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The Authority On Purdue Athletics www.GoldAndBlack.com $2.50<br />

VOL. 15, ISSUE 5• OCT. 8, 2004 I L L U S T R A T E D<br />

WOW!<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> <strong>Spank</strong><br />

<strong>Irish</strong>, <strong>41</strong>-<strong>16</strong>


COVER STORY: NO. 15 PURDUE <strong>41</strong>, NOTRE DAME <strong>16</strong><br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> Snap Streak<br />

In South Bend Shootout<br />

Orton-Led Offense Easily Dismantle <strong>Irish</strong><br />

BY KEITH THOMAS<br />

KThomas@GoldandBlack.com<br />

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — For the first<br />

time in recent memory, misfortune was<br />

misplaced for the Boilermakers in Notre<br />

Dame Stadium.<br />

After all, this sort of thing doesn’t<br />

usually happen for Purdue — it usually<br />

happens against Purdue.<br />

But the bad Boilermaker karma<br />

finally switched teams in South Bend.<br />

And the No. 15 Boilermakers came<br />

out swinging, slugging a 30-year old<br />

streak right in the mouth with a dominating<br />

<strong>41</strong>-<strong>16</strong> win over Notre Dame Oct. 2.<br />

The <strong>Boilers</strong> played so well, in fact,<br />

that they just might have knocked the<br />

mustache right off of defensive coordinator<br />

Brock Spack’s face.<br />

The trademark hair below Spack’s<br />

nose was missing following the game,<br />

just as were questions about whether<br />

Purdue would ever win “up there.”<br />

For Spack, who hasn’t had a naked<br />

upper lip since 1999, going fuzz-free was<br />

a simple choice for a man who was taking<br />

part in his 18th Purdue-Notre Dame<br />

rivalry game — especially since it was a<br />

motivating factor for senior co-captain<br />

Antwaun Rogers and the Boilermaker<br />

defense.<br />

So the defense brought their focus,<br />

and some razors.<br />

“Antwaun asked, ‘Victory for the<br />

‘stache?’ I said, ‘Absolutely,” the former<br />

Purdue linebacker said. “That was it. A<br />

deal’s a deal — you can’t welsh. They all<br />

brought their clippers with them; they<br />

were prepared.”<br />

If fact, Spack the win over the <strong>Irish</strong><br />

was certainly worth the wait, he was<br />

willing to trade a victory for being in<br />

trouble at home.<br />

“My wife’s going to hate me, but<br />

that’s the way it goes,” Spack said.<br />

And everything went the way of the<br />

Boilermakers (4-0 overall, 1-0 in the Big<br />

Ten) against the <strong>Irish</strong> on this crisp<br />

autumn afternoon.<br />

“They were playing us real tough there for<br />

a while, and then we just took it right down<br />

the field and put it right in their face and said,<br />

‘We came to play today.’”<br />

— Purdue quarterback Kyle Orton<br />

Following a game that had Purdue<br />

fans waiting for the traditional meltdown<br />

that never came, Coach Joe Tiller<br />

was relatively relaxed.<br />

“Surprisingly enough, I am pretty<br />

calm considering the magnitude of this<br />

victory. If it had been a nail biter, it<br />

would have been a much different feeling.<br />

I am extremely happy that we won,<br />

and I am sure we will celebrate a little<br />

more when we get home tonight.”<br />

But it wasn’t clear that it was going<br />

to be a Boilermaker blowout in the early<br />

going.<br />

In fact, shortly after Purdue received<br />

the opening kickoff, the <strong>Boilers</strong> and <strong>Irish</strong><br />

traded paint on nearly identical drives —<br />

marching down the field for 60-plus<br />

yards in just over four minutes resulting<br />

in a field goal for each. At that point, it<br />

looked like it was going to be another<br />

closely fought football game in the shadows<br />

of the Golden Dome.<br />

But with just more than six minutes<br />

remaining in the opening quarter, the<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Senior receiver Taylor Stubblefield finished<br />

the scoring for the day on this 12yard<br />

touchdown with 0:45 left in the<br />

third quarter. Purdue’s <strong>41</strong> points at Notre<br />

Dame was the highest point total by a<br />

Purdue team against the <strong>Irish</strong> since a 51-<br />

19 win in 1960.<br />

first indication that the big plays traditionally<br />

tagged as Luck of the <strong>Irish</strong> in<br />

South Bend would belong to the<br />

Boilermakers on this day.<br />

With the score tied at three in the<br />

early going, Purdue sophomore kick<br />

returner Jerome Brooks fielded an <strong>Irish</strong><br />

kick on the doorstep of the Boilermaker<br />

end zone. One hundred yards, a nifty<br />

spin move and a couple of key blocks<br />

later, Brooks dove into an eerily quiet<br />

end zone, putting the Boilermakers on<br />

top, and they wouldn’t look back.<br />

Senior quarterback Kyle Orton said<br />

that key play was a turning point that let<br />

Purdue know that it had a good chance<br />

to win the game for obvious reasons.<br />

Continued on page 6<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 2 GoldandBlack.com


Volume 15, Issue 5<br />

Oct. 8, 2004<br />

A Publication of: <strong>Boilers</strong>, Inc.<br />

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ON THE COVER<br />

There was plenty of things to<br />

jump and shout about for<br />

players, coaches and fans<br />

alike as Purdue won in South<br />

Bend for the first time in 30<br />

years. Ray Williams (2) and<br />

Brandon Jones (27) sky after<br />

Jones’ 28-yard halfback<br />

option pass in the second<br />

quarter while the inset is of<br />

Coach Joe Tiller and Kyle<br />

Orton happily walking off<br />

the field at game’s end. Cover<br />

and University Spirit 2004<br />

photos by Tom Campbell.<br />

COACH TILLER: 24 HOURS LATER<br />

WITH QUESTION ANSWERED, TIME TO MOVE ON<br />

Tiller Pleased ‘Will You Ever Win In South Bend?’ Inquiry Buried<br />

BY KEITH THOMAS<br />

KThomas@GoldandBlack.com<br />

Each Sunday afternoon following<br />

Purdue football games,<br />

GoldandBlack.com catches up<br />

with Coach Joe Tiller to get some<br />

of his thoughts on the weekend’s<br />

contest, after he’s had a<br />

chance to review it on film.<br />

Below are some thoughts a day<br />

after Tiller’s Boilermakers posted<br />

a dominating <strong>41</strong>-<strong>16</strong> victory over<br />

the <strong>Irish</strong>.<br />

Q: Now that you’ve had<br />

time for this victory to set in,<br />

do you view it any differently,<br />

as far as the significance of<br />

what your team accomplished<br />

and the fact that no one can<br />

ask you about winning at<br />

Notre Dame any longer?<br />

Tiller: “Well that’s what feels<br />

best about it — I don’t have to<br />

answer that question any more. I<br />

look at things differently than<br />

you all do, and that’s the way it<br />

should be. I haven’t felt like<br />

there’s really much left for that<br />

we have to prove here. But I suppose<br />

in the real world, that’s a<br />

fair assumption. So winning a<br />

game like this eliminates one<br />

more of those, ‘You have to go<br />

do this.’ You guys know where<br />

I’m coming from, and it’s natural<br />

— I understand it. I don’t feel<br />

that way, but I feel satisfied about<br />

the win because I’m not going to<br />

get that question any longer.”<br />

Q: Following the win, your<br />

team is ranked No. 9 in the<br />

Associated Press poll, which<br />

ties your highest ranking since<br />

coming to Purdue. Now that<br />

the polls weigh heavily on the<br />

BCS rankings, will you start to<br />

play a little more attention to<br />

that?<br />

Tiller: “Ever since they took<br />

me off of the voting (panel), I<br />

pay much less attention to it.<br />

And I don’t know what merits us<br />

being ranked where we’re at,<br />

again, and I’m very serious here,<br />

when I was voting, I was always<br />

aware of who the top-10 teams<br />

were and Nos. 12, 13, 14. And I<br />

guess somebody above you has<br />

to lose for you to move<br />

up, so I don’t know<br />

what happened<br />

(Saturday) to why we’d<br />

move up. And quite<br />

frankly, I wouldn’t pay<br />

too much attention to it<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Joe Tiller shows rare emotion on<br />

the sideline moments after the win<br />

at Notre Dame. Tiller is now 4-4<br />

against the <strong>Irish</strong>.<br />

anyway this early. Maybe Game<br />

8 or 9, you might get me on that<br />

one, but not now.”<br />

Q: You’ve had some potent<br />

offenses at Purdue before, but<br />

have you ever had one that<br />

was this potent and efficient at<br />

the same time?<br />

Tiller: “Probably not. We’ve<br />

had some unbelievable days<br />

when Drew (Brees) was here,<br />

number-wise, be we’ve never<br />

been as efficient running the<br />

offense as we have in this combination<br />

of four games. I think<br />

this is probably the best (combination).<br />

I’d have to go back and<br />

evaluate — I don’t think along<br />

those lines very often. But like<br />

everybody, I’m pleased, and kind<br />

of amazed, at how<br />

efficiently we’re running<br />

the offense.”<br />

Q: Did Notre<br />

Dame see something<br />

on tape that<br />

let them believe<br />

that they would be<br />

able to successfully<br />

throw the football<br />

against your<br />

defense, and are<br />

you concerned<br />

with allowing 460<br />

passing yards?<br />

Tiller: “Our<br />

biggest problem<br />

(Saturday) from a<br />

pass defense point of<br />

view was really our<br />

inability or a failure<br />

to communicate. In<br />

other words, on<br />

their one touchdown<br />

pass, we had<br />

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Nov. 13<br />

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Tailgate Is Oct. 8<br />

one-half of our secondary playing<br />

man (coverage) and the<br />

other half playing zone. And<br />

they just didn’t get the calls<br />

relayed across the secondary.<br />

That concerns us because that’s<br />

something that you have to do<br />

regardless of the crowd or the<br />

noise or anything else — you<br />

have to be on the same page.<br />

That’s the bad news. The good<br />

news is that any problems we<br />

had are correctable problems.”<br />

Q: What’s the status of<br />

Anthony Spencer, who didn’t<br />

play in the second half with an<br />

ankle injury?<br />

Tiller: “Spence will not practice<br />

today, although everything<br />

(X-ray-wise) is negative on him<br />

and hopefully it’ll stay that way<br />

on him.<br />

Q: Obviously Spencer was<br />

having a career day before getting<br />

banged up. Comment on<br />

his monstrous first half.<br />

Tiller: “It was easily a monster<br />

game. He was playing<br />

extremely well. We have a point<br />

system on defense, and for any<br />

player who scores 15 or more<br />

points during the game — you<br />

get a point for tackle and a point<br />

for a knocked down pass, etc. —<br />

they get a helmet sticker for<br />

that. Last week in our win at<br />

Illinois, we had five defensive<br />

players that got a sticker for playing<br />

a good football game.<br />

“Spencer (against Notre<br />

Dame) had 36 points by half-<br />

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Before or after the game, stop<br />

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time. That’s the most we’ve<br />

ever had a player get in one<br />

half. So to say he was playing<br />

extremely well is probably an<br />

understatement.”<br />

Q: How is the health of<br />

everyone else on your squad<br />

following the game?<br />

Tiller: “(Jon) Goldsberry will<br />

be tested again (Monday to see if<br />

he’s cleared from his bout with<br />

mono); that was according to<br />

plan. He has been improving<br />

and they’re going to start biking<br />

him and some light jogging and<br />

some activity.”<br />

Q: What kind of a Sunday<br />

workout do you traditionally<br />

get from your guys after big<br />

wins like this?<br />

Tiller: “Well we’ve changed<br />

our approach this year, and<br />

we’re going to stick with it, and<br />

that is we’re going to go out<br />

there and have our ‘Boiler Bowl’<br />

where our young players scrimmage.<br />

We did it last week and<br />

we’re going to do it every<br />

Sunday from now on. And the<br />

reason I bring that up is because<br />

I think that even though it’s not<br />

your No. 1 guys, it kind of gets<br />

them a little energized and they<br />

watch the young guys scrimmage.<br />

And it kind of gets their<br />

minds off the game and on to<br />

what you’re doing next.” j<br />

SHOWROOM HOURS:<br />

Game Days: 9A.M.–6P.M.<br />

Mon.– Fri.: 8A.M.–6P.M.<br />

Saturday: (No Game)<br />

9A.M.–4P.M.<br />

Windows • Siding • Gutters • Doors • Sunrooms<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 3 GoldandBlack.com


GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 4 GoldandBlack.com


FROM PUBLISHER ALAN KARPICK<br />

NOW THINGS COULD GET INTERESTING<br />

C onventional wisdom would<br />

make one think that Coach Joe Tiller<br />

has a tough job ahead of him.<br />

After all, his team just beat Notre<br />

Dame on the road for the first time in<br />

30 years.<br />

Wait, his team didn’t just beat<br />

the <strong>Irish</strong>, it crushed them in a way<br />

few teams have in the history of<br />

Notre Dame Stadium.<br />

But something is very different<br />

about this Purdue football team that<br />

makes all the talk about overconfidence<br />

and possible lack of focus<br />

heading into Happy Valley Oct. 9<br />

just talk.<br />

That difference is No. 18 and the<br />

air of confidence and ability quarterback<br />

Kyle Orton brings to this team.<br />

It’s not something that is plainly visible<br />

on the sideline or even in the<br />

huddle. He doesn’t spend much wasted<br />

motion pumping his fists or being<br />

overly demonstrative on the sidelines<br />

with his teammates. But what he<br />

does do that builds more confidence<br />

than anything is deliver amazing<br />

results. And that speaks volumes his<br />

to Boilermaker brethren.<br />

To set the record straight, Purdue<br />

has never had a quarterback enjoy a<br />

four-game stretch like<br />

Orton has. Not Griese, not<br />

Phipps, not Everett, not<br />

Herrmann and not Brees.<br />

The statistic of 17 touchdown<br />

passes and no interceptions,<br />

at least in Purdue<br />

terms, is akin to Joe<br />

DiMaggio’s 56-game hitting<br />

streak. When you stop<br />

and think about it, it is<br />

pretty amazing and may<br />

never be repeated.<br />

Orton is the first Boilermaker to<br />

throw four or more touchdown passes<br />

in four consecutive games. Heck,<br />

only quarterbacks Drew Brees (1998)<br />

and Len Dawson (1954) have done it<br />

in back-to-back games. Brees did<br />

snap off <strong>16</strong> touchdown passes over a<br />

four-game stretch during his recordsetting<br />

‘98 season when he tossed a<br />

Big Ten standard 39 scoring passes.<br />

But Brees threw five picks during that<br />

hot streak that took place in the last<br />

four regular-season games of that season.<br />

The common thread during<br />

Orton’s and Brees’ amazing runs?<br />

Purdue won all its games.<br />

Orton is, and deserves to be at<br />

this point in the season, a Heisman<br />

Trophy candidate. He will remain in<br />

Serious Personal Injury<br />

and Accidents<br />

Jeff Cooke<br />

the race if two things<br />

occur. First, and obviously,<br />

he has to continue to perform<br />

at a high level. But<br />

second, and most important,<br />

Purdue needs to win<br />

at least nine regular season<br />

games and be in the hunt<br />

for a BCS bowl come mid-<br />

November.<br />

What is Orton’s biggest<br />

ally in the race for college<br />

football immortality? The<br />

fact that all he really cares about is<br />

winning football games. One look at<br />

Orton’s haircut, though I don’t think<br />

it is as bad as some people, and one<br />

can see he is not a Madison Avenue<br />

guy. If Purdue continues its remarkable<br />

season, no matter what individual<br />

numbers Orton accrues, it will be<br />

good enough for him.<br />

Finally, long-time fans with a<br />

healthy dose of Purdue paranoia, will<br />

remember that the team has struggled<br />

over the years it had a game the<br />

week after beating Notre Dame.<br />

Purdue is 9-4 in that situation in its<br />

history, but just 2-5-2 the week after<br />

it won in South Bend. In fact, the<br />

Boilermakers have lost their last<br />

three times they have played a road<br />

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game after beating Notre Dame. But<br />

Tiller is 3-0 the weeks following wins<br />

over the <strong>Irish</strong>.<br />

Researching the above data<br />

passed the time for me while I was<br />

waiting for the Notre Dame game to<br />

finally come to an end following a<br />

seemingly endless fourth quarter.<br />

While it makes for good conversation<br />

among the Knuckleheads during<br />

game week, it doesn’t mean any more<br />

than the 30-year losing streak under<br />

the Golden Dome meant to the 2004<br />

Boilermakers.<br />

Something special is in the air<br />

for this football team. How special<br />

we will all find out in the coming<br />

weeks, but if you are a Boilermaker<br />

fan you can dream big. This year,<br />

some of those dreams just might<br />

come true.<br />

Karpick can be reached at<br />

AKarpick@GoldandBlack.com. For those<br />

readers experiencing problems with issue<br />

delivery, please e-mail Karpick, and<br />

include your mailing address as it appears<br />

on your mailing label.<br />

FREE INTERVIEW<br />

FEE BASED ON RECOVERY<br />

Aaron Cooke<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 5 GoldandBlack.com


Continued from page 2<br />

“It seems like that’s the never-ending<br />

trend in this rivalry — whoever wins<br />

the special teams battle is going to win<br />

the game,” Orton said. “I think both<br />

teams know that, and I really do believe<br />

that. And we definitely won it today.”<br />

Later in the quarter, the<br />

Boilermakers scored on the first of backto-back<br />

97-yard touchdown scoring drives<br />

that served as bookends to the halftime<br />

break.<br />

Opposite day play No. 2, however,<br />

occurred minutes before the first long<br />

drive, and served as the game’s second<br />

turning point.<br />

With the <strong>Irish</strong> driving down the<br />

field, it appeared that Notre Dame was<br />

going to answer Brooks’ touchdown<br />

return, as Notre Dame ended up in a<br />

first-and-goal situation on the<br />

Boilermaker 2-yard line.<br />

That’s when sophomore defensive<br />

end Anthony Spencer shocked the<br />

crowd of 80,795 by ripping the football<br />

out of the hands of <strong>Irish</strong> freshman running<br />

back Darius Walker, subsequently<br />

stripping the <strong>Irish</strong> of a chance to ensure<br />

the South Bend Streak would continue<br />

for two more years.<br />

“That was a huge swing,” Spack said.<br />

“And Anthony Spencer was playing the<br />

game of his life. I would have liked to<br />

have seen what happened if he would<br />

have played the second half. He played<br />

very, very well and came up with some<br />

huge plays. You talk about creating<br />

turnovers all the time, and in that situation,<br />

that was a huge play — a 14-point<br />

swing in a game like this — it was big.”<br />

It was a two-touchdown swing since<br />

Purdue’s deflating 97-yard, 11-play drive<br />

was capped by a perfectly executed playaction<br />

pass from Orton to defensive end<br />

Rob Ninkovich, who doubles as a goal<br />

line tight end, to give the visitors a comfortable<br />

20-3 lead at the intermission.<br />

“I think that 97-yard drive really<br />

broke their backs — I really do,” Orton<br />

said. “They were playing us real tough<br />

there for a while, and then we just took<br />

it right down the field and put it right in<br />

their face and said, ‘We came to play<br />

today.’ So I think that (drive) really set<br />

the tempo for the rest of the game.<br />

“At halftime I was real confident.<br />

We had just gone up by three scores and<br />

right there I knew we had a pretty good<br />

chance to come away with a win. I just<br />

told everyone, ‘Hey, we have to keep<br />

pulling our end. No turnovers; that’s the<br />

only way they can come back.’ And we<br />

did a great job again of not turning the<br />

ball over.”<br />

But Purdue’s 17-point lead wouldn’t<br />

last long.<br />

After an <strong>Irish</strong> three-and-out, the<br />

Boilermakers took just 19 seconds to<br />

extend their lead to a 24-point margin.<br />

And the second 97-yard drive by the<br />

Purdue offense to put the <strong>Boilers</strong> up 27-<br />

3 at the beginning of the third quarter<br />

was personal for senior wideout Taylor<br />

Stubblefield following some bulletin<br />

board material courtesy of <strong>Irish</strong> cornerback<br />

Dwight Ellick.<br />

“I guess Ellick said in the paper that<br />

he was going to get in Taylor’s face and<br />

not let him off the line,” Orton said.<br />

“Coach showed us that before the game<br />

and I think it kind of motivated Taylor a<br />

little bit. And they’ve been trying to do<br />

that (to Stubblefield) for three years and<br />

it hasn’t worked.”<br />

And it didn’t work on Oct. 2 either.<br />

On the third play of the drive, Orton<br />

called an audible and found Stubblefield<br />

streaking down the sideline, swallowing<br />

up all 97 yards on the drive in large<br />

chunk, as the fifth-year receiver began a<br />

fist-pumping celebration at the Purdue<br />

40 and carried it 60 yards into the end<br />

zone.<br />

“They had commented that they were<br />

going to play press coverage and that they<br />

were going to play it so tight that I was not<br />

going to be able to breathe,” Stubblefield<br />

said. “Anytime a team want’s to go manto-man<br />

— we’ve seen it the last three<br />

games, which was quite surprising — and<br />

we saw it again this game. Anytime we see<br />

it, we’re going to check to something and<br />

make them pay, and that’s what we did.”<br />

And the Purdue dynamic duo made<br />

them pay all day.<br />

Orton, now considered a frontrunner<br />

for the Heisman Trophy, completed<br />

21-of-31 passes for 385 yards and four<br />

touchdowns, while Stubblefield, Orton’s<br />

favorite target and soon-to-be Big Ten<br />

all-time reception leader, caught seven<br />

passes for 181 yards and two scores.<br />

Orton would hook up later on<br />

scoring strikes with 6-foot-9 receiver<br />

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Kyle Ingraham (nine yards), and with<br />

