UW Huskies vs Wisconsin Football Viewing Party at Sagos Las Vegas
Schedule
Sat, 08 Nov, 2025 at 01:30 pm
UTC-08:00Location
SAGOS | Las Vegas, NV
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Helloooooo Huskies Alumni and Dawgs Fans!I hope you all enjoyed the bye week and are having productive and fun times!
We get the group back together this Saturday, November 8th for more fun at Sagos Tavern on Fort Apache vs Wisconsin at 1:30pm. We are now ranked #24 finally, so now it's time go out and prove it as well as inch closer to get into the top 12 for a playoff position by the end of the year! We have Wisconsin this week, Purdue next week on November 15th at 4pm PST, then face UCLA at the Rose Bowl on Nov 22nd. Then we will be tested with the biggest game of the year coming against our PNW rival, the Oregon Ducks, which could be a game that the winner would be granted a spot into the college football playoffs! It's at home in Seattle, so there's a chance we can upset them with the roster we have... all they have to do is win the games they need to win, take care of business to be in that position. Then, anything can happen.... anyways, we will see you all at Sagos this week. Come join us to enjoy the rest of the season with your Vegas Dawg family! Let's finish the season strong!
Go DAWGS,
WOOF!~
-Anthony Schlumpf
THE GAME: The Washington football team (6-2 overall, 3-2 Big Ten) makes its first trip to Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wis., in 57 years as the Huskies take on Wisconsin (2-6, 0-6) Saturday at 3:30 p.m. CT/1:30 p.m. PT. The game will air on Big Ten Network. For the first time in 2025, the Huskies are ranked in the AP Top 25, at No. 24. They're one spot out in the coaches' poll. The Badgers are the fifth conference foe the Huskies have faced this year coming off of a bye week, though for the first time, UW also had a week off. UW and UW have faced one another just four times ever, and just once in Madison, in 1968. After the trip to America's Dairyland, the Dawgs return home to face Purdue Nov. 15. From there, the regular season wraps up with a trip to UCLA (Nov. 22) and a home game vs. rival Oregon (Nov. 29).
QUICK HITTERS: Husky RB Jonah Coleman leads the nation in scoring (11.3 points per game) and total touchdowns (15); is second in rushing touchdowns (13); and four total points (90) ... Coleman also ranks No. 10 in all-purpose yards ... Coleman has new career highs for attempts (24 vs. Colo. St.), rushing TDs (5 vs. UC Davis), receptions (8, vs. Maryland), and receiving yards (104 vs. WSU) this year ... Husky QB Demond Williams Jr. is currently No. 2 in the nation in completion percentage and No. 8 in pass efficiency ... Williams is currently the FBS active career leader in pass efficiency (172.17), which would rank No. 6 in NCAA-FBS history ... Washington won 24-20 Oct. 4 at Maryland, despite trailing 20-0 ... it was the seventh 20-point comeback in UW history and the first on the road since the 1993, 24-23 win at California ... Washington has outscored opponents 94-28 in the fourth quarter this season ... only three of eight UW opponents has scored in the final quarter this year ... Washington ranks No. 2 in the nation in third-down conversions and No. 6 in team passing efficiency ... the Huskies are also No. 19 in rushing defense ... Washington's last nine true road games have been announced sellouts ... the current UW roster includes players from 19 different states, as well as in Australia and Canada.
DEMOND'S BIG DAY: UW quarterback Demond Williams Jr. turned in a career performance in Washington's 38-19 win over Rutgers on Fri., Oct. 10, passing for 402 yards while rushing for 138. In doing so, he became the first Husky, second Big Ten player and 16th QB in NCAA-FBS history to pass for 400-plus yards and rush for 100 or more in a game. His 138 rushing yards were fourth-most ever by a Husky quarterback (his was just the 12th 100-yard rushing performance by a QB in UW history), and his 538 yards of total offense broke Michael Penix's record of 529, set in 2022 vs. Arizona (516 passing, 13 rushing). His 402 passing yards were 15th-most in UW single-game history.
