UW football notes: Maragos provides safety valve
By TOM ZIEMER, TOM MULHERN, ANDY BAGGOT and ROB HERNANDEZ
608-252-6170
10/12/2008
Wisconsin State Journal
SPORTS
Text Size: A A A
Page 1 of 2
Email this article Email
Print this article Print

With a game against run-heavy Iowa on the horizon, University of Wisconsin football coach Bret Bielema is looking for improved run support from his free safety.

Who exactly that will be is still slightly up in the air.

Junior Chris Maragos replaced junior Shane Carter in the starting lineup for Saturday night's 48-7 loss to Penn State at Camp Randall Stadium. Carter also saw time with the base defense as well as in UW's nickel alignment.

Maragos, who sat out all of last season after transferring from Western Michigan, finished with six tackles. Carter had four.

"We looked at some things defensively and felt that Maragos might give us a better chance of tackling," Bielema said. "We felt that he had showed us at certain times when he'd been in the game that he would come downhill and be more aggressive in the way he supported the run."

Watching from afar

Joe Paterno is enjoying his view from the press box, but the hobbled Penn State coach admits he does feel out of place away from the sidelines.

"I'm afraid someone is going to come around and ask me for my ticket," Paterno said.

Paterno, 81, who started using a cane this week, is suffering from a sore right leg, which he injured while demonstrating an onsides kick at practice before the Nittany Lion's season opener with Coastal Carolina. He coached from the press box last week during Penn State's win over Purdue after spending the Illinois game on the field.

Before the game at Camp Randall, Paterno received a visit from former Badgers coach and current UW athletic director Barry Alvarez, who coached from the press box most of the 1999 season as he recovered from knee surgery.

"He was upstairs for eight games and they won 'em all," Paterno said. "I told him 'That shows how much they needed you.' Maybe they don't need me, either."

Not very special

Special teams problems early on cost the Badgers in a variety of ways.

A 15-yard punt by freshman Brad Nortman in the first quarter led to a Penn State field goal.

A 63-yard punt return for a touchdown by Derrick Williams gave the Nittany Lions a 17-0 lead in the second quarter.

Three of the five first-half kickoffs resulted in UW starting inside its 20.

"We have to do a better job of being consistent off what we coach our guys," Bielema said. "The return game we've just got to be able to secure our blocks and hold them longer and be able to do it earlier in the ballgame."

Committee approach

There was another twist in the storyline for UW's tailbacks.

Junior incumbent P.J. Hill and redshirt freshman John Clay began the evening alternating the start of each series — the first time that's happened in six games this season — while sophomore Zach Brown was used almost strictly on third downs and when the Badgers had to throw the ball.

"We have a nice situation, we can kind of go with the guy that we feel gives us the best chance on each play and each situation," Bielema said.

Bielema stuck to the series rotation at the outset of the second half, but the scoreboard dictated a minimum of running plays and, ultimately, an altered approach.

■ ■ Next
Text Size: A A A
Page 1 of 2
Email this article Email
Print this article Print
0 comment posts
UW football notes: Maragos provides safety valve
This email is never shared.
Badgerbeat.com monitors COMMENTS posted online. We reserve the right to edit or delete any message or shut down a disucssion at any time if, in our judgement, comments become offensive, threatening or libelous. Poster Terms and Conditions
BadgerBeat.com Copyright 2008 Capital Newspapers, Inc.