13 No. 20 Purdue Camp Randall StadiumMadison, WI L 612   77,280
September 20 BYU* Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI L 328   71,496
September 27 at No. 16 UCLA* Los Angeles Memorial ColiseumLos Angeles, CA L 035   40,018
October 4 San Diego State*dagger Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI W 3512   76,340
October 11 at Indiana Memorial StadiumBloomington, IN L 024   51,029
October 18 at Michigan State Spartan StadiumEast Lansing, MI W 177   76,173
October 25 No. 10 Ohio State Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI L 021   79,523
November 1 at Iowa Kinnick StadiumIowa City, IA L 1322   59,995
November 8 No. 12 Michigan Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI L 024   69,560
November 15 at Northwestern Dyche StadiumEvanston, IL W 3919   17,372
November 22 Minnesota Camp Randall Stadium • Madison, WI (Paul Bunyan's Axe) W 257   54,229
*Non-conference game. daggerHomecoming. #Rankings from AP Poll.

[1]

Game summaries

Purdue

On September 13, Wisconsin opened its season with a 12–6 loss to #20 Purdue. Mark Hermann of Purdue passed for 347 yards, including 200 yards to wide receiver Bart Burrell, but the Boilermakers were unable to score a touchdown, settling for four field goals.[4]

BYU

On September 20, Wisconsin lost to BYU, 28–3, in Madison. BYU's Jim McMahon, winner of the 1981 Davey O'Brien Award and Sammy Baugh Trophy, passed for 337 yards and three touchdowns and ran for a fourth touchdown.[5]

at UCLA

On September 27, Wisconsin lost to UCLA (AP No. 16), 35–7, at the Rose Bowl in Pasadena. UCLA's freshman running back Kevin Nelson rushed for 123 yards and a touchdown on 20 carries and also caught three passes for 36 yards. John Williams rushed for 101 yards for Wisconsin, but the Badgers were unable to score.[6]

San Diego State

On October 4, Wisconsin defeated San Diego State, 35–12, in Madison. After failing to score a touchdown in its first three games, Wisconsin took a 21–0 lead over San Diego State in the second quarter. Defensive end Dave Ahrens had three sacks, and the Aztecs were held to minus four net rushing yards.[7]

at Indiana

On October 11, Indiana defeated Wisconsin, 24–0, in front of a homecoming crowd of 51,029 at Memorial Stadium in Bloomington. Indiana's defense held Wisconsin to 204 yards of total offense (only 65 in the second half) and had seven tackles for loss. Quarterback Tim Clifford completed 17 of 25 passes for 186 yards and two touchdowns.[8]

at Michigan State

On October 18, Wisconsin defeated Michigan State, 17–7, at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing. Wisconsin fullback Dave Mohapp rushed for 138 yards and scored a touchdown. Wisconsin's second touchdown followed a fumbled punt that was recovered in the end zone by Mark Subach.[9]

Ohio State

On October 25, Wisconsin lost to #10 Ohio State, 21–0, in Madison. Wisconsin's defense held Art Schlichter to 89 passing yards, but Ohio State scored touchdowns after two Wisconsin fumbles and an interception. After the game, Wisconsin coach Dave McClain said, "You can't make that many mistakes. I've never been so frustrated with the mistakes."[10]

at Iowa

On November 1, Wisconsin lost to Iowa, 22–13, in Iowa City. In his first game as Iowa's starting quarterback, Pete Gales completed nine of 22 passes for 161 yards and rushed for 41 yards. One of Gales' completions was good for 54 yards and a touchdown to Keith Chappelle. Iowa scored another touchdown when Iowa linebacker Andre Tippett forced a fumble by Wisconsin quarterback John Josten, and Mark Bortz recovered the ball in the end zone.[11]

Michigan

On November 8, Wisconsin lost to #8 Michigan, 24–0, in Madison. Michigan struggled early, failing to earn a first down on its first six possessions. Anthony Carter caught a touchdown pass just before halftime to set a Michigan school record for touchdown receptions in a single season. As Michigan drove deep into Wisconsin territory, noise from the Wisconsin student section made it difficult for Michigan to call its signals. When fans refused to reduce the noise, the officials struck all three Wisconsin timeouts and then assessed two delay of game penalties, giving Michigan a firt down at the one-yard line. Butch Woolfolk then scored on a one-yard run[12]

at Northwestern

On November 15, Wisconsin defeated Northwestern, 39–19, in Evanston. Northwestern's Mike Kerrigan passed for 237 yards in the loss.[13] The Wildcats finished the season 0–11 and in the midst of a 34-game losing streak that began on September 22, 1979, and ended on September 25, 1982

Minnesota

On November 22, in the annual battle for Paul Bunyan' Axe, Wisconsin defeated Minnesota, 25–7, at Camp Randall Stadium in Madison. Wisconsin quarterback, Jess Cole, in his second start, scored four touchdowns.[14]

Team players in the 1981 NFL Draft

Player Position Round Pick NFL Club
Dave Ahrens Linebacker 6 143 St. Louis Cardinals

[15]

References

  1. 1 2 "1980 Wisconsin Badges Schedule and Results". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 5, 2016.
  2. "1980 Wisconsin Badgers Stats". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 8, 2016.
  3. "1980 Big Ten Conference Year Summary". SR/College Football. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
  4. "Purdue Gets Its Kicks From Rick". The Indianapolis Star. September 14, 1980. p. 4-1.
  5. "Brigham Young bombs bury Badgers". Green Bay Press-Gazette. September 21, 1980. p. D1.
  6. "Bruins roll over scoreless Badgers". Green Bay Press-Gazette. September 28, 1980. p. D1.
  7. "Badgers find end zone, rout Aztecs". Green Bay Press-Gazette. October 5, 1980. p. D1.
  8. Bill Benner (October 12, 1980). "IU Strols". The Indianapolis Star. pp. D1, D12.
  9. "Badgers, Mohapp down Spartans". Green Bay Press-Gazette. October 19, 1980. pp. D1–D2.
  10. "Game Badgers finally self-destruct". Green Bay Post-Gazette. October 26, 1980. pp. D1–D2.
  11. "New quarterback leads Iowa over Badgers". Green Bay Press-Gazette. November 2, 1980. p. D1.
  12. Charlie Vincent. "Wolverines win, 24–0; now it's title time". Detroit Free Press. pp. 1G, 11G.
  13. "Northwestern cures ailing UW offense". Green Bay Press-Gazette. November 16, 1980. p. D1.
  14. "Wisconsin 25, Minnesota 7". St. Louis Post-Dispatch. November 23, 1980. p. 5H.
  15. "1981 NFL Draft: Full Draft". NFL.com. National Football League. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
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