2004 Recruiting Class Produces High Expectations
Transcription
2004 Recruiting Class Produces High Expectations
The Authority On Purdue Athletics www.GoldandBlack.com Defensive End Rob Ninkovich VOL. 15, ISSUE 15 • JAN. 15, 2005 I L L U S T R AT E D Safety Torri Williams Wide Receiver Dorien Bryant Running Back Kory Sheets Promising Picture Guard Jordan Grimes 2004 Recruiting Class Produces High Expectations Defensive Tackle Ryan Baker $2.50 COVER STORY: 2004 FOOTBALL RECRUITING CLASS Waiting On Deck Class Of '04 Made Early Impact; More To Come BY BRIAN NEUBERT BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com promise at both tight end and on the defensive line. Baker spent the entire season at tight end, but donned a black jersey to move to defense for the team’s Sunday Boiler Bowl scrimmages for young players. It was ultimately decided that Baker’s nonstop, hard-charging playing style suited him best on defense. It didn’t hurt that Purdue’s loaded with bodies at tight end, but perilously thin at defensive tackle. During pre-bowl practices, Baker was moved to defensive tackle, likely for good. The 6-6 Baker saw his weight drop down to 240 during his senior basketball season at Indianapolis Chatard; but he’s now approaching a rock-solid 260 pounds. If he can add even more weight and strength, you’ll assuredly see him on the field in 2005. You know, it’s not as important to be 300 pounds so much as it O ne year later, Coach Joe Tiller believes his 2004 recruiting class is everything it was cracked up to be when it signed exactly one year ago. Of course, few coaches would come out and say otherwise, but in Tiller, you can genuinely sense he believes it, particularly when it comes to his young receivers and offensive linemen, two positions that are absolutely critical as Purdue’s offense moves forward. Tiller is also pleased with the eight newcomers who contributed in 2004. “Over the course of the time they played, they all made plays,” Tiller said. From a position-by-position standpoint, a quarter of the offensive line signees that the staff repeatedly referred to using the word “jackpot,” did not disappoint, though health is now a major concern. “I’d take a (line) class like this one every year,” Tiller said. Then there are the receivers, which saw one true freshman and a junior college transfer make an impact, with two other promising rookies redshirting. “I’ll stick by my statement,” Tiller said, “that this is the most talented receiver class we’ve signed.” Below is a look at the ’04 newcomers and how they progressed through their debut season at Purdue. (Note: Headers indicate whether a player played, and if so, where, or redshirted, as well as position.) CLIFF AVRIL Played • Outside Linebacker/ Special Teams Beside punter Dave Brytus, Cliff Avril was the only other rookie to emerge as a full-time starter, due to the season-ending injury suffered at Northwestern by junior strong-side linebacker Bobby Iwuchukwu. Starting the final four-plus games of the year, Avril made 36 tackles and forced a fumble. Coaches were pleased with the way he handled himself considering the circumstances. With some experience under his belt, Avril becomes an especially intriguing prospect. He’s 6-foot-3, with long arms and good athleticism, and maintained his weight all year. He’s pushing 230 pounds. With Iwuchukwu coming back for his senior season, there might be a log jam brewing on the strong side. When Avril first signed, his physical attributes suggested he might become a defensive end. With a redshirt year still available, a move is still not outside the realm of possibility, Tiller said. “There’s a thought that’s a possibility, is to play like you are, and Baker shows indications of being able to do just that. His sheer tenacity alone can overwhelm blockers and his height and timing seem to give him a knack for batting down passes at the line. Tiller’s gone so far as to suggest he could beat out a returning senior for a starting job. Position coach Mark Hagen might not argue; he’s as enamored with Baker as anyone. “Great motor. Tough. He’s everything you love about a football player. He’s kind of a throw-back,” Hagen said. “He goes hard every play. Sometimes our guys (on offense and defense) take offense to it, but that’s the way you should play all the time.” Hagen’s been thrilled with how receptive Baker has been to coaching — “He’s like a sponge” — as well as his effort and sheer talent. “Whenever he’s been on defense … the offensive guys, they’re just not used to a guy who goes as hard as he does every single play. You don’t see that much nowadays. They’re rare. And when you find one — like Ryan — you’ve got something really good to work with.” As a tackle, Baker can probably be compared to former Boilermaker Craig Terrill, though Baker’s taller and probably a better athlete. DAN BICK Played • Special Teams Tom Campbell Ryan Baker could start next season at defensive tackle because of his size (6foot-6, 260 pounds), athleticism and great motor. Baker can be compared to former Boilermaker and current Seattle Seahawk Craig Terrill, but may prove to be even better. but you do want a guy to learn one position and be really good at it,” Tiller said. “ … He has broad shoulders and looks like he’s going to become a very big person. I think if we did decide his future was at defensive end, that he could become that 250- or 255-pound end. He’s an Akin Ayodele type guy.” Purdue’s young ranks at defensive end are rather thin, perhaps more so than linebacker, which will welcome an infusion of nice new talent for next fall, to go along with three returning starters (counting Iwuchukwu). RYAN BAKER Redshirted • Defensive Tackle What a nice problem to have. In the case of former heralded recruit Ryan Baker, the coaching staff spent the entire season tying to decide where it wanted Baker to play. It was a tough decision, because Baker’s shown much Tom Campbell Defensive tackles and special teams coach Mark Hagen says linebacker Dan Bick may be used in every phase of special teams in the coming seasons, ala Jon Goldsberry. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 2 Though a linebacker by trade, Dan Bick made his mark on special teams as a true freshman, earning a spot on the kickoff team. Bick is fast and aggressive and laid down some heavy hits in the kicking game this year. In high school, he had an uncanny knack for blocking kicks. “Dan Bick, in my opinion, is a guy who could really be on every special team,” said Hagen, who doubles as special teams coach. “That was a big part of his high school career, and we may want to use him in every phase. “He’s a great effort guy and understands the importance of special teams. I see him having the same role as a Jon Goldsberry, being in on every phase. You can’t say he’ll be exactly like Jon — Jon’s been special — but Dan Bick might have that potential.” Linebackers coach Brock Spack said, though, that Bick shouldn’t be labeled just yet GoldandBlack.com I L L U S T R A T E D Volume 15, Issue 15 Jan. 15, 2004 A Publication of: Boilers, Inc. PO Box 2618 West Lafayette, Indiana 47996 765-463-1800x282 FAX: 765-464-2002 1-800-876-GOPU www.GoldAndBlack.com 2605 Yeager Road West Lafayette, IN 47906 President/Publisher Alan Karpick, ext 278 AKarpick@GoldandBlack.com Editor Doug Griffiths, ext 279 DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com Associate Editor/Internet Coordinator Brian Neubert, ext 281 BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com Staff Writer Kyle Charters KCharters@GoldandBlack.com Advertising Sales Alan Karpick Graphic Designer Gary A. Hoffman Consultants J. George Owen Mary Owen Photographer Tom Campbell Subscriptions Jackie Patterson, ext 282 Gnbmanager@GoldandBlack.com Contributors Keith Thomas Printer Bedford (Ind.) Times-Mail Gold & Black Illustrated is published 26 times a year, primarily during the football and basketball seasons and once in April and May. Periodicals postage paid at Lafayette, Ind., and additional office. USPS: 010-447. Subscription rate: $53.95 ($57.20 for Indiana subscribers). Foreign rates: Available upon request. POSTMASTER: Send change of address form to: Gold & Black