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Kaleb Johnson ties Iowa football program record in win vs. Wisconsin

Kaleb Johnson ties Iowa football program record in win vs. Wisconsin
LEADER. THANK YOU SCOTT. WE FOUND OUT THAT’S A 230 GAME FROM ARROWHEAD IN IOWA CITY A RIVALRY GAME. THE BATTLE FOR THE BRASS BOWL. BRENDAN SULLIVAN PICKING UP WHERE HE LEFT OFF WHEN HE PLAYED NORTHWESTERN NIGHT GAME UNDER THE LIGHTS. KINNICK. A BLACKOUT. WHAT A SCENE! WISCONSIN LED THREE. NOTHING EARLY, BUT FROM THERE, THE DEFENSE LOCKED IN. BRAYDEN LOCK LOOKING INTENDED FOR C.J. WILLIAMS. IT’S PICKED OFF BY DESHAWN LEE, AND THE HAWKEYES WOULD TAKE OVER AND THEY WOULD DRIVE DOWN THE FIELD FROM THERE. AND WHO ELSE? QB SNEAK BRENDAN SULLIVAN FINDING THE END ZONE. SULLY MAKES IT A SEVEN THREE HAWKEYE LEAD. NEXT DRIVE, HAWKEYES WOULD GO 80 YARDS AND IT’S CAPPED OFF BY WHO ELSE? THIS TIME? CALEB JOHNSON, 16 YARDS OUT. IOWA MAKES IT A 14 THREE LEAD. THAT WOULD BE THE SCORE AT THE HALF. CALEB JOHNSON IF IT WEREN’T FOR ASHTON. THAT’S YOUR DOAK WALKER WINNER RIGHT THERE. SECOND HALF HAWKEYES ARE GOING TO BLOW THIS GAME WIDE OPEN. THIS TIME IT’S JOHNSON FROM NINE YARDS OUT 21 TO 3. KINNICK WAS ROCKING IOWA WAS MOVING AND THEY WERE GETTING DOWN TO BUSINESS BEHIND NUMBER TWO. AND HOW ABOUT A LITTLE TOUCHDOWN THROUGH THE AIR. A LITTLE BOOTLEG ACTION JACOB GILL FROM BRENDAN SULLIVAN. THE NORTHWESTERN TRANSFER MATE. ABSOLUTE DOMINATION WISCONSIN 42 TO 10 IOWA WINS. IT’S THE FOURTH 40 POINT PERFORMANCE OF THE YEAR FOR IOWA. THEY DIDN’T HAVE 440 POINT PERFORMANCES IN THE LAST FOUR SEASONS COMBINED. SHANNON EARHART LIVE IN IOWA CITY WITH MORE. JEFF, IT SEEMS LIKE IOWA HAS UPGRADED AT QUARTERBACK. BRENDAN SULLIVAN GETTING THE START TODAY. LIKE YOU MENTIONED, HE WAS IOWA’S RED ZONE QUARTERBACK BEFORE HE WON THE STARTING JOB BECAUSE CADE MCNAMARA GOT INJURED WHEN HE WAS THE RED ZONE QUARTERBACK. HE WAS EIGHT FOR EIGHT TONIGHT. HE WAS SIX FOR SIX. SO IT’S NO SURPRISE ALL 42 POINTS COMING IN THAT RED ZONE. BUT MORE SURPRISING THAN THAT THEY HAD 329 RUSHING YARDS AVERAGING SIX YARDS PER CARRY. IT’S ON BRAND FOR CALEB JOHNSON TO GO OFF. BUT KAMARI BOLTON SULLIVAN AND JAZZ PATTERSON PILED ON. BUT IT STARTS IN THE TRENCHES. THE HAWKS OWN THE BADGERS INSTEAD OF JOHNSON TAKING PROPS ON THE SIDELINE. I ACTUALLY WATCHED HIM GIVE THANKS TO HIS ENTIRE O LINE HIGH FIVING EVERY SINGLE ONE OF THEM. KUDOS TO THE DEFENSE, TOO, FOR ANNOYING THE HECK OUT OF WISCONSIN. THE DEFENSE HELD WISCO TO 261 TOTAL YARDS AND FORCED TWO INTERCEPTIONS. THE DIFFERENCE IS THAT IOWA HAD 14 POINTS OFF OF THOSE TURNOVERS. NICK JACKSON HAD THAT SECOND INTERCEPTION. I HAD ASKED HIM AFTER THE GAME IF HE KNEW THAT HE REALLY HAD THE BALL AND HE SAID NO. I ACTUALLY COULDN’T PROCESS IT. I DIDN’T KNOW I HAD IT, BUT HE THEN AGAIN HAD GREAT FIELD POSITION. SO IOWA WAS ABLE TO CONVERT AFTER THAT. YOU SAW THE TROPHY CELEBRATION. ALL THE GUYS COULD SAY AFTER THAT WAS A LITTLE ALONG THE LINES OF THIS. YOU KNOW, SOMETIMES YOU’VE JUST GOT TO JUMP AROUND AFTER A WIN. YOU KNOW, IT’S A GREAT FEELING TO HAVE THE BOYS AROUND. I MEAN, IT’S SUPER FUN WHEN YOU GET A WIN LIKE THAT, ESPECIALLY AGAINST A BIG RIVAL, A TROPHY GAME AS WELL. IT WAS A BLACKOUT HERE. THE FANS WERE SUPER LOUD, VERY NOISY AND I THINK IT BOTHERED WISCONSIN AS WELL. IT’S THE FIRST TIME THIS SEASON THAT IOWA HAS WON TWO CONSECUTIVE POWER
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Kaleb Johnson ties Iowa football program record in win vs. Wisconsin
