And yet, Wisconsin somehow beat Iowa 62-59 in overtime Wednesday night at Carver-Hawkeye Arena.
You often hear basketball players complain about shots not falling when in reality the real problem is defense, turnovers or hustle. But for this Badger team, it might really be as simple as making shots.
Wisconsin leads the country in fewest turnovers (7.8 per game) and is second in scoring defense (56.3 points per game). UW turned the ball over only eight times Wednesday night and allowed just 59 points despite playing overtime, both right around its averages. And if it wasn't for 16 offensive rebounds, the Badgers would have been blown out by the Hawkeyes in the first half Wednesday, so hustle certainly wasn't the problem either.
But making just 6-of-33 first half shots certainly was the problem. And the Badgers needed every bit of their 51.7 percent second half shooting just to force overtime.
Jordan Taylor's three with 29 seconds left tied the game at 53 and forced the extra frame.
Shooting on the road continues to be a problem for Wisconsin, especially in Big Ten play. Other than the 55 percent outburst at Northwestern last month, the Badgers have now shot 42 percent or worse in four of five conference road games and three of those games have been below 38 percent.
In comparison, the Badgers are shooting 48 percent at home this season. And to really put it in perspective, consider that Wisconsin just got done blitzing Michigan State 82-56 at home Sunday by shooting 59 percent from the field. To follow that up with an 18 percent first half performance in Iowa City is just bizarre.
And that's the core of the problem. Forget the overall percentages, it's the inconsistency on the road that is startling. A similar poor shooting half at Penn State cost UW a 14-point lead and resulted in a loss.
Still, Wisconsin sits at 18-5 overall and 8-3 in the Big Ten for the second straight season and came into Wednesday night's game averaging 6.3 more points per game than last year's team. That, coupled with UW's phenomenal defensive, turnover and free throw statistics, point to a lot of optimism with this squad.
Tonight's win at Iowa was by no means pretty, but the Badgers got big shots from key players in crunch time and gutted out a win away from the Kohl Center. That's more than they can say about their trips to Illinois, Michigan State and Penn State.
This was the type of win that can pay dividends come March.


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