Illustrated, PO Box 2618 West Lafayette, IN 47996 Publisher assumes no responsibility for unsolicited manuscripts and photographs. All letters to Gold & Black Illustrated will be treated as intended for publication and are subject to Gold & Black Illustrated’s right to edit and comment editorially. The Boilers, Inc., officers, shareholders, staff and contributors are not and never have been sponsored by or sanctioned by Purdue University. © Copyright, Boilers, Inc. 2005. All Rights Reserved. Reproduction or use in whole or in part, without permission, of editorial or graphical content in any manner is strictly prohibited. ON THE COVER Associate editor Brian Neubert’s extensive cover story in this week’s issue focuses on the 2004 recruiting class and the potential impact it may have on Purdue football in the coming years. Cover and University Spirit photos by Tom Campbell. as a specialist only. “You don’t pigeon-hole anybody at this point,” Spack said. “The best players play.” DORIEN BRYANT Played • Wide Receiver/ Special Teams The impact player of the class, Dorien Bryant was slowly incorporated into Purdue’s offense early on, but grew more and more involved with each passing week. Bryant caught 38 balls — the most by a true freshman under Tiller since John Standeford in 2000 — for 582 yards and three touchdowns. He Tom Campbell also became a threat Receiver Dorien Bryant will take over in the running for Taylor Stubblefield in the slot in 2005 and Coach Joe Tiller wants to see game, carrying Tom Campbell Bryant add some weight to become seven times for Dave Brytus was the Sun Bowl Special more physical. an average of 12.1 Teams MVP and should improve greatly yards per carry, with more experience. finishing with an average of 40 “That’s new for a lot of freshmen. yards per attempt. He closed the including a 62-yard touchdown against Indiana. It is You can’t just go on the practice season strong, though, as the thin hoped that Bryant will assume field and do it.” El Paso air helped him average Tiller would like to see Bryant 48.9 yards on eight kicks — three punt-return responsibilities in time add 10 more pounds of muscle of which pinned Arizona State for next fall. Exiting two-a-days, Purdue before his sophomore season. near its own goal line — and take “I think that’s going to be home the game’s special teams entered the fall with just a handful of specific ways — meaning actual the trump card on him — the MVP honor. plays — to use the speedster, but ability to get bigger and stronger But that was the end of the through the course of the fall, his and become a more physical player,” role expanded tremendously. “In my opinion,” receivers Tiller said. coach Bob DeBesse said, “he’s just DAVE scratching the surface.” BRYTUS And you’ll see more next year, Played • Punter as Bryant’s the heir apparent to Dave Brytus was Taylor Stubblefield’s 300-pluscatches in the slot position. Bryant recruited by Purdue has listened intently this season to to kick right away, Stubblefield, who's aimed to help and that’s exactly the youngster with the mental what he did. The former part of the game, as well as his blue-chipper earned route-running. For Bryant, this season was for the No. 1 punting learning, but there’s still work to job heading into the be done, as evidenced by a sub-par season and held it all year, although performance in the Sun Bowl. “He had to learn the Aaron Levin punted Northwestern importance of paying attention at and studying and retaining due to the windy what we’d do in the (football) conditions. Brytus had his class room,” DeBesse said of the bouncy, charismatic receiver. ups and downs, season; fast forward to the start of it. Back in September,theoffensewas practically unstoppable. As a result, Brytus punted just once in Purdue’s first two games. “I’m glad I didn’t have to, because that meant we were scoring,” Brytus said. “But I didn’t get many chances. I’d be lying if I said there weren’t any nerves.” Tiller said Brytus did “OK” this season, but the name of the game for the youngster this season was getting experience. “David has just tremendous physical ability,” Hagen said, “so we expect him to keep getting better.” Continued on page 6 Volume 15 2005 Publishing Schedule Issue Mailing No. Date 16 January 18 17 February 1 18 February 8 19 February 22 20 March 1 21 March 8 22 March 15 23 March 22 24 April 8 25 April 29 26 May 27 Schedule is subject to change. IN THIS EDITION OF THE JOHN PURDUE CLUB REPORT ON PAGE 4: • Endowed Scholarship Brunch Set For Jan. 30 • JPC Snapshot: Lauren Devich, Softball • Basketball Reminders GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 3 GoldandBlack.com GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 4 GoldandBlack.com FROM ASSOCIATE EDITOR: BRIAN NEUBERT THE BEST MAY BE YET TO COME S panning a large chunk this magazine you’ll find our comprehensive annual retrospective on Joe Tiller’s most recent recruiting class, just weeks before his next one is signed. In this piece, you’ll find out anything and everything about the Class of 2004 that you care to know, perhaps short of what Dorien Bryant had for breakfast and what Ryan Baker got for Christmas. But, I think it was Froot Loops and socks, respectively. Pointless jokes aside, this is a class Tiller takes very seriously. And for good reason: It’s a collection of young talent that’s lived up to its billing as his “best class yet,” a label it’ll hold all the way up until Feb. 2, when this next class signs. You saw this most recent class draw immediate dividends in 2004. You saw Bryant prove to be the most talented receiver inked by Tiller to date as he dropped hints of greatness on Saturday afternoons. You watched 310-pound tank Jordan Grimes prove to be the most complete and ready-made offensive lineman you may ever see around these parts. Then, there’s Torri Williams, who’s clearly the future, if not the present, at free safety, and Brian Hare, who seemed to average about 62 yards a catch this year. Don’t forget Rob Ninkovich, who didn’t even need to start in order to tie for the Big Ten regular season lead with eight sacks. Purdue’s got a pretty good young punter on its hands in Dave Brytus, too. But as much as you saw from this group this season, the best could be yet to come. This class could really establish Purdue on very solid ground heading into the future, if it’s not there already. There’s quality across the board in the Class of 2004, and when the ’05 class is mixed in, you might be talking about a wealth of riches in certain spots. When reviewing the crop of hatchlings from this season, perhaps the most encouraging developments occurred on the offensive line, where Grimes proved to be a prodigy and tackles Garret Miller and Sean Sester were deemed smashing hits while redshirting. But, sticking true to the old adage that, “Things are never as good as they seem,” Miller (a projected ’05 starter at a critical position) and classmate center-hopeful Zach Smith were hurt during pre-bowl workouts on Purdue’s dilapidated and downright hazardous indoor practice turf. The day Purdue’s own knee-eating green monster is replaced — it needs to happen this summer — will be a joyous and painfully overdue day around Boilermaker athletics. Then there’s running back Kory Sheets. If this guy plays on game day like he does on the practice field, Purdue has something special in its backfield. You can say much of the same about Baker, now a defensive tackle after a year spent playing tight end. Baker has all the attributes — including sheer want-to — to be a great player. The Boilermakers have played with undersized defensive tackles for several seasons now, but Baker could give Purdue a real battleship in the trenches, with a heart big enough to match his body. