Tawee Walker ran for 126 yards in another big performance, Braedyn Locke threw for a touchdown and ran for a score and Wisconsin beat Northwestern 23-3 on Saturday at Martin Stadium in Evanston.
The Badgers (5-2, 3-1 Big Ten) came away with another easy win, locking down the Wildcats (3-4, 1-3) after pummeling Purdue and Rutgers by a combined 94-13.
Walker, coming off a career-best 198-yard outburst against Rutgers, delivered again. He carried 23 times, including a 24-yarder that helped set up Wisconsin’s first touchdown, facing a defense that was ninth in the nation against the run.
Locke threw for 160 yards, completing 14 of 24 passes with an interception, in his fourth start since Tyler Van Dyke was injured in a loss to Alabama on Sept. 14. He also ran for an 8-yard touchdown that made it 7-0 early in the second quarter.
Cade Yacamelli ran for a 3-yard touchdown after a strip-sack by John Pius near the end of the first half. Sebastian Cheeks and Curt Neal strip-sacked Jack Lausch at the start of the fourth quarter to make it 23-3.
Northwestern missed some big opportunities and couldn’t sustain drives. It all added up to a rough afternoon in the fifth and final game this year at its temporary lakefront stadium.
The Wildcats host No. 4 Ohio State and No. 22 Illinois on Nov. 16 and 30 at Wrigley Field. A new Ryan Field is scheduled to open in 2026.
Lausch was just 9-for-24 with 82 yards.
Wisconsin led 14-0 at the half after a big takeaway in the closing minute.
Northwestern had Lausch, who was 4-for-14 in the half, drop back to pass with the ball on its 8. Pius came through with a strip-sack, and Elijah Hills recovered at the 3. Cade Yacamelli took the pitch on the next play and scored.
Wisconsin’s first touchdown came in the opening minute of the second quarter, when Locke scored from the 8 on a keeper. That capped a 66-yard drive after Northwestern’s Luke Akers came up short on a 51-yard field-goal attempt.
After Wisconsin’s touchdown, Northwestern drove to the 10. But the Badgers’ Ben Barten blocked Akers’ field-goal try. The Wildcats then returned the favor when Jaiden Cameron knocked down Nathanial Vakos’ 41-yard attempt.
Akers cut it to 14-3 midway through the third with a 26-yard field goal. The Wildcats then took over at the Wisconsin 44 after Greyson Metz poked the ball away from Locke as he dropped back to pass. But they went three and out.
Up next
Wisconsin: Plays host to No. 3 Penn State on Saturday.
Northwestern: Visits Iowa on Saturday.