Wisconsin begins this pandemic-delayed season with most of the same players who created so many memorable moments during a stirring stretch drive last year.
The seventh-ranked Badgers return nearly the entire nucleus that led them on an eight-game winning streak and a share of the Big Ten regular-season title before the coronavirus pandemic halted play in mid-March. This veteran group is old enough to realize that late-season surge has no bearing on what the Badgers want to accomplish this year.
"We've got to start this season like it's a fresh one, like it's a new one," fifth-year senior guard D'Mitrik Trice said.
Trice is one of five returning players who averaged at least 8.7 points per game last season. That list also includes senior guard Brad Davison, senior forward Nate Reuvers and fifth-year senior forwards Aleem Ford and Micah Potter.
Those players have encountered so many highs and lows over the last 18 months that they should have a keen understanding of how to deal with the uncertainties surrounding this season.
Prominent for them is the May 2019 car wreck that killed the wife and daughter of assistant coach Howard Moore, who remains on medical leave after suffering serious burns in the accident. Wisconsin struggled to get far above .500 for much of the 2019-20 campaign and lost one of its key players when Kobe King left the team at midseason, but the Badgers regrouped to finish 21-10.
Coach Greg Gard said the lessons learned on and off the court have made this team stronger.
"They learned not to take things for granted," Gard said. "They learned that really fast in a very harsh and cruel way. It's given them the tools and the ability to really embrace and appreciate everything they get a chance to do."