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 5 At receiver, Bryant would appear to be a star in the making. Redshirts Brandon Whittington and Desmond Tardy will join him as part of a nice corps of receivers — which will add big-time recruits Selywn Lymon and Greg Orton next year as well — that will be catching the long ball over the long haul. Defensively, Williams certainly appears set for big things, and Zach Logan and Fabian Martin are expected to give the Boilermakers a muchneeded shot of depth and talent on the corners. The talent is there; so is the enthusiasm. More than anything, the Class of ’04 could inject the 2005 Boilermakers with a healthy dose of Life, but not the cereal or the board game. Logan, Martin and Williams love to play football. So does Baker. And Miller and Hare. Usually chirping like parakeets, Bryant and Tardy just seem to love life in general. Now, skip ahead a couple pages and read for yourself. Our apologies for the lack of breakfast information. Maybe next year. j Neubert can be reached at BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com. GoldandBlack.com FRESHMEN Continued from page 3 average of 26 yards per-grab — and the three aforementioned touchdowns. And Hare did this with what DeBesse calls so-so know-how of his position, though Tiller has always admired Hare’s ability to “track” balls in the air and make plays on deep passes. “His shortcomings come with his technique,” DeBesse said. “For so long, he’s gotten away with just running by people, being faster than everyone. But that doesn’t always work in the Big Ten, with the schedule we play. “Consequently, his focus this spring and summer has to be on improving his technique. Sometimes he gets in trouble at the line of scrimmage or down the field, so he has to learn to become more disciplined and not just rely on his speed. But he’s very coachable and I love the kid to death. He’ll get better.” Tom Campbell Junior college transfer Jeremy Coley must get his weight up and increase his strength if he intends to be a force at defensive end. JEREMY COLEY — remember, though, that the Boilermakers return each ANTHONY HEYGOOD Here’s a name many fans will be of their top four defensive Redshirted • Running Back ends — may be determined interested in hearing about. Running back Anthony Heygood Jeremy Coley. The junior college by the kind of off-season he might be the X factor in this whole has in the weight room. transfer came to West Lafayette as one of class. While Coley was a the most-touted J.C. defensive ends in the Why? No one seems to know where nation, but this fall, Purdue got a little less disappointment in one the running back’s going to end up. He respect, he was anything but than what it bargained for. came to Purdue as an accomplished in another. Don’t take that as an indictment of high school running back, but that’s a “His weight is down and Coley as a player. Rather, he showed up position where the Boilermakers have a weighing much less than was anticipated. his strength is down, but lot of bodies. After playing his sophomore season his motor is up,” Tiller said. Tom Campbell So there’s some thought that the “Those guys, the Craig Terrill around 250 pounds, Coley arrived at Tiller believes offensive guard Jordan Grimes is "going 6-2, 215-pounder — with speed and Purdue tipping the scales at less than 230 type, have a tendency to do to be a dandy." After all, he was the first true freshman athleticism that belie his size — could offensive lineman to start at Purdue since Damon Lewis and at no point in the season got more things that aren’t picture- in 1993. find his future elsewhere. He played perfect, but they still find than a pound or two beyond that mark. freshman ever to earn playing time on the safety in high school, as well as running their way to the football because of their How could this happen? Tiller pointed offensive line under Tiller. And he didn’t back. He was an outstanding track athlete out that Coley spent the summer working motor. Coley is that type of guy.” disappoint. in high school also. on his academics at a very reputable “He’s going to be a dandy,” said Tiller, One possibility is fullback, where JORDAN GRIMES junior college, and thus spent little time who fully intends on making Grimes a Tiller said Heygood could conceivably be Played • Offensive Guard in the weight room. full-time starter in 2004. the team’s next Goldsberry. Jordan Grimes made history of As a result of Coley’s physical disparity, The 6-foot-3, 310-pound former high “We’d like to find some things out he redshirted in 2004. His impact next year sorts this season, becoming the first true school power-lifting champion walked in about him and find a place for Anthony,” the door as the most physically developed Tiller said. “When we recruited him, we young lineman this coaching staff had thought he was an athletic guy who could ever seen; he bench-pressed 400 pounds play multiple positions and we talked upon arriving on campus. As a result, it to him about that when we he visited took Grimes just a couple of two-a-day here, and he was fine with that. That’s sessions to earn a spot in the two-deeps. He saw reserve action all year before starting the Sun Bowl. “I feel like I picked up the offense pretty quick,” Grimes said. “It took a few games, but as I got more experience, I got more comfortable.” Who Do You Rate As Purdue’s Greatest Basketball The key for Grimes now, coaches say, Coach Of All Time? is to continue gaining experience and to prevent his natural on-field aggressiveness from reaching the point where it’s a detriment. And, Tiller wants to make sure Gene Keady 66% George King 8% Grimes doesn’t get too big. Redshirted • Defensive End (Junior) Great Rates for Great Boilermaker Fans Ward "Piggy' Lambert 24% Others 2% BRIAN HARE Played • Wide Receiver (Junior) This survey question ran in a past issue of Gold & Black Illustrated. Fans voted by e-mail at HuntingtonGRates@aol. com, by fax and by mail. Thanks to all that participated and watch for results and upcoming surveys in all future issues. In a quality-over-quantity sort of way, junior receiver Brian Hare made quite a substantial impact in his Purdue debut season. In his very first game, against Syracuse, Hare caught a 75-yard touchdown. It was that kind of season for Hare, as it seemed like every ball he caught went for a huge play. He also caught a 48-yard scoring bomb at Iowa and an 80-yard catch-andrun TD in the Sun Bowl. For the season, Hare caught just 13 balls, but they went for 338 yards — a fat GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 6 Tom Campbell Look for receiver Brian Hare to become even more of a deep-play threat next season, but to do so he needs to improve his technique. GoldandBlack.com Martin collectively, and with admiration. “They were always in my office bugging me, asking, ‘Coach, you got any tape?” Anarumo said. “And this is when they weren’t even playing.” Logan came to Purdue as the rare true cornerback recruit. And he may have been a little ahead than his peers from a know-how standpoint after being coached in high school by former long-time NFL defensive back Maurice Douglass. “Every school or situation is a little bit different,” Anarumo said, “but he did come in comfortable with some techniques we like, more so than other guys. He Tom Campbell Tom Campbell really wants to do well, and Anthony Heygood may end up playing fullback, Because he's so talented, it was difficult for he’s his own biggest critic. which is fine with him as he has told Tiller that the coaching staff to redshirt cornerback Zach But he has to let it come to he'll play wherever needed. Logan in 2004. him and just play.” encouraging, because that’s the exception Like with almost all to the rule. He’s had a great attitude. I’ve ZACH LOGAN young defensive backs, it would help talked to him about maybe being a fullback Redshirted • Cornerback Logan to pack on additional size and and I know other coaches have talked to Along with classmate Fabian Martin, strength. His official listing of 6-1 might him about maybe being a linebacker, and cornerback Zach Logan will be on the field be generous and he topped out during the he’s said, ‘Coach, whatever you want.’” next fall, according to Tiller. season at around 176 pounds. For that reason, Heygood will certainly Logan nearly played this year, when he be one to keep an eye on in the spring. was the team’s traveling (or “emergency”) FABIAN MARTIN redshirt. Redshirted • Cornerback JAMAAL JONES “All year long, when the (first team) Coaches literally could not be