Chicago Sun-Times

BADGERS ARE BIG 1 IN BIG TEN

In weak conference, Wisconsin is only program that routinely meets or exceeds expectatio­ns

- Email: sgreenberg@suntimes.com

This week’s Bucket List — 10 observatio­ns on the college basketball season:

1Three years in a row during the mid- 1990s, Purdue won the Big Ten regular- season championsh­ip outright. That stretch was the high point in the outstandin­g career of longtime Boilermake­rs coach Gene Keady. It also was where Purdue ceased, quite frankly, to be a conference power. Since 1996: zero outright titles ( and a single shared one, in the 2009- 10 season).

As one of the better Boilermake­rs teams of the last two decades rolls toward the NCAA tournament, Michigan State is trying to avoid flaming out of contention for a bid. The Spartans probably will right the ship enough to get to the Big Dance, but they’re also- rans in the league standings — and there’s nothing unusual about that. Since the 1999- 2000 team won the program’s only national championsh­ip under Tom Izzo, guess how many outright league titles Sparty has claimed? Try one.

Indiana has won two outright titles in the last four years, but overall the Hoosiers have produced an equal measure of disappoint­ment ( see: this season) under Tom Crean. Michigan has receded since — three seasons ago — winning its only outright title of the 2000s. For the fourth consecutiv­e season, Ohio State is buried in the middle of the pack.

Is it any wonder no Big Ten team since MSU in 2000 has cut down the nets at the Final Four?

There’s really only one program in the league that has regularly met, or exceeded, expectatio­ns since then: Wisconsin. Alone in first place after Thursday’s game at Nebraska, the Badgers are trying to win their fourth outright title of the 2000s while — amazingly — securing their 16th consecutiv­e top- four finish.

The Big Ten’s top program: Wisconsin, and it isn’t even close. But the conference kids itself if it thinks it sets the standard on a national level.

2If ever there were a clear distinctio­n between “player of the year” and “most valuable player,” we’re seeing it in the Big Ten. Purdue’s Caleb Swanigan is tearing up the league, establishi­ng himself beyond a doubt as its top player. Yet Wisconsin’s Ethan Happ is leading his first- place team in scoring, rebounding, assists, steals and blocks in Big Ten play. If that doesn’t scream MVP, what the heck does?

3Happ, Swanigan, Notre Dame’s Bonzie Colson and Gonzaga’s Nigel Williams-Goss all are 16/ 1 picks for national player of the year, according to Bovada. In other words, none of them has a chance.

Above that foursome: Kansas’ Frank Mason III ( 5/ 2), Villanova’s Josh Hart ( 4/ 1), UCLA’s Lonzo Ball ( 6/ 1), Kentucky’s Malik Monk ( 7/ 1), North Carolina’s Justin Jackson ( 15/ 2) and Duke’s Luke Kennard ( 12/ 1). Realistica­lly, it’s still a twoman race between Mason and Hart.

4Speaking of UCLA’s Ball, have you become familiar with the freshman point guard’s family story? Younger brother LiAngelo is a high school senior bound for the Bruins, and youngest brother LaMelo is a sophomore who scored — are you sitting down? — 92 points in a varsity game earlier this week. Mercy.

5Still trying to wrap my brain around how Kentucky allowed itself to be outrebound­ed 54- 29 in a blowout loss to Florida last weekend. The Wildcats are monstrousl­y talented, but at times they lack effort and toughness. It has to be frustratin­g for coach John Calipari, though not as frustratin­g as his 2013- 14 squad. That group entered the season ranked No. 1, goofed around for four months, entered the NCAA tournament with doubledigi­t losses

and a sorry No. 8 seed — and made it all the way to the national title game. Go figure.

6What a difference ex-Simeon star Ed Morrow makes for Nebraska. The Huskers were off to a 3- 0 start in Big Ten play when the burly sophomore hurt his foot against Northweste­rn. Their season has imploded from there, the team tumbling into the bottom three of the league standings.

7Which reminds me: Planet Purple to Scottie Lindsey . . . come in, Scottie Lindsey. NU needs its best player back in the lineup in the worst way.

8Saturday is must- win time for Illinois at home against Penn State. If coach John Groce can’t get his players to dig as deep as they did last time out in a victory at Northweste­rn, the Illini will lose — and there might not be anyone left in his corner.

9Central Michigan’s Marcus Keene refuses to let his scoring average dip under 30. The 5- 9 junior is at 30.7 after recent explosions — all in victories — for 50, 41 and 41.

10Did you hear what happened to Saint Louis on Wednesday night? After the Billikens lost at St. Bonaventur­e, they exited the arena to board the team bus, and — poof! — it had disappeare­d. The driver? Forty miles away, arrested for DWI. If only late SLU coach Rick Majerus were alive to crack wise about it.

Follow me on Twitter @ SLGreenber­g.

 ??  ?? Wisconsin’s Ethan Happ leads the Badgers in scoring, rebounding, assists, steals and blocks in Big Ten play. | ANDY MANIS/ AP
Wisconsin’s Ethan Happ leads the Badgers in scoring, rebounding, assists, steals and blocks in Big Ten play. | ANDY MANIS/ AP
 ??  ?? John Calipari
John Calipari

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