The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 7, 2004 - 13A Bucks, Badgers do battle By Tyler Hagls and Dan Ording Daily Sports Writers A major showdown between Wiscon- sin and Ohio State highlights this week's Big Ten action. Purdue hopes to continue its strong play against Penn State, while Northwest- ern could goes for two in a row against Indiana. Illinois travels to Michigan State to round out the Big Ten slate on Saturday. Aga NI3 No. 15 Wisconsin (2-0, 5-0) at No. 18 Ohio State (0-1, 3-1) - 3:30 p.m., ABC It was not quite the "Curse of the Bambino" being lifted, but a major streak was broken last week in the Ohio State-Northwestern game. The Buck- eyes finally lost a close game, and Mr. Reliable - Mike Nugent - missed a field goal in overtime. The Buckeyes have struggled mightily on offense this season, especially at quar- terback. Justin Zwick, one of the most highly-touted recruits in the nation out of high school, has not lived up to expecta- tions. With the defense that Ohio State has, Zwick just has to read the Trent Dilfer playbook and play smart. If he continues to throw interceptions (five already this year), the Buckeyes will continue to have trouble in the Big Ten. Wisconsin fans are beginning to see visions of Ron Dayne and Brooks Bol- linger in the Rose Bowl days of the late 1990s. Anthony Davis came back from an eye injury with a vengeance last week - with 213 rushing yards against Illinois - and helped restore the balance to the Badger offense. The defense has needed no help - it has not given up more than seven points in a game this season. State has no one like him. Wisconsin 21, Ohio State 9 No. 10 Purdue (1-0, 4-0) at Penn State (0-2,2-3) - 4:30 p.m., ESPN Purdue made a statement last week with its 41-16 thumping of Notre Dame in South Bend - a game that proved it's a legitimate top-10 team. The Boilermakers will look to keep their record unblemished as they head into Happy Valley to face Joe Pater- no and his struggling group of Nittany Lions. Purdue quarterback Kyle Orton is having a stellar season and contin- ues to lead many experts' Heisman Trophy race. This should come as no surprise since he has already thrown for 17 touchdowns and, even more impressively, a big fat goose egg in the interception column. Six-foot wide receiver Taylor Stubblefield has caught 10 of those touchdown tosses and can become the Big Ten's all- time receptions leader with just three more grabs. For the Nittany Lions to win, they're going to need a lot of points. The only problem is, they've scored a grand total of 10 in their last two games. Quarter- back Zack Mills has more interceptions (eight) than touchdowns (five) this year, and would have to flip that stat around for his team to have any sort of hope. This won't happen as Purdue's defense will rebound from its performance last week, when Notre Dame passed for 460 yards. Purdue will run away with the win as Orton will have another huge day. How- ever, he will throw his first interception of the year, but only because he wore a pink polo on ESPN2's Cold Pizza. Man up, Kyle, man up. Purdue 38, Penn State 7 Illinois (0-2, 2-3) at Michigan State (1-1, 2-3) - noon, ESPN2 Two struggling 2-3 teams match up this Satur- day in East Lansing AA- to decide p which team is more medi- ocre. No. 15 -;Wisconsin's -* swarming defense com- pletely shut down Illinois last week in a 24-7 vic- tory. Illinois was held to a meager 206 total yards and quarterback Jon Beutjer threw for just 85 yards. Luckily for the Illini offense, their next opponent is the Spartans, who have given up 58 points in the last two games. Michigan State sophomore quarterback Drew Stanton, a poor man's Mike Vick, has been destroying his competition. He leads Michigan State in running and pass- ing yards, finally establishing himself as the quarterback of the future in East Lan- sing. If he can avoid the troubles that fol- lowed Jeff Smoker, Stanton could lead this team to a Big Ten title. While Illinois' offense has been superb for most of the year, the defense has given up 29 points per game against I-A teams. Beutjer, more like Kurt Kittner than Vick, has not thrown an interception this season, but he and his offensive teammates cannot overcome the team's porous defense. The Spartans seem to have the talent edge in every major area. But they have been inconsistent this season, so no one knows how they will perform. Look for the team that overcame Indiana in the sec- ond half two weeks ago. Michigan State 35, Illinois 17 Indiana (0-2, 2-3) at Northwestern (2-3) - noon Last week, Northwestern shocked Ohio State in overtime, beating the Buckeyes for the first time in 33 years, 33-27. Come Saturday, it will try to beat Indiana for the first time since ... last year. Watch for the Wildcats to come out strong in hopes of avoiding a letdown after such a huge win. They'll do so by starting right where they left off - with senior running back Noah Herron. Her- ron tasted the end zone three times last weekend, including the game-winning score, and should add to his season tally of six total touchdowns on Saturday. Quar- terback Brett Basanez will look to pick apart Indiana's swiss cheese defense that gave up over 330 yards through the air to Michigan last week. For the Hoosiers to have any chance, their offense must step up its production. Their best bet may be forcing the issue on the ground to eat up some clock and keep the ball away from the Wildcats. They can do so with BenJarvus Green-Ellis (3.5 yards a carry and three touchdowns) who has one of the coolest first names in college football. But the reality is that Indiana has little to no chance, and Northwestern should run away with another home victory. Note to Evanston: Don't storm the field after this one. Indiana is bad at football. Northwestern 27, Indiana 10 AP PHOTO Basanez Iq