happier Redshirted • Offensive Line was on the field, it was (Brian) Hickman with Fabian Martin, who along with While most freshmen spend their first and (Antwaun) Rogers,” Tiller said, “but Logan, is expected to contribute at corner year on campus adding weight, Jamaal when the (second team) was out there, it in 2005. Jones was dropping it. was (Paul) Long and Logan.” Not only are Tiller and his staff pleased After arriving on campus last spring, But as the season progressed, junior with Martin the player, but also with Jones proved to be woefully overweight, Sean Petty, who had been sidelined by a everything he’s proven to be off the field. with his strength and speed lagging well bad shoulder during camp, moved above Martin came to Purdue with big plans behind as well. Logan as the staff’s desire to keep the of being an impact wide receiver in the He spent the year at defensive tackle, freshman’s redshirt year intensified. Boilermaker offense. But just days into but was moved to the offensive line before First-year secondary coach Lou the bowl game. Anarumo speaks about Logan and Position aside, the coaching staff has been A TALENTED BUNCH pleased with Jones’ Below is a list of the 23 remaining scholarship newcomers that joined physical progress, though Purdue for the 2004 season: he’s still thought to be No. Name Pos. Ht. Wt. 2005 elig. some distance from being 85 Cliff Avril* LB 6-3 225 So. ready to make an impact 90 Ryan Baker DT 6-6 250 R-Fr. 36 Dan Bick LB 6-1 215 So. on the field. 9 Dorien Bryant* WR 5-10 175 So. “He’s a heck of a lot 16 Dave Brytus* P 6-4 235 So. closer to helping us this 57 Jeremy Coley#! DE 6-5 250 Jr. year when he was last 66 Jordan Grimes OG 6-3 310 So. year,” Tiller said. 80 Brian Hare! WR 6-3 200 Jr. Hagen, who coached 42 Anthony Heygood RB 6-2 210 R-Fr. 97 Jamaal Jones OL 6-4 296 R-Fr. Jones with the defensive 5 Zach Logan CB 6-1 175 R-Fr. tackles all year, said he 4 Fabian Martin CB 5-11 185 R-Fr. also saw Jones’ intensity 26 Lance Melvin SS 5-9 190 R-Fr. pick up. 51 Garret Miller OT 6-8 265 R-Fr. “I think he’s learning 93 Rob Ninkovich! DE 6-3 245 Sr. 99 Jonathan Patton DT 6-4 250 R-Fr. what he needs to do to 74 Sean Sester OT 6-8 275 R-Fr. play,” Hagen said. 40 Kory Sheets RB 6-0 205 R-Fr. As of the time of 60 Zach Smith OL 6-4 285 R-Fr. his switch, it wasn’t set 6 Desmond Tardy WR 6-1 180 R-Fr. in stone where on the 46 Luis Vasquez DE 6-3 238 R-Fr. offensive line Jones would 19 Brandon Whittington WR 6-2 195 R-Fr. 13 Torri Williams* FS 6-2 190 So. end up playing, though * Played for the Boilermakers in 2004 guard would seem like ! Junior college transfer the most logical starting # Redshirted after transferring from junior college point. Note: All heights and weights are those officially listed by the camp, he was asked to move to corner. “I didn’t tell him he had to move,” Tiller said. Martin did move, and after a couple days of mild disappointment and what appeared to be some sulking, he bought into his new position whole-heartedly. That, and the weight room, where he’s put on almost 10 solid pounds while redshirting. That’s quite an accomplishment for a young DB, particularly if they can maintain their speed, of which Martin has plenty. “Obviously he can run, but he had never lifted weights before he’d come here. They just didn’t have (weights at his high school),” Anarumo said. “With a year of lifting and running under his belt, he could be able to really help us. And Fabian’s doing a heck of a job (academically). He’s really excelling in the classroom. He really wants to do well and really wants to be here.” When Tiller talks about Martin, he smiles and talks about a player from an urban environment (Chicago) who’s truly seemed to make the most of the opportunities presented to him. “He came in here as an average student, but of all the kids we’ve had come in here, he’s really grabbed a hold of the academic part of the equation,” Tiller said. “He’s really done a great job. He’s very organized, responsible and accountable. We just couldn’t be more pleased of him. And, he has a great personality.” LANCE MELVIN Redshirted • Defensive Back It’s still up in the air as to whether defensive back Lance Melvin will end up as a safety or a cornerback. Tiller said of Melvin that he simply didn’t prove talented enough to play ahead of classmate Torri Williams at safety or to return kicks, where the coaches have Bryant on the fast track. university and was gathered prior to the season. More up-to-date measurements, when significant, are reflected in individual bios. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 7 GoldandBlack.com That’s not to say the heady DB’s been written off. When he was recruited, Purdue’s coaches loved Melvin’s toughness and football savvy. Physically, though, Melvin may have lost a step from high school, according to Tiller. “He’s put on 10 pounds since high school,” Tiller said, “and I suspect that’s affected his quickness and speed.” The rock-solid 5-9 Melvin was weighing around 192 pounds toward the end of the season. GARRET MILLER Redshirted • Offensive Tackle Offensive tackle Garret Miller was the most pleasant surprise of this season, but by no fault of his own, also perhaps the biggest disappointment. You see, Miller was so Tom Campbell impressive this season that the Defensive end Rob Ninkovich was a pleasant in 2004, leading the Boilermakers with coaches had him informally surprise eight sacks, which tied for the Big Ten regularpenciled in to start next year. But season lead. that was before Miller sustained things up extremely quickly. I don’t think a dislocated patella — a severe leg injury it’s a matter of if rather than when with — during pre-bowl workouts on the Garret.” Mollenkopf Athletic Center’s worn-down Tiller compared Miller’s on-the-field indoor practice turf. It’s a injury Tiller says demeanor to past Boilermaker linemen he’s never had a player totally rebound Matt Light, Mark Fischer and Chukky from. Okobi. If Miller were to do so, however, the “I really like his temperament as well coaches would be ecstatic. The staff raved as his athleticism,” Tiller said, also before about him all year long. the injury. “He’ll really battle you. He has “He was more than what we thought good leverage and long arms, so he’s really we were getting,” offensive line coach Bill hard to get around. Legg said before the injury. “We knew “He has a chance to be a heck of a we were getting a bright, tough, athletic player.” kid. I don’t know if we knew we were To do so, though, Miller would have getting as athletic a kid as he turned out needed a big summer in the weight to be. He’s naturally strong and has great room, as he was around just 260 pounds balance. He’s very intelligent and picks After he flip-flopped between tight end and defensive end during training camp, the coaches opted to leave Ninkovich on defense and pass on the redshirt year he had available. It proved to be a good decision. All season, Ninkovich was the Boilermakers’ first defensive end off the bench, seeing action in Purdue’s “posse” (four defensive end) line package and when starter Anthony Spencer was banged up. Though just a reserve, Ninkovich wound up leading the team with eight sacks, which also tied him for the regular season Big Tom Campbell Ten lead. He doubled his total by Of all the freshmen, Tiller said quarterback Curtis Painter, who will enter Spring Practice as Purdue's sacking Indiana’s Matt LoVecchio No. 2 quarterback behind Brandon Kirsch, may four times in the regular season have improved the most. finale. For the season, he made 23 toward the end of the season. His offtackles — 9.5 for loss — and broke season, of course, will be hampered as he up four passes. rehabilitates, so just how much Miller can Ninkovich also caught a touchdown contribute next season is very much in at Notre Dame, as a situational goal-line doubt. blocker. And, he served as Purdue’s backup long-snapper, though he was never ROB NINKOVICH needed. Played • Defensive End (Junior) As a defensive end, Ninkovich brings No newcomer made the most of his solid speed and quickness in addition playing time this year more than junior to great toughness and