Stubblefield again from 12-yards out.<br />

His play is no longer shocking to<br />

Tiller.<br />

“Our quarterback continues to do a<br />

great job,” Tiller said. “He does an excellent<br />

job at the line of scrimmage. I’m not<br />

surprised anymore by what No. 18 can<br />

do. He’s a heck of a talent.”<br />

Notre Dame coach Tyrone<br />

Willingham, who earlier in the week<br />

called Orton “bulletproof,” was also<br />

singing Orton’s praises after witnessing<br />

Purdue’s fourth-straight 500-plus of total<br />

offense.<br />

“Orton has complete command<br />

of their system,” Willingham said.<br />

“He made some pretty big plays<br />

today. He had a real strong game. He<br />

came in not having thrown an interception<br />

and he didn’t have one<br />

today. There’s a reason for that. He<br />

does a great job.”<br />

After the contest, a relieved Tiller<br />

was tickled when talking to the large<br />

gathering of media.<br />

BY DOUG ELISH<br />

“This is a great win — no question<br />

about it,” Tiller said. “To come<br />

here to Notre Dame and win in this<br />

stadium is huge for us. Winning a<br />

game against this team (was great),<br />

because in my opinion watching<br />

Notre Dame over the course of last<br />

week, I was walking on eggshells. I<br />

thought this was the best team Coach<br />

Willingham has had at Notre Dame,<br />

and they were hitting on all eight<br />

cylinders. I was worried about their<br />

defensive front seven, and I thought<br />

our offensive line did a great job containing<br />

them today.”<br />

And the defense got the job done as<br />

well.<br />

Although the <strong>Irish</strong> accumulated<br />

536 yards of total offense, and Notre<br />

Dame quarterback set a Notre Dame<br />

Stadium record with 432 passing<br />

yards, the Boilermakers managed to<br />

keep the home team off the scoreboard<br />

in excess.<br />

After giving up 30 points to<br />

Illinois a week earlier, Spack hoped<br />

his defense would step up against<br />

Notre Dame.<br />

“I thought we played better here,”<br />

Spack said. “I didn’t think we’d play<br />

poorly, but I was hoping that we’d tackle<br />

better — that was our main goal to get<br />

better.<br />

“We kept the ball in front of us. We<br />

had some injuries we had to deal with in<br />

the second half, so it was critical to keep<br />

the ball in front of us.”<br />

The most crucial, and potentially<br />

costly at the time, was the injury of<br />

Anthony Spencer, who suffered a<br />

high-ankle sprain before halftime<br />

after posting four tackles, two sacks,<br />

the key forced fumble and a pass<br />

breakup. Spencer didn’t play in the<br />

second half, but was still a likely a<br />

candidate for the Purdue defensive<br />

player of the game.<br />

His positionmate, Ray Edwards,<br />

was nearly equally impressive,<br />

recording five tackles, 2.5 sacks and a<br />

forced fumble of his own. Linebacker<br />

George Hall again led the team with<br />

Orton Shines In Spotlight<br />

Against the <strong>Irish</strong> and in front<br />

of a national television audience,<br />

Kyle Orton made sure<br />

every Heisman voter knows what<br />

those close to Purdue have for a<br />

long time.<br />

He’s the real deal.<br />

A lot of pundits claimed<br />

Orton and Purdue weren’t as good<br />

as their wins over Syracuse, Ball<br />

State and Illinois made it seem.<br />

But against a Notre Dame team<br />

regarded as a true test, Orton had<br />

arguably the best performance of<br />

his career.<br />

After all, he completed 21 of<br />

31 passes for 385 yards.<br />

He threw four more touchdowns,<br />

bringing his total to 17<br />

without an interception.<br />

He led the offense to <strong>41</strong><br />

points against the <strong>Irish</strong>, the<br />

second-highest total by Purdue<br />

in the 76-year history of the<br />

series.<br />

Oh yeah, he did something<br />

Bob Griese, Gary Danielson, Mark<br />

Herrmann, Jim Everett and Drew<br />

Brees never could. He went to Notre Dame Stadium<br />

and came home with a win.<br />

He was so impressive even the Notre Dame<br />

players, who have no love-lost for Purdue, confirmed<br />

his legitimacy.<br />

“He was unstoppable. He is a great quarterback.<br />

A lot of people say he is the leading candidate for the<br />

Heisman Trophy,” Notre Dame defensive end Justin<br />

Tuck said. “He’s got my vote.”<br />

Defensive back Dwight Ellick, who was the one<br />

burned on Taylor Stubblefield’s 97-yard touchdown<br />

reception by a perfectly-thrown Orton ball, said<br />

Orton is the best he’s seen.<br />

“It’s the quarterback, to be honest with you,”<br />

<strong>Irish</strong> senior cornerback Dwight Ellick said. “He’s<br />

checking the defense, making his reads and every-<br />

Quarterback Kyle Orton continued his incredible streak of great performances posting a season-high<br />

385 passing yards and four touchdown passes. He became the first Boilermaker in<br />

history to toss four or more touchdown passes in four consecutive games.<br />

thing like that. You don’t see a quarterback who<br />

can make audibles and checks on every single<br />

play, week-in and week-out. You don’t see that at<br />

the college level.”<br />

It will be hard to find a Heisman list anywhere<br />

that disagrees with those two after Orton again<br />

orchestrated his offense to near perfection and in the<br />

process ended 30 years of Purdue frustration in<br />

South Bend.<br />

Certainly, it won’t be wide receiver Taylor<br />

Stubblefield’s list. After his 97-yard touchdown<br />

reception and when he knew the NBC cameras were<br />

on him, Stubblefield pointed to Orton and struck the<br />

Heisman pose, something Orton is about as likely to<br />

do as actually admit he cares about the highest<br />

honor in college football.<br />

Orton simply laughed at Stubblefield’s<br />

13 tackles.<br />

But the story was again the arm<br />

of Orton, who now leads the nation<br />

with 17 touchdown passes and no<br />

interceptions.<br />

And he continued to spread the<br />

wealth, connecting with eight different<br />

receivers.<br />

Stubblefield, who needs just<br />

three more receptions to replace<br />

former teammate John Standeford<br />

as the Big Ten’s all-time leading<br />

pass catcher, said the win, though a<br />

non-conference contest, was still<br />

pretty special.<br />

“It’s good for our team and great<br />

for the program,” Stubblefield said.<br />

“We just worried about ourselves — we<br />

didn’t worry about distractions. Our<br />

offense played well and our defense<br />

came up big at crucial times and we<br />

came out with a victory. It’s definitely<br />

big for our team, but it’s even bigger<br />

for our program. We’ve got the trophy<br />

and added another ‘P’ to it.” j<br />

antics and when asked if he had<br />

just proved himself in a stadium<br />

that’s housed more Heisman<br />

winners than anywhere else in<br />

college football history, he<br />

responded how he has after<br />

every other game this season.<br />

“I don’t know; I don’t have a<br />

vote,” Orton said.<br />

He did add that being in the<br />

running for the prestigious<br />

award means the team is doing<br />

well, but all the ever-increasing<br />

hype surrounding his personal<br />

achievements hasn’t changed a<br />

thing about his preparation,<br />

attitude or goals.<br />

“It feels the same as if I were a<br />

nobody,” Orton said. “It’s no added<br />

pressure for me. I’m just happy<br />

we’ve won four games and we are<br />

playing well.”<br />

It definitely doesn’t look like<br />

the pressure is effecting Orton as<br />

his poise and accuracy almost<br />

make his performances look<br />

easy. He never seems rattled<br />

even after a big hit or pressure<br />

in his face.<br />

Coach Joe Tiller and Orton<br />

have been saying all season that Orton’s experience<br />

and command of the system have finally<br />

allowed him to use his ample physical gifts to the<br />

fullest. Now, they just hope it lasts for seven<br />

more weeks.<br />

“I think (experience) is everything,” he said.<br />

“I don’t think I could have came in here as a<br />

freshman a few years back and played as well as I<br />

am right now. I’m so comfortable with the<br />

offense. We’re kind of in a groove right now and<br />

I just hope it keeps going.”j<br />

Doug Elish is a freelance contributor to Gold &<br />

Black Illustrated and GoldandBlack.com.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 7 GoldandBlack.com


THE VITALS<br />

When: Saturday, Oct. 9<br />

Where: Beaver Stadium (107,282)<br />

Playing Surface: Natural Grass<br />

Kickoff: 3:30 p.m. EST (West Lafayette<br />

time)<br />

TV Broadcast: ESPN<br />

Radio Broadcast: The Purdue Sports<br />

Network (Joe McConnell, play-by-play, Pete<br />

Quinn, color commentator, Tim Newton,<br />

anchor/producer Brett Schetzsle, sideline,<br />

Gary Kline, engineer) can be heard on over<br />

29 stations around the state, including the<br />

flagship station WSHP-FM (95.3, Lafayette)<br />

“The Rocket.”<br />

Series: Purdue trails 2-6-1, but defeated<br />

the Nittany Lions for the first time since<br />

they joined the Big Ten last season.<br />

Last Meeting: The Boilermakers won, 28-14,<br />

Oct. 11, 2003, in Ross-Ade Stadium.<br />

PSU 2004 SCHEDULE<br />

Date Opponent Result<br />

Sept. 4 AKRON W, 48-10<br />

Sept. 11 @ Boston College L, 7-21<br />

Sept. 18 CENTRAL FLORIDA W, 37-13<br />

Sept. 25 @ Wisconsin L, 3-<strong>16</strong><br />

Oct. 2 @ Minnesota L, 7-<strong>16</strong><br />

Oct. 9 PURDUE<br />

Oct. 23 IOWA<br />

Oct. 30 @ Ohio State<br />

Nov. 6 NORTHWESTERN<br />

Nov. 13 @ Indiana<br />

Nov. 20 MICHIGAN STATE<br />

PSU 2003 RESULTS<br />

Opponent Result<br />

TEMPLE W, 23-10<br />

BOSTON COLLEGE L, 14-27<br />

@ Nebraska L, 10-18<br />

KENT STATE W, 32-10<br />

MINNESOTA L, 14-20<br />

WISCONSIN L, 23-30<br />

@ Purdue L, 14-28<br />

@ Iowa L, 14-26<br />

OHIO STATE L, 20-21<br />

@ Northwestern L, 7-17<br />

INDIANA W, 52-7<br />

@ Michigan State L, 10-<strong>41</strong><br />

Game Five: Penn State Nittany Lions<br />

BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@Goldand-Black.com<br />

Penn State fell to 0-2 in the<br />

Big Ten after a <strong>16</strong>-7 loss Oct. 2 at<br />

No. 18 Minnesota.<br />

The 2-3 Nittany Lions’<br />

defense played well enough to<br />

win, but their offense staggered<br />

as the Blue and White gained a<br />

total of 271 yards.<br />

Penn State senior quarterback<br />

Zack Mills started after suffering<br />

a shoulder injury the week<br />

before at Wisconsin. He completed<br />

24-of-46 passes for 250<br />

yards and an interception.<br />

Over the last two seasons, senior<br />

quarterback Zack Mills has thrown<br />

11 touchdown passes and 13<br />

interceptions. (Craig Melvin/Getty<br />

Images)<br />

While the Lions are slumping, Purdue is soaring. The Boilermakers<br />

are off to a 4-0 start (1-0 in the Big Ten) and will conclude a grueling<br />

three-game road trip when they visit State College Oct. 9.<br />

Below is a look at the key matchups when the Boilermakers and<br />

Nittany Lions meet for the fourth time in Happy Valley since Penn State<br />

joined the Big Ten.<br />

PSU RUNNING GAME VS. PU AGAINST THE RUN<br />

The Boilermakers took away Notre Dame’s running<br />

game and made the <strong>Irish</strong> one-dimensional and must do<br />

the same against the Nittany Lions.<br />

Rest assured that Coach Joe Paterno wants to control<br />

the clock and keep Kyle Orton off the field.<br />

He won’t get his wish though if the Lions are as ineffective<br />

on the ground as they were at Minnesota. Penn State rushed for<br />

a woeful 21 yards (fourth-lowest under Paterno) on 22 attempts (thirdfewest<br />