Kaleb Johnson rushed for 135 yards and three touchdowns and quarterback Brendan Sullivan rushed for a touchdown and threw for one as Iowa defeated Wisconsin 42-10 on Saturday night.The Hawkeyes (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) rushed for 329 yards, with Johnson leading the way. Johnson, ranked second nationally in rushing yards and rushing yards per game, had his seventh game of 100 or more rushing yards.Johnson has 20 touchdowns this season, tying Shonn Greene for the program’s single-season scoring record. “A couple of weeks ago, he was here and he said, ‘I know you can break my records. Go ahead and do it,’ stuff like that,” Johnson said of Greene, who was the Doak Walker Award winner in 2008. “So I just kept my head down, remembered what he said, and just kept going.”Johnson has 1,279 rushing yards this season, but he's not concerned about gaining national attention.“Like I always say, I'm a humble person,” Johnson said. “Whatever goes out there, goes out there, and whatever's said is said.”“He's got a good ability, obviously, and the size and strength and speed, all those things you would like to have,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “I think I'm most impressed with just his approach, the maturity that he's playing with and practicing with right now.” Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell said what Johnson is doing goes beyond his ability.“He's the one that has all the yards,” Fickell said. “But I think it's got to fall on the shoulders of that offensive line. I’m not sure there weren’t some pretty good seams and holes in there that he had an opportunity to take advantage of.”Sullivan, making his first start for Iowa after taking over for injured starter Cade McNamara in last week’s 40-14 win over Northwestern, gave the Hawkeyes a 7-3 lead in the second quarter on a 1-yard touchdown run. Johnson added a 16-yard touchdown run four minutes later, and the Hawkeyes led 14-3 at halftime.Iowa, which rushed for 152 yards in the first half, kept that momentum going in the second half. The Hawkeyes’ first possession was a 10-play, 86-yard drive that was all running plays, capped by Johnson’s 9-yard touchdown run.“That's something that every offensive player can feel, when the defense knows what you're going to do and you still do it at a high level,” Sullivan said. “That's really cool.”Nick Jackson’s interception on Wisconsin’s next possession set up Sullivan’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Jacob Gill for a 28-3 lead. Johnson then added a 1-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. Jaziun Patterson closed the scoring with a 4-yard touchdown run.Wisconsin (5-4, 3-3) opened the game with Nathanial Vakos’ 38-yard field goal. The Badgers wouldn’t score again until Braedyn Locke’s 14-yard touchdown pass to CJ Williams early in the fourth quarter.Sullivan completed 7 of 10 passes for 93 yards, and rushed for 58 yards.Locke was 15-of-29 passing for 137 yards.The takeawayWisconsin: The Badgers had no answer for the Hawkeyes on either side of the ball. Wisconsin opened the game with a 12-play, 59-yard drive that led to Vakos’ field goal, then had just 67 yards on its next six possessions. Wisconsin has an off week before playing Oregon in two weeks. “I don't think there's a whole lot of positives we can point out from tonight,” Fickell said. “Like I said, we're going to find out what we're made of.”Iowa: The Hawkeyes, who became bowl eligible for the 23rd time in 24 seasons, have shown some life after a 32-20 road loss to Michigan State on Oct. 19. Iowa has won four of its last five games against the Badgers after an eight-game stretch in which Wisconsin won seven. This was the largest win for Iowa in the rivalry since a 41-0 win in 1996.Up nextWisconsin: Hosts Oregon on November 16.Iowa: At UCLA next Friday.

