Wisconsin linebacker T.J. Edwards heeded his defensive co-ordinator's request for more production.
More games like the one Edwards had on Saturday against Purdue and Wisconsin will have another reliable playmaker on an already-dangerous defence.
Edwards had a career-high 16 tackles and a forced fumble, Joel Stave threw for 322 yards and Alec Ingold ran for two short scores in the Badgers' 24-7 victory on Saturday over the Boilermakers.
The Badgers (5-2, 2-1 Big Ten) overcame several penalties and other mistakes in the red zone to win on homecoming weekend at Camp Randall Stadium. A near-flawless defence held Purdue (1-6, 0-3) to season-lows of 191 yards of total offence and 55 on the ground.
"This defence, the reason it's playing well is they don't care about the numbers. They care about playing together and being a part of a good defence," coach Paul Chryst said.
Outside linebackers Joe Schobert and Vince Biegel draw the headlines for their pass-rushing prowess. Senior Michael Caputo provides a hard-hitting presence at safety.
Now Wisconsin is getting big plays from freshmen inside linebackers Edwards and Chris Orr, too. Coordinator Dave Aranda called on them this week to make more big plays.
"I'm glad he did. It's that Coach Aranda love that we need," Edwards said.
Orr and Schobert each finished with seven tackles and shared credit for a sack, helping the defence hold off Purdue until the offence could catch up.
Wisconsin led just 10-7 late in the third quarter until two rushing touchdowns in an eight-minute span between the third and fourth quarters.
Edwards then forced the Boilermakers' Markell Jones to fumble at the Purdue 43. Safety Tanner McEvoy pounced on the ball to seal the win.
"I thought that was probably the best defence we'd faced coming into the game on film and we played some pretty good defences in Michigan State and Virginia Tech," Purdue coach Darrell Hazell said.
The Boilermakers' only score came on David Blough's 2-yard quarterback keeper in the second quarter.
It capped the worst stretch of the afternoon for Wisconsin. Purdue capitalized after Leroy Clark intercepted Stave at the 5 and returned the ball 66 yards.
Blough's score tied the game at 7. Just like two weeks ago at Michigan State, the Boilermakers had designs of pulling off an unlikely upset on the road.
Just like two weeks ago, Purdue headed home with a loss.
Hazell pointed to poor showings on third downs (4 of 13) and bad field position, with Purdue's second-half drives on average starting at the 22.
"People can look at the 1-6 and say whatever they want. It is tough but nobody is in there pointing fingers," Blough said.
The effort to simplify the offence this week for redshirt freshman Blough produced few results. Blough was 15 of 26 for 136 yards, picking up chunks of yardage late in the fourth quarter with the game well in hand for Wisconsin.
A 39-yard touchdown pass by Blough with 1:09 left was called back by a holding penalty.
Still, it took a while before Wisconsin could assert control.
The running game could only amass 96 yards against a Purdue defence that was giving up a Big Ten-worst 215 yards a game on the ground.
But the Badgers got production in the red zone from their tailbacks.
Dare Ogunbowale ran for 56 yards on 18 carries and a 4-yard touchdown run on the last play of the third quarter for a 17-7 lead.
Ingold, a freshman, powered his way for a 1-yard score after breaking a tackle at the 3 with 7:16 left in the game. He finished with 19 yards on nine carries.
Aside from his bad throw that led to the pick, Stave was solid and finished 30 of 39. The Badgers moved the ball effectively through the air despite some mistakes inside the 20.
"We've just got to do a better job executing" in the red zone, Stave said. "I thought we did a great job moving the ball, a great job sustaining drives."
Stave connected with seven different receivers, led by nine catches for 86 yards for Alex Erickson.
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