under Paterno).<br />

Purdue will have its sights on No. 26 Tony Hunt, the Lions’ leading<br />

rusher. He is also a threat coming out of the backfield after catching<br />

seven passes for 110 yards at Minnesota (the first Penn State running<br />

back to top 100 yards receiving since 1981).<br />

Penn State ranks 61st in the nation in rushing, averaging 152.6<br />

yards per game, while Purdue’s run defense is 13th (allowing 90.5<br />

yards).<br />

Advantage: Purdue<br />

PSU PASSING GAME VS. PU AGAINST THE PASS<br />

We saw significant improvement in the Boilermakers’ tackling<br />

No. Name Pos.<br />

2 Ray Williams WR<br />

3 Garret Bushong TE<br />

3 Jason Renn QB<br />

4 Fabian Martin DB<br />

4 Matt Pruitt CB<br />

5 Zach Logan CB<br />

6 Desmond Tardy WR<br />

7 Kyle Smith SS<br />

8 Grant Walker FS<br />

9 Dorien Bryant WR<br />

10 Ray Edwards DE<br />

11 Brandon Kirsch QB<br />

12 Antwaun Rogers CB<br />

13 Torri Williams SS<br />

14 Scott Carroll QB<br />

<strong>16</strong> Dave Brytus P<br />

17 Josh Ferguson LB<br />

17 Curtis Painter QB<br />

18 Kyle Orton QB<br />

19 Paul Dubler CB<br />

19 Brandon Whittington WR<br />

20 Andre Chattams WR<br />

21 Taylor Stubblefield WR<br />

22 Jerome Brooks RB<br />

23 Kevin Noel WR<br />

24 Sean Petty CB<br />

24 Sean Bird WR<br />

25 Paul Long FS<br />

25 Jake Standeford WR<br />

26 Brandon Lombardy RB<br />

26 Lance Melvin FS<br />

27 Brandon Jones RB<br />

28 Dustin Keller TE<br />

29 Aaron Levin P/K<br />

30 George Hall LB<br />

No. Name Pos.<br />

1 “Phillips, Anwar CB<br />

3 “Bulter, Deon Db<br />

3 Ganter, Chris QB<br />

4 Gould, Robbie PK<br />

5 Kanuch, Jim Saf<br />

6 Hart, Mike QB<br />

6 Johnson, Donnie CB<br />

7 Mills, Zack QB<br />

8 Kinlaw, Rodney TB<br />

9 Phillips, Terrance WR<br />

10 Lowry, Calvin Saf<br />

11 Ganter, Jason Saf<br />

11 Golden, Terrell WR<br />

12 Robinson, Michael QB<br />

13 Humes, Patrick K<br />

13 Palmer, Kinta WR<br />

14 Kubic, Andy LB<br />

14 Morelli, Anthony QB<br />

15 Cianciolo, Paul QB<br />

15 Wise, Brent CB<br />

<strong>16</strong> Corrado, Dan QB<br />

<strong>16</strong> Davis, Tony DB<br />

17 Chisley, Lavon DE<br />

18 Guman, Andrew Saf<br />

19 Lundquist, Tom QB<br />

19 Smith, Gerald WR<br />

20 Shaw, Tim LB<br />

21 Prokopik, Joe WR/K<br />

21 Zemaitis, Alan CB<br />

22 Hardy, Darien CB<br />

22 Hill, Jed TE<br />

23 Mills, Marcus CB<br />

24 McCready, Nolan Saf<br />

25 Perretta, Brendan WR<br />

26 Hunt, Tony TB<br />

27 Harrell, Chris Saf<br />

29 Cronin, Paul Saf<br />

www.pur duesports.com<br />

Purdue Boilermakers<br />

31 Bernard Pollard SS<br />

32 Jerod Void RB<br />

33 Brian Hickman CB<br />

34 Jimmy Ladd FB<br />

35 Ben Jones K<br />

36 Dan Bick LB<br />

36 Casey Welch K<br />

37 Hakeem Abdullah RB<br />

37 Rafael Price WR<br />

38 Brian Mattaway SS<br />

39 Bobby Iwuchukwu LB<br />

40 Kory Sheets RB<br />

<strong>41</strong> John Lampert LB<br />

42 Anthony Heygood RB<br />

42 Craig Mansfield LB<br />

43 James Flanagan LB<br />

44 Jon Goldsberry FB<br />

45 Gene Bright DE<br />

46 Luis Vasquez LB<br />

47 Mike Durrett LB<br />

48 Pat Kohtz SS<br />

49 Anthony Spencer DE<br />

50 Tyler Moore OG<br />

51 Garret Miller OT<br />

52 Hugh Johnson LB<br />

52 Mike Durrett LB<br />

53 Nick Fincher OG<br />

54 Adam Huebner DE<br />

55 Brandon Villarreal DT<br />

56 Matt Turner C<br />

57 Jeremy Coley DE<br />

58 Brent Grover DT<br />

59 Stanford Keglar LB<br />

60 Zach Smith OT<br />

61 Chris Mattson LS<br />

62 Craig Henderson DT<br />

30 Snow, BranDon LB<br />

31 Posluszny, Paul LB<br />

33 Scott, Austin TB<br />

34 Hahn, Matt RB<br />

34 Vendemia, Gio CB<br />

35 Royse, John CB<br />

35 Zwierzynski, J.R. OLB<br />

36 Kapinos, Jeremy P<br />

36 Pinchek, Nick RB<br />

37 Ridenhour, Spencer DB<br />

38 Lawlor, Dan FB<br />

39 Jefferson, Paul FB<br />

40 Connor, Dan LB<br />

<strong>41</strong> Paxson, Scott DT<br />

42 Senk, Adam FB<br />

43 Kilmer, Ethan LB<br />

44 Hall, Patrick DE<br />

45 Bedics, Pat LB<br />

46 Reese, Curt DB<br />

46 Sales, Tyrell LB<br />

47 Gilmore, Brian FB<br />

49 Burton, Dorian LB<br />

49 Ream, Brandon P<br />

50 Richardson, Andrew T<br />

51 Harris, Tim DL<br />

52 Brown, Dontey LB<br />

53 Roach, Steve DT<br />

54 Davis, Scott G<br />

54 Purcell, Amani DE<br />

55 Rice, Matthew DE<br />

56 Hinton, Austin OL<br />

56 Sothern, Mike LB<br />

57 Mauriello, Chris KS<br />

58 Harrison, Greg T<br />

59 Rush, Charles G<br />

60 Weber, Patrick C<br />

61 Muir, Ross OL<br />

62 Daise, Nick DL<br />

63 David Owen OT<br />

64 Danny May OG<br />

65 Mike Otto OT<br />

66 Jordan Grimes OG<br />

67 Uche Nwaneri OG<br />

68 Robbie Powell C<br />

69 Neal Tull DT<br />

71 Dan Zaleski OT<br />

72 Chris Mattson LS<br />

73 Jeff Bennett TE<br />

74 Sean Sester OT<br />

75 Brian Wang OT<br />

76 Willie Bach OG<br />

77 Ryan Noblet OT<br />

78 Nick Maynard C<br />

79 Jermaine Guynn DE<br />

80 Brian Hare WR<br />

81 Al Royal LB<br />

82 Cory Benton TE<br />

83 Jake Cunningham WR<br />

84 Byron Williams WR<br />

85 Cliff Avril LB<br />

86 Chase Lecklider WR<br />

87 Charles Davis TE<br />

88 Drew Rucks LB<br />

89 Kyle Ingraham WR<br />

90 Ryan Baker TE<br />

91 Nick Cavallo DE<br />

93 Rob Ninkovich DE<br />

94 Jerry Wasikowski TE<br />

96 Nick Raben TE<br />

97 Jamaal Jones DT<br />

98 Dan McGowen DT<br />

99 Jonathan Patton DT<br />

Penn State Nittany Lions<br />

63 Toriello, Joe OL<br />

64 Bowman, Wyatt OL<br />

65 Price, Robert G<br />

66 Antolick, Lance C<br />

67 Brown, Levi T<br />

68 Wilson, John T<br />

69 Schnell, Tommy OL<br />

70 Marmo, Nick G<br />

71 Baird, Mike WR<br />

71 Farris, Mark T<br />

72 Lispi, Lee G<br />

72 Varva, Trent OL<br />

73 Holler, Joel T<br />

74 Reed, Tyler G<br />

75 Kuzemchak, Lee OL<br />

76 Cadogan, Gerald OL<br />

77 Smith, E.Z. C<br />

78 Shaw, John DT<br />

79 Auletta, Chris T<br />

80 Rubin, Mark WR<br />

81 Smolko, Isaac TE<br />

82 Surma, Vic WR<br />

83 Scott, Ryan WR<br />

84 Gaines, Josh DE<br />

85 Alford, Jay DT<br />

86 Lucien, Mike DL<br />

87 Bronson, John TE<br />

88 Darlin, Kevin TE<br />

89 Lyons, Jordan TE<br />

90 Robinson, Jason TE<br />

91 Hali, Tamba DL<br />

92 Johnson, Ed DT<br />

93 Shipley, A.Q. DT<br />

94 Wake, Derek DE<br />

95 Robinson, Elijah DT<br />

96 Ohrnberger, Rich DL<br />

98 Pawlikowski, Mike TE


effort against the <strong>Irish</strong> compared to the Illinois<br />

game. With that in mind, we expect to see a much<br />

better effort from Purdue’s linebackers covering the<br />

tight end in the passing game.<br />

As always, getting pressure on the quarterback<br />

will be key, especially since the Lions will probably be faced with<br />

several third-and-long situations.<br />

Keep in mind, that senior quarterback Zack Mills still won’t<br />

be close to 100 percent after partially separating his right (nonthrowing)<br />

shoulder against the Badgers.<br />

Also, the left-handed Mills has been prone to turn the ball<br />

over often during his career. He has thrown five touchdown passes<br />

with eight interceptions in 2004 and has been picked off 35<br />

times (compared to 37 TD passes) during the course of his career.<br />

If Michael Robinson is unable to go after suffering a concussion<br />

against Wisconsin, Penn State’s passing attack will be greatly<br />

effected. Robinson holds the Lions’ longest pass reception of<br />

the season (49 yards), but after that the longest play has been 32.<br />

Not helping matters in this category has been the fact that<br />

Penn State’s receivers have dropped several passes on numerous<br />

occasions.<br />

Purdue must improve its pass defense, which is surrendering<br />

239.5 yards per game (85th nationally).<br />

You can bet Penn State will try and exploit that any and<br />

every way it can.<br />

Advantage: Purdue<br />

PU RUNNING GAME VS. PSU AGAINST THE RUN<br />

The 77-year-old Paterno says the Lions aren’t as<br />

bad as some people believe at stopping the run<br />

(54th nationally, permitting 135.8 yards per game)<br />

so we think the Blue and White will play with a lot<br />

of energy and hold the Boilermaker running attack<br />

in check.<br />

Plus, Jerod Void is less than 100 percent after banging up his<br />

left shoulder against the <strong>Irish</strong>.<br />

The Lions did a decent job on Minnesota’s rushing attack,<br />

which entered play Oct. 2 averaging a Big Ten-best 332 yards per<br />

game. The Gophers settled for 288 yards on the ground, including<br />

a season-low 143 in the first two quarters.<br />

Nonetheless, Purdue proved against Notre Dame that it<br />

doesn’t have to run the ball especially well to be productive<br />

offensively.<br />

Advantage: Penn State<br />

PU PASSING GAME VS. PSU AGAINST THE PASS<br />

How would you like to be a defensive coordinator<br />

trying to devise a game plan to slow down<br />

the Boilermaker aerial attack and quarterback Kyle<br />

Orton?<br />

Purdue ranks second in the nation in passing<br />

2004 Top Nittany Lion Statistical Leaders<br />

Rushing Att. Yds. Avg. TDs Long Avg/G<br />

Hunt, T. 69 <strong>41</strong>0 5.1 4 77 82.0<br />

Scott, A. 21 172 8.2 2 47 43.0<br />

Robinson, M. 22 99 4.5 0 14 24.8<br />

Passing Att. Comp. Pct. Yds. TD Int. Long<br />

Mills, Z. 129 76 58.9 890 5 8 49<br />

Receiving No. Yds. Avg. TDs Long<br />

Hunt, T. 17 <strong>16</strong>8 9.9 0 24<br />

Robinson, M. <strong>16</strong> 231 14.4 1 49<br />

Smith, G. 14 201 14.4 0 27<br />

Jefferson, P. 10 63 6.3 0 20<br />

Tackles UT AT Tot Sacks<br />

Posluszny, P. 22 17 39 1.0<br />

Guman, A. 27 10 37 0.0<br />

Shaw, T. 19 14 33 0.5<br />

Rice, M. 17 13 30 1.0<br />

Zemaitis, A. 20 5 25 0.0<br />

follett’s<br />

Top Twenty<br />

1st<br />

Place<br />

Team Pts Record Votes<br />

1 USC 132 4-0 3<br />

2 Oklahoma 1<strong>16</strong> 4-0 1<br />

3 Georgia 114 4-0 1<br />

4 Auburn 99 5-0 1<br />

5 Miami Fla. 92 4-0<br />

5 Texas 92 4-0<br />

7 Purdue 78 4-0<br />

8 California 74 3-0<br />

8 Virginia 74 4-0<br />

10 Florida St. 65 3-1<br />

11 Minnesota 53 5-0<br />

12 Utah 51 5-0<br />

13 Michigan 49 4-1<br />

14 Florida 46 3-1<br />

15 Wisconsin 45 5-0<br />

<strong>16</strong> Ohio St. 22 3-1<br />

17 Tennessee 19 3-1<br />

18 West Virginia 17 4-1<br />

19 Arizona St. <strong>16</strong><br />

20 Maryland 13<br />

Also receiving votes: Louisville, Boise State, LSU,<br />

Oklahoma State. Voting Panel: Jeff Gulick, Follett’s;<br />

Joe McConnell, Purdue Sports Radio Network; Alan<br />

Karpick, Gold & Black Illustrated; Lanny Sigo,<br />

WASK-Radio and Guest Fans Brent Talcott and<br />

Keith Didion.<br />

offense, averaging 370.3 yards per game.<br />

Orton will be looking to become the first Purdue quarterback<br />

ever to have four consecutive 300-yard passing games.<br />

He’ll do just that if Stubblefield continues to sizzle. He is<br />

making a strong case for being the front runner for the Biletnikoff<br />

Award this season. No. 21 has been sensational to date, hauling<br />

in 28 passes for 505 yards (that’s an average of 18 yards per grab)<br />

and a whopping 10 touchdowns. In just four games Stubblefield<br />

is just three touchdown receptions short of the school single-season<br />

record shared by John Standeford and Vinny Sutherland.<br />

Stubblefield is playing with more confidence than ever and<br />

has that mind set that no one can cover him let alone catch<br />

him.<br />

Penn State’s defense limited Minnesota quarterback Bryan<br />

Cupito to 113 yards passing (8-for-18) and intercepted him<br />

once. Cupito, however, isn’t in the same league as Orton.<br />

Statistically, the Lions are 18th in the country in pass<br />

defense, allowing <strong>16</strong>1.2 yards per game, but haven’t faced an<br />

offense nearly as committed to the pass as<br />

Purdue’s.<br />

Advantage: Purdue<br />

SPECIAL TEAMS<br />

Purdue’s special teams were special against<br />

Notre Dame and if they continue to play like that they could be<br />

the difference between a very good season and a special season.<br />

Ben Jones hit both of his field goal versus Notre Dame and<br />

has now connected on 5-of-6 attempts this season, including<br />

five straight.<br />

Opponents now have to fear Jerome Brooks’ ability to<br />

change the complexion of a game.<br />

Freshman Dave Brytus has been OK in the punting department,<br />

averaging 38.1 yards. To his defense, he hasn’t gotten a lot<br />

of practice in game conditions (just nine attempts). Brytus has<br />

put five of those nine inside the 20.<br />

Talk about not many chances … that certainly applies to<br />

Penn State kicker Robbie Gould. He has hit 1-of-3 field goals this<br />

season, a 23-yarder.<br />

Like Brytus, Penn State punter Jeremy Kapino has been average<br />

at best. He’s averaging 37.8 yards per punt with six going<br />

inside the 20. However, Kapino has punted 26 times in five games.<br />

There doesn’t appear to be a big threat in the return game<br />

for the Lions as they have yet to run back a kickoff or a punt<br />

longer than 30 yards.<br />

Penn State has allowed a punt return for a touchdown.<br />

The Lions’ strengths on special teams is blocking kicks.<br />

Advantage: Purdue<br />

GUT FEELING<br />

Will Purdue suffer a letdown after such an<br />

impressive performance at Notre Dame? Not with<br />

the way Orton is playing and leading the offense.<br />

Penn State is playing with little to no confidence.<br />

After all, the Lions have lost nine of their last 10 Big Ten games.<br />

Purdue, on the other hand, has an abundance of confidence<br />

after its showing in South Bend.<br />

If the Boilermakers get off to a good start and silence the<br />

Penn State faithful (except for the “Joe must go!” shouts), this<br />

one could get out of hand early.<br />

Keep in mind that Purdue leads the nation in total offense,<br />

averaging 549.3 yards per game and is second in scoring offense,<br />

averaging 47.3 points. Penn State, on the other hand, is 65th in<br />

the country in total offense (364.8 yards per game) and 90th in<br />

scoring offense (20.4 points).<br />

Advantage: Purdue<br />

PREDICTION<br />

PURDUE 34, PENN STATE 17<br />

If the Boilermakers can win in Notre Dame Stadium for the<br />

first time in 30 years, they certainly can defeat a slumping Penn<br />

State program for the first time ever in Beaver Stadium.<br />

As long as Purdue protects the ball, they’ll win going away<br />

in this one.<br />

For thorough, daily coverage of Boilermaker football, visit<br />

GoldandBlack.com.


2004 OPPONENT PREVIEW<br />

SCOUTING PENN STATE<br />

BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

BE ON THE LOOKOUT FOR<br />

… (a.k.a. STRENGTHS)<br />

R Beaver Stadium and its expected<br />

sellout crowd of 107,282 will be the<br />

largest venue the Boilermakers play in<br />

in the regular season.<br />

Penn State fans have been encouraged<br />

to “White Out” Purdue by wearing<br />

a white shirt or sweatshirt to the game.<br />

R Penn State’s defense probably<br />

isn’t as good as Notre Dame’s, but can<br />

have its moments.<br />

The Lions held Minnesota to <strong>16</strong><br />

points, 28 points below its season average<br />

of 44.2 points per game.<br />

In addition, they held the Gophers<br />

142 yards below their season average of<br />

542.8 yards per game.<br />

Penn State ranks 22nd in scoring<br />

defense (allowing 15.2 points per<br />

game), 26th in the country in total<br />

defense (297 yards allowed per game).<br />

R If junior quarterback Michael<br />

Robinson returns to action, and that<br />

may be a big if considering he suffered<br />

a head injury less than two weeks ago,<br />

he would be cause for concern for<br />

Purdue.<br />

The multi-talented Robinson started<br />

at wide receiver for the third time<br />

this season Sept. 25 at Wisconsin and<br />

made a 49-yard catch and run on the<br />

first play of the game. It was the longest<br />

reception of his career.<br />

Robinson is the Lions’ second-leading<br />

receiver with <strong>16</strong> catches for 231<br />

yards and one touchdown. He also has<br />

rushed for 99 yards on 22 carries and is<br />

5-of-8 passing for 87 yards and one<br />

score. Robinson is second on the team<br />

with 330 all-purpose yards.<br />

Last year against Purdue,<br />

Robinson replaced the injured Mills<br />

at quarterback and connected on just<br />

10-of-32 passes for 98 yards and one<br />

touchdown.<br />

R The Lions have a knack for<br />

blocking kicks.<br />

Defensive tackle Scott Paxson<br />

blocked two field goal attempts at<br />

Minnesota and now has five in his<br />

career (three this season).<br />

Outside linebacker Derek Wake<br />

blocked a Gopher PAT to record his<br />

seventh blocked kick of his career.<br />

R At times, senior quarterback<br />

Zack Mills, who is tied for fourth alltime<br />

in school annals with 37 career<br />

touchdown passes, can be a strength or<br />

a weakness.<br />

Mills, who has 15 200-yard passing<br />

games in his career (one behind<br />

the school’s all-time leader — Kerry<br />

Collins), is completing 58.9 percent<br />

of his passes (76-of-129) for 890 yards<br />

with five touchdowns and eight<br />

interceptions.<br />

He threw for 111 yards in the<br />

first half against the Gophers, but<br />

couldn’t guide Penn State past<br />

Minnesota’s 43 until the Lions’ final<br />

drive of the half.<br />

NITTANY LIONS<br />

AT A GLANCE<br />

Location: University Park, Pa.<br />

Nickname: Nittany Lions<br />

Colors: Blue and White<br />

Enrollment: <strong>41</strong>,795<br />

Conference: Big Ten<br />

Stadium: Beaver Stadium (107,282)<br />

Last Time Went To Bowl: 2002 (Capital One<br />

Bowl, a 13-9 loss to Auburn)<br />

Head Coach: Joe Paterno (Brown, 1950)<br />

R 3<strong>41</strong>-112-3 overall, 55-35 in the Big<br />

Ten, as Penn State’s head coach (39 seasons)<br />

R Assistant coach, Penn State (1950-65)<br />

2003 Record: 3-9 overall, 1-7 in the Big Ten (tied for ninth)<br />

Lineup:<br />

Offensive Formation: Multiple<br />

Defensive Formation: Multiple<br />

Returning Starters/Lost: 15/12<br />

Returning Lettermen/Lost: 32/21<br />

Website: www.bwi.rivals.com<br />

Penn State coach<br />

Joe Paterno<br />

ACHILLES’ HEEL<br />

… (a.k.a.<br />

WEAKNESSES)<br />

R Coach Joe<br />

Paterno summed up<br />

how thrilled he is<br />

about his team right<br />

now shortly after<br />

losing to Minnesota.<br />

“I’m not anxious<br />

to talk about the<br />

play of anybody,”<br />

Paterno said. “We just have to find some<br />

people who can make a play.”<br />

Enough said.<br />

R Penn State’s offense is struggling.<br />

In its first two Big Ten games, it<br />

scored a combined 10 points. That’s the<br />

fewest two-game total since scoring a<br />

combined six points at Pittsburgh and<br />

Ohio State in 2000.<br />

R If Robinson is unable to play<br />

against Purdue, that would greatly<br />

reduce Penn State’ potency on offense.<br />

Robinson traveled with the team to<br />

Minnesota but did not dress. He had<br />

several follow-up tests since his concussion<br />

at Wisconsin. Robinson is listed as<br />

week-to-week with original estimates<br />

from team doctors ranging from two to<br />

four weeks.<br />

R The Lions are 101st in the<br />

nation in turnover margin (-1.20 with<br />

10 takeaways and <strong>16</strong> giveaways).<br />

R A winning attitude. Since the<br />

1999 season, Penn State is 24-29 overall,<br />

including 14-20 in the Big Ten.<br />

R Penn State’s top five receivers<br />

from last year are gone, including<br />

Maurice Humphrey. He left the team in<br />

the spring while facing charges relating<br />

to an alleged assault. Humphrey was<br />

later acquitted of felony assault<br />

charges, but found guilty of three misdemeanor<br />

counts of simple assault.<br />

Last season, Humphrey had 30<br />

receptions, <strong>41</strong>0 receiving yards and one<br />

touchdown.<br />

R Over the last two seasons,<br />

Robbie Gould has hit just 2-of-10 field<br />

goals from beyond 40 yards.<br />

R You probably never thought you<br />

would see the day where Paterno would<br />

play a number of true freshmen, but<br />

that day has come. So far this season,<br />

Paterno has played six true freshmen.<br />

DID YOU KNOW?<br />

R A win would make the <strong>Boilers</strong><br />

5-0 for the first time since 1945.<br />

R The last time Purdue won its<br />

first two Big Ten road games was 1997<br />

when it defeated Minnesota (59-43)<br />

and Illinois (48-3).<br />

R The last time the Boilermakers<br />

won three straight road games was<br />

1943 when they toppled Wisconsin,<br />

Minnesota and Indiana. Purdue went<br />

9-0 that season.<br />

R Under Coach Joe Tiller, Purdue<br />

is 0-8 in road games against Penn State,<br />

Ohio State and Michigan.<br />

R Under Tiller, Purdue is 6-1 in<br />

games immediately following the Notre<br />

Dame game. The lone loss came to<br />

Washington State in the 2001 Sun Bowl.<br />

R You might have noticed that<br />

Purdue will play at Penn State two years<br />

in a row. After their visit to Happy<br />

Valley Oct. 9, the Boilermakers will<br />

return to State College Oct. 29, 2005.<br />

Why?<br />

That’s just the way the schedule the<br />

computer spits out the schedule.<br />

R Penn State is 0-2 in the Big Ten<br />

for the fourth time in 12 years of conference<br />

play.<br />

R Coach Joe Paterno hired former<br />

Penn State player Galen Hall, the former<br />

head coach at Florida, to be his<br />

offensive coordinator.<br />

R Paterno flew home without his<br />

team after the Nittany Lions’ loss to<br />

Wisconsin when he learned his son-inlaw<br />

had been involved in a serious<br />

bicycle accident.<br />

Craig Melvin/Getty Images<br />

Junior quarterback Michael Robinson, who<br />

is the Lions’ most potent offensive threat,<br />

was knocked out of the Wisconsin game<br />

Sept. 25 and was taken off the field by an<br />

ambulance. He suffered a concussion and<br />

didn’t play Oct. 2 at Minnesota. He is<br />

questionable for the Purdue game.<br />

Paterno was told after the game<br />

that Chris Hort, the husband of his<br />

daughter, Mary Kay, was in intensive<br />

care at a hospital in State College, Pa.,<br />

with a head injury.<br />

Paterno’s wife, Sue, was at Camp<br />

Randall when she learned of the accident<br />

during the first half and immediately<br />

flew back to Pennsylvania.<br />

R Last year’s 3-9 record was<br />

Paterno’s worst at Penn State, but he<br />

was offered a new four-year extension<br />

that will put him at age 82 if the<br />

Nittany Lions go to a bowl game after<br />

the 2008 season.<br />

Paterno, who has donated millions<br />

of dollars to Penn State, continues to<br />

say he isn’t close to retiring.<br />

R The Sporting News ranked Penn<br />

State 55th nationally and eighth in the<br />

Big Ten. j<br />

For thorough, daily coverage of Boilermaker football,<br />

visit GoldandBlack.com.<br />

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issue of Gold & Black Illustrated. Please vote by e-mail to<br />

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GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 11 GoldandBlack.com


Q&A WITH OFFENSIVE COORDINATOR JIM CHANEY<br />

ANOTHER SPECTACULAR JOB<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong>’ Offensive Onslaught Blows Out Notre Dame In South Bend<br />

BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — It’s hard not<br />

to sound like a broken record these<br />

days when describing Purdue’s offensive<br />

output.<br />

But here goes.<br />

In the Boilermakers’ 25-point win<br />

Oct. 2 at Notre Dame, Purdue racked<br />

up more than 500 yards of total<br />

offense for the fourth straight game<br />

this season.<br />

Quarterback Kyle Orton threw<br />

four touchdown passes. He’s had at<br />

least four TD tosses in every game<br />

this season. In addition, Orton didn’t<br />

throw an interception. He hasn’t<br />

been picked off in 137 pass attempts<br />

this season.<br />

And finally for the fourth game<br />

in a row, Purdue scored at least 38<br />

points (something no Purdue team<br />

has done in 117 years of football) and<br />

didn’t commit a turnover.<br />

“I can’t find a lot to be critical of<br />

at this moment and I’m really not<br />

looking for it,” offensive coordinator<br />

Jim Chaney said. “I’m just thrilled to<br />

death.”<br />

Gold & Black Illustrated talked<br />

with Chaney after the Boilermakers’<br />

thrilling win. Below is what he had to<br />

say.<br />

GBI: It doesn’t get much bigger<br />

than this win does it?<br />

Chaney: “No. We’ve been here<br />

eight years and there are a lot of<br />

things we have and haven’t done.<br />

One thing we have not been able to<br />

accomplish is to come up here and<br />

beat Notre Dame. To do it is refreshing<br />

and comforting.<br />

“Joe (Tiller), Brock (Spack) and<br />

Gary (Emanuel) have been here a<br />

long time, we’re competitive people<br />

and we know down deep that that’s<br />

the one thing we hadn’t gotten done<br />

and we did today.<br />

“The players played their butts<br />

off.”<br />

GBI: In a lot of ways to a lot of<br />

people it’s more than just one win,<br />

right?<br />

Chaney: “It might be for a lot of<br />

people and for the guy I work for<br />

(Tiller), Spack and Gary who have<br />

lived through a few up here you’re<br />

right … it probably is a little more<br />

than that.<br />

“It’s winning in an environment<br />

that you respect and that’s an incredible<br />

accomplishment for our football<br />

team.”<br />

GBI: In the game’s opening<br />

series, you made a statement by getting<br />

a number of players involved.<br />

Chaney: “Oh yeah. That’s what<br />

we were trying to do. We were trying<br />

to decoy them, do our little game and<br />

go up and down the field and then<br />

we got the chance to make some big<br />

plays.<br />

“It was like we smelled blood<br />

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Tom Campbell<br />

Junior receiver Ray Williams was one of several<br />

Boilermakers to step up big against Notre Dame<br />

nearly tripling his production in the previous<br />

three games with five catches for 59 yards.<br />

when they started playing a lot of<br />

press man on us. We weren’t sure<br />

whether or not we could get off (the<br />

line of scrimmage). When we did, it<br />

all kind of avalanched and our kids<br />

had a lot of confidence. They were<br />

wanting to throw the ball down the<br />

field all the time and I was having<br />

Kyle throw the ball down the field<br />

quite a bit.”<br />

GBI: Big games are decided by big<br />

plays and Jerome Brooks’ 100-yard<br />

kickoff return for a touchdown was<br />

huge.<br />

Chaney: “I would say that was big,<br />

but I would say the biggest play of this<br />

game was the fumble (by Notre Dame)<br />

on the (Purdue) 2. And us going 97<br />

yards on that drive really turned the<br />

momentum on them and really gave<br />

us something to hang our hats on at<br />

halftime.”<br />

GBI: Take us through the 97yard<br />

touchdown pass from Orton to<br />

Taylor Stubblefield.<br />

Chaney: “That was a hell of a<br />

play. I did not expect them to play<br />

man-to-man coverage. We told Kyle<br />

as soon as they got back to man, Let’s<br />

keep throwing it to Taylor.’<br />

“I called the play, they were playing<br />

straight up man, Kyle audibled<br />

and threw a touchdown.<br />

“He changes about 20 percent of<br />

the plays. That’s what a good quarterback<br />

does. He changed things up<br />

on that play and made a good play.”<br />

GBI: Another good play call was on<br />

first-and-goal from the Notre Dame 2.<br />

You had Orton bootleg and he hit a<br />

wide-open Rob Ninkovich for a touchdown<br />

in the second quarter.<br />

Chaney: “It worked. It’s always good<br />

when they work.”<br />

GBI: In the last couple of years<br />

you’ve taken some heat for your playcalling<br />

…<br />

Chaney: “Yeah, that’s life in the big<br />

city. Kyle Orton is a hell of a player. If he’s<br />

saying he wants something, I’m<br />

calling it. I may not be the smartest<br />

man in the world, but when I’ve got<br />

a quarterback playing as hot as Kyle<br />

is right now and he requests something,<br />

he’s getting it. I’m going to<br />

feed that monster until it dies.”<br />

GBI: Is anyone hotter than<br />

Orton right now?<br />

Chaney: “I don’t see everyone<br />

else, but the one we’ve got is<br />

playing real well.”<br />

GBI: You don’t like to talk<br />

about the Heisman Trophy, but<br />

he certainly made a statement<br />

today with his performance.<br />

Chaney: “I’ll just let his play<br />

speak for itself.”<br />

GBI: Some thought Notre<br />

Dame would try to take<br />

Stubblefield out of your arsenal<br />

by double-covering him (bracketing<br />

him).<br />

Chaney: “Going into the ball<br />

game, we never thought that. Notre<br />

Dame has not been playing a lot of<br />

press coverage and they’ve been playing<br />

very good defense so we weren’t<br />

anticipating them coming in and<br />

bracketing and doing a bunch of<br />

crazy stuff to take away Taylor.”<br />

GBI: Did they defend you differently<br />

than Illinois?<br />

Chaney: “Yes. They were on us<br />

more and did less zone pressure than<br />

Illinois did. They played man-to-man<br />

a whole lot more. You can generate a<br />

lot more big plays when you’re facing<br />

man-to-man coverage.”<br />

GBI: Talk about the performance<br />

put in by the offensive line<br />

today.<br />

Chaney: “I said earlier if there is<br />

an MVP of this game, it’s the offensive<br />

line. Coming in, we thought the<br />

strength of their team was their<br />

defensive front and that we had to<br />

negate them. Our kids did a wonderful<br />

job without having to throw a lot<br />

of quick game. We did a lot of fivestep<br />

drops. We held up marvelously<br />

well.<br />

“I couldn’t be more pleased with<br />

them and I told every one of them<br />

that. They played really well.”<br />

GBI: Do you realize just how big<br />

of a win this is to Purdue fans?<br />

Chaney: “I’m a Purdue fan and<br />

it’s very big to me. It’s big any time<br />

you beat a team like Notre Dame. As<br />

a coaching staff, we respect them so<br />

much. They do such a wonderful job<br />

recruiting and coaching that any<br />

time you beat a team that you put on<br />

a pedestal … that’s pretty good.” j<br />

You can get Chaney’s thoughts after<br />

each game all season long on<br />

GoldandBlack.com.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 12 GoldandBlack.com


