American college football season
1998 Wisconsin Badgers football Conference Big Ten Conference Coaches No. 5 AP No. 6 1998 record 11–1 (7–1 Big Ten) Head coach Barry Alvarez (9th season)Offensive coordinator Brad Childress (8th season)Defensive coordinator Kevin Cosgrove (4th season) Home stadium Camp Randall Stadium (Capacity: 76,129, Astroturf)Seasons
1998 Big Ten Conference football standings
Conf
Overall
Team
W
L
W
L
No. 2 Ohio State %+
7
–
1
11
–
1
No. 6 Wisconsin $+
7
–
1
11
–
1
No. 12 Michigan +
7
–
1
10
–
3
No. 24 Purdue
6
–
2
9
–
4
No. 17 Penn State
5
–
3
9
–
3
Michigan State
4
–
4
6
–
6
Minnesota
2
–
6
5
–
6
Indiana
2
–
6
4
–
7
Illinois
2
–
6
3
–
8
Iowa
2
–
6
3
–
8
Northwestern
0
–
8
3
–
9
$ – BCS representative as conference champion % – BCS at-large representative + – Conference co-champions Rankings from AP Poll
The 1998 Wisconsin Badgers football team represented the University of Wisconsin during the 1998 NCAA Division I-A football season .
Wisconsin finished the regular season 10–1 overall (7–1 conference) and were co-champions of the Big Ten Conference (with Ohio State and Michigan ) for the first time since 1993 . They were awarded the berth in the 1999 Rose Bowl due to Big Ten Conference tie-breaking rules, at the time, which gave the Rose Bowl invitation to the tied team which had gone the longest period of time without an invitation: Michigan had been in the 1998 Rose Bowl , Ohio State had been in the 1997 Rose Bowl , while Wisconsin's last Rose Bowl was 1994 .
The circumstances of this selection, the fact that Ohio State was the higher-ranked team (Ohio State was the pre-season #1 and spent most of the season with this ranking: Wisconsin did not play Ohio State or Michigan State that year, so Ohio State had the better record versus common opponents due to the Michigan loss), combined with the fact that the opponent (UCLA ) was ranked #2 and headed to the national title game before a season-ending loss, led to ridicule in the national media: most notably, Craig James ' declaration that Wisconsin was "the worst team to ever play in the Rose Bowl." Wisconsin went on to defeat #6 UCLA 38–31 in the 1999 Rose Bowl. Afterward, Badger coach Barry Alvarez fired back, "Well, I know we're at least the second worst."[1] [2]
Schedule [ ]
Date Time Opponent Rank Site TV Result Attendance September 5 8:00 p.m. at San Diego State * No. 20 Qualcomm Stadium San Diego, CA W 26–1437,471[3]
September 12 11:30 a.m. Ohio * No. 17 Camp Randall Stadium Madison, WI MSC W 45–074,676[4]
September 19 1:00 p.m. UNLV * No. 14 Camp Randall Stadium Madison, WI W 52–775,044[5]
September 26 11:00 a.m. Northwestern No. 14 Camp Randall Stadium Madison, WI ESPN W 38–778,337[6]
October 3 11:00 a.m. at Indiana No. 13 Memorial Stadium Bloomington, IN ESPN2 W 24–2032,328[7]
October 10 7:30 p.m. Purdue No. 12 Camp Randall Stadium Madison, WI ESPN2 W 31–2478,782[8]
October 17 11:00 a.m. at Illinois No. 9 Memorial Stadium Champaign, IL ESPN2 W 37–340,627[9]
October 24 2:30 p.m. at Iowa No. 9 ABC W 31–070,397[10]
November 7 11:00 a.m. Minnesota No. 8 ESPN W 26–778,767[11]
November 14 11:00 a.m. at No. 15 Michigan No. 8 Michigan Stadium Ann Arbor, MI ESPN L 10–27111,217[12]
November 21 2:00 p.m. No. 14 Penn State No. 13 Camp Randall Stadium Madison, WI ESPN W 24–378,964[13]
January 1, 1999 3:30 p.m. vs. No. 6 UCLA * No. 9 Rose Bowl Pasadena, CA (Rose Bowl )ABC W 38–3193,872[14]
*Non-conference game HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the game All times are in Central time
Rankings [ ]
Ranking movementsLegend: ██ Increase in ranking. ██ Decrease in ranking. NR = Not ranked. RV = Received votes. т = Tied with team above or below. ( ) = First place votes.
