Isaac Gard’s Wisconsin career may not have been built on box-score production, but it clearly left a mark.
The recent graduate has been named Wisconsin’s nominee for the Big Ten Outstanding Sportsmanship Award, joining Women’s Tennis player Maria Sholokhova in receiving the honor from the Badgers.
Gard wrapped up his time in Madison with 14 total points, all of them coming during his junior and senior seasons. His first career 3-pointer came on Nov. 4, 2024, in the season opener against Holy Cross. This past year, he knocked down three shots from beyond the arc, and none meant more than the deep, double-clutch three he buried on senior night against Maryland, right in front of his father.
"You couldn't've scripted the end there, him making the three. That's a testament, again, I go back to talking about the culture and the teammates that he has.
The possession before it, they called a special for him. That didn't come from the bench," Greg Gard said that night.
"You've heard me call him a culture keeper," the coach continued. "You need those types of people that really are invested in the program."
Even with the obvious family connection, Isaac Gard earned real respect inside the program. He spent years around Wisconsin basketball, growing up in the Kohl Center with his father since he was a baby, and that familiarity showed in the way teammates embraced him.
The fans did too. During lopsided early-season wins, chants of "Isaac Gard!
Isaac Gard!" would echo through the Kohl Center, especially from the student section.
He wasn’t a major on-court piece for the Badgers, but over four seasons in Madison, Gard still helped create moments people won’t forget. The senior night shot against Maryland was the biggest one, and now it comes with another layer of recognition as his post-grad chapter begins.
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The optimism around the additions is real enough, but so are the familiar questions that hang over Wisconsin when the shot goes cold. Analysts see reasons for hope, yet they also point to red flags in the Badgers 2026-27 outlook, especially the possibility that the offense can bog down when the three-point ball is not falling. It is the same kind of concern that has trailed the program before, including during last seasons tournament run, and it leaves Wisconsin facing another test of whether a reset can become a step forward. [Read more 🡒]
