INDIANAPOLIS - If Don King was running the Big Ten, this is exactly how he would set up the championship game: If you want to be the champ, you've got to beat the champ.
But this isn't a title fight, and the Wisconsin Badgers, even with their back-to-back Big Ten championships in tow, aren't Floyd Mayweather. The Badgers will battle Nebraska on Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium with the conference championship at stake, but only after a week's worth of battling the perception that they don't belong here.
"I appreciate the question and I understand it totally," Badgers coach Brett Bielema said when asked if a team that finished third in the Leaders Division, went only 4-4 in Big Ten play and has lost three of its past four games is worthy of playing for a championship. Bielema said some of his players are calling Saturday's matchup an "eraser game," in which a victory could reset, perhaps even validate, Wisconsin's strange season.
"We're a 7-5 team that's looking for respect," Bielema said, adding that doubts about the Badgers "can all be washed away this Saturday."
Perhaps, though, even a victory won't change the fact that Wisconsin would be the first five-loss team ever to play in the Rose Bowl. But the Badgers believe their record doesn't reflect their talent level. "It's the best 7-5 team I've ever been a part of. The guys don't have a loser's mentality," the seventh-year Wisconsin coach said. "We've been emphasizing to our kids: If we'd have won all five games we lost, we'd still be here playing Nebraska. How we got here doesn't matter."
Especially since it didn't have much to do with the Badgers. Wisconsin just happened to be the beneficiary of a divisional alignment in which the two teams ahead of it, 12-0 Ohio State and 8-4 Penn State, have been disqualified from postseason play this year. "It's not our fault what happened to them," said Wisconsin tailback Montee Ball, who returned for his senior season hoping to win a Rose Bowl or even a national championship game. "We're definitely going to take this opportunity and we're going to run with it."
Not a bad idea, because the Badgers want the game to come down to running -- all the better to take the pressure off quarterback Curt Phillips, making his fourth career start. Ball gives the Badgers a way to move the football through Wisconsin's favorite method: by pushing and shoving their way down the field.
"This game isn't about X's and O's and tricking the other guy," said Nebraska coach Bo Pelini. "It's about doing what you do."