effort to the college transfer Rob Ninkovich. Boilermaker defensive line. Being that Purdue returns Spencer and fellow starter Ray Edwards, NEWS AND NOTES ON THE it might be expected that CLASS OF ’04 Ninkovich will play the R Attrition struck light on this class through same role next year as he Year 1, as only two scholarship recruits have fallen did in 2004. out of the program since the group arrived on There’s no reason to campus. think at this point that Junior college wide receiver Bruce Gordon this will be considered, but and freshman linebacker-turned-fullback Jimmy Ninkovich does still have a Ladd left the team in August and late October, redshirt year available. respectively. Gordon, who arrived for spring ball last year, was frustrated by a series of hamstring CURTIS PAINTER injuries; Ladd left for personal reasons. Redshirted • Quarterback R Of those who signed last winter, but didn’t Curtis Painter, by virtue initially enroll, defensive back Christian Graham of a strong training camp, has re-signed and now enrolled mid-year. Running immediately established back Chris Haslon, sidelined by academic and himself in the No. 3 slot health issues, will play college football at the on Purdue’s depth chart at Division I-AA level. quarterback.Fortunatelyfor Quarterback David Ramirez, who grey-shirted the Boilermakers, though, during the fall semester because of a back injury, he was never needed, and has already joined the team. thus redshirted. R Purdue’s coaches have been saying all year Now, Painter appears that they’d “hit the jackpot” on their new young poised to enter spring offensive linemen — Garret Miller, Sean Sester and practice as the back-up Zach Smith. to junior-to-be Brandon But that excitement has to be tempered now, Kirsch. to say the least, by the major leg injuries sustained Painter might be by Miller and Smith during pre-bowl practices on considered a cross between the Mollenkopf Athletic Center’s antiquated AstroKirsch and ’04 starter Kyle Turf. Both injuries were sustained in non-contact Orton. He’s athletic and situations. It’s generally believed that the summer can run with the ball, between an offensive lineman’s first and second but not quite as well as years are the most important from a physical Kirsch. Meanwhile, his development standpoint. arm appears stronger than R Six true freshmen played this fall, second Kirsch’s, but not quite as in participation only to the eight that played powerful as Orton’s. in 2000: Dan Bick and Dave Brytus were special Quarterbacks coach teams staples. Dorien Bryant contributed heavily at Blaine Bennett describes receiver. Jordan Grimes became the first freshman Painter’s arm, which zings offensive lineman ever to play under Tiller. Torri consistent spirals on the Williams became a key reserve in the secondary. practice field, as lively. Lastly, Cliff Avril ended the season as the starter at “Kyle could throw the strong-side linebacker, having replaced the injured ball every day and never Bobby Iwuchukwu. Continued on page 26 GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 8 GoldandBlack.com FOOTBALL: NEWS AND NOTES AND FINALLY Boilermakers Earn FedEx Air Team-Of-The-Year Honor BY DOUG GRIFFITHS DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com D uring halftime of the BCS national championship game between Oklahoma and USC Jan. 4 in the FedEx Orange Bowl in Miami, Purdue was named the FedEx Express Air Team-ofthe-Year. As a result, the university’s general scholarship fund receives $25,000. The honor was the result of online balloting by the fans. Other nominees included Arizona State, Georgia, Oklahoma, Texas Tech, USC and Utah. Purdue’s aerial assault amassed 3,573 yards and 35 touchdowns (both Big Ten highs in 2004), with only eight interceptions, this season. A brief highlight package was shown, including quarterback Kyle Orton’s 97yard touchdown pass to receiver Taylor Stubblefield Oct. 2 at Notre Dame. “At Purdue, we believe in passing until we get hot, and when we get hot, we’ll keep passing,” Coach Joe Tiller said during a taped interview on ABC. “We’re not afraid to throw it on any down or distance whether it’s first, second, third or fourth down and I think that’s why fans like to watch us play,” Stubblefield said. Play-by-play announcer Brad Nessler pointed out that Stubblefield became college football’s all-time leader in receptions this past season. Tom Campbell Quarterback Kyle Orton helped Purdue’s high-flying offense earn FedEx Air Team-ofthe-Year honors, throwing for 3,090 yards and 31 touchdowns. BOILERS IN NFL UPDATE R Chargers starting R Linebacker Gilbert 2005 center Nick Hardwick Gardner didn’t dress for PURDUE suffered a knee and ankle Indianapolis’ impressive SCHEDULE sprain in the second home win (49-24) over Date Opponent quarter against the Jets. Denver Jan. 9. He was out Sept. 10 AKRON Sept. 17 @ Arizona After being examined in with a shoulder injury. Sept. 24 @ Minnesota the locker room, Hardwick Oct. 1 NOTRE DAME returned to the sideline IN CASE YOU Oct. 8 IOWA Oct. 15 NORTHWESTERN* late in the third quarter DIDN’T KNOW Oct. 22 @ Wisconsin with a noticeable limp and R Purdue’s defensive Oct. 29 @ Penn State Nov. 5 MICHIGAN STATE didn’t return to action. effort against Arizona State Nov. 12 ILLINOIS R San Diego in the Sun Bowl was ranked Nov. 19 @ Indiana linebacker Shaun Phillips as the 10th-biggest dud in *Homecoming had one tackle and a half the 2004 bowl season by sack in the Chargers’ loss. CollegeFootballNews.com R Middle linebacker in the Web sites' best and Niko Koutouvides and defensive end worst list of the bowl season. Chike Okeafor started for Seattle while It said, “The same Boilermaker defensive tackle Craig Terrill came off unit which ranked among the nation’s the bench for the Seahawks in a 27-20 best in defense this year failed to hold home loss to St. Louis Jan. 8. a late fourth-quarter lead and yielded It was interesting to see all three more than 500 yards to an Arizona Boilermakers on the field at the same State team sans starting quarterback time, especially during St. Louis’ game- Andrew Walter.” winning touchdown drive late in the R Hardwick was named to ESPN. fourth quarter. com’s NFL All-Rookie Team. Koutouvides was credited with five Hardwick blocked for an offense tackles. Okeafor had four stops and two that was third in the league in scoring sacks, while Terrill got half a sack. during the regular season (446 points). R According to figures in the Dec. 27, 2004-Jan. 2, 2005 2004-05 VERBAL COMMITMENTS issue of Street & Smith’s Player Pos. Ht. Wt. Hometown/High School SportsBusiness Journal, Joey Elliott QB 6-2 190 Evansville, Ind./Harrison the Purdue-Notre Christian Graham^ CB 6-2 190 Indianapolis, Ind./Warren Central Dame game ranked Frank Halliburton DE 6-3 240 Indianapolis, Ind./Chatard Eric Hedstrom OL 6-6 265 Arlington Heights, Ill./Prospect 22nd among the Todshon Jones* DB 6-2 165 Winslow Township, N.J./Winslow Township highest-rated network Jason Kacinko OL 6-6 300 Harrison City, Pa./Penn-Trafford television games in Brandon King ATH 5-10 171 Warner Robins, Ga./Houston County college football this Selwyn Lymon WR 6-4 190 Fort Wayne, Ind./Harding season. It received Alex Magee DT 6-5 270 Oswego, Ill./Oswego a 2.5 rating (2.719 Dray Mason RB 5-10 175 Indianapolis, Ind./Bishop Chatard million viewers). j Michael Neal DE 6-4 240 Merrillville, Ind./Merrillville Several former Purdue players had their seasons end during the first round of the NFL play-offs Jan. 8-9. R Quarterback Drew Brees’ San Diego Chargers were upset 20-17 in overtime by the New York Jets Jan. 9 in Qualcomm Stadium. Brees completed 31-of-42 passes for a game-high 319 yards with two touchdowns and an interception. Of those 319 yards, 147 came in the fourth quarter and OT. He started the game completing his first eight passes. There is some question as to whether Brees will return to San Diego next season, because he’s a free agent. Jonathan Daniel/Getty Images San Diego starting center Nick Hardwick, shown snapping the ball to Drew Brees, missed the second half of the Chargers’ playoff game against the New York Jets Jan. 8 after injuring his ankle and knee. Greg