Q&A WITH DEFENSIVE COORDINATOR BROCK SPACK<br />

BEND BUT DON’T BREAK MENTALITY<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> Accomplish No. 1 Goal … Stop <strong>Irish</strong> Ground Attack<br />

BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Purdue’s No. 1<br />

defensive goal entering its game Oct. 2 at<br />

Notre Dame was to make the <strong>Irish</strong> onedimensional.<br />

The Boilermakers did just that.<br />

Defensive coordinator Brock Spack’s<br />

unit limited the <strong>Irish</strong> to 76 yards rushing<br />

(2.1 yards per rush). Entering the game,<br />

Notre Dame was averaging 1<strong>16</strong>.2 yards<br />

rushing per game.<br />

“They’ve had a lot of success at running<br />

the football,” Spack said. “They ran<br />

the ball really well on Michigan (40 carries<br />

for 135 yards and two touchdowns),<br />

which concerned us a great deal. We<br />

wanted to make them one-dimensional<br />

today and try to keep the ball in front of<br />

us. We had to do that and did.”<br />

But the Boilermakers were torched<br />

through the air by Notre Dame sophomore<br />

quarterback Brady Quinn for a<br />

Purdue opponent record 432 yards and<br />

gave up more than 500 yards for just the<br />

second time in Spack’s eight years as<br />

defensive coordinator..<br />

However, the Boilermaker D had a<br />

bend but don’t break mentality.<br />

Notre Dame was in Purdue territory<br />

on 10 of 11 possessions in the game, but<br />

scored just two touchdowns and settled<br />

for one field goal. The <strong>Irish</strong> also had a 44yard<br />

field goal partially blocked.<br />

On one of Notre Dame’s deepest drives,<br />

it was kept off the scoreboard thanks<br />

to a great play by defensive tackle<br />

Anthony Spencer. On second-and-goal<br />

from the Purdue 2, <strong>Irish</strong> running back<br />

Darius Walker ran left and had the ball<br />

ripped out of his arms by Spencer.<br />

Defensive tackle Brent Grover recovered<br />

it at the 3.<br />

The Boilermakers proceeded on a 97yard<br />

drive to make it 20-3 and never<br />

looked back.<br />

Spack said Spencer’s play couldn’t<br />

have come at a better time.<br />

“That was a huge strip,” said Spack,<br />

who shaved off his mustache as he<br />

promised the team he would if it beat the<br />

<strong>Irish</strong>. “It’s just great to see a kid execute<br />

what you try to teach.<br />

“Spencer got hurt (sprained his ankle<br />

late in the second quarter). He was having<br />

the game of his life. I can’t count the<br />

plays in the first half that he made.”<br />

Following are Spack’s thoughts on<br />

Purdue’s fourth win of the season.<br />

GBI: How big is this win?<br />

Spack: “In the last eight years, we’ve<br />

been up here three times and it was really<br />

frustrating. We had come very close<br />

and hadn’t been able to pull it off.<br />

“Today was really unbelievable.”<br />

GBI: When you were walking off the<br />

field were you kind of pinching yourself<br />

looking at that scoreboard?<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Defensive coordinator Brock Spack reacts after the<br />

Boilermakers force a three-and-out in the second quarter.<br />

Unfortunately, the <strong>Boilers</strong> were whistled for offsides on<br />

the <strong>Irish</strong> punt on the next play which kept the drive<br />

alive. The <strong>Irish</strong> were stopped later when Darius Walker<br />

fumbled near the goal line.<br />

Spack: “Yeah. In the last five or six<br />

minutes of the game, you knew it was<br />

over and it was quite a feeling.”<br />

GBI: Can you put into words what<br />

this win means to Purdue fans?<br />

Spack: “No. You get tired of getting<br />

it (losing to Notre Dame in South Bend)<br />

shoved in your face all the time. I heard<br />

so many times, ‘You can’t win up there.’”<br />

GBI: Doesn’t a win like this put the<br />

2004 team in a special place in<br />

Boilermaker lore?<br />

Spack: “Our theme was that it was<br />

just another game. I told our players during<br />

the week, ‘If you win this game here,<br />

it is what legends are made of.’ You then<br />

become a very special group because<br />

obviously it doesn’t happen very often at<br />

Purdue.”<br />

GBI: A lot of critics took the<br />

approach that they would believe it once<br />

they saw it in terms of Purdue winning<br />

at Notre Dame.<br />

Spack: “This is the fourth time we’ve<br />

been here in the last eight years. All four<br />

times we thought we could win and this<br />

time we finally did it. These kids did a<br />

great job. What more can you ask for?”<br />

GBI: The tackling effort was much<br />

better against the <strong>Irish</strong> than at Illinois,<br />

which you thought would be the case.<br />

Spack: “I thought we would play<br />

hard here. We always seem to do that.<br />

They learned from last week that you<br />

can’t take anything for granted in the<br />

game of football. It can make you look<br />

like a fool or like today it can make you<br />

look like a hero.”<br />

“I had a slight smile<br />

on my face as I left Illinois’<br />

stadium last week because<br />

I thought that was good<br />

for us. We won, but we<br />

went through some adversity.<br />

It was a great teaching<br />

tool for us.”<br />

GBI: How did the<br />

tackling improve that<br />

much in just a week?<br />

Spack: “It’s a mental<br />

issue. Always remember<br />

this in football … ties go<br />

to the offense. If you go in<br />

there and tie up a blocker<br />

or lean on a ball carrier,<br />

that goes to the offense<br />

because you have to whip<br />

the blocker, accelerate to<br />

the ball and terminate the<br />

ball-carrier.<br />

“We didn’t do that on<br />

every play last Saturday.<br />

And when you play<br />

against good teams like<br />

Notre Dame that can run<br />

the football, you cannot<br />

allow them to run the ball<br />

because they would have<br />

you on your heels.”<br />

GBI: What do you<br />

think of the offense?<br />

Spack: “It’s unbelievable. At all the<br />

alumni functions I did in the spring and<br />

summer I said that I thought No. 18<br />

(Kyle Orton) was one of the best I’ve ever<br />

been around and I’ve been around some<br />

great ones.<br />

“He is a great player and he has proven<br />

it. He has something that is hard to coach<br />

and that is he’s mentally tough and physically<br />

tough and has great arm strength. He<br />

has turned into a great player.<br />

“I have not seen one like him.”<br />

GBI: Is there a player anywhere in<br />

the country right now hotter than<br />

Orton?<br />

Spack: “I don’t think so. I could see<br />

this coming in the spring.”<br />

GBI: After Spencer caused the fumble,<br />

the offense went on a 97-yard<br />

touchdown drive. How big was that?<br />

Spack: “It was huge. When you turn<br />

it over and a team comes back and scores<br />

off that turnover, it’s just heartbreaking<br />

and really hurts your confidence.”<br />

GBI: Just out of curiosity, does your<br />

defense stop Orton and Co.?<br />

Spack: “I wouldn’t say we stop<br />

them. Once in a while we might slow<br />

them down a little bit, but he’s awfully<br />

good.” j<br />

You can get Spack’s thoughts after each<br />

game weekly on GoldandBlack.com.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 13 GoldandBlack.com


O DOUBT<br />

Photos by Tom Campbell<br />

HE DROUGHT IS OVER<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> Post Worst<br />

Beating On <strong>Irish</strong><br />

In 44 Years<br />

Sophomore Jerome Brooks’ (22) 100yard<br />

first quarter kickoff return<br />

changed the complexion of the game<br />

and started the Boilermakers on<br />

their first celebration on <strong>Irish</strong> turf in<br />

30 years. Brooks became the first<br />

Purdue player since Jimmy Smith<br />

(and the fourth ever) in 1981 to<br />

return a kick 100 yards for a score<br />

and the 14th player overall to score<br />

on a kickoff return.<br />

Sophomore strong safety Bernard Pollard looks<br />

on as Notre Dame tight end Anthony Fasano<br />

stretches out in vain to catch a pass in the end<br />

zone. Fasano had a career day for the <strong>Irish</strong><br />

catching eight passes for 155 yards.<br />

Brooks and teammate Brandon Jones (27) sing<br />

‘Hail Purdue’ in the southeast corner of Notre<br />

Dame Stadium with several thousand Purdue<br />

fans that remained for the celebration.<br />

Junior defensive tackle Brent Grover had<br />

another solid game in the trenches with two<br />

blocked passes, five tackles and a fumble<br />

recovery. Purdue limited the <strong>Irish</strong> to just 76<br />

yards rushing, keeping the ND running game<br />

under triple figures against Purdue for the<br />

second-straight year.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 14 GoldandBlack.com<br />

Junior cornerback Brian Hickman gets in a jump-ball situation<br />

with <strong>Irish</strong> receiver Jeff Samardzija. The <strong>Irish</strong> picked up a Purdue<br />

opponent record 460 passing yards, but the Boilermaker defense<br />

held the <strong>Irish</strong> to <strong>16</strong> points, the fewest by a host Notre Dame<br />

team against Purdue since a 10-6 ND win in 1978.<br />

Actress Susan Saint James and her<br />

husband Dick Ebersol, president of<br />

NBC Sports, mirror the mood of the<br />

Notre Dame faithful from the<br />

sidelines in the second half.<br />

Somewhat lost in the shuffle is that the Purdue<br />

offensive line had another standout day.<br />

Quarterback Kyle Orton was sacked twice, but<br />

for much of the game he had all the time<br />

needed to carve up the <strong>Irish</strong> secondary. Also<br />

impressive was Purdue’s ground game in the<br />

second half, as the line helped the visitors chew<br />

up the clock while nursing a comfortable lead.<br />

No. 15 Purdue <strong>41</strong>, Notre Dame <strong>16</strong><br />

Oct. 2, 2004<br />

Notre Dame Stadium<br />

South Bend, Ind.<br />

Check us out at our website<br />

PurdueGear.com<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5• 15 GoldandBlack.com


BY TOM CAMPBELL<br />

A Boilermaker In <strong>Irish</strong> Territory<br />

Co-Workers Share Notre Dame Experience<br />

SOUTH BEND, Ind — The<br />

Joyce Center on the Notre<br />

Dame campus was rocking<br />

Friday night. Ten thousand<br />

<strong>Irish</strong> fans make sure it’s rocking<br />

every Friday night before<br />

a Notre Dame home football<br />

game.<br />

In a scene that was<br />

equal parts high school<br />

homecoming and Hollywood<br />

hype, the <strong>Irish</strong> toast their traditions<br />

during a pep session<br />

that features goofy skits with<br />

cross-dressing students and<br />

plenty of versions of that<br />

goose-bump raising “Notre<br />

Dame Victory March.”<br />

In the middle of all<br />

those <strong>Irish</strong> stewing was one,<br />

lone Purdue fan. Wearing a<br />

Purdue shirt and hat, Dan<br />

Annarino stuck out like that<br />

mole on Cindy Crawford’s<br />

face.<br />

“Man, I was getting some<br />

serious strange looks,” said<br />

Annarino, a graphic artist in<br />

Purdue’s department of<br />

Agricultural Communication.<br />

Annarino was born a<br />

Boilermaker. His dad, Tony, took<br />

him to Purdue games while Dan<br />

was still in diapers. He’s seen his<br />

share of Purdue flops in South<br />

Bend and missed some, too. It got<br />

so bad for Purdue one time that<br />

he left an <strong>Irish</strong> blowout at halftime<br />

and spent the remainder of<br />

the game across the street at the<br />

Snite Museum of Art.<br />

But he was back in Notre<br />

Dame this past weekend to see if<br />

his Boilermakers could break their<br />

30-year losing streak to the <strong>Irish</strong>.<br />

The pep session was the first<br />

stop of Annarino’s <strong>Irish</strong><br />

Experience. His tour guide for the<br />

weekend was best friend and coworker,<br />

video producer Steve<br />

Doyle.<br />

“I have to listen to his<br />

stories all the time about how<br />

great football weekends are at Notre<br />

Dame,” Annarino says, “so I thought I<br />

would take him up on it and see what<br />

all the fuss is about.”<br />

Ever since he was in elementary<br />

school, Doyle and his dad, Tom,<br />

have been regulars at Notre Dame<br />

home games, and at the pep session the<br />

night before.<br />

As a student at South Bend St.<br />

Joseph High School, Doyle could look<br />

out the window and see Notre Dame’s<br />

fabled Golden Dome. Each Friday in<br />

the fall, classes would halt for a<br />

moment so students and faculty could<br />

say a brief prayer for their beloved <strong>Irish</strong><br />

football team.<br />

The pep session is something the<br />

Doyle’s take in every chance they get,<br />

arriving at the Joyce Center (Notre<br />

Dame’s basketball arena) 90 minutes<br />

before the gates even open, not to<br />

ensure they get good seats, but seats,<br />

period.<br />

“We got here late one time,” Doyle<br />

relates, “and they wouldn’t let us in. It<br />

was full.”<br />

Doyle’s <strong>Irish</strong> tour continued at<br />

Fiddler’s Hearth, a traditional <strong>Irish</strong> pub in<br />

South Bend. There the air is filled with<br />

the smell of corned beef and cabbage, the<br />

sight of wall-to-wall Notre Dame fans and<br />

the sound of more versions of the Notre<br />

Dame Fight Song performed by, you<br />

guessed it, an <strong>Irish</strong> band.<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Purdue fan Dan Annarino gets to experience the<br />

Friday night Notre Dame pep session in the Joyce<br />

Center with his Purdue co-worker and Notre Dame<br />

fan Steve Doyle.<br />

But everything is just a prelude to<br />

the blur of traditions and tribal rites<br />

that is game day.<br />

The Doyles park downtown to avoid<br />

traffic and take a shuttle to campus where<br />

they enjoy one Bloody Mary in the Frank<br />

Leahy room at the Morris Inn. Then it’s a<br />

hike to the famed grotto (everything here<br />

is the famed something or other) for a<br />

quick prayer for the <strong>Irish</strong> (Annarino<br />

chooses not to participate in this ritual).<br />

He thinks 30 years of losing is enough.<br />

“I got the whole tour,” Annarino<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Nearly 10,000 Notre Dame fans<br />

(and one lone Boilermaker) take<br />

part in festivities the night<br />

before the game. Nearly half of<br />

the crowd was students.<br />

said. “We went to the famous<br />

cabin by the lake, which was<br />

the first structure on the Notre<br />

Dame campus, then we went to<br />

the basilica where the team was<br />

having mass. Everybody lines<br />

up and the players walk<br />

through. It’s pretty intense.”<br />

Next stop, the Knights of<br />

Columbus building on the<br />

quadrangle for one of their<br />

famous steak sandwiches. A<br />

movie was playing in the K of C<br />

lounge, “Rudy,” of course.<br />

After watching a concert by<br />

the marching band on the steps<br />

of Bond Hall, Annarino and the<br />

Doyles fell into lock step with<br />

the other thousands of fans and<br />

marched to the stadium.<br />

Finally, game time.<br />

“It was an amazing 24-hour<br />

period,” said Annarino. “I<br />

think I heard just about every<br />

Notre Dame tradition and<br />

story there is. It was the total<br />

college scene, it was great.”<br />

But for Annarino, the best<br />

came last, when Purdue broke<br />

its own tradition of losing at Notre<br />

Dame.<br />

“I’ll bet I sang ‘Hail Purdue’ at least<br />

10 times during the game. What a great<br />

game. What a great weekend.” j<br />

Tom Campbell’s weekly photo galleries on<br />

GoldandBlack.com. Campbell can be reached<br />

at TSC@Purdue.edu.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • <strong>16</strong> GoldandBlack.com


Each week the<br />

Maniacs are<br />

asked to pick<br />

the winners of five games. The prognosticators<br />

have to rank the games 1-5. For<br />

example, this week, if the Maniac was<br />

most certain that Purdue was going to<br />

beat Penn State, he would rank that<br />

game a five. If he was least certain that<br />

Wisconsin was going to beat Ohio State<br />

he would rank that game a 1. Points will<br />

be tabulated throughout the season with<br />

each week having a maximum of 15<br />

points. In case of a tie, the Maniac coming<br />

closest to predicting the total points<br />

in the featured Purdue game will be the<br />

winner. The guess for the tiebreaker is<br />

found in parentheses after the predicted<br />

winner of that game.<br />

Weekly Media Mania winners receive<br />

a dinner certificate for two to Bruno’s<br />

Swiss Inn, located in West Lafayette and<br />

the yearly winner will be presented with<br />

the Golden Typewriter as the top Media<br />

Maniac. Point totals for Week 5/cumulative<br />

point totals are listed in parentheses.<br />

ROB BLACKMAN — ESPN 950, INDIANAPOLIS<br />

(12/53)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Northwestern<br />

3. Purdue (67) 2. Michigan<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: The <strong>Boilers</strong> leave Happy Valley happy<br />

they’re still undefeated in Big Ten play.<br />

MATT BRANN — GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED<br />

ALUMNUS, MORGANTOWN, W.Va. (13/50)<br />

5. Michigan State 4. Michigan<br />

3. Purdue (44) 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: If I thought Purdue could end its 30year<br />

winless streak at Notre Dame, surely the<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> can snap a shorter dry spell at Penn<br />

State.<br />

CHRIS DENARI — FOX-59, INDIANAPOLIS<br />

(13/50)<br />

5. Purdue (48) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Michigan State 2. Michigan<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: None.<br />

KYLE CHARTERS — WBAT-RADIO, MARION<br />

(13/47)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Purdue (53)<br />

3. Illinois 2. Michigan<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: The <strong>Boilers</strong> finally get back to Ross-<br />

Ade after an easy win.<br />

PETE DIPRIMIO — FORT WAYNE NEWS-<br />

SENTINEL (11/48)<br />

5. Purdue (<strong>41</strong>) 4. Michigan<br />

3. Michigan State 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: None.<br />

Founded 1865<br />

MEDIA MANIA: PRESENTED BY UNDERWOOD INSURANCE AGENCY<br />

CLAYTON DUFFY — WLFI TV-18, WEST<br />

LAFAYETTE (13/54)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Purdue (58)<br />

1. Michigan State<br />

Comment: A banged up bunch of Lions are dangerous,<br />

but Orton and the <strong>Boilers</strong> tame them.<br />

DOUG ELISH — HERALD ARGUS, LAPORTE<br />

(15/43)<br />

5. Purdue (65) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Michigan 2. Northwestern<br />

1. Illinois<br />

Comment: Tough games this week, but that<br />

means they should be good.<br />

DREW FREEMAN — GUEST FAN, WEST<br />

LAFAYETTE (11/49)<br />

5. Purdue (42) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Michigan State<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: It will be nice to finish this long road<br />

trip with our first win at PSU.<br />

BRYAN GASKINS — KOKOMO TRIBUNE, KOKO-<br />

MO (13/45)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan State<br />

3. Purdue (45) 2. Michigan<br />

1. Indiana<br />

Comment: The <strong>Boilers</strong> handle a tough test and<br />

pick up their first win in Happy Valley.<br />

CRAIG GRAHAM — UNDERWOOD AGENCY<br />

(11/43)<br />

5. Michigan 4. Michigan State<br />

3. Purdue (45) 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: A must win for Big Ten title hopes!<br />

DOUG GRIFFITHS — GOLD & BLACK ILLUS-<br />

TRATED, WEST LAFAYETTE (7/39)<br />

5. Purdue (51) 4. Northwestern<br />

3. Michigan 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Michigan State<br />

Comment: Purdue hasn’t been 5-0 since 1945,<br />

but will after Orton tames the Lions.<br />

ORLANDO ITIN — GUEST FAN, BRUNO’S<br />

(11/49)<br />

5. Purdue (45) 4. Michigan<br />

3. Ohio State 2. Northwestern<br />

1. Michigan State<br />

Comment: <strong>Boilers</strong> roar one step closer.<br />

ALAN KARPICK — GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED,<br />

WEST LAFAYETTE (10/47)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan<br />

