Seeking thoughts on the All-time Badger teams list. I have personal memories of all but the first two.
Don't know much about them but the records:
1942: AP#3, 8-2, beat #1 Ohio State at Camp Randall, lost 6-0 to Iowa; didn't win the conference championship. World War II era, and no bowl.
1962: AP#2, 8-2, lost classic 1 vs. 2 Rose Bowl to USC, falling just short in a 4th quarter comeback bid (42-37); the comeback was so strong, some Wisconsin fans remember the game as a win. Beat #1 Northwestern at Camp Randall, 37-6, then beat #5 Minnesota, 14-9. Lost at Ohio State, 14-7. Beat unranked Notre Dame as well. Conference champions.
Followed along with them:
1993: AP #6, 10-1-1, won Rose Bowl 21-16 over #13 (AP) UCLA. Beat #24 Michigan 13-10 at Camp Randall, tied #3 Ohio State 14-14 at Camp Randall (augh, watched them miss (get blocked) the potential winning field goal), beat #25 Michigan State 41-20 in last game of the season; lost to last-place Minnesota in the Metrodome (augh; I was there for that turnover-fed meltdown, too). Balanced team with a punishing 1-2 running attack (Moss/Fletcher), game manager QB (Bevell), and a bend-but-don't break defense. Conference co-champions with Ohio State.
1998: AP#6, 11-1, won Rose Bowl 38-31 over heavily favored and just-missed on national title hopes #6 UCLA (had been #2 headed into final week 49-45 loss at Miami). Badgers remember this as the team called the "worst team to ever play in the Rose Bowl." Lost 27-10 at #15 Michigan, beat #14 Penn State 24-3 at Camp Randall. Ron Dayne at his peak, was nearly unstoppable--UCLA sure couldn't stop him. Decent defense. Conference co-champions with Ohio State.
1999: AP #4, 10-2, won Rose Bowl,17-9 over #22 Stanford. Beat #12 Ohio State (didn't turn out #12) 42-10 in Columbus, #25 Minnesota 20-17 in Minneapolis, #11 Michigan State 40-10 at Camp Randall, and #17 Purdue, 28-21 in West Lafeyette; lost to #4 Michigan, 21-16 in Camp Randall, the week after inexplicably losing to Cincinatti in Cincinatti, 17-12. Bollinger was made the starting QB after the Michigan game, I think. Dayne was a beast in his senior year, and the Wendell Bryant-led defense was stout. Conference champions.
2006: AP #7, 12-1, won Capital One (Citrus) Bowl 17-14 over heavily favored Arkansas, using team defensive speed to slow down Darren McFadden and Felix Jones. Went 11-1 in the regular season, but lost to the only ranked team they played, #6 Michigan 27-13 in Ann Arbor (the Badgers beat Penn State, which ended the season #24). John Stocco was the quintessential game-managing quarterback, and P.J. Hill was probably the most system of any Badger "system backs." Bielema's first season as head coach.
2010: AP #7, 10-2, lost Rose bowl 21-19 to #3 TCU when failed 2-pt conversion to tie at the end. Beat #1 Ohio State 31-18 at Camp Randall, #13 Iowa 31-30 at Kinnick, lost to #24 (finished 14) Michigan State 34-24 in East Lansing. Tolzein was a game-managing senior QB who played beyond people's expectations, John Clay with James White and Montee Ball formed a three-headed running monster, with each coming up huge when needed, and JJ Watt anchored a solid defense. Co-conference champions with Michigan State (that must still fry MSU fans).
2011: AP #10, 11-3, lost Rose Bowl 45-38 to #4 Oregon in a wild game where the defenses just decided not to show up (mostly). Beat #8 Nebraska 48-17 at Camp Randall, #20 Penn State 45-7 at Camp Randall, and came from behind to beat #11 Michigan State 42-39 in the Conference Championship when a punt return for MSU that looked to win the game was called back on running into the kicker. In back to back weeks lost at MSU 37-31 on a Hail Mary that after being caught barely broke the plane, then at Ohio State 33-29, on a broken play bomb in the final 20-or so seconds. Explosive offense (probably best Badger offense ever) with Russell Wilson team throwing to Nick Toon, Jared Abbredaris, and Jacob Pederson, Montee Ball, James White, and Melvin Gordon running on everyone behind a beastly offensive line. Despite Chris Borland and Aaron Henry, not a particularly strong defense. Conference champions.
2017: AP #6, 13-1, won Orange Bowl 34-24 over #10 Miami. First perfect regular season ever (12-0/9-0), but played in a weak Big Ten West. Beat #25 Iowa 38-14 at Camp Randall, #19 Michigan, 24-10 at Camp Randall, but lost to #5 Ohio State in the conference championship game, 27-21. One of the best defenses the Badgers have had with tons of team speed, but less heft in the middle than people are used to, with a mediocre offense behind a developing, but interception-prone quarterback Hornibrook, and freshman phenom Jonathan Taylor.
So how do they rank all-time?
Of the ones in my lifetime, I'm currently trending 1999, 2010, 2017 as 1, 2, 3. 2011 had the best offense, but not a great defense; I think 2017 had the best defense. 2006 is often overlooked, but was similar to the balanced 1994 and 2017 teams. No, they didn't play anyone, but it was a senior-quarterback-led, pretty solid team all the way around. With both 1999 and 2011 there's a lingering, "what could have been" thought for a lot of Badger fans (in 2011, what if Watt had stuck around for his senior year?). Maybe we'll end up feeling that way about 2017, too, though I tend to think this team performed pretty close to its ceiling.
And where to '62 and '42 fit in? Different eras, hard to say. Maybe they were the best (by AP ranking they were). '62 went toe-to-toe with the national champs in the national champs' back yard. That's got to be worth something. I think they get the nod as #1. '42? I just don't know, and suspect the rankings were Yankee-skewed, and that the football just wasn't as good during the war.
Thoughts? What about your best teams (lifetime and otherwise)?