Orton WR 6-4 190 Huber Heights, Ohio/Wayne J.B. Paxson DE 6-3 260 Greenwood, Ind./Center Grove Jonathan Phillips K 6-1 200 West Palm Beach, Fla./Wellington David Ramirez^ QB 6-2 190 Red Oak, Texas/Grace Preparatory Academy Jason Werner LB 6-4 200 Indianapolis, Ind./Roncalli Kyle Williams^ LB 6-2 217 Bolingbrook, Ill./Bolingbrook Jared Zwilling DE 6-4 255 Evansville, Ind./Central ^enrolled at Purdue for the spring semester in January and will participate in spring practice * new commitment GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 9 For thorough, daily coverage of Boilermaker football, visit GoldandBlack.com. GoldandBlack.com FOOTBALL FEATURE: DREW BREES SUPER CHARGER Free-Agent-To-Be Brees Turns Career, San Diego Around BY KYLE CHARTERS KCharters@GoldandBlack.com INDIANAPOLIS — Drew Brees knew this was where he would be all along — leading the San Diego Chargers into the AFC playoffs. Before the season started in early September, it was a scenario which many — if not most — seemed an impossibility. And although the final chapter ended earlier than he expected with a playoff loss to the New York Jets Jan. 8 — for Brees, the former Purdue quarterback who led the Boilermakers to the Rose Bowl in 2001, it was the best scenario. “He’s a remarkable competitor,” Charger coach Marty Schottenheimer said after San Diego’s loss to Indianapolis on Dec. 26. “He’s provided great leadership, as well as great performances for us this season.” Brees’ storybook season ended when the Jets defeated the Chargers 20-17 in overtime. San Diego ended the season with a 12-5 record. A few months ago, a San Diego playoff berth would have seemed an unlikely scenario. With the No. 1 pick in the NFL Draft in April, San Diego went looking for a new franchise quarterback, as the organization seems to do every couple of years or so, settling on North Carolina State's Phillip Rivers, after trading the rights to Eli Manning to the New York Giants. The move “The big thing was just having the right signaled an apparent end to attitude. It was like, ‘Hey, what am I the Drew Brees Era going to do? Am I going to sit around — one which saw the signal-caller and let somebody take my job? Or am I get pulled for two games last season going to show them what I’m all about?’ in favor of 41-year So I decided to show them what I’m all old Doug Flutie and benched for about.” five others as the Chargers fell to an – Drew Brees NFL worst 4-12. “The big thing compared to just that this is his team. I don’t think the was just having 11 touchdowns, draft pick had anything to do with it; I the right attitude,” Brees earned a trip think he was just out to prove to people said Brees. “It was to the Pro Bowl that he could play quarterback at this like, 'Hey, what as the league’s level.” am I going to do? third-highest rated Brees isn’t the only former Am I going to sit passer behind Boilermaker who helped the Chargers to around and let I n d i a n a p o l i s ’ the playoffs this year. The organization somebody take Peyton Manning drafted rookies Nick Hardwick and my job? Or am and Minnesota’s Shaun Phillips after their outstanding I going to show Duante Culpepper, four-year careers at Purdue. them what I’m Getty Images/Jonathan Daniel with “I’ve known all along that Drew is all about?’ So I Former Boilermaker Drew Brees could see finishing 3,159 passing a great player,” Phillips said, “and he’s a big payday after leading the Chargers decided to show to a playoff berth in his fourth season y a r d s , 2 7 going to be one for a lot of years. He them what I’m all in the NFL. Brees was named Associated t o u c h d o w n s just didn’t have a lot of help the last Press Comeback-Player-of-the-Year earlier about.” this month. and seven couple of years. Now he’s starting to get Brees capped interceptions. His some help and he’s showing what kind his fourth NFL season by being named 104.8 rating is 37.3 points higher than of quarterback he is.” The Associated Press 2004 NFL Comeback After the disappointing loss to the Player-of-the-Year, easily beating out last season. “I think last year was just one Jets, Brees and the Chargers must turn Carolina linebacker Mark Fields, who sat of those seasons that you have to go their attention to the future. Brees, a free out last season with Hodgkin’s Disease. through to make yourself a better agent, could be allowed to test the open A year after throwing 15 interceptions player and a better person,” Brees said. market, looking for a large, long-term “I think we all grew and matured deal. But it’s widely speculated that the and learned from that time. Honestly Chargers will place the “franchise tag” coming into the season we expected (to on Brees, guaranteeing him a one-year make the playoffs). We expected to be deal worth the average of the salaries going into the playoffs and fighting for of the top-5 highest paid quarterbacks a Super Bowl Championship.” in the league — an equivalent of about OK, so 53 players and a handful of 9-million dollars. coaches believed, but for the rest of the Although that is a lot of money, world, that certainly wasn't the case. it's not as much as Brees could earn The Chargers were predicted by many considering he would get millions more to finish near or at the bottom of the in a signing bonus. As a result, it's easy AFC West Division; Schottenheimer’s to see why the QB wants a long-term job was in jeopardy; and Rivers was deal — either with the Chargers or with expected to replace Brees as the team’s another team. starter by mid-season, if not sooner. While the business side of football But with Rivers holding out during will have to work itself out, Brees says the preseason because of a prolonged there’s more work to be done on the contract negotiation, Brees got the small football field next season. opening he needed. After an off-season “I don’t feel like I’ve even scratched in which Brees rededicated himself the surface of what I can do in this to intense workouts and endless film league and I don’t think we’ve even study, others were confident that the scratched the surface as far as what job would be his. we can do as a team,” he said. “You’ve “Drew has spent countless hours just always got to believe that. No in the film room and out on the matter what happens. Let’s face it, bad football field with his receivers, getting things are going to happen. I mean, it’s their timing down and creating a really the NFL. There are other good players special bond,” said longtime Brees’ out there and it’s kind of a cutthroat buddy LaDainian Tomlinson, who is business where they’re always bringing headed to the Pro Bowl, too. “I think somebody in to try to replace you or to that has just paid off for him. He’s been upgrade. That’s just the business, it’s the on the same page with his receivers way it is. But you just have to believe since the first game. in yourself and have confidence, and “Drew has always had the mindset everything will work out.” j GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 10 GoldandBlack.com MEN'S BASKETBALL: NO.1 ILLINOIS 68, PURDUE 59 PUTTING UP A FIGHT Boilermakers Play Top-Ranked Illini Tough, But Fall Short In Second Half BY BRIAN NEUBERT BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com Indeed. With energy not often seen from Purdue this season, the Boilermakers swarmed the Illini, keeping those in orange out of their lethal transition game (as the Illini didn't have one fastbreak bucket the entire game). Keeping the game relegated to the half court, Purdue hit 10 of its first 15 shots and corralled nine of the contest’s 12 rebounds. It looked like Weber was about to faint, as he rolled his eyes and stepped backwards at 16:03, when Matt Kiefer buried a three-pointer right in front of Illinois' F or 30 minutes Jan. 8, the magic was back in Mackey Arena. But for the final 10, reality was as hard and cold as the inch-thick ice encasing much of frigid West Lafayette these days. Playing a nationally-televised game in front of a crowd that was about as divided as the 2004 presidential election, the out-manned and under-talented Boilermakers gave the No. 1 team in the country all it could chew on for the first