3. Purdue (55) 2. Northwestern<br />

1. Michigan State<br />

Comment: Post-Notre Dame week can be hard<br />

on Purdue, but I don’t think that will be the case<br />

this year.<br />

Underwood Insurance<br />

310 Ferry Street, P.O. Box 118<br />

Lafayette, Indiana 47902-0118<br />

(765) 742-7320 800-852-5447<br />

WEEK THREE RESULTS<br />

Keith Thomas of Gold & Black Illustrated<br />

was the only Maniac to have a perfect<br />

week. He wins on the basis of being the<br />

only Maniac to pick Northwestern to beat<br />

Ohio State.<br />

KEVIN KECKLER — GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED<br />

ALUMNUS, WEST LAFAYETTE (12/55)<br />

5. Northwestern 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Illinois 2. Penn State (49)<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: <strong>Boilers</strong> eager to return home after a<br />

three-week road trip.<br />

TOM KUBAT — LAFAYETTE JOURNAL &<br />

COURIER (9/46)<br />

5. Northwestern 4. Purdue (58)<br />

3. Michigan 2. Michigan State<br />

1. Ohio State<br />

Comment: Purdue finally gets a win in Happy<br />

Valley before JoePa hangs it up.<br />

JOE MCCONNELL — PURDUE SPORTS RADIO<br />

NETWORK (9/49)<br />

5. Purdue (<strong>41</strong>) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Illinois<br />

1. Minnesota<br />

Comment: <strong>Boilers</strong> finally get a Happy Valley win<br />

over a declining Penn State program! This might<br />

be the toughest week in the Big Ten ... certainly<br />

so far!<br />

BRIAN NEUBERT — GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED,<br />

WEST LAFAYETTE (11/53)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Illinois<br />

1. Purdue (44)<br />

Comment: None.<br />

TIM NEWTON — PURDUE SPORTS RADIO<br />

NETWORK, WEST LAFAYETTE (12/51)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Illinois<br />

1. Purdue (44)<br />

Comment: This one might not be as easy as it<br />

looks.<br />

WAYNE PRATT — WBAA, WEST LAFAYETTE<br />

(14/49)<br />

5. Purdue (51) 4. Northwestern<br />

3. Ohio State 2. Michigan<br />

1. Illinois<br />

Comment: Purdue should avoid post-Notre<br />

Dame letdown.<br />

PURDUE EXPONENT, WEST LAFAYETTE (5/47)<br />

5. Purdue (60) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Northwestern 2. Illinois<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: <strong>Boilers</strong> finally win at State College<br />

under Tiller.<br />

Craig W. Graham, CIC<br />

Kym Hussong, Commercial<br />

Connie Webber, Commercial<br />

Cherie Nelson, Personal/Commercial<br />

Jennifer Mellady, Personal<br />

Adrienne Strauch, Life & Health<br />

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Visit our website, www.underwoodagency.com for your Auto-Owners<br />

Homeowner, Automobile or Life & Health Insurance quotations<br />

Also:<br />

OCTOBER 9 MATCHUPS<br />

Purdue at Penn State<br />

Minnesota at Michigan<br />

Indiana at Northwestern<br />

Wisconsin at Ohio State<br />

Illinois at Michigan State<br />

PETE QUINN — PURDUE SPORTS RADIO NET-<br />

WORK, INDIANAPOLIS (13/45)<br />

5. Michigan 4. Illinois<br />

3. Indiana 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Purdue (44)<br />

Comment: None.<br />

GREG RAKESTRAW — ESPN 950,<br />

INDIANAPOLIS (9/44)<br />

5. Ohio State 4. Michigan State<br />

3. Purdue (49) 2. Minnesota<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: Purdue’s revenge tour continues, just<br />

too much Purdue offense for the Nitany Lions to<br />

stop.<br />

DICK REA — WTHR-13, INDIANAPOLIS (12/52)<br />

5. Purdue (55) 4. Ohio State<br />

3. Michigan State 2. Northwestern<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: Strong finish to long road test.<br />

BRETT SCHETZSLE — PURDUE SPORTS RADIO<br />

NETWORK, WEST LAFAYETTE (11/47)<br />

5. Northwestern 4. Purdue (63)<br />

3. Michigan 2. Michigan State<br />

1. Ohio State<br />

Comment: None.<br />

JIM STAFFORD — LAFAYETTE JOURNAL &<br />

COURIER (10/49)<br />

5. Purdue (45) 4. Northwestern<br />

3. Michigan State 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Michigan<br />

Comment: <strong>Boilers</strong> get first win in Happy Valley<br />

under Joe Tiller.<br />

KEITH THOMAS — GOLD & BLACK<br />

ILLUSTRATED, WEST LAFAYETTE (15/49)<br />

5. Northwestern 4. Purdue (50)<br />

3. Illinois 2. Michigan<br />

1. Wisconsin<br />

Comment: Now that the South Bend streak is<br />

busted, Purdue must refocus quickly to gain<br />

another road victory that has eluded them in the<br />

Tiller Era. That said, Penn State just doesn’t have<br />

enough tools to stop a team on a roll like this.<br />

REX TRAUTMAN — WLFI TV-18, WEST<br />

LAFAYETTE (9/43)<br />

5. Michigan 4. Michigan State<br />

3. Purdue (58) 2. Ohio State<br />

1. Northwestern<br />

Comment: None.<br />

Bob Leonard<br />

PO Box 1072<br />

Michigan City, IN 46361<br />

(219) 878-1<strong>16</strong>8<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 17 GoldandBlack.com


STATE FARM AGENT TRENT JOHNSON PRESENTS: BY THE NUMBERS<br />

Purdue at Notre Dame — 10/2/2004 ; Notre Dame Stadium Notre Dame, Ind., Attendance 80,795<br />

Quarter 1st 2nd 3rd 4th Tot<br />

Purdue 10 10 21 0 <strong>41</strong><br />

Notre Dame 3 0 13 0 <strong>16</strong><br />

First Quarter<br />

PUR ND<br />

PUR Ben Jones 31-yard Field Goal<br />

10:49<br />

Drive: 10 plays 63 yds 4:11<br />

3 0<br />

ND Fitzpatrick 26-yard Field Goal<br />

06:30 3 3<br />

Drive: 11 plays 69 yds 4:19<br />

PUR Jerome Brooks TD KO<br />

(Ben Jones Kick) 06:<strong>16</strong> 10 3<br />

Second Quarter<br />

PUR Ben Jones 39-yard Field Goal<br />

11:24 13 3<br />

Drive: 7 plays 52 yds 1:52<br />

PUR Rob Ninkovich Pass from Kyle Orton 2-yards<br />

(Ben Jones Kick) 01:03 20 3<br />

Drive: 11 plays 97 yds 3:36<br />

Third Quarter<br />

PUR T. Stubblefield Pass from Kyle Orton 97-yards<br />

(Ben Jones Kick) 11:51 27 3<br />

Drive: 3 plays 97 yds 0:19<br />

ND McKnight Pass from Quinn 40-yards<br />

(Fitzpatrick Kick) 08:54 27 10<br />

Drive: 7 plays 63 yds 2:57<br />

PUR Kyle Ingraham Pass from Kyle Orton 9-yards<br />

(Ben Jones Kick) 06:40 34 10<br />

Drive: 5 plays 56 yds 2:14<br />

ND Powers-Neal 1-yard Run<br />

(Quinn Pass Fail) 04:17 34 <strong>16</strong><br />

Drive: 7 plays 76 yds 2:23<br />

PUR T. Stubblefield Pass from Kyle Orton 12-yards<br />

(Ben Jones Kick) 00:45 <strong>41</strong> <strong>16</strong><br />

Drive: 8 plays 75 yds 3:32<br />

PUR ND<br />

Total First Downs 22 28<br />

Rushing 6 4<br />

Passing 15 21<br />

Penalty 1 3<br />

Rushing Attempts 28 36<br />

Yards Gained Rushing 125 106<br />

Yards Lost Rushing 26 30<br />

Net Yards Rushing 99 76<br />

Net Yards Passing <strong>41</strong>3 460<br />

Passes Attempted 32 49<br />

Passes Completed 22 29<br />

Had Intercepted 0 0<br />

Percent Completion 68.8% 59.2%<br />

Yards per Attempt 12.9 9.4<br />

Yards per Completion 18.8 15.9<br />

Total Offensive Plays 60 85<br />

Total Net Yards 512 536<br />

Avg. Gain Per Play 8.5 6.3<br />

Fumbles: No-Lost 0-0 2-1<br />

Penalties: No-Yards 8-70 7-40<br />

Punts: No-Yards 3-107 3-148<br />

Avg. Per Punt 35.7 49.3<br />

Avg. Net Punt 34.0 49.3<br />

Punt Returns: No-Yards 0-0 1-5<br />

Kickoff Returns: No-Yards 2-118 5-95<br />

Interception Returns: No-Yards 0-0 0-0<br />

Fumble Returns: No-Yards 0-0 0-0<br />

Miscellaneous Yards 0 0<br />

Possession Time 26:48 33:12<br />

Third-Down Conversions 5-10 8-18<br />

Percentage 50.0% 44.4%<br />

Fourth-Down Conversions 0-0 2-4<br />

Percentage 0.0% 50.0%<br />

Sacks By: No-Yards 7-31 2-17<br />

Purdue Individual Statistics<br />

Offensive<br />

Rushing No Gain Lost Net Avg TD Lg<br />

Jerod Void 11 57 4 53 4.8 0 <strong>16</strong><br />

Brandon Jones 9 46 2 44 4.9 0 17<br />

Kyle Orton 6 21 18 3 0.5 0 <strong>16</strong><br />

Ray Williams 1 1 0 1 1.0 0 1<br />

Team 1 0 2 -2 -2.0 0 0<br />

Total 28 125 26 99 3.5 0 17<br />

Passing Att Comp % Int Yds TD Lg<br />

Kyle Orton 31 21 67.7 0 385 4 97<br />

Brandon Jones 1 1 100.0 0 28 0 28<br />

Total 32 22 68.8 0 <strong>41</strong>3 4 97<br />

Receiving No Yds TD Lg<br />

T. Stubblefield 7 181 2 97<br />

Dorien Bryant 2 78 0 56<br />

Ray Williams 5 59 0 28<br />

Brian Hare 1 36 0 36<br />

Kyle Ingraham 4 29 1 9<br />

Jerod Void 1 15 0 15<br />

Charles Davis 1 13 0 13<br />

Rob Ninkovich 1 2 1 2<br />

Total 22 <strong>41</strong>3 4 97<br />

Kick Returns No Yds TD Lg<br />

Jerome Brooks 2 118 1 100<br />

Punting No Avg Lg Blk TB FC 50+ In 20<br />

Dave Brytus 3 35.7 44 0 0 1 0 1<br />

Field Goals Made Att Lg Blkd<br />

Ben Jones 2 2 39 0<br />

Defense Tac Ast Tot TFL Sac PD FF FR<br />

George Hall 6 7 13 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Bernard Pollard 5 5 10 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

B. Villarreal 5 2 7 1-2 0-1 0 0 0<br />

Stanford Keglar 4 3 7 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Brent Grover 4 1 5 0-0 0-0 2 0 1<br />

Brian Hickman 4 1 5 0-0 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Ray Edwards 3 2 5 2-11 2-11 0 1 0<br />

Anthony Spencer 3 1 4 2-13 2-13 1 1 0<br />

Antwaun Rogers 1 3 4 0-0 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Bobby Iwuchukwu 3 1 4 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Kyle Smith 3 0 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Dan Bick 2 0 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Paul Long 2 0 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Rob Ninkovich 2 0 2 2-6 2-6 1 0 0<br />

Cliff Avril 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Grant Walker 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

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Tom Campbell<br />

Bobby Iwuchukwu’s six career blocks ties him for<br />

fourth all-time among NCAA blocked kick leaders.<br />

Notre Dame Individual Statistics<br />

Offensive<br />

Rushing No Gain Lost Net Avg TD Lg<br />

Walker 19 62 2 60 3.2 0 8<br />

Jenkins 2 20 0 20 10.0 0 14<br />

Wilson 1 2 0 2 2.0 0 2<br />

Powers-Neal 2 1 0 1 0.5 1 1<br />

Quinn 12 21 28 -7 -0.6 0 6<br />

Total 36 106 30 76 2.1 1 14<br />

Passing Att Comp % Int Yds TD Lg<br />

Quinn 46 26 56.5 0 432 1 42<br />

Dillingham 3 3 100.0 0 28 0 13<br />

Total 49 29 59.2 0 460 1 42<br />

Receiving No Yds TD Lg<br />

Fasano 8 155 0 42<br />

McKnight 7 113 1 40<br />

Shelton 3 61 0 34<br />

Samardzija 3 59 0 <strong>41</strong><br />

Freeman 2 22 0 <strong>16</strong><br />

Walker 2 <strong>16</strong> 0 14<br />

Anastasio 1 15 0 15<br />

Collins 1 13 0 13<br />

Powers-Neal 1 6 0 6<br />

Quinn 1 0 0 0<br />

Total 29 460 1 42<br />

Punt Returns No Yds TD Lg<br />

McKnight 1 5 0 5<br />

Kick Returns No Yds TD Lg<br />

Anastasio 3 69 0 30<br />

Holiday 1 <strong>16</strong> 0 <strong>16</strong><br />

Hoskins 1 10 0 10<br />

Total 5 95 0 30<br />

Punting No Avg Lg Blk TB FC 50+ In 20<br />

Fitzpatrick 3 49.3 59 0 1 0 1 2<br />

Field Goals Made Att Lg Blkd<br />

Fitzpatrick 1 2 26 0<br />

Defense Tac Ast Tot TFL Sac PD FF FR<br />

Burrell 4 3 7 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Curry 5 2 7 0-2 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Goolsby 5 2 7 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Tuck 2 3 5 0-4 0-4 0 0 0<br />

Zbikowski 5 0 5 1-1 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Ellick 2 1 3 0-0 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Hoyte 1 2 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Jackson 3 0 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Richardson 2 1 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Abiamiri 2 0 2 2-11 1-8 0 0 0<br />

Landri 0 2 2 0-1 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Pauly 0 2 2 0-5 0-5 0 0 0<br />

Beidatsch 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Budinscak 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Frome 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Laws 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Leitko 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Purdue Lineups vs. Notre Dame<br />

OFFENSE<br />

Quarterback: Kyle Orton<br />

Running Back: Jerod Void, Brandon<br />

Jones, George Hall<br />

Wide Receiver: Taylor Stubblefield,<br />

Andre Chattams<br />

Wide Receiver: Kyle Ingraham, Brian<br />

Hare<br />

Wide Receiver: Ray Williams, Dorien<br />

Bryant<br />

Tight End: Charles Davis, Rob<br />

Ninkovich, Jeff Bennett<br />

Left Tackle: Mike Otto<br />

Left Guard: Uche Nwaneri<br />

Center: Matt Turner<br />

Right Guard: Tyler Moore, Jordan<br />

Grimes<br />

Right Tackle: David Owen, Moore<br />

DEFENSE<br />

Defensive End: Anthony Spencer,<br />

Ninkovich<br />

Defensive Tackle: Brandon Villarreal<br />

Defensive Tackle: Brent Grover, Dan<br />

McGowen<br />

Defensive End: Ray Edwards, Gene<br />

Bright<br />

Weakside Linebacker: Bobby<br />

Iwuchukwu, Cliff Avril<br />

Middle Linebacker: George Hall<br />

Strongside Linebacker: Stanford<br />

Keglar<br />

Cornerback: Brian Hickman<br />

Free Safety: Kyle Smith, Grant<br />

Walker<br />

Strong Safety: Bernard Pollard<br />

Cornerback: Antwaun Rogers<br />

SPECIAL TEAMS<br />

Place-kicker: Ben Jones<br />

Punter: Dave Brytus<br />

Long Snapper: Villarreal<br />

Kick Returner: Jerome Brooks, Void<br />

Punt Returner: Stubblefield<br />

Holder: Kyle Smith<br />

Others: Aaron Levin, Brian Mattaway,<br />

Iwuchukwu, Hall, Dan Bick, Cavallo,<br />

Bryant, Bright, Smith, Williams, Avril,<br />

Walker, Keglar, Void, Ninkovich,<br />

Chattams, Villarreal, Br. Jones,<br />

Edwards, Spencer, Grover, Pollard,<br />

Hickman, Davis, Keller, Otto,<br />

Nwaneri, Owen, Moore, Grimes, Sean<br />

Petty, Kevin Noel, Paul Long<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 18 GoldandBlack.com


NO. 15 PURDUE <strong>41</strong>, NOTRE DAME <strong>16</strong><br />

What They Had To Say About One Of Purdue’s<br />

Most Memorable Wins Ever<br />

BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

“It took 30 years, but it was worth<br />

the wait. I don’t think I’ve seen a<br />

better game plan drawn up offensively,<br />

a better game plan executed<br />

or better play calling. It was a<br />

phenomenal effort by so many<br />

guys. They deserve to enjoy this<br />

because they don’t come a long<br />

too often. Congratulations to the<br />

Boilermakers.”<br />

—Former Purdue standout center and current<br />

radio color commentator Pete Quinn<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Junior center Matt Turner heads toward<br />

the band in triumph after a prolonged<br />

celebration with the Boilermaker fans<br />

after the game.<br />

“This is huge for our program. It<br />

has been so long since we won<br />

up here so it’s just great. The<br />

kids played their butts off and<br />

the outcome shows it. What a<br />

great win for our program.”<br />

— Defensive tackles/special teams coach Mark Hagen<br />

“This is a great feeling. Our kids<br />

did everything we asked them<br />

to do and they executed everything<br />

we taught them. What<br />

was it? Thirteen straight times<br />

we had lost here. We put an end<br />

to that streak didn’t we?”<br />

—Running backs coach David Mitchell<br />

“What it means to me is nothing compared<br />

to what it means to these people who have<br />

been here so many years. Joe (Tiller), Jim<br />

Chaney, Brock Spack and all these seniors<br />

have come here and experienced so much<br />

frustration. For me, this is the thrill<br />

of a lifetime and I can only imagine<br />

what some of our coaches and<br />

seniors who have been here so long<br />

are going through.<br />

“To beat a storied program on<br />

national TV and do it somewhat<br />

decisively, that helps (in recruiting).<br />

It will give us something to<br />

talk about.”<br />

— Wide receivers coach and recruiting<br />

coordinator Bob DeBesse<br />

“To me it’s another victory<br />

that establishes<br />

yourself as a pretty fair<br />

football team. When you<br />

beat Notre Dame at<br />

Notre Dame, it means<br />

you’ve been doing some<br />

things right. We’re doing<br />

a lot of stuff right, right<br />

now, which is enabling<br />

us to be successful with<br />

wins and losses.<br />

“This was a fun day. I’ll<br />

remember this a while.”<br />

—Offensive coordinator and tight ends<br />

coach Jim Chaney<br />

“When I was here as a player, we<br />

brought great teams up here and<br />

couldn’t win. Our Rose Bowl team<br />

(in 2000) couldn’t do it so this is<br />

pretty special.”<br />

— Defensive coordinator and linebackers coach<br />

Brock Spack<br />

“There’s no question this is one of the<br />

highlights of my coaching career. It’s<br />

exciting and very rewarding. Any time<br />

you can win a big game, and today<br />

was a big game, it’s always exciting.<br />

Any time you can win that big game<br />

on the road, it’s even more exciting.”<br />

— Offensive line coach Bill Legg<br />

“Any time you win anywhere it’s important,<br />

but to come up here as many times<br />

as we’ve come up here without success,<br />

obviously it’s a very important win for the<br />

program and the guys on the team.<br />

“You hope it means a lot and gives us<br />

national attention.<br />

“Any time you win at this level, it’s great,<br />

no matter who it’s against. But against<br />

Notre Dame, it’s extremely special.”<br />

— Assistant head coach and defensive ends coach<br />

Gary Emanuel<br />

“I’m just ecstatic. It’s a great<br />

thing for Purdue with all the<br />

people here. It’s just wonderful.<br />

“You always hoped this day would<br />

come. That’s what you play for<br />

this game for is to win.”<br />

— Strength and conditioning coordinator Jim Lathrop<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Coach Joe Tiller looks for protection from the potential “Gatorade Shower” from quarterback<br />

Kyle Orton and receiver Taylor Stubblefield in the closing minutes of the game.<br />

“I was in the middle of graduate school<br />

(the last time Purdue won in South<br />

Bend) and I’ve waited 12 years as an AD<br />

to do it up here. I stood under the goal<br />

posts when we got beat by the kick (in<br />

2000) and I’ve seen balls do strange<br />

things up here. Today we just played a<br />

complete game.<br />

“I’m happy for the kids. I’m happy for<br />

Joe and Brock who had never had a victory<br />

up here. It was a great game.”<br />

— Athletics Director Morgan Burke<br />

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GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 19 GoldandBlack.com