Kaleb Johnson rushed for 135 yards and three touchdowns and quarterback Brendan Sullivan rushed for a touchdown and threw for one as Iowa defeated Wisconsin 42-10 on Saturday night.

The Hawkeyes (6-3, 4-2 Big Ten) rushed for 329 yards, with Johnson leading the way. Johnson, ranked second nationally in rushing yards and rushing yards per game, had his seventh game of 100 or more rushing yards.

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Johnson has 20 touchdowns this season, tying Shonn Greene for the program’s single-season scoring record.

“A couple of weeks ago, he was here and he said, ‘I know you can break my records. Go ahead and do it,’ stuff like that,” Johnson said of Greene, who was the Doak Walker Award winner in 2008. “So I just kept my head down, remembered what he said, and just kept going.”

Johnson has 1,279 rushing yards this season, but he's not concerned about gaining national attention.

“Like I always say, I'm a humble person,” Johnson said. “Whatever goes out there, goes out there, and whatever's said is said.”

“He's got a good ability, obviously, and the size and strength and speed, all those things you would like to have,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “I think I'm most impressed with just his approach, the maturity that he's playing with and practicing with right now.”

Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell said what Johnson is doing goes beyond his ability.

“He's the one that has all the yards,” Fickell said. “But I think it's got to fall on the shoulders of that offensive line. I’m not sure there weren’t some pretty good seams and holes in there that he had an opportunity to take advantage of.”

Sullivan, making his first start for Iowa after taking over for injured starter Cade McNamara in last week’s 40-14 win over Northwestern, gave the Hawkeyes a 7-3 lead in the second quarter on a 1-yard touchdown run. Johnson added a 16-yard touchdown run four minutes later, and the Hawkeyes led 14-3 at halftime.

Iowa, which rushed for 152 yards in the first half, kept that momentum going in the second half. The Hawkeyes’ first possession was a 10-play, 86-yard drive that was all running plays, capped by Johnson’s 9-yard touchdown run.

“That's something that every offensive player can feel, when the defense knows what you're going to do and you still do it at a high level,” Sullivan said. “That's really cool.”

Nick Jackson’s interception on Wisconsin’s next possession set up Sullivan’s 7-yard touchdown pass to Jacob Gill for a 28-3 lead. Johnson then added a 1-yard touchdown run in the fourth quarter. Jaziun Patterson closed the scoring with a 4-yard touchdown run.

Wisconsin (5-4, 3-3) opened the game with Nathanial Vakos’ 38-yard field goal. The Badgers wouldn’t score again until Braedyn Locke’s 14-yard touchdown pass to CJ Williams early in the fourth quarter.

Sullivan completed 7 of 10 passes for 93 yards, and rushed for 58 yards.

Locke was 15-of-29 passing for 137 yards.

The takeaway

Wisconsin: The Badgers had no answer for the Hawkeyes on either side of the ball. Wisconsin opened the game with a 12-play, 59-yard drive that led to Vakos’ field goal, then had just 67 yards on its next six possessions. Wisconsin has an off week before playing Oregon in two weeks. “I don't think there's a whole lot of positives we can point out from tonight,” Fickell said. “Like I said, we're going to find out what we're made of.”

Iowa: The Hawkeyes, who became bowl eligible for the 23rd time in 24 seasons, have shown some life after a 32-20 road loss to Michigan State on Oct. 19. Iowa has won four of its last five games against the Badgers after an eight-game stretch in which Wisconsin won seven. This was the largest win for Iowa in the rivalry since a 41-0 win in 1996.

Up next

Wisconsin: Hosts Oregon on November 16.

Iowa: At UCLA next Friday.