half-and-a-half. But in the closing minutes, Bruce Weber’s undefeated Illini spit it right back out. After Purdue led by as many as nine during an inspired first half, Illinois gained control of the game in the second, using a 26-7 run to turn a threepoint deficit at the 17-minute mark into an 11-point cushion with eight-and-ahalf minutes to play. After trailing at the half for the first time this year, Illinois pulled away to win 68-59. Illinois improved to 16-0 overall, 2-0 in the Big Ten, while Purdue fell to 4-8, 0-2. The decisive run was capped by three consecutive three-pointers from Dee Brown, who didn’t even take a shot in the first half. “They’re the No. 1 team in the nation, and they just kept coming at us,” Purdue’s Carl Landry said. “They stayed together, hit a couple of shots and that was that.” Weber — the long-time Keady assistant — knew his former boss would have his team come out like a pack of hungry dogs. He was right, particularly in the first half. ## 40 43 04 05 11 33 45 50 Player Name Augustine, James Powell, Jr., Roger Head, Luther Williams, Deron Brown, Dee McBride, Rich Smith, Nick Ingram, Jack TEAM Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % ## 14 42 02 04 10 05 30 33 45 f f g g g “I think we shocked them a little bit,” Keady said. “The first question Bruce asked me after the game was, ‘Why don’t they play like that all the time?’” Said Weber of the first half: “We were the team on its heels; they were the team on its toes.” Illinois TOT-FG FG-FGA 2-4 5-11 5-11 2-9 4-7 2-2 0-2 3-5 3-PT FG-FGA 0-0 1-4 3-7 1-3 4-6 2-2 0-0 0-0 FT-FTA 4-6 2-3 2-4 1-3 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 23-51 11-22 11-18 1st Half: 11-29 37.9% 1st Half: 5-9 55.6% 1st Half: 6-9 66.7% Player Name Landry, Carl Kiefer, Matt Teague, David Ford, Andrew McKnight, Brandon Dillon, Bryant Price, Xavier Ware, Gary Davis, Charles TEAM Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % f f g g g Tom Campbell Things looked good for Purdue in the first half as junior forward Carl Landry was able to get several easy shots inside. Landry and forward Matt Kiefer nailed 11-of-16 shots in the opening stanza, leading the Boilermakers to hit a crisp 57.1 percent of their shots from the floor. REBOUNDS DE TOT 6 9 4 5 2 4 2 3 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 2 1 1 9 17 26 OF 3 1 2 1 0 1 0 0 2nd Half: 12-22 54.5% 2nd Half: 6-13 46.2% 2nd Half: 5-9 55.6% 3-PT FG-FGA 1-1 1-2 2-4 0-0 1-3 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 FT-FTA 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 3-4 3-4 0-0 0-0 0-0 24-52 5-10 6-8 Officials: Randy Drury, Mike Sanzere, Dan Crisman Technical fouls: Illinois-None. Purdue-None. Attendance: 14,123 Score by Periods 1st 2nd Total Illinois 33 35 -68 Purdue 39 20 -59 TP 8 13 15 6 14 6 0 6 A 3 0 3 6 2 0 1 1 TO 2 1 0 2 2 0 0 0 BLK 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 1 S 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 0 MIN 34 28 38 31 33 19 4 13 15 68 16 7 6 5 200 Game: 45.1% Game: 50.0% Game: 61.1% Purdue TOT-FG FG-FGA 7-12 8-14 4-10 0-0 3-10 2-4 0-0 0-0 0-2 1st Half: 16-28 57.1% 1st Half: 3-4 75.0% 1st Half: 4-6 66.7% PF 3 4 0 4 3 0 0 1 REBOUNDS DE TOT 2 7 4 6 2 3 0 0 4 4 3 5 1 1 0 0 4 4 1 1 10 21 31 OF 5 2 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 2nd Half: 8-24 33.3% 2nd Half: 2-6 33.3% 2nd Half: 2-2 100 % PF 3 4 3 3 0 3 0 0 0 TP 15 17 10 0 10 7 0 0 0 A 2 2 0 3 2 5 0 0 0 TO 3 2 1 0 2 2 1 1 1 BLK 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1 S 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 MIN 36 26 39 9 37 29 6 5 13 16 59 14 13 4 1 200 Game: 46.2% Game: 50.0% Game: 75.0% First, Roger Powell dunked off an in-bound pass, then Brown hit a three. Then Powell dunked again and Brown hit another three. Deron Williams, who was held to just six points, hit a jumper at 14:46, but then Bryant Dillon answered for Purdue. At 10:27, Luther Head drove to the hoop and scored, but Kiefer answered. But it was then that things got really ugly. Brown — heeding Weber’s halftime advice to “play like you’re No. 1” — hit a three, then another to give UI its first double-digit lead, 56-45 at 9:21. David Teague hit a three-pointer for Purdue, but then Brown hit another, this time from well beyond NBA range. The rest of the way, Purdue never got within fewer than eight. The Boilermakers were assertive in the first half, but in the second, Illinois became the aggressor, getting loose ball after loose ball, offensive rebound after offensive rebound. The 6-foot pinball-like guard made like a cartoon, using his maddening speed and quickness to play “Jerry” to the Boilermakers’ “Tom.” Kiefer led Purdue with 17 points on 8-of-14 shooting, showing more spring off his surgically repaired knee than he had previously. “The crowd being that big kind of gets you going,” Kiefer said of the announced sellout, “so maybe that had something to do with it.” Landry had 15 points on 7-of-12 shooting, with seven rebounds. Teague and McKnight each had 10. For the second straight game — the Boilermakers’ prior loss to Wisconsin Tom Campbell may have been Keady’s Junior guard David Teague tries to create some space team’s best statistical away from Illinois guard Luther Head. Head and the Illinois defense clamped down severely on Teague showing of the year — the in the second half limiting him to just four shots as Boilermakers put forth one Purdue managed just 20 points in the second period. of their better efforts of second-year coach. the season, and again lost convincingly. Purdue was led in the half by a This perhaps would lead one to the seemingly inspired Kiefer, who scored revelation that even Purdue’s very best 13 points, ranging from long jumpers this season may not be enough against to driving, one-handed dunks. His assist the Big Ten’s upper crust. at 9:30 gave Landry an easy two-handed The Boilermakers shot a very slam and provided Purdue an eight-point respectable 46.2 percent, out-rebounded lead. A three by Brandon McKnight at Illinois 31-26 and had more assists than 4:57 made it a nine-point game. turnovers. All seemed to start well for the Purdue shot 57 percent in the first Boilermakers in the second half, as half and grabbed eight more rebounds, Landry dunked, then drew an offensive while Illinois shot just 37 percent. Keady foul on James Augustine. But the Illini knew all this in the locker room. defense stiffened, Kiefer picked up his “They were only down six,” Keady third foul and was replaced by Charles said, “so they probably felt good about Davis and the Illini took off. that.” j GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 11 GoldandBlack.com M EN'S BASKETBALL: WISCONSIN 77, PURDUE 68 TRIPLE PLAY Badgers Shoot Their Way To Win In Big Ten Opener BY BRIAN NEUBERT BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com P romotional materials for Purdue men’s basketball this season have promised ticket-buyers “a whole lot of threes.” Well, on Jan. 5, both ticket-buyers and freebie walk-ins — due to the icy weather and void of students, free admission was offered to all willing to come — the Mackey Arena crowd got just that: A whole lot of threes. But much to Coach Gene Keady’s chagrin, they came from the wrong team. Wisconsin knocked down 14-of-22 three-pointers in beating the Boilermakers, 77-68, in the conference opener for both schools before an announced crowd of 7,925 fans. “We didn’t get up on their shooters; we didn’t follow the scouting report,” said David Teague, the player who promises all those threes in the commercials, but uncharacteristically scored 20 without the benefit of a single triple. “Coach told us all week who could shoot and who couldn’t shoot.” Hopefully for Purdue, Zach Morley’s name appeared in the “can shoot” column on Keady’s chalkboard. The bushy-haired big man was 6-of8 from long range, hitting four of those triples between the 16:30 and 13-minute marks of the second half, as Wisconsin blew the game open. His hot shooting put the Badgers up by as many as 13 in the second half. While the men in red were red-hot from beyond the arc in the second half, they were even more so in the first, when Tom Campbell Matt Kiefer and Wisconsin’s