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Badgers knock off No. 1 Buckeyes... Again

MADISON -- The Kohl Center, where streaks come to die.
One of the 17,230 fans packed inside the building on Dayton Street made a sign Saturday with the above statement. Another read "24-1."
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After a hard-fought 40 minutes, they were right on both accounts.
Behind an incredible second-half performance by junior guard Jordan Taylor, one that came when his team needed it most, Wisconsin handed No. 1 Ohio State its first loss, 71-67. With the win, the UW became just the eighth school since 1969-70 to defeat the AP No. 1 team in both football and basketball during the same academic year.
"It's Madison, Wisconsin," said Wisconsin head coach Bo Ryan of the upset. "It's been said a lot of times about what this campus is like, what this school is all about. ... Like I was telling people before, I think the basketball thing is a little different in February with Ohio State being No. 1.
"I don't know about football rankings, and Ohio State was No. 1, I understand that. I just think in our sport, to be [24-0], you've had to win in November, December, January and into February. So, I kind of like ours because it just happened. I loved football's because I was there at the game. It's just all good for the school."
Last time a school upset the nation's No. 1 team in both sports? Florida, in 2006-07, also over Ohio State.
Heading into the matchup, Keaton Nankivil and the Badgers talked about looking to get off to a hot start and maintain a high level of intensity throughout, something that worked tremendously for the football team back on October 16.
Instead, the basketball version took a little different trajectory.
After a highlight montage from that victory at Camp Randall pumped up the crowd just before tipoff, Wisconsin jumped out to a fairly hot start, building a 12-6 lead through the first 6 1/2 minutes of play. Unlike the football team, however, that hot start did not translate into a dominant wire-to-wire victory.
In fact, the Badgers fell behind by as many as 15 points with 13:21 to play in the second half, stunning the home crowd. The next trip down the floor, trailing 47-32, Taylor hit a floater in the lane that sparked a 15-0 run to tie it.
"You have to give Wisconsin a ton of credit," Ohio State head coach Thad Matta said. "We got that lead and had some great looks, I thought, but it just kind of went in and out on us. It flipped, we started missing shots and they started making shots."
Just like that, in a matter of four minutes, the Badgers took what looked to be a sure blowout and flipped it into the type of back-and-forth battle it had been throughout the first half. Only, they weren't done there.
After dropping behind once again by four points with 7:40 to play, the Badgers tied it at 55 just 42 seconds later on a Mike Bruesewitz 3-pointer. Over the next 2 1/2 minutes, Wisconsin reeled off nine unanswered for its largest lead of the game at 62-55.
Now, not only was Ryan's squad not going to be blown out, it was in control against the nation's best. And while Taylor's 21 second-half points stand out, it was a true team effort that got them there.
"When we were down, I don't think things really changed," Taylor said. "They made a run, and we knew we had a run in us. ... We eventually we started getting stops and started making plays and everybody made a big play. Not one person didn't."
Ohio State kept things interesting over the game's final minutes, but with the raucous crowd behind it, Wisconsin would not relinquish its lead.
Despite their best efforts, William Buford's 21 points and Jared Sullinger's 19 point and 12 rebounds just weren't enough. Despite all the talk surrounding Sullinger as a national player of the year candidate, he and Buford could not do it alone.
"Our game plan [was] to kind of limit his touches, because when he gets it down there, he is pretty much unstoppable," said Jon Leuer of Sullinger. "It is hard to score if you don't have the ball, and that is what we were trying to do with him."
Taylor, who struggled in the first half, finished with a game-high 27 points and seven assists against just one turnover. Leuer, Bruesewitz and Josh Gasser joined him in scoring double digits, with 27 of the points between the four coming from beyond the arc.
As the clock ticked to zero, fans stormed the court, mobbing the Badgers for the second time in four months following a thrilling victory over the Buckeyes.
"It's an unbelievable feeling," Taylor said. "We were at the football game when they beat Ohio State and a few of us got to go down on the field. Just to be in another court rusher game like that, similar to Duke last year, it was unbelievable.
"It's something you remember forever."
Badgers knock off No. 1 Buckeyes... Again from Jordan Schelling on Vimeo.
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