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Getting your player ready...

MADISON, Wis. — Russell Wilson gave Nebraska a harsh welcome to the Big Ten, throwing for two touchdowns and running for another in No. 7 Wisconsin’s 48-17 rout of the eighth-ranked Cornhuskers on Saturday night.

Montee Ball ran for 151 yards and four touchdowns for the Badgers (5-0, 1-0 Big Ten). But Wilson was the main attraction for a primetime television audience as Wisconsin overcame a slow start to solidify its status as the class of the conference.

“If there’s a better player in college football right now, I’d like to see it,” Badgers coach Bret Bielema said of Wilson.

Taylor Martinez threw three interceptions for the Huskers (4-1, 0-1), who showed they weren’t quite ready for the best of the Big Ten.

By the time the Camp Randall Stadium public address system blared “Jump Around” to get fans hopping before the fourth quarter, the game already was in the bag for the Badgers.

“I knew there was a lot of hype going into this game,” Bielema said. “That’s why I kind of challenged our players to embrace it all week. I knew if we went out and played well and did what we do, we’d get a lot more attention.”

It was the sixth meeting between the teams and the first since 1974, but clearly the biggest and one of the most anticipated games in recent memory for Wisconsin. The Badgers fans didn’t exactly have Camp Randall to themselves.

The crowd of 81,384 was filled with plenty of Nebraska fans — they wore black to differentiate themselves from Wisconsin fans who wear a similar shade of red — amid reports earlier in the week that thousands of fans were expected to make the trip to Madison this weekend for the Huskers’ first conference game as a member of the Big Ten.

“We didn’t make plays,” Nebraska coach Bo Pelini said. “I’m embarrassed. I apologize to the fans of Nebraska.”

The Badgers sent them home disappointed, but the teams could be on track to meet again.

Wisconsin is in the Leaders Division of the Big Ten and Nebraska is in the Legends Division, meaning the two teams could play in the conference championship game.

It was another big step for Wilson, the former North Carolina State quarterback who gave up minor-league baseball with the Rockies to return to college football and play for a Badgers team that seemed to have all the pieces of a BCS bowl contender but needed a quarterback.

Five games into the season, there’s no reason to think otherwise.

Wilson had played well in his first four games for the Badgers after joining them over the summer, but hadn’t yet been tested by a top-level opponent since his days with the Wolfpack.

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