FOOTBALL PLAYER FEATURE: DORIEN BRYANT<br />

BY KYLE CHARTERS<br />

Dorien Bryant says he’s not a daredevil.<br />

“But I like to live on the edge a little bit,”<br />

said the freshman wide receiver. “I like to do<br />

extreme things.”<br />

Such as skydiving, surfing, skateboarding,<br />

and — coming soon to Ross-Ade Stadium<br />

— sprinting across the middle against the<br />

super-sized Big Ten defense.<br />

In his first four games at Purdue, Bryant<br />

has already received a small taste of the<br />

extreme nature of Big Ten football. With the<br />

addition of his two catches for 78 yards<br />

against Notre Dame on Oct. 2, Bryant has<br />

totaled nine receptions for 156 yards and a<br />

touchdown this season. His breakthrough<br />

game came against Ball State on Sept. 11<br />

when he contributed four receptions for 60<br />

yards and a touchdown in the <strong>Boilers</strong>’ victory<br />

and a 53-yard kickoff return to open the<br />

game.<br />

“I think the coaches are seeing more and<br />

more that I’m not the nervous type,” said the<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong>’ fourth-leading receiver. “I thrive on<br />

pressure situations like this.”<br />

Bryant has spent much of his playing<br />

time trying his best impersonation of Purdue<br />

senior wide receiver Taylor Stubblefield. And<br />

although there are similarities between the<br />

two — both are about the same height and<br />

weight — Stubblefield points out that there<br />

are also differences.<br />

“He’s obviously a lot faster than I am,”<br />

said Stubblefield. “He controls his speed,<br />

which is what I like to see. You see a lot of<br />

MAKING HIS MARK<br />

Bryant Brings Calm Demeanor Despite Youth<br />

guys who are fast but they can’t stop or they<br />

can’t move in or out of their breaks. But<br />

Dorien does a great job of that and he can<br />

catch the ball. And that’s probably the most<br />

important thing.”<br />

The other major difference is a statistical<br />

one. Stubblefield ranks third in the Big Ten<br />

with 264 career receptions — a fact not lost<br />

on Bryant.<br />

“I like filling in for Taylor because, obviously,<br />

he gets the ball,” said Bryant, a mere<br />

255 catches behind. “And I think any wide<br />

receiver wants the ball. It was a good first<br />

experience for me.”<br />

Bryant said he’s trying to learn as much<br />

as possible from Stubblefield in their one year<br />

together. He said the senior has taught him<br />

the importance of running sharp routes,<br />

instead of relying only on his speed to get<br />

open.<br />

“He’s already helped me tremendously,”<br />

said Bryant, who has been clocked at 4.31 seconds<br />

in the 40-yard dash. “I was always just a<br />

lot faster than everybody. He’s helped me on<br />

the routes and being focused on the field.<br />

Freshman year, you have a tendency to get<br />

out there and get rattled a little bit. But he’s<br />

helped me with my poise, route-running and<br />

everything.<br />

“I’m obviously a little faster than Taylor,<br />

but he’s a real pro,” said Bryant. “He runs<br />

routes better than anybody I’ve ever seen in<br />

college football.”<br />

And, according to Stubblefield, his<br />

young protégé has quickly picked up on some<br />

of his lessons.<br />

“Dorien is a very talented young man<br />

Imag•in•ation - n.<br />

The act of forming a mental image of something<br />

not present to the senses. Creative ability such<br />

as in our creative design concepts. The Purdue<br />

Boilermakers making a school record eighth<br />

consecutive bowl game. Isn’t imagination great?<br />

Imagine the Modern Graphics’ team as your printer... Go <strong>Boilers</strong>!<br />

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and he’s playing very well right now,” he said.<br />

“He’s playing almost like he’s been here<br />

before.”<br />

Bryant, who spent a year at Fork Union<br />

Military Academy before arriving at Purdue<br />

this fall, didn’t wait long to start making an<br />

impact on the Boilermaker football team. In<br />

fact, he got into the mix on the first play of<br />

the season when he made the tackle on the<br />

opening kickoff against Syracuse. So how did<br />

it feel to be on the field on the first play of his<br />

freshman year?<br />

“I just kind of thought, ‘This is the place<br />

I’m supposed to be,’” he said. “Everybody has<br />

butterflies. If you don’t have butterflies, then<br />

you need to be out of the game.”<br />

Aside from the victories, the biggest trill<br />

of his young collegiate career may have came<br />

in the second quarter against Ball State when<br />

he caught a 15-yard touchdown pass from<br />

quarterback Kyle Orton.<br />

“It felt like practice,” said Bryant. “I was<br />

like, ‘Oh, I’m wide open. I just hope he doesn’t<br />

overlook me.’ And Kyle did a good job of<br />

looking everybody off and coming back to<br />

me.<br />

“I didn’t want to go crazy, but I was pretty<br />

excited about it,” he said.<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Dorien Bryant came up big at Notre<br />

Dame Stadium with two catches for 78<br />

yards.<br />

Although Bryant is off to a good start,<br />

there are areas of his game that he wants to<br />

work on. He’d like to get a chance to return<br />

punts — a skill he perfected while at<br />

Kingsway Regional High School in<br />

Swedesboro, New Jersey.<br />

“Punt returns are just about being<br />

smart,” said Bryant. “And people get scared<br />

about it, but really there’s nothing to be<br />

scared of ... if you’re going to get rung, you’re<br />

going to get rung.”<br />

And Bryant uses the same philosophy<br />

while lining up at receiver. He’s still looking<br />

forward to that first pass across the middle<br />

against a defensive backfield with the caliber<br />

of talent of Michigan.<br />

“People look at me and say, ‘Well, you’re<br />

small, you can’t go across the middle,’” he<br />

said. “And I’m like, ‘Yeah right, I can do it.’”<br />

But even though he’s looking forward to<br />

the big hit and admits to “living on the edge,”<br />

he does have his limits.<br />

“No touchdown dance,” he said. “I’m not<br />

ready to get yanked off the field yet.” j<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 20 GoldandBlack.com


BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

ecruiting analyst Tom Lemming<br />

believes Purdue is off to a great<br />

start in the recruiting wars and<br />

could have a special year when signing<br />

day rolls around in February.<br />

“Right now Purdue is off to the best<br />

start they’ve ever had in recruiting, particularly<br />

locally,” said Lemming, who is<br />

the editor of Prep Football Report and is<br />

ESPN’s college football recruiting<br />

expert. “Purdue could have a really<br />

great year this year. They just have to sit<br />

back and go after some of the bigger<br />

names, which they’re doing.<br />

“Purdue is starting to get a real<br />

good offensive identity nationally.<br />

They’ve got big names looking their<br />

way now and I haven’t seen that in the<br />

25 years that I’ve been doing this.<br />

“I’ve said before that Purdue has<br />

had good, quality classes, but they<br />

haven’t gotten a lot of interest from the<br />

premier players. That might be about to<br />

change, especially since the No. 1 player<br />

in the country is going to visit<br />

there.”<br />

Although it’s extremely early to<br />

rank recruiting classes, Lemming, a<br />

South Barington, Ill., native, who annually<br />

visits hundreds of the country’s top<br />

prospects, said the Boilermakers’ six<br />

verbal commitments to date put them<br />

among the top 20<br />

classes nationally<br />

at this point.<br />

With five of<br />

those six commitments<br />

coming<br />

from instate players,<br />

one might<br />

believe that this is<br />

a great year for talent<br />

in Indiana.<br />

However,<br />

Lemming said<br />

that’s not the case.<br />

“It’s a good<br />

year, but I don’t<br />

know if there’s one<br />

clear knockout in<br />

the state though,” Lemming said. “It’s<br />

not a great year, but a very good year —<br />

an above average year.<br />

RECRUITING REPORT<br />

Where Lemming Has<br />

Ranked Purdue<br />

Following is a look at where recruiting<br />

analyst Tom Lemming has ranked<br />

Joe Tiller’s recruiting classes.<br />

Class Big Ten Nationally<br />

2004 5th 20th-22nd<br />

2003 4th or 5th 25th-30th<br />

2002 5th 25th<br />

2001 5th 20th<br />

2000 7th 29th<br />

1999 6th 30th<br />

1998 2nd 11th<br />

1997 10th NR<br />

NR-not ranked<br />

Lemming Believes Purdue May Have Great Recruiting Year<br />

Recruiting Analyst Impressed By Reception <strong>Boilers</strong> Receiving Nationwide<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

The size, arm strength and<br />

productivity of Evansville<br />

Harrison High School quarterback<br />

Joey Elliott has recruiting<br />

analyst Tom Lemming<br />

thinking that he’ll be a good<br />

one at the next level.<br />

“If Purdue gets the two instate players<br />

they really want, they’ll put their<br />

stamp on having complete control of<br />

the state.”<br />

Following is what Lemming had to<br />

say on each instate commitment.<br />

On Joey Elliot<br />

Lemming: “I like Joey. I had him<br />

bring tape to Champaign where I met<br />

him and I was really impressed with<br />

him. I was surprised because he had no<br />

offers when I saw him in April. That<br />

shocked me because he is<br />

such a good talent and I<br />

thought a lot of people<br />

would have known about<br />

him. But it takes some<br />

schools a little bit longer to<br />

realize that a 6-foot-2 kid<br />

with a good arm and good<br />

production is going to be<br />

good.<br />

“With Tiller it’s like<br />

money in the bank with a<br />

big-time quarterback. When<br />

it comes to quarterbacks, if<br />

they get the guy they want,<br />

he’ll be a star.”<br />

On Dray Mason<br />

Lemming: “He may be the only<br />

explosive player in the state. Plus, he<br />

could play a number of positions.<br />

2004-05 VERBAL COMMITMENTS<br />

Player Pos. Ht. Wt. Hometown/High School<br />

Joey Elliott QB 6-2 190 Evansville, Ind./Harrison<br />

Dray Mason RB 5-10 175 Indianapolis, Ind./Bishop Chatard<br />

Michael Neal DE 6-4 240 Merrillville, Ind./Merrillville<br />

Greg Orton WR 6-4 190 Huber Heights, Ohio/Wayne<br />

Jason Werner LB 6-4 200 Indianapolis, Ind./Roncalli<br />

Jared Zwilling DE 6-4 255 Evansville, Ind./Central<br />

Christian Graham* SS 6-2 190 Indianapolis, Ind./Warren Central<br />

Chris Haslon* RB 5-11 180 Burlington Township, N.J./Holy Cross<br />

David Ramirez! QB 6-2 190 Red Oak, Texas/Grace Preparatory Academy<br />

*hopes to re-sign with Purdue in February and join team mid-year<br />

!currently enrolled at Purdue as part-time student and set to join team in January<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Lemming thinks Purdue<br />

recruited Indianapolis<br />

Roncalli High School linebacker<br />

Jason Werner based<br />

on his athleticism and<br />

potential.<br />

Lemming believes<br />

Merrillville High School<br />

standout Michael Neal has<br />

the most potential of any<br />

Indiana prepster.<br />

“I went through Indiana four times<br />

so I could see everybody and I thought<br />

he was one of the top five guys (in the<br />

state) that I saw on film.”<br />

On Michael Neal<br />

Lemming: “Of all the people in the<br />

state, the kid with the most potential is<br />

Michael Neal. He looks like an NFL guy<br />

right now. He’s a real physical guy, but<br />

he didn’t look that great on film as a<br />

junior, which is the thing that really<br />

got me. But he’s looking good now.<br />

“Purdue is going after him knowing<br />

they can coach him into being a great<br />

player because he has real good move-<br />

www.lafayettecommunitybank.com<br />

ment skills, he’s big, strong and powerful.<br />

He has all of the ingredients to<br />

be an All-American except for production.<br />

That scares me a little bit,<br />

but he’ll come around with good<br />

coaching and that’s exactly what<br />

he’ll get at Purdue.”<br />

On Jason Werner<br />

Lemming: “I liked him, too. He’s<br />

tall and skinny. His school has about<br />

three or four (Division I-A) prospects,<br />

but he’s the one that really jumps<br />

out. He’s impressive and comes off<br />

the corner real well. I think they’ll<br />

redshirt him and put some weight<br />

and strength on him. I think Purdue<br />

went after him based on his athletic<br />

ability and potential.”<br />

On Jared Zwilling<br />

Lemming: “I know they offered<br />

him a long time ago. He doesn’t have<br />

the body type that would lead you to<br />

believe that he’ll be a big-time player,<br />

but he plays like a big-time player and<br />

obviously that’s more important.”<br />

Editor’s Note: Lemming’s comments<br />

about Ohio wide receiver Greg Orton were in<br />

the last issue of GBI (Vol. 15, Issue 4). j<br />

For thorough, up-to-the-minute coverage<br />

of Boilermaker football recruiting, be sure<br />

to visit GoldandBlack.com<br />

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GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 21 GoldandBlack.com


Presents Purdue<br />

Local Legends<br />

BY DOUG ELISH<br />

It’s true that dreams can come true,<br />

even if they’re not quite as expected.<br />

That’s the case for Boilermaker tight<br />

end Dustin Keller.<br />

Keller grew up a diehard Purdue fan<br />

and even aside from being raised in<br />

Lafayette, he had good reason.<br />

His grandfather, Dale Mulvey, played<br />

on Purdue’s 1952 Big Ten championship<br />

team, his great grandfather, Robert Siskind,<br />

was an engineering professor, his mother,<br />

Maureen, and grandmother, Linda Orr, are<br />

Purdue graduates and he has two brothers,<br />

Dwight and Drew, that are also <strong>Boilers</strong>.<br />

So when Keller says “this is the place I<br />

always wanted to be,” it’s easy to see why.<br />

But now that he’s wearing the Old<br />

Gold and Black that he’s always loved, he’s<br />

not doing what he’s always done.<br />

Keller came to Purdue as a record-setting<br />

wide receiver from Lafayette Jefferson<br />

High School. In his senior season, his 113<br />

receptions and 1,804 yards were more than<br />

any Indiana player had ever accumulated<br />

in a single season and his 22 receiving<br />

touchdowns weren’t far off a record. He<br />

earned all-state honors, was a finalist for<br />

the Indiana Mr. Football award and was<br />

named in the nation’s top 50 receivers by<br />

Street & Smith’s.<br />

With such accolades, it’s understandable<br />

that Keller never thought he’d play<br />

Keller Living Purdue Roots<br />

anything other than wide receiver. But after<br />

a redshirt season full of not-so-subtle questions<br />

from Coach Joe Tiller, Keller started to<br />

suspect a position change to tight end<br />

might be in the future.<br />

“A lot of times Coach Tiller would<br />

come in the weight room my redshirt year<br />

joking around ‘keep on eating, put that<br />

weight on,’” said the 6-foot-4, 237-pound<br />

Keller. “He was always talking about where<br />

he wanted me to be on the scale and when<br />

I went to his office he would say ‘have you<br />

met (strength coach) Jim Lathrop?’ Just<br />

jokes like that, so I knew sooner or later it<br />

was going to happen.”<br />

The switch finally happened during<br />

this past spring practice and 50 pounds<br />

heavier, a whole bunch stronger and a few<br />

hundred technique lessons later, Keller<br />

made his first Boilermaker appearance<br />

against Syracuse Sept. 5. A 47-yard touchdown<br />

pass made his Purdue debut memorable<br />

and he followed that game up with a<br />

four-catch, 31-yard effort against Ball State.<br />

There wasn’t any question whether he<br />

could catch though, and the coaches and<br />

he both know he still has a lot to learn<br />

about blocking at the position.<br />

“His physical part of the game has<br />

improved dramatically considering where<br />

he’s coming from, but he’s got a lot to learn<br />

about the game of football,” Tiller said.<br />

“The thing of it is that it’s a different position<br />

and a different style of play compared<br />

to being outside. But he’s made tremendous<br />

progress since he’s been there.”<br />

Keller didn’t hesitate to admit that<br />

blocking a 180-pound defensive back is like<br />

a stroll in the park compared to tangling<br />

with a 280-pound lineman, but he’s determined<br />

to master his new trade.<br />

His weightroom numbers have risen<br />

tremendously and, while it’s not a great measure<br />

of overall strength, his bench press number<br />

broke the 385-pound mark recently. The<br />

technique is the key though and that’s where<br />

Keller is really focusing his efforts.<br />

“I always thought when I came to this<br />

position that strength would be the more<br />

important thing, but weight and technique<br />

definitely out do that easily,” Keller said. “A<br />

couple guys on the offensive line won’t<br />

even be stronger guys, but their technique<br />

is so good it doesn’t matter too much. I am<br />

trying to work on technique.”<br />

When Keller does master the blocking<br />

skills, he could be one of the more dangerous<br />

tight ends around. He’s already proven his<br />

receiving skills and his 6-10 high jump in high<br />

school showed his athleticism. Quarterback<br />

Kyle Orton saw his impressive 24-yard catch<br />

and run against Ball State, in which Keller<br />

juked and spun his way to the 9-yard line, and<br />

thinks Keller has the ability to become a star in<br />

the Big Ten.<br />

“He should be able to,” Orton said.<br />

“He’s probably got more physical skills<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Redshirt freshman Dustin Keller has the<br />

tools to become a stellar Big Ten tight end<br />

and has shown flashes of his talent in 2004.<br />

than any tight end in the conference with<br />

his great athleticism. He should grow into a<br />

big-time tight end and if he keeps on working<br />

hard, he probably will be.”<br />

If he does reach that “big-time” status,<br />

Keller said he will have no regrets that it<br />

isn’t at his former position. In fact, the lightspoken<br />

and affable Keller draws the same<br />

satisfaction from a hole-creating block as he<br />

did from a game-breaking catch.<br />

“If you make a big block for a running<br />

back, or a quarterback or wide receiver that’s<br />

a key block in picking up yards it definitely<br />

makes you feel real good,” Keller said. “You<br />

don’t really get recognized the way the running<br />

backs will, but you know. You don’t<br />

need other people telling you all of that.<br />

You know that you helped open that up<br />

and so does the running back.” j<br />

Doug Elish is a freelance contributor<br />

for Gold & Black Illustrated and<br />

GoldandBlack.com.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 22 GoldandBlack.com


BY DOUG GRIFFITHS<br />

DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com<br />

UNCHARTERED WATERS<br />

For the second time in Coach Joe<br />

Tiller’s eight seasons at Purdue, the<br />

Boilermakers are ranked in the top 10<br />

nationally.<br />

Purdue cracked the top 10 in both<br />

the Associated Press and ESPN/USA<br />

Today polls Oct. 3.<br />

The Boilermakers are ranked No. 9<br />

by AP and No. 10 by ESPN/USA Today.<br />

The last time Purdue was ranked<br />

this high was heading into the<br />

Michigan State game in November of<br />

2000 when it was ninth.<br />

Before Tiller arrived in West<br />

Lafayette, the Boilermakers hadn’t been<br />

in the top 10 since the 1980 preseason<br />

poll when they were ninth.<br />

By the way, the highest Purdue has<br />

ever been ranked in the AP was No. 1 in<br />

1968 (They were No. 1 in the coaches<br />

poll for one week in 1965). The<br />

Boilermakers were No. 2 in , 1943, 1965<br />

and 1967. The highest ranking during<br />

Coach Jim Young’s tenure at Purdue<br />

was fifth in September of 1979.<br />

BOILER BITS FROM<br />

NOTRE DAME GAME<br />

R Purdue was favored by three<br />

points.<br />

R The 25-point home loss to Purdue<br />

was the third-worst defeat for the <strong>Irish</strong> in<br />

the last 43 years. Only Florida State (37-0)<br />

and USC (45-14) have defeated Notre<br />

Dame by wider margins on its home field<br />

during that span.<br />

R Quarterback Kyle Orton’s 385yard<br />

passing performance marked the<br />

first time a Purdue quarterback has ever<br />

thrown for 300 yards in Notre Dame<br />

Stadium.<br />

The other 300-plus performances<br />

against the <strong>Irish</strong> are Billy Dicken (352 yards)<br />

in Purdue’s 28-17 win in 1997, Mark<br />

Herrmann (351) in a 31-24 loss to the <strong>Irish</strong><br />

in 1977 and Drew Brees (317) in Purdue’s<br />

28-23 win in 1999.<br />

R Orton’s four touchdown passes<br />

is the most by a Boilermaker quarterback<br />

against Notre Dame since<br />

sophomore sensation Len Dawson<br />

tossed four scoring passes in a 28-14<br />

PRESENTS<br />

AND FINALLY<br />

SIMPLY AMAZING<br />

Purdue is the only team in<br />

Division I-A football that has<br />

not yet committed a turnover.<br />

Boilermaker win over No. 1 Notre<br />

Dame 50 years ago.<br />

R Purdue’s 97-yard touchdown<br />

connection (Orton to Taylor<br />

Stubblefield) was the longest ever by a<br />

Notre Dame opponent.<br />

R Orton tied an <strong>Irish</strong> opponent<br />

record with four touchdown passes,<br />

becoming the 10th player to reach that<br />

mark and the first since USC’s Matt<br />

Leinart last season.<br />

R It marked the first time Purdue<br />

posted more than 500 yards in total<br />

offense against Notre Dame in the<br />

Coach Joe Tiller Era.<br />

R Purdue has now won two consecutive<br />

games against Notre Dame for<br />

the first time since 1984-85.<br />

R Purdue’s <strong>41</strong> points are the second-most<br />

ever for the Boilermakers in<br />

the 76-game series (51-19 on Oct. 1,<br />

1960, at Notre Dame Stadium).<br />

R The Boilermakers kept possession<br />

of the Shillelagh Trophy, which is<br />

annually awarded to the winner of the<br />

Purdue-Notre Dame game. The <strong>Irish</strong><br />

lead the battle for the trophy 30-18.<br />

In case you didn’t know, Purdue is<br />

two-thirds of the way to winning all<br />

Associated Press<br />

Top 25<br />

(Sept. 26)<br />

No. School Prev<br />

1 Southern California 1<br />

2 Oklahoma 2<br />

3 Georgia 3<br />

4 Miami (FL) 4<br />

5 Texas 5<br />

6 Auburn 8<br />

7 California 10<br />

8 Florida State 9<br />

9 Purdue 15<br />

10 Virginia 12<br />

11 Utah 14<br />

12 Florida <strong>16</strong><br />

13 Minnesota 18<br />

14 Michigan 19<br />

15 Wisconsin 20<br />

<strong>16</strong> West Virginia 6<br />

17 Tennessee 10<br />

18 Ohio State 7<br />

19 Arizona State 21<br />

20 Louisville 22<br />

21 Boise State 23<br />

22 Oklahoma State 25<br />

23 Maryland 24<br />

24 LSU 13<br />

25 South Carolina _<br />

ESPN/USA Today<br />

Coaches Top 25<br />

(Sept. 26)<br />

No. School Prev<br />

1 Southern California 1<br />

2 Oklahoma 2<br />

3 Georgia 3<br />

4 Miami (FL) 4<br />

5 Texas 5<br />

6 Auburn 9<br />

7 California 10<br />

8 Florida State 11<br />

9 Virginia 12<br />

10 Purdue 15<br />

11 Utah 14<br />

12 Florida <strong>16</strong><br />

13 Minnesota 19<br />

14 Michigan 18<br />

15 Ohio State 6<br />

<strong>16</strong> Wisconsin 20<br />

17 Tennessee 8<br />

18 West Virginia 7<br />

19 Boise State 21<br />

20 Louisville 22<br />

21 Oklahoma State 24<br />

22 Arizona State 25<br />

23 Maryland 23<br />

24 LSU 13<br />

25 North Carolina State _<br />

2004 PURDUE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<br />

Date Opponent ‘03 Record Series TV Time/Result<br />

Sept. 5 SYRACUSE 6-6 1-0 ABC W, 51-0<br />

Sept. 11 BALL STATE 5-8 6-0 None W, 59-7<br />

Sept. 25 @ Illinois 1-11 35-<strong>41</strong>-6 ESPN Plus W, 38-30<br />

Oct. 2 @ Notre Dame 5-7 25-39-2 NBC W, <strong>41</strong>-<strong>16</strong><br />