HUSKIES vs. BADGERS HISTORY: Washington has a surprisingly brief history vs. Wisconsin, as compared to many of the longtime Big Ten teams, most of which had been common, non-conference opponents over the year. The Huskies and Badgers have faced one another just four times, with Washington winning all four – one in a Rose Bowl, two in Seattle and one in Madison. The Huskies and Badgers did have a home-and-home scheduled for 2017-18, but it was canceled after the Big Ten moved to a nine-game conference schedule. Here's a look at those four games:
#8 Washington 44, #6 Wisconsin 8
Jan. 1, 1960, Rose Bowl, Pasadena
The first-ever Washington-Wisconsin game didn't come until the 1960 Rose Bowl game, at the end of the 1959 season. The Huskies, under third-year head coach Jim Owens, had gone 9-1, their lone loss coming in game five, at home vs. No. 7 USC. A selection committee chose the Huskies from among three teams with 3-1-0 records in the newly formed AAWU/Big 5. The game was, surprisingly, a one-sided affair as Washington got a Don McKeta run, and both a field goal and a punt return for a touchdown from George Fleming, in the first quarter to take a 17-0 lead. Wisconsin got a score in the second quarter, on a Tom Wiesner run (and a two-point PAT), but Husky QB Bob Schloredt hit Lee Folkins with a 23-yard TD pass before halftime. Washington added three more scores in the second half to wrap up a 44-8 win. Fleming and Schloredt were named co-MVPs. The Husky win broke a streak of six straight Rose Bowl wins by the Big Ten, which had also won 12 of the last 13.
Washington 17, Wisconsin 0
Sept. 23, 1967, Husky Stadium, Seattle
After a season-opening, home loss to Nebraska, Washington welcomed Wisconsin for game two in 1967, in what was the Badgers' first game of the season, their first under new coach John Coatta. Washington won the game in a fashion typical of the day, behind a strong rushing attack and a stout defense. Washington rushed for 230 yards while the Badgers were held to minus-26, a UW record at the time. Washington was led by QB Tom Manke, a sophomore from the tiny town of Harrington, Wash., who rushed for a team-high 88 yards, while completing 4-fo-6 passes for 68 yards. Don Martin opened the scoring with a 37-yard field goal on the game's opening drive. On the final play of the first half, Manke hit Harrison Wood with a 44-yard TD pass. Early in the third, Manke rushed for an 11-yard score to cap the scoring. Wisconsin QB Don Boyajian, who was charged with minus-48 rush yards, completed 10-of-16 passes for 112 yards to lead the Badgers.
Washington 21, Wisconsin 17
Sept. 28, 1968, Camp Randall Stadium, Madison
After a 35-35 home tie with Rice to open the year, the 1968 Huskies traveled to Madison in week two, earning a 21-17 win over the Badgers. After a scoreless first quarter, Washington's Bo Cornell scored on a one-yard run in the second. Early in the third, Harvy Blanks added to the Husky lead with a 66-yard punt return and an eight-yard run, making it 21-0. Badgers fullback Stu Voigt scored on runs in the third and fourth quarters, and Wisconsin got a field goal to cut it to 21-17, but the last four Badgers drives ended in Husky interceptions – two each from NCAA record holder Al Worley (who had 14 that season) and Tom Verti. The Huskies were led by Blanks, who also had an 83-yard kickoff return (non-scoring) and halfback Carl Wojciechowski, who rushed for 122 years.
#2 Washington 27, Wisconsin 10
Sept. 12, 1992, Husky Stadium, Seattle
After opening the season with a 31-7 win at Arizona State, the 1991 National Champions played their first home game of 1992 against Wisconsin at sold-out Husky Stadium. It was the first game of the season for Coach Barry Alvarez' Badgers. The Huskies won the game, 27-10, behind a solid performance from QBs Billy Joe Hobert and Mark Brunell, and a defense that limited Wisconsin to nine first downs. Hobert hit Puyallup High classmate Joe Kralik with an 18-yard TD pass to begin the scoring, but the visitors tied it thanks to a TD pass from Jay Macias to Tim Ware. Hobert's 60-yard TD run late in the first gave Washington a 14-7 lead the Dawgs would never surrender. Travis Hanson made two field goals in the second quarter and Jay Barry ran for a score in the third to extend the lead before a Badgers field goal and a scoreless final quarter. It was UW's 16th straight win in a streak that would grow to 22 games.
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SAGOS, 4786 S Fort Apache Rd, Las Vegas, NV 89147-7933, United StatesEvent Location & Nearby Stays:
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