Week
Poll
Pre
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
Final
AP
20
17
14
14
13
12
9
9
9
8
8
13
10
8
9
6
Coaches Poll
20
17
14
14
13
10
9
8
8
7
6
12
9
8
8
5
BCS
Not released
9
8
9
13
10
9
9
Not released
Roster [ ]
1998 Wisconsin Badgers football team roster
Players
Coaches
Offense
Defense
Special teams
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches
Legend
(C) Team captain
(S) Suspended
(I) Ineligible
Injured
Redshirt
Roster
Regular starters [ ]
Position
Player
Quarterback
Mike Samuel
Running Back
Ron Dayne
Fullback
Cecil Martin
Wide Receiver
Chris Chambers
Wide Receiver
Ahmad Merritt
Tight End
Dague Retzlaff/Eric Grams
Left Tackle
Chris McIntosh
Left Guard
Bill Ferrario
Center
Casey Rabach
Right Guard
Dave Costa
Right Tackle
Aaron Gibson
Game summaries [ ]
UCLA (Rose Bowl) [ ]
Wisconsin vs. UCLA (Rose Bowl )
1
2 3 4 Total
• #9 Badgers
7
17 7 7
38
#6 UCLA
7
14 7 3
31
Date: January 1, 1999Location: Rose Bowl Pasadena, California Game start: 12:30 PST Game attendance: 93,872Game weather: 74°F, SunnyTV announcers (ABC ): Keith Jackson and Bob Griese
Scoring summary 1 WIS Ron Dayne 54-yard run (Matt Davenport kick) WIS 7–0
1 UCLA Jermaine Lewis 38-yard pass from Cade McNown (Chris Sailer kick) Tied 7–7
2 WIS Dayne 7-yard run (Davenport kick) WIS 14–7
2 UCLA Durell Price 61-yard pass from Freddie Mitchell (Sailer kick) Tied 14–14
2 UCLA Danny Farmer 41-yard pass from McNown (Sailer kick) UCLA 21–14
2 WIS Dayne 10-yard run (Davenport kick) Tied 21–21
2 WIS Davenport 40-yard field goal WIS 24–21
3 WIS Dayne 22-yard run (Davenport kick) WIS 31–21
3 UCLA Lewis 10-yard run (Sailer kick) WIS 31–28
4 WIS Jamar Fletcher 46-yard interception return (Davenport kick) WIS 38–28
4 UCLA UCLA – Sailer 30-yard field goal WIS 38–31
Main article: 1999 Rose Bowl
See also: 1998 UCLA Bruins football team
Individual awards and honors [ ]
Tom Burke : All-America (unanimous consensus ), Bill Willis Trophy , Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, All-Big Ten (First Team, coaches & media)
Aaron Gibson : All-America (consensus), All-Big Ten (First Team, media; Second Team, coaches)
Ron Dayne : All-America (WCFF ), 1999 Rose Bowl player of the Game, All-Big Ten (First Team, coaches & media)
: All-Big Ten (First Team, coaches & media)
Kevin Stemke : All-Big Ten (First Team, coaches & media)
Jamar Fletcher : All-Big Ten (First Team, media; Second Team, coaches)
Casey Rabach : All-Big Ten (Second Team, coaches & media)
Chris McIntosh :All-Big Ten (Second Team, coaches)
Barry Alvarez : Big Ten Coach of the Year
1999 NFL Draft [ ]
Player
Position
Round
Pick
NFL Club
Aaron Gibson
Tackle
1
27
Detroit Lions
Tom Burke
Linebacker
3
83
Arizona Cardinals
Cecil Martin
Fullback
6
172
Philadelphia Eagles
[15]
References [ ]
^ Howard-Cooper, Scott (January 2, 1999). "After Dayne Runs Them Over, They Beat Themselves Up - UCLA Conquered and Divided After Rose Bowl Defeat" . Los Angeles Times . Retrieved April 4, 2009 .
^ Gurnick, Ken (January 2, 1999). "College Football: Rose Bowl; Badgers Prove Doubters Wrong" . The New York Times . Retrieved April 4, 2009 .
^ "Wisconsin at San Diego St" . CNN . September 6, 1998.
^ "Ohio at Wisconsin" . CNN . September 12, 1998.
^ "UNLV at Wisconsin" . CNN . September 19, 1998.
^ "Northwestern at Wisconsin" . CNN . September 26, 1998.
^ "Wisconsin at Indiana" . CNN . October 3, 1998.
^ "Purdue at Wisconsin" . CNN . October 11, 1998.
^ "Wisconsin at Illinois" . CNN . October 17, 1998.
^ "Wisconsin at Iowa" . CNN . October 24, 1998.
^ "Minnesota at Wisconsin" . CNN . November 7, 1998.
^ "Wisconsin at Michigan" . CNN . November 14, 1998.
^ "Penn State at Wisconsin" . CNN . November 21, 1998.
^ Bagnato, Andrew (January 2, 1999). "Badgers Say Cheese" . Chicago Tribune .
^ "1999 NFL Draft" .
Venues
Randall Field (1895–1916)
Camp Randall Stadium (1917–present)
Bowls & rivalries
Bowl games
Iowa (Heartland Trophy)
Minnesota (Slab of Bacon, 1930–1943; Paul Bunyan's Axe, 1948–present)
Nebraska (Freedom Trophy)
Culture & lore
Bucky Badger
"On, Wisconsin! "
Marching band
"Jump Around "
Tall Grass Game
Crazylegs
People Seasons
Western Conference Big Ten Big Nine Big Ten National championships in bold