Oct. 9 @ Penn State 3-9 2-6-1 ESPN 3:30 p.m.<br />

Oct. <strong>16</strong> WISCONSIN* 7-6 29-36-8 ESPN2 4:30 p.m.<br />

Oct. 23 MICHIGAN* 10-3 12-39-0 TBD TBA<br />

Oct. 30 @ Northwestern* 6-7 47-23-1 TBD TBA<br />

Nov. 6 @ Iowa* 10-3 44-29-3 TBD TBA<br />

Nov. 13 OHIO STATE* 11-2 11-35-2 TBD TBA<br />

Nov. 20 INDIANA 2-10 65-35-6 TBD TBA<br />

!Homecoming *Participated in bowl games during 2003 season All times EST<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

Sophomore defensive end Ray Edwards forced one<br />

fumble and had 2.5 sacks. His play had much to do<br />

with the <strong>Irish</strong> being held under 100 yards rushing.<br />

three of its trophy<br />

games having kept the<br />

Cannon with a win<br />

over Illinois Sept. 25.<br />

If the Boilermakers<br />

beat Indiana Nov. 20<br />

to keep the Old Oaken<br />

Bucket, they will have<br />

won all three trophy<br />

games for the third<br />

time in Coach Joe<br />

Tiller’s eight seasons in<br />

West Lafayette.<br />

Purdue has completed<br />

the trifecta in<br />

1968, 1969, 1979,<br />

1985, 1997 and 2003.<br />

LIGHTEN UP<br />

FRANCIS<br />

Leading up to the<br />

Notre Dame game, the<br />

<strong>Irish</strong> players made a<br />

2004 BIG TEN STANDINGS<br />

Big Ten Overall<br />

Team W-L/Pct. W-L/Pct.<br />

Minnesota 2-0/1.000 5-0/1.000<br />

Wisconsin 2-0/1.000 5-0/1.000<br />

Michigan 2-0/1.000 4-1/.800<br />

PURDUE 1-0/1.000 4-0/1.000<br />

Iowa 1-1/.500 3-2/.500<br />

Michigan State 1-1/.500 2-3/.400<br />

Northwestern 1-1/.500 2-3/.400<br />

Ohio State 0-1/.000 3-1/.750<br />

Illinois 0-2/.000 2-3/.400<br />

Indiana 0-2/.000 2-3/.400<br />

Penn State 0-2/.000 2-3/.400<br />

Oct. 2 Results<br />

PURDUE <strong>41</strong>, Notre Dame <strong>16</strong><br />

Iowa 38, Michigan State <strong>16</strong><br />

Wisconsin 24, Illinois 7<br />

Michigan 35, Indiana 14<br />

Northwestern 33, Ohio State 27 (OT)<br />

Oct. 9 Games<br />

PURDUE @ Penn State, 3:30 p.m<br />

Illinois @ Michigan State, 11 a.m.<br />

Indiana @ Northwestern, 11 a.m.<br />

Minnesota @ Michigan, 11 a.m.<br />

Wisconsin @ Ohio State, 2:30 p.m.<br />

.All times EST (Lafayette time)<br />

big to do about a statement<br />

that Orton made earlier in<br />

the week.<br />

Orton said, “We’re<br />

going to have to keep them<br />

off balance, run the ball.<br />

But I don’t see us having<br />

that much trouble with<br />

them.”<br />

According to some<br />

South Bend radio station<br />

reports, Notre Dame coach<br />

Tyrone Willingham used<br />

that as bulletin board material.<br />

The <strong>Irish</strong> players also<br />

made it known that they<br />

were going to show how<br />

much they disliked Purdue<br />

running through their<br />

pregame warm-ups last season<br />

in Ross-Ade Stadium.<br />

BROOKS<br />

TAKES IT TO<br />

THE HOUSE<br />

During fall camp,<br />

running back Jerome<br />

Brooks told Gold &<br />

Black Illustrated that he<br />

wanted to become<br />

even more of a threat<br />

returning kickoffs.<br />

“My job last year<br />

was to try and get the<br />

ball to the 50, but this<br />

year I look forward to<br />

getting to the house,”<br />

he said.<br />

Well, he took one<br />

to the house on one of<br />

the biggest stages there<br />

is in one of the biggest<br />

games of the season.<br />

Brooks’ first-quarter<br />

100-yard kickoff<br />

return for a touch-<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 23 GoldandBlack.com


down at Notre<br />

Dame tied a<br />

Notre Dame<br />

o p p o n e n t<br />

record (now<br />

done four<br />

times), dating<br />

to 1974 when<br />

USC’s Anthony<br />

Davis went end<br />

zone to end<br />

zone.<br />

Brooks’<br />

return also tied<br />

the Purdue<br />

record for the<br />

longest kickoff<br />

return and was<br />

the first kickoff<br />

runback for a<br />

TD by a<br />

Boilermaker<br />

since Sept. 30,<br />

1995, when Lee<br />

Johnson did so<br />

against Ball<br />

State (99 yards).<br />

Following<br />

his big day<br />

against the<br />

<strong>Irish</strong>, Brooks<br />

finds himself<br />

No. 6 in career<br />

kickoff return<br />

yardage at Purdue with 957 yards on<br />

40 runbacks and fifth in career kickoff<br />

return average (23.9).<br />

R Brooks’ kickoff return against<br />

the <strong>Irish</strong> was the Xerox Unexpected<br />

Play-of-the-Day on the NBC telecast.<br />

Rushing G No Gain Lost Net Avg TD Lg Yd/G<br />

Jerod Void 4 49 270 4 266 5.4 2 18 66.5<br />

Brandon Jones 4 <strong>41</strong> 198 4 194 4.7 0 24 48.5<br />

Brandon Kirsch 2 11 83 2 81 7.4 1 <strong>16</strong> 40.5<br />

Jerome Brooks 3 8 67 0 67 8.4 1 44 22.3<br />

Kyle Orton 4 24 89 35 54 2.2 2 <strong>16</strong> 13.5<br />

Jon Goldsberry 2 5 37 0 37 7.4 0 11 18.5<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 3 10 0 10 3.3 0 4 2.5<br />

Brent Grover 4 1 5 0 5 5.0 0 5 1.2<br />

Brian Hare 4 1 5 0 5 5.0 0 5 1.2<br />

Dave Brytus 4 1 2 0 2 2.0 0 0 0.5<br />

Ray Williams 4 1 1 0 1 1.0 0 1 0.2<br />

Team 4 3 0 6 -6 -2.0 0 0 -1.5<br />

Total 4 148 767 51 7<strong>16</strong> 4.8 6 44 179.0<br />

Opponent 4 139 536 174 362 2.6 1 32 90.5<br />

Passing G Att Comp % Int Yds TD Lg Yd/G<br />

Kyle Orton 4 137 95 69.3 0 1367 17 97 3<strong>41</strong>.8<br />

Brandon Kirsch 2 6 4 66.7 0 86 1 47 43.0<br />

Brandon Jones 4 1 1 100.0 0 28 0 28 7.0<br />

Total 4 144 100 69.4 0 1481 18 97 370.2<br />

Opponent 4 128 77 60.2 2 958 5 42 239.5<br />

Receiving G No Yds Avg TD Lg Yd/G<br />

T. Stubblefield 4 28 505 18.0 10 97 126.2<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 9 156 17.3 1 56 39.0<br />

Brian Hare 4 5 135 27.0 1 75 33.8<br />

Brandon Jones 4 9 129 14.3 2 49 32.2<br />

Kyle Ingraham 4 12 123 10.2 2 31 30.8<br />

Ray Williams 4 8 115 14.4 0 44 28.8<br />

Charles Davis 4 11 106 9.6 0 23 26.5<br />

Dustin Keller 3 4 88 22.0 1 47 29.3<br />

Jerod Void 4 8 76 9.5 0 21 19.0<br />

Andre Chattams 4 3 22 7.3 0 13 5.5<br />

Jon Goldsberry 2 1 15 15.0 0 15 7.5<br />

Kevin Noel 2 1 9 9.0 0 9 4.5<br />

Rob Ninkovich 4 1 2 2.0 1 2 0.5<br />

Total 4 100 1481 14.8 18 97 370.2<br />

Opponent 4 77 958 12.4 5 42 239.5<br />

Total Offense G Rush Pass Total PG<br />

Kyle Orton 4 54 1367 1421 355.2<br />

Jerod Void 4 266 0 266 66.5<br />

Brandon Jones 4 194 28 222 55.5<br />

Brandon Kirsch 2 81 86 <strong>16</strong>7 83.5<br />

Jerome Brooks 3 67 0 67 22.3<br />

Jon Goldsberry 2 37 0 37 18.5<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 10 0 10 2.5<br />

Brent Grover 4 5 0 5 1.2<br />

Brian Hare 4 5 0 5 1.2<br />

Dave Brytus 4 2 0 2 0.5<br />

Ray Williams 4 1 1 0.2<br />

Team 4 -6 0 -6 -1.5<br />

Total 4 7<strong>16</strong> 1481 2197 549.2<br />

Opponent 4 362 958 1320 330.0<br />

ORTON FEATURED IN<br />

SPORTS ILLUSTRATED, ON<br />

ESPN’S COLLEGE GAMEDAY<br />

Orton continues to get plenty of<br />

exposure and deservedly so.<br />

GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS<br />

On Oct. 2, ESPN’s<br />

College GameDay did a<br />

feature on Orton.<br />

In the Oct. 4 issue of Sports<br />

Illustrated, there was a feature on Orton<br />

titled, “The Big Ten’s Big Shift.”<br />

R Following the Illinois game Sept.<br />

25, Orton was named the Big Ten<br />

Offensive Player-of-the-Week (for the<br />

second time this season), The Sporting<br />

News and the USA Today.com National<br />

Player-of-the-Week.<br />

GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS<br />

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PURDUE INDIVIDUAL SEASON STATS<br />

All Purpose G Rush Rec PR KR IR Total PG<br />

T. Stubblefield 4 0 505 7 0 0 512 128.0<br />

Jerod Void 4 266 76 20 0 0 362 90.5<br />

Brandon Jones 4 194 129 0 0 0 323 80.8<br />

Jerome Brooks 3 67 0 0 256 0 323 107.7<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 10 156 0 53 0 219 54.8<br />

Brian Hare 4 5 135 0 0 0 140 35.0<br />

Kyle Ingraham 4 0 123 0 0 0 123 30.8<br />

Ray Williams 4 1 115 0 0 0 1<strong>16</strong> 29.0<br />

Charles Davis 4 0 106 0 0 0 106 26.5<br />

Dustin Keller 3 0 88 0 0 0 88 29.3<br />

Brandon Kirsch 2 81 0 0 0 0 81 40.5<br />

Kyle Orton 4 54 0 0 0 0 54 13.5<br />

Jon Goldsberry 2 37 15 0 0 0 52 26.0<br />

Bernard Pollard 4 0 0 17 0 19 36 9.0<br />

Andre Chattams 4 0 22 0 0 0 22 5.5<br />

Kevin Noel 2 0 9 0 0 0 9 4.5<br />

George Hall 4 0 0 0 8 0 8 2.0<br />

Brent Grover 4 5 0 0 0 0 5 1.2<br />

Dave Brytus 4 2 0 0 0 0 2 0.5<br />

Rob Ninkovich 4 0 2 0 0 0 2 0.5<br />

Team 4 -6 0 0 0 0 -6 -1.5<br />

Total 4 7<strong>16</strong> 1481 44 317 19 2577 644.2<br />

Opponent 4 362 958 <strong>16</strong> 494 0 1830 457.5<br />

Punt Ret G No Yds Avg TD Lg Yd/G<br />

Jerod Void 4 1 20 20.0 0 0 5.0<br />

Bernard Pollard 4 1 17 17.0 0 0 4.2<br />

T. Stubblefield 4 3 7 2.3 0 8 1.8<br />

Total 4 5 44 8.8 0 8 11.0<br />

Opponent 4 3 <strong>16</strong> 5.3 0 9 4.0<br />

Kick Ret G No Yds Avg TD Lg Yd/G<br />

Jerome Brooks 3 8 256 32.0 1 100 85.3<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 1 53 53.0 0 53 13.2<br />

George Hall 4 1 8 8.0 0 8 2.0<br />

Total 4 10 317 31.7 1 100 79.2<br />

Opponent 4 26 494 19.0 0 72 123.5<br />

Punting G No Avg Lg Blk TB FC 50+ In 20<br />

Dave Brytus 4 9 38.1 51 0 1 2 1 5<br />

Kyle Orton 4 1 20.0 20 0 0 0 0 1<br />

Team 4 1 0.0 0 1 0 0 0 0<br />

Total 4 11 33.0 51 1 1 2 1 6<br />

Opponent 4 22 37.0 59 2 2 5 4 6<br />

Field Goals G Att Made Lg Blkd<br />

Ben Jones 4 6 5 45 0<br />

Total 4 6 5 45 0<br />

Opponent 4 6 4 48 1<br />

FACTOID<br />

Purdue has beaten Notre Dame more times<br />

(25) than any other school besides USC (28).<br />

GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS GO BOILERMAKERS<br />

BUILD IT AND<br />

THEY WILL<br />

COME?<br />

With Purdue looking<br />

at three and possibly<br />

four sellouts for the<br />

remainder of the 2004<br />

home season, there has<br />

been some conjecture<br />

about when the upper<br />

deck is going to be built<br />

on the east side of Ross-<br />

Ade Stadium. When talking<br />

with Athletics Director Morgan Burke<br />

prior to the Notre Dame game, he said his<br />

plan hasn’t changed.<br />

“We’ll talk about building the deck<br />

when we get to 53,000 season ticket holders,<br />

plain and simple,” Burke said. “We are<br />

following a path I predicted three years ago<br />

in that our season ticket base (42,800 plus<br />

1,900 half-season ticket holders) is growing<br />

because people are finding out this fall that<br />

they should have bought their tickets in<br />

June if they wanted to see some of the Big<br />

Ten games.”<br />

A key factor in the next phase of the<br />

renovation will be whether Purdue has<br />

demand for additional suites on the east<br />

side. In the plan for adding approximately<br />

8,000 addi-<br />

tional seats with<br />

the upper deck,<br />

is plans for<br />

approximately<br />

15 suites under<br />

the deck.<br />

“We need<br />

to sell the<br />

suites to pay off<br />

the debt service<br />

on the cost for<br />

Defense G Tack Ast Tot TFL Sack PD FF FR<br />

George Hall 4 15 22 37 1-2 0-0 2 0 0<br />

Bobby Iwuchukwu 4 12 17 29 2-10 0-5 1 0 1<br />

Kyle Smith 4 20 9 29 2-7 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Bernard Pollard 4 9 <strong>16</strong> 25 1-3 1-3 1 1 0<br />

Stanford Keglar 4 9 12 21 0-4 0-3 0 0 0<br />

Ray Edwards 4 8 10 18 5-25 3-22 1 1 1<br />

Brent Grover 4 9 8 17 1-3 0-0 4 0 1<br />

Brian Hickman 4 11 5 <strong>16</strong> 0-0 0-0 2 0 0<br />

B. Villarreal 4 10 5 15 3-<strong>16</strong> 1-10 1 0 0<br />

Antwaun Rogers 2 8 6 14 0-1 0-0 2 0 0<br />

Anthony Spencer 4 5 8 13 4-<strong>41</strong> 4-39 2 2 0<br />

Cliff Avril 4 5 4 9 1-3 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Grant Walker 4 4 2 6 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Paul Long 4 5 1 6 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Dan Bick 3 4 1 5 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Rob Ninkovich 4 4 1 5 2-6 2-6 1 0 0<br />

Brian Mattaway 3 1 2 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 1<br />

Josh Ferguson 3 1 2 3 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Al Royal 4 2 0 2 1-2 0-0 1 0 0<br />

Dan McGowen 4 0 2 2 0-2 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 2 0 2 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Gene Bright 4 1 1 2 1-12 1-11 0 0 0<br />

Brandon Jones 4 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Neal Tull 2 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Nick Cavallo 3 0 1 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Paul Dubler 1 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Ray Williams 4 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Team 4 1 0 1 0-0 0-0 0 0 0<br />

Int Ret G No Yds Avg TD Lg Yd/G<br />

Bernard Pollard 4 1 19 19.0 0 19 4.8<br />

Paul Long 4 1 0 0.0 0 0 0.0<br />

Total 4 2 19 9.5 0 19 4.8<br />

Opponent 4 1 0 0.0 0 0 0.0<br />

Scoring G TD FG SAF PAT-1 PAT-2 Total PG<br />

T. Stubblefield 4 10 0 0 0 0 60 15.0<br />

Ben Jones 4 0 5 0 24 0 39 9.8<br />

Brandon Jones 4 2 0 0 0 0 12 3.0<br />

Jerod Void 4 2 0 0 0 0 12 3.0<br />

Jerome Brooks 3 2 0 0 0 0 12 4.0<br />

Kyle Ingraham 4 2 0 0 0 0 12 3.0<br />

Kyle Orton 4 2 0 0 0 0 12 3.0<br />

Brandon Kirsch 2 1 0 0 0 0 6 3.0<br />

Brian Hare 4 1 0 0 0 0 6 1.5<br />

Dorien Bryant 4 1 0 0 0 0 6 1.5<br />

Dustin Keller 3 1 0 0 0 0 6 2.0<br />

Rob Ninkovich 4 1 0 0 0 0 6 1.5<br />

Total 4 25 5 0 24 0 189 47.2<br />

Opponent 4 6 4 0 5 0 53 13.2<br />

PURDUE TEAM STATS<br />

Scoring by Quarters:<br />

1st 2nd 3rd 4th OT Total<br />

PUR 55 54 52 28 0 189<br />

Opp 13 10 <strong>16</strong> 14 0 53<br />

PUR OPP<br />

Total First Downs 109 78<br />

Rushing 44 28<br />

Passing 59 42<br />

Penalty 6 8<br />

Total Net Yards 2197 1320<br />

Total Plays 292 267<br />

Yards Per Play 7.5 4.9<br />

Yards Per Game 549.2 330.0<br />

Rushing Attempts-Yards 148-7<strong>16</strong> 139-362<br />

Yards Per Attempt 4.8 2.6<br />

Yards Per Game 179.0 90.5<br />

Pass Att.-Comp.-Int. 144-100-0 128-77-2<br />

Passing Yards 1481 958<br />

Yards Per Completion 14.8 12.4<br />

Yards Per Game 370.2 239.5<br />

Punting: No.-Avg. 11-33.0 22-37.0<br />

Fumbles-Lost 6-0 9-4<br />

Penalties-Yards 26-243 29-192<br />

Sacks By-Yds. Lost 15-99 3-28<br />

Third-Down Conversions 34-55 23-62<br />

Conversion Pct. 61.8 37.1<br />

Fourth-Down Conversions 3-5 4-8<br />

Conversion Pct. 60.0 50.0<br />

Avg. Time Of Possession 30:20 29:40<br />

the new deck (which<br />

was $25 million back<br />

in 1999 and is<br />

expected to be at<br />

least $30 million<br />

now),” Burke said.<br />

“We need to watch<br />

the demand for suites<br />

and see how it goes.<br />

“I think it will<br />

happen (the east<br />

deck), but I am just<br />

not sure when. I<br />

would rather have a<br />

tight ticket as<br />

opposed to an occasional<br />

sellout and<br />

(Coach) Joe (Tiller)<br />

and I are on the same page on this.<br />

Building the upper deck will be for the<br />

next generation and will have to be<br />

able to sustain itself long after Joe and<br />

I are gone.”<br />

Burke said Purdue needs a year to<br />

build the new deck and suites can be<br />

built in the off-season, but it would<br />

have to be preceded by a year of planning<br />

and selling the suites. There also<br />

has been talks about what to do with<br />

the south end zone in terms of either<br />

removing the seats, renovating the<br />

area or some other project. Burke said<br />

that while plans for the south end<br />

zone have been discussed, a plan is<br />

in its infancy.<br />

ORTON FOR HEISMAN<br />

Is there a quarterback at any level that is hotter than Kyle<br />

Orton is right now?<br />

Below is a look at his 2004 statistics as well as his career<br />

numbers heading into the Penn State game Oct. 9.<br />

2004<br />

Att. Comp. Int. Pct. Yds. TD Long<br />

137 95 0 .693 1,477 17 97<br />

Career<br />

Att. Comp. Int. Pct. Yds. TD Long<br />

1,084* 645 23 .595 7,724! 49* 97<br />

*third place all-time at Purdue<br />

!fourth place all-time at Purdue<br />

For thorough, daily<br />

coverage of Boilermaker<br />

football, visit<br />

GoldandBlack.com.<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 24 GoldandBlack.com


