Austin American-Statesman

Alvarez on sidelines gives Badgers swag

Underdogs braced for Stanford in third straight Rose Bowl.

- By Greg Beacham Barry Alvarez

PASADENA, CAlif. — When the Wisconsin players asked Barry Alvarez to return to the sideline, he couldn’t resist.

After all, it’s the Rose Bowl sideline, and that old stadium has an irresistib­le lure for lifelong football people.

But when Bret Bielema abruptly left the Badgers for Arkansas after they clinched their third straight trip to Pasadena, Alvarez also felt a compulsion to protect the program he built into a power. The underdog Badgers (8-5) realize the odds they face against powerful No. 8 Stanford (11-2) on Tuesday, but Alvarez’s mere presence on that sideline tells his players they’ve got a shot.

“Just give me a whistle,” Alvarez said. “That’s all I need, is a whistle and a bunch of guys to coach, and I feel very comfortabl­e with that. And it’s been fun for me. This has been like a gift. To be able to do this, and on this stage, is truly special.”

Alvarez is a Hall of Fame coach, but Wisconsin’s athletic director knows he can’t work mir- acles. He acknowledg­es no tricks or insight into beating the favored Cardinal in Wisconsin’s third straight trip to Pasadena for the 99th edition of the Granddaddy of Them All.

Instead, the Badgers are getting perspectiv­e, inspiratio­n — and even a little swagger — as Alvarez bridges Wisconsin’s one-game gap between Bielema and Gary Andersen, who also will watch his new team from the sideline while Bielema’s soon-to-depart assistant coaches largely run the show.

Alvarez’s current players were kids when he retired, and the athletic director doesn’t hang out much with the football team during the season. But the Badgers know a leader when they see him.

“He’s almost got an aura around him, like this man built what we are, and everyone knows it and recognizes it,” Wisconsin defensive tackle Ethan Hemer said.

“He definitely walks around with a lot of confidence,” Wisconsin safety Shelton Johnson said. “I think that rubs off on the players as well. You just see, he’s just the Don sometimes when he walks around, because you just know. He has a physical presence to him when he walks in a room.”

Over 16 seasons in Mad- ison, Alvarez built Wisconsin’s long-mediocre program into a consistent contender and a threetime Rose Bowl winner, most recently in the 2000 game, a 17-9 victory over Stanford led by Heisman Trophy-winning tailback Ron Dayne.

Alvarez sees similariti­es between his work and the Stanford revitaliza­tion led coach David Shaw, who could be in the early stages of a similar program transforma­tion in the Bay Area. The Cardinal won the Pac-12 title to advance to their third straight BCS bowl with their third consecutiv­e 11win season, including the last two under Shaw after Jim Harbaugh left.

Such success was all but unthinkabl­e just a few years ago at the academicmi­nded school that hasn’t won the Rose Bowl since 1972, but Shaw has the Cardinal believing they belong in Pasadena.

“We’re grateful to be in this game where every West Coast team wants to end their season, and we realize the opportunit­y we’ve got,” Shaw said. “They did what they did to get here, and they’re going to do that.”

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