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  Saturday, Nov. 13 3:30pm ET
Title caps Badgers' day of euphoria
 
  RECAP | BOX SCORE

MADISON, Wis. (AP) -- Ron Dayne's four-year run at history is over, and his reward is another bouquet of roses.

On the biggest day in Wisconsin football history, Dayne broke the major-college career rushing record as the No. 9 Badgers claimed the outright Big Ten title and earned a return trip to the Rose Bowl with a 41-3 rout of Iowa on Saturday.

Ron Dayne
Wisconsin's Ron Dayne gets some help from teammate Chris Chambers as he breaks the major-college career rushing record in the second quarter Saturday.
Dayne broke Williams' record with 4:32 left in the second quarter on a 31-yard run toward the Wisconsin sideline. He finished the game with 216 yards rushing and a touchdown on 27 carries, giving him 6,397 yards for his career, or 118 more than the 6,279 Williams gained at Texas.

"The record was broken because we looked at it as a team goal," Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez said. "A lot of people had to do their job for him to have a chance to achieve that."

The Badgers (9-2, 7-1) finished their regular season by winning seven straight games and clinching a return trip to the Rose Bowl on Jan. 1. Wisconsin, which beat UCLA 38-31 in Pasadena last year, will be playing in consecutive Rose Bowls for the first time in school history.

Williams broke Tony Dorsett's 22-year-old record last season. Dayne, who needed 99 yards on Saturday to beat Williams, gained just 39 yards on his first 12 carries but ended up with the 11th 200-yard rushing game of his career, tying the record held by Williams and Marcus Allen of Southern California.

"I tried to do everything I usually do," Dayne said. "It seemed like a normal game."

That is, until the postgame ceremony, when the school unveiled his name and No. 33 on the press box at Camp Randall Stadium. While not an official number retirement, it was close.

"I didn't know what to say," Dayne said. "I was amazed and dazed. I was happy and grateful. I didn't know whether to laugh or cry."

Wisconsin led 27-3 at halftime and was never challenged by the Hawkeyes (1-9, 0-7), who lost their seventh straight. Chris Chambers caught two touchdown passes, and quarterbacks Brooks Bollinger and Matt Kavanagh rushed for TDs.

After the game ended, the sellout crowd stayed and roared as Dayne and the Badgers were honored at midfield. The crowd held up 70,000 white signs with Dayne's No. 33 written in red.

Even Alvarez, who has been coaching from the press box since undergoing knee surgery six weeks ago, hobbled down to the field with 11 minutes remaining in the game. He grabbed Dayne in a joyous bear hug before watching the rest of the game on crutches.

"The first time I met him, I hugged him, so I think it was only appropriate that I hugged him when he broke the record," Alvarez said. "I'll never forget that big smile of his. He just lit it up."

Dayne was most excited about the Badgers' second straight conference title. He and the Badgers accepted their Big Ten championship and Rose Bowl invitation after the game.

"You get a ring for that," Dayne said. "I just got my name in some books for breaking a record."

Shortly after the game began, the final score from Michigan's upset of Penn State (9-2, 5-2) was flashed on the scoreboard, drawing a huge cheer from the crowd. Wisconsin had a half-game lead on Penn State in the conference race before Saturday's games.

"I think our league is better this year than a year ago," Alvarez said. "If we're not the best league in the country, we're pretty close, so to win it outright is special."

There was little doubt Dayne would set the record against the nation's 109th-ranked rushing defense; the only question was when. Wisconsin's offense moved the ball at will, finishing with 604 yards.

The Badgers finished in a tie with Michigan and Ohio State for the conference title last season, but the Nittany Lions' second straight loss left the Badgers alone this time around.

It was Dayne's day, but Bollinger, a freshman, was the game's star. He threw for 144 yards and rushed for 113, throwing three first-half touchdown passes, two to Chambers.

The crowd's chants of "RON! DAYNE!" grew louder in the third quarter, and Dayne responded with a 38-yard rush to the Iowa 3. But Dayne couldn't get in the end zone on three tries, and the Badgers turned the ball over on downs.

Dayne rushed three times for 30 yards late in the third quarter before leaving the game midway through a scoring drive. The crowd gave an ovation, but saved its loudest cheers for the postgame ceremony honoring Wisconsin's four-year starter at tailback.

"What's not to love about the guy if you live here?" Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz asked. "But if you're on the other side of the line or outside the state borders, he's nothing but a headache. What a great performer."

Alvarez and Dayne spoke to the crowd. Alvarez will undergo another knee operation next week but expects to be on the sideline for the Rose Bowl.

 


ALSO SEE
College Football Scoreboard

Iowa Clubhouse

Wisconsin Clubhouse

Wisconsin's Dayne runs by Williams to become No. 1

Dayne through the years

Badgers fans greet Dayne's day with emotion

College football Top 25 overview


AUDIO/VIDEO
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 Ron Dayne makes history with a 31-yard, second-quarter run.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Dayne goes untouched into the endzone.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

 Brooks Bollinger connects with Chris Chambers for 16-yard TD.
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RealVideo: 56.6 | ISDN | T1

audio
 Ron Dayne is the new NCAA all-time rushing leader.
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