BY ALAN KARPICK<br />

AKarpick@GoldandBlack.com<br />

Assistant athletic director<br />

Ed Howat, whose<br />

lot in life is to oversee<br />

Purdue’s academic support<br />

staff for athletics, admits it is<br />

a step in the right direction.<br />

Increasing the number of<br />

computers in the academic<br />

learning center from 24 to<br />

74 and renovating the computer<br />

lab, at a cost of nearly<br />

$250,000, is a welcome sight<br />

to Howat’s eyes.<br />

“We have such high<br />

expectations for our student<br />

athletes in terms of success<br />

in the classroom, that we are<br />

glad to really upgrade the<br />

resources available to them<br />

when they are on this side of<br />

campus,” Howat said.<br />

“When we planned the new<br />

computer center, it basically<br />

came down to how many<br />

computers could fit into the<br />

space we had available to<br />

us.”<br />

Much of the funding for<br />

the project came from the<br />

Student Athlete Opportunity<br />

Fund, which was made possible<br />

as part of NCAA’s most<br />

recent television contract<br />

with CBS. Purdue receives<br />

$121,000 annually from the<br />

NCAA and used about<br />

$70,000 of that fund for the<br />

project. ITAP (Information<br />

Technology At Purdue) provided<br />

about $103,000 worth<br />

of computers with the athletic<br />

department kicking the<br />

balance for the wiring, carpeting and<br />

aesthetics for the room.<br />

The computer lab is an integral part<br />

of the Jane P. Beering Academic<br />

Learning Center, which inhabits most<br />

of the second floor of the<br />

Intercollegiate Athletic Facility. The lab<br />

is open to all students on campus, not<br />

just student-athletes. But, because of its<br />

location, it will be used predominantly<br />

by Purdue’s 450 athletic competitors.<br />

“Having the computers here is very<br />

important, because time is one of the<br />

things our student athletes have in<br />

short supply,” athletics director Morgan<br />

Burke said. “If we can save them 10-15<br />

minutes because they can have quick<br />

access to computers, that really helps.”<br />

Howat and Burke know, however,<br />

that the current academic support facility<br />

falls far short of the space needed to<br />

provide all the necessary academic services<br />

for the student-athletes.<br />

“Our biggest needs consist of academic<br />

tutoring rooms and places for<br />

New Computer Center First Step<br />

In Academic Support Upgrade<br />

Current Facility Puts Limitations On Services To Student Athletes<br />

Academic Support Staff<br />

Responsibilities<br />

Tanya Foster: Soccer, M/W Track, Wrestling, LifeSkills<br />

Program<br />

Stan Kissell: MBasketball, M/W Swim., Softball<br />

Mark Shook: Football<br />

Mallori Walker: WBasketball, VBall, M/W Tennis, M/W<br />

Golf, Baseball<br />

Nicole Weston: Wrestling, M Swim., M/W Golf, W Tennis<br />

small study groups to meet,” said<br />

Howat. “We are also hoping to someday<br />

have an auditorium to that could handle<br />

up to 150 people at one time. It is on our<br />

three-to-five-years wish list.”<br />

The $12-million Student Athlete<br />

Enhancement Center is on the drawing<br />

board, but Burke is looking for a major<br />

donor to fund the project. Part of the function<br />

of the new facility would be to clear the<br />

way for the entire second floor of the IAF to<br />

be used only for academic services.<br />

Currently there are coaches and administrators<br />

housed in the area.<br />

Both Burke and Howat believe the academic<br />

services area is adequately staffed to<br />

handle the department’s needs. There has<br />

been a ramping up of personnel in recent<br />

years.<br />

Howat’s staff consists of five full-time<br />

advisors, three graduate assistants and one<br />

clerical support person. Each of the fulltime<br />

advisors is assigned multiple sports<br />

with the exception of Mark Shook, who<br />

handles football. Four of the five advisors<br />

Tom Campbell<br />

At the start of the 2004 school year, 50<br />

new computers were added to the computer<br />

lab in the Jane P. Beering Academic<br />

Learning Center.<br />

have been in place for three<br />

years.<br />

“The staff had a good year<br />

last year and even though it is<br />

mostly pretty young, it will<br />

continue to get better,” Burke<br />

said.<br />

Tanya Foster is the most<br />

experienced of the group. She<br />

has been involved with academic<br />

support for Purdue for 21<br />

years. Foster dates back to the<br />

day when it was she and Bob<br />

King, who still stops by the<br />

office despite officially retiring<br />

nearly a decade ago, handled<br />

academic support for all of athletics.<br />

“It has really changed a lot<br />

in the past few years,” Howat<br />

said. “Coach Bob and Tonya<br />

not only carried a big stick in<br />

this area, but cast a long shadow,”<br />

Howat said. “Bob is a true<br />

pioneer in this field and Tonya<br />

has the longevity and expertise<br />

that allows us to know the history<br />

behind events over many<br />

years. They are both valuable to<br />

have around.”<br />

In a later issue, Burke and Howat<br />

will share thoughts about some of the challenges<br />

facing academic services from the<br />

high-profile cases involving academic eligibility like<br />

Joey Harris and Chris Booker, to servicing the emotional<br />

needs of the student-athlete.j<br />

For three generations, our family has been proud to be a progressive part<br />

of the Purdue Athletic Community. The high standards that we maintain<br />

have made us what we are today.<br />

Go <strong>Boilers</strong>!<br />

For reservations call<br />

219-865-2000<br />

Celebrating Our 75th Anniversary<br />

We invite you to dine with us this evening.<br />

Your hosts:<br />

Robert and Stephen Teibel<br />

US 30 & RT <strong>41</strong><br />

Schererville, IN<br />

www.teibels.com<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 25 GoldandBlack.com


P U R D U E<br />

VOLLEYBALL TEAM BEATS<br />

MICHIGAN STATE, LOSES<br />

TO MICHIGAN<br />

The volleyball team had an up and<br />

down week with a win against Michigan<br />

State after a loss to Michigan.<br />

On Oct. 2, the <strong>Boilers</strong> overcame a<br />

12-year drought in Jennison Fieldhouse<br />

with a 3-2 win over Michigan State<br />

Saturday night.<br />

Purdue broke the losing streak with<br />

a 30-26, 26-30, 28-30, 30-21 and 15-6<br />

win over the Spartans, garnering another<br />

historically significant victory for the<br />

Boilermakers on the day.<br />

Purdue clinched the match in convincing<br />

fashion with the 9-point win in<br />

Game 5. The <strong>Boilers</strong> registered a blazing<br />

.688 hitting percentage with 11 kills in<br />

<strong>16</strong> attempts, including four by senior<br />

Kim McConaha.<br />

“I felt like our players grew up a little,”<br />

Purdue coach Dave Shondell said.<br />

“We gave away a lot of points in the first<br />

two games and in Game 3 they outplayed<br />

us in the end. But from that<br />

point on our players found their zone<br />

and it was a fun effort to watch. We went<br />

from an uptight group in the first two<br />

games to a group that was in complete<br />

control. We really learned how to relax<br />

and play on the opponents’ home<br />

court.”<br />

2004 Soccer Schedule<br />

Day Date Opponent Result/Time<br />

Sat. Aug. 21 DePaul (Exh.) T, 2-2<br />

Sat. Aug. 28 CINCINNATI* W, 2-1<br />

Sun. Aug. 29 NEW MEXICO* W, 3-0<br />

Wed. Sept. 1 @ No. 15 West Virginia L, 0-1<br />

Sun. Sept. 5 @ No. 22 Nebraska L, 0-3<br />

Fri. Sept. 10 MIAMI% W, 3-2<br />

Sun. Sept. 12 WRIGHT STATE% W, 1-0<br />

Fri. Sept. 17 IOWA W, 1-0<br />

Sun. Sept. 19 MINNESOTA W, 1-0<br />

Fri. Sept. 24 @Ohio State L, 0-1<br />

Sun. Sept. 26 @Penn State L, 1-3<br />

Fri. Oct. 1 WISCONSIN L, 0-1<br />

Fri. Oct. 8 MICHIGAN 3 p.m.<br />

Sun. Oct. 10 MICHIGAN STATE 1 p.m.<br />

Fri. Oct. 15 @Illinois 7 p.m.<br />

Sun. Oct. 17 @Northwestern 1 p.m.<br />

Fri. Oct. 22 INDIANA# 3 p.m.<br />

Sun. Oct. 24 @Indiana State 1 p.m.<br />

Thu. Oct. 28 OAKLAND 3 p.m.<br />

Sat. Oct. 30 @UW-Milwaukee 2 p.m.<br />

All times local to site<br />

#Senior Day<br />

*Boilermaker Challenge Cup<br />

%Clash of Conferences<br />

Leah Wischmeier led Purdue with<br />

23 kills, while McConaha added 15 and<br />

Sammi Mader tallied 13. Poe pulled up<br />

17 digs in the match, moving her<br />

Purdue dig tally to 1,009.<br />

A day earlier against Michigan, the<br />

Wolverines outlasted the <strong>Boilers</strong> for a 3-<br />

1 win in a game that featured 15 lead<br />

changes and 47 tie scores.<br />

The <strong>Boilers</strong> had several chances<br />

against the Wolverines but were unable<br />

to come away with victories in two overtime<br />

games. Michigan won the match<br />

30-23, 32-34, 31-29 and 30-26.<br />

Wischmeier posted a career-high 26<br />

kills, besting her previous high of 24,<br />

while McConaha and Kim Cappa also<br />

reached double digits with 17 and 15,<br />

respectively. McConaha hit .400, while<br />

completing her double-double with 13<br />

digs and five blocks.<br />

SOCCER SHUTOUT<br />

AGAINST WISCONSIN<br />

The Boilermakers dropped a 1-0<br />

decision to Wisconsin on Oct. 1 at the<br />

Varsity Soccer Complex. The loss<br />

snapped an eight-match home unbeaten<br />

streak and broke a four-match winning<br />

streak against the Badgers.<br />

Prior to the match, Wisconsin (7-3-<br />

1, 1-3-1 Big Ten) had not beaten nor<br />

scored against Purdue (6-5, 2-3) in the<br />

regular season since 1999, a<br />

4-0 win at Madison.<br />

Wisconsin starting<br />

midfielder Katy Lindemuth<br />

broke the Badgers’ five-year<br />

scoring drought in the<br />

10th minute. Her first shot<br />

on goal was saved by a<br />

Purdue defender, but she<br />

was able to gain control of<br />

the rebound and blasted<br />

the ball past Boiler goalkeeper<br />

Lauren Mason.<br />

The Badgers recorded<br />

eight shots for the match,<br />

with only six shots on goal.<br />

Purdue’s offense, though,<br />

wasn’t any better. The<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> finished with 12<br />

shots, six of which were on<br />

goal.<br />

Badger goalkeeper<br />

Lynn Murray recorded her<br />

second shutout of the season<br />

to boost her record to<br />

5-2-0.<br />

CROSS COUNTRY<br />

MEN, WOMEN<br />

FINISH 11TH<br />

Eleven was the magic<br />

number on the cross country<br />

course Oct. 1 as both<br />

the Purdue men and<br />

women finished in 11th<br />

place at the Adidas Notre<br />

Dame Invitational.<br />

The event was run at<br />

Purdue<br />

Kim McConaha played a big role in Purdue’s win at<br />

Michigan State.<br />

the Burke Memorial Golf Course, with<br />

the men running 8K and the women 5K.<br />

The Boiler men - competing in the<br />

Gold division - placed 11th among 26<br />

teams. Notre Dame won the team title<br />

with 85 points, compared to Purdue’s<br />

358.<br />

2004 Volleyball Schedule<br />

Day Date Opponent Result/Time<br />

Wed. Sept. 1 BUTLER W, 3-1<br />

Fri. Sept. 3 vs. No. 12 Georgia Tech* W, 3-1<br />

Sat. Sept. 4 vs. Missouri* W, 3-2<br />

Fri. Sept. 10 vs. Tennessee-Martin^ W, 3-0<br />

Sat. Sept. 11 vs. Wake Forest^ L, 0-3<br />

Sat. Sept. 11 vs. Tennessee^ L, 1-3<br />

Tue. Sept. 14 VALPARAISO W, 3-1<br />

Fri. Sept. 17 vs. Central Michigan# W, 3-0<br />

Sat. Sept. 18 vs. East Tennessee State# W, 3-0<br />

Sat. Sept. 18 vs. Kentucky# L, 2-3<br />

Wed. Sept. 22 INDIANA W, 3-0<br />

Fri. Sept. 24 @ No. 13 Illinois W, 3-1<br />

Fri. Oct. 1 @ Michigan L, 1-3<br />

Sat. Oct. 2 @ Michigan State W, 3-2<br />

Fri. Oct. 8 PENN STATE 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Oct. 9 OHIO STATE 7 p.m.<br />

Fri. Oct. 15 @ Northwestern 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Oct. <strong>16</strong> @ Wisconsin 7 p.m.<br />

Fri. Oct. 22 IOWA 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Oct. 23 MINNESOTA 8 p.m.<br />

Fri. Oct. 29 @ Ohio State 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Oct. 30 @ Penn State 7 p.m.<br />

Fri. Nov. 5 MICHIGAN STATE 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Nov. 6 MICHIGAN 7 p.m.<br />

Wed. Nov. 10 @ Indiana 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Nov. 13 ILLINOIS 8 p.m.<br />

Fri. Nov. 19 @ Minnesota 7 p.m.<br />

Sun. Nov. 21 @ Iowa 2 p.m.<br />

Fri. Nov. 26 WISCONSIN 7 p.m.<br />

Sat. Nov. 27 NORTHWESTERN 7 p.m.<br />

* Madison, Wis.<br />

^ Lady Vols Classic, Knoxville, Tenn.<br />

# Mortar Board Premier, West Lafayette, Ind.<br />

Justin Stadt paced the<br />

Purdue men, finishing<br />

40th in the individual<br />

standings with a time of<br />

25:40. Justin Gauthier was<br />

the second Boiler to cross<br />

the finish line, running a<br />

26:01 for 67th place.<br />

Purdue’s third, fourth and<br />

fifth scoring runners were<br />

Eric Hammond (76th,<br />

26:08), Zach Wilder (79th,<br />

26:14) and Joshua<br />

Robinson (96th, 26:31).<br />

In the women’s Blue<br />

division, Purdue scored 3<strong>16</strong><br />

points for 11th-place.<br />

Stanford won the field of<br />

national elite squads with<br />

34 points. The Boilermakers<br />

finished one spot, and one<br />

point, behind Big Ten foe<br />

Penn State.<br />

Amber Ferner was the lead runner<br />

for the Purdue women, finishing 34th<br />

with a time of 17:36, a personal best at<br />

5K. Ferner’s prior best was a 17:46 run at<br />

the Indiana Intercollegiates in 2001.<br />

Lindsay Zinn finished second for Purdue<br />

with a time of 17:45, placing 45th overall.<br />

Four other veteran Purdue<br />

women posted personal bests,<br />

led by Corrie Whisner’s 74thplace<br />

18:07. Kara Lahey finished<br />

a second behind<br />

Whisner for 76th-place.<br />

Kaleena Cappel finished 87th<br />

with an 18:<strong>16</strong>. And Rachel<br />

Kroll finished with a time of<br />

18:43.<br />

PURDUE TO HOST<br />

2008 NCAA GOLF<br />

TOURNAMENT<br />

Purdue was awarded the<br />

host site for the 2008 NCAA<br />

Division I Men’s Golf<br />

Championships.<br />

The event - from May 28<br />

to 31 - will be held at the<br />

Kampen Course of the Birck<br />

Boilermaker Golf Complex.<br />

The Kampen Course was<br />

designed by world-renowned<br />

golf course architect Pete Dye.<br />

“This facility was designed<br />

by Pete Dye to challenge all<br />

level of golfers and, with that<br />

in mind, Pete created a true<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 26 GoldandBlack.com


Purdue<br />

Freshman Parrissa Eyorokon led Purdue<br />

with three shots against Wisconsin.<br />

test for NCAA champion golfers on the<br />

Kampen Course,” said athletic director<br />

Morgan Burke. “The Birck Boilermaker<br />

Golf Complex will be the ideal venue to<br />

host this prestigious event. We know a<br />

lot of outstanding facilities were considered<br />

for this opportunity and that makes<br />

receiving the bid even more special.”<br />

The Kampen Course hosted the<br />

NCAA Women’s Golf Championships in<br />

2003, the NCAA Women’s Central<br />

Regional Championships in 2001 and<br />

the NCAA Men’s Golf Central Regional<br />

Championships in 2004.<br />

“It is a tribute to our facility, our<br />

staff that ran the central regional in<br />

2004, and to our golf program specifically,”<br />

said Purdue golf coach Devon<br />

Brouse. “The golf course now is truly one<br />

of the best two or three collegiate facilities<br />

in the country, and a strong case<br />

could be made that it is the best. We<br />

have, along with Pete Dye’s help, plans<br />

for a few minor adjustments that will<br />

make it even better. By 2008, the players<br />

will find it to be one of the best tests of<br />

golfing ability. With our track record, I<br />

am confident we can count on the<br />

Purdue family and community to run a<br />

great championship.”<br />

During the 2004 Central Regional<br />

Championships, the Kampen Course<br />

played 7,259 yards and was a par 72.<br />

Purdue has hosted a men’s national<br />

golf championship twice before - in<br />

1952 and 1961. In the 1961 NCAA Men’s<br />

Golf Championship, the <strong>Boilers</strong> won the<br />

national championship.<br />

PURDUE ACADEMIC<br />

PROGRAM RECEIVES<br />

RECOGNITION<br />

The Purdue CHAMPS/Life Skills program<br />

was named a Program of<br />

Excellence this week by the Division I-A<br />

Athletic Directors’ Association at a luncheon<br />

held in Dallas.<br />

Auburn University and the<br />

University of Utah also joined the<br />

<strong>Boilers</strong> at the awards podium.<br />

The Program of Excellence designation<br />

is shared by just 32 other schools,<br />

including those inducted this week.<br />

Notre Dame, Penn State, Michigan State,<br />

Iowa and Ohio State have also been<br />

inducted.<br />

CHAMPS, which stands for<br />

2004 Men’s and Women’s Cross Country Schedule<br />

Day Date Opponent Result/Time<br />

Sat. Sept. 4 Great American Legends NTS<br />

Sat. Sept. 11 @ Indiana State Invitational 4 th @<br />

Fri. Sept. 17 INDIANA INTERCOLLEGIATES W1st/M4th<br />

Fri. Oct. 1 @ Notre Dame Invitational M/W 11TH<br />

Sat. Oct. <strong>16</strong> Pre-National Meet ##.<br />

Sun. Oct. 31 Big Ten Championships&&<br />

Sat. Nov. 13 NCAA Regionals**<br />

Mon. Nov. 22 NCAA Championships##<br />

##Terre Haute, Ind.<br />

&&Iowa City, Iowa<br />

**Ypsilanti, Mich.<br />

Home Meets ALL CAPS<br />

@Women fourth place of nine teams, Men fourth of eight<br />

Challenging Athletes’<br />

Minds for Personal Success,<br />

was founded in 1992 by the<br />

national athletics directors<br />

association to raise the profile<br />

of the other elements of<br />

a student-athletes education<br />

beyond athletics. The<br />

five guiding principles of<br />

the CHAMPS/Life Skills program<br />

are commitments to<br />

academic excellence, athletic<br />

excellence, personal<br />

development, community<br />

Score big with PEFCU.<br />

Chances are you can join the Purdue Employees<br />

Federal Credit Union team. Becoming a member<br />

is easy. Of course Purdue employees can join,<br />

but so can students, alumni and their family<br />

members. You may also be able to join through<br />

your employer.<br />

Once you become a member of our team, you’ll<br />

discover what makes PEFCU a winner. We offer<br />

a wide array of consumer and business products.<br />

And because we’re a credit union, we beat most<br />

banks with better rates and more services with<br />

fewer fees.<br />

PEFCU has the home field advantage with two<br />

locations right on campus. To find out more, stop<br />

by our new branch in the Purdue Memorial Union<br />

before the next game - we’re open until noon on<br />

Saturdays - or log onto purdueefcu.com.<br />

Federally Insured<br />

by the NCUA<br />

• Free checking<br />

• Convenient branch locations<br />

• A wide range of remote access options<br />

service and career development.<br />

“The guiding principles of the<br />

CHAMPS program are what we ask of all<br />

of our student-athletes, coaches and support<br />

staff,” Burke said. “The coaches, our<br />

administrative and support staff, and<br />

our colleagues across Purdue University<br />

all share in the honor of being named a<br />

Program of Excellence.” j<br />

• Better rates and fewer fees than most banks<br />

g y q j pp<br />

• Surcharge free ATMs around town and across the country<br />

Join the winning team.<br />

765-49-PEFCU or 800-62-PEFCU – www.purdueefcu.com<br />

GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 5 • 27 GoldandBlack.com


Presents<br />

The Big Play By Purdue’s Golden Boys<br />

Kyle Orton’s 97-yard touchdown pass to Taylor Stubblefield<br />

with 11:51 left in the third quarter was the longest play from<br />

scrimmage ever against Notre Dame and the second longest in<br />

Purdue annals. In the first frame, Orton signals to Stubblefield the<br />

route to be run. Then he makes the toss with the end result a little<br />

celebration on the sideline by the Boilermaker duo. Orton became<br />

the first Purdue quarterback to throw for more than 300 yards in<br />

South Bend and Stubblefield’s seven receptions (for 186 yards and<br />

two scores) puts him three short of John Standeford’s Purdue and<br />

Big Ten all-time records.<br />

PurdueGear.com<br />

University Spirit celebrates the spirit<br />

of Purdue Athletics. For the 2004-05<br />

season, University Spirit will bring<br />

you the present and past difference<br />

makers captured in pictures.<br />

TIME DATED MATERIAL PLEASE RUSH!<br />

DELIVER BY OCT. 8, 2004

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