Zach Morley battle for a rebound during second half action. In addition to his game-high seven rebounds, Morley was a huge thorn in the Boilermakers’ side, connecting on 6-of-8 three-point attempts. He finished with a team-high 22 points. they connected on 8-of-10 treys and 2-of15 on all their other shots. The Badgers’ first 18 points came off three-pointers. The first half, though, was extremely competitive, as Purdue led by as many as seven and didn’t trail by more than three until the final two minutes of the half. With 51 seconds left in the opening stanza, Keady was called for a technical foul after protesting a traveling call on Brandon McKnight. The Badgers made one free throw off the T, then sank a three-pointer by Alando Tucker for a six-point lead, their biggest of the half. “We’ve had coaches outside of that friggin’ (coaches) box all year, and I didn’t say (a word) about it,” fumed Keady who appeared to inadvertently make contact with Tom Clark, the official who called the T. “Now, we have an important game like this and I wanted to find out what happened on the steps and we get a technical. That’s ridiculous. That’s not what lost the game for us, but I get so fed up with these guys (the officials).” Then, the Badgers’ barrage from threepoint land blew it open in the final 20 minutes. In the game’s closing minutes, Purdue almost stubbornly kept fouling to delay the inevitable as long as possible. But UW hit 9-of-10 from the stripe in the final two minutes. The Boilermakers scored 10 points, all virtually uncontested, in the final minute but never so much as attempted a three-pointer. The loss dropped Purdue to 4-7, and Keady’s getting fed up. “It’s a lack of intensity; a lack of doing what we practice; a lack of taking coaching,” a livid Keady said after the game. “I don’t want to sound like a coach blaming his players, because I’m not. We teach. We’re the coaches. It’s our fault, but we’ve got to start making some plays to win games. “The people we’ve had here in the program — the older guys — are used to losing. I’m sorry. When you get used to winning and maintaining leadership, like Wisconsin’s doing right now … we’re being like they used to be. That’s got to change. That’s why I wanted to change head coaches. That’s got to change with new enthusiasm and a new voice, because evidently, they’re not listening to me. “It’s like a radio station in Chicago said, we’re ‘God awful.’ I’m really pissed off about that because I hate what has happened here in 25 years. Hopefully, we can get it turned around this year.” Though much of Purdue’s offensive production came in the final few minutes with the game decided, statistically this may have been one of the Boilermakers’ better offensive outings of the season. Purdue shot a season-best 53.7 percent and had a glowing 19-to-9 assist-to-turnover ratio. Teague had the rare game when he hit more than half his shots. He was 9-of16, with no three-pointers. The Boilermakers’ offensive catalyst, though, was once again hamstrung by foul trouble. Leading scorer Carl Landry scored 23 points on 8-of-10 shooting, but played just 24 minutes. It was no coincidence that Wisconsin’s runs in both halves came with Landry on the pine. “He’s our biggest asset on the team,” Teague said of Landry. “If he’s not in the game, we’re going to struggle to score.” For Landry, this is clearly a case of a new player trying to learn to play defense to Keady’s liking, but also doing so without being over-aggressive. Landry said the solution, he hopes, “starts tomorrow.” “I’m going into the coaches’ office tomorrow,” Landry said after the game, “and try to figure out some ways to stay out of foul trouble.” j Wisconsin ## Player Name 42 Tucker, Alando 44 Morley, Zach 54 Wilkinson, Mike 01 Chambliss, Sharif 13 Hanson, Clayton 04 Nixon, Ray 21 Helmigk, Andreas 23 Taylor, Kammron 32 Butch, Brian TEAM Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % ## Player Name 14 Landry, Carl 33 Ware, Gary 02 Teague, David 04 Ford, Andrew 10 McKnight, Brandon 05 Dillon, Bryant 30 Price, Xavier 42 Kiefer, Matt 45 Davis, Charles TEAM Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % f f f g g TOT-FG 3-PT FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA 3-9 2-3 1-2 8-14 6-8 0-1 4-7 1-2 2-5 4-9 3-5 5-6 2-4 0-1 2-2 1-3 1-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-3 0-0 5-6 1-1 1-1 0-0 1st Half: 1st Half: 1st Half: f f g g g 15-22 24-50 14-22 10-25 8-10 2-5 40.0% 2nd Half: 14-25 80.0% 2nd Half: 6-12 40.0% 2nd Half: 13-17 TOT-FG 3-PT FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA 8-10 0-0 7-9 0-0 0-0 0-0 9-16 0-3 2-2 0-1 0-1 0-0 5-12 0-2 0-2 1-4 0-1 0-0 1-3 0-0 0-2 4-7 1-2 0-2 1-1 0-0 0-0 29-54 1st Half: 1st Half: 1st Half: 13-28 0-4 0-0 1-9 9-17 REBOUNDS DE TOT 1 3 5 7 5 6 4 4 0 0 1 1 3 3 0 0 0 0 3 5 22 29 PF 1 1 4 1 2 3 1 0 1 TP 9 22 11 16 6 3 0 7 3 A 3 1 5 6 3 1 0 0 0 TO 1 1 2 0 1 1 1 4 1 BLK 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 S 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 MIN 35 32 32 34 26 13 5 12 11 14 77 19 12 2 2 200 56.0% Game:48.0%DEADB 50.0% Game:63.6% REBS 76.5% Game:68.2% 5,1 Purdue OF 1 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 0 6 46.4% 2nd Half: 16-26 0.0% 2nd Half: 1-5 0.0% 2nd Half: 9-17 Officials: Ted Hillary, Tom Clark, Zelten Steed Technical fouls: Wisconsin-None. Purdue-TEAM. Attendance: 7,925 Score by Periods 1st 2nd Wisconsin 30 47 Purdue 26 42 - GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 12 OF 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 7 REBOUNDS DE TOT 2 3 2 2 5 6 0 1 1 2 1 1 1 2 6 6 0 1 3 3 21 27 PF 4 2 3 0 2 1 4 1 1 TP 23 0 20 0 10 2 2 9 2 A 1 0 0 2 7 4 4 1 0 TO 2 0 0 1 2 0 2 2 0 BLK 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 S 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 MIN 24 14 39 12 34 19 20 25 13 18 68 19 9 4 3 200 61.5% Game:53.7%DEADB 20.0% Game:11.1% REBS 52.9% Game:52.9% 4 Total 77 68 GoldandBlack.com MEN'S BASKETBALL PHOTO PAGE STRONG SECOND HALF KEY FOR NO. 1 ILLINOIS Weber Has Happy Second Homecoming Senior guard Brandon McKnight pesters Illinois guard Dee Brown. McKnight and the Boilermaker defense didn’t allow Brown a field goal attempt in the first half, but the Illini speedster got untracked in the second half with 14 points and four threepointers. No. 1 Illinois 68, Purdue 59 Jan. 8, 2005 Mackey Arena West Lafayette, Ind. Photos by Tom Campbell Action was fast and furious under the basket for much of the game. Surprisingly, the Boilermakers outrebounded Illinois 31-26, which was a key factor in keeping the home team in the game for much of the contest. Purdue’s six-point halftime lead marked the first time Illinois has trailed at intermission in 2004-05. CBS lead announcer Gus Johnson (right) does some last-minute game prep as junior forward Carl Landry stretches. The contest marked the first of two January games (the other Michigan, Jan. 30) to be aired on the network. Illinois coach Bruce Weber shakes hands with Gene Keady moments before tip-off. Weber directed his team to its 16th consecutive victory in 2004-05 and his second triumph in Mackey Arena in as many seasons. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 13 GoldandBlack.com UNIVERSITY SPIRIT PRESENTS: WOMEN'S BASKETBALL PHOTO SPREAD BOILERMAKERS SMOTHER HOOSIERS AND WOLVERINES Stifling Defense Helps Purdue To 3-1 League Start Jan. 6: No. 24 Purdue 54, Indiana 31 Jan. 9: No. 24 Purdue 60, Michigan 43 Mackey Arena West Lafayette, Ind. Photos by Tom Campbell Guard Tye Jackson dives for a loose ball against the Hoosiers. Though the sharp-shooting freshman managed just four points, all from the charity stripe, in 20 minutes, she contributed mightily with a game-high three blocks and a steal. Jackson and the Boilermaker defense had their collective eyes wide open holding the Wolverines to just 18 points in the second half to break open a close game. Jackson had two steals and the Boilermakers had 18 thefts, a season-high. Sophomore forward Erin Lawless rebounded from an off-night offensively against Indiana to post a team-high 16 points against Michigan. Against IU, Lawless managed just six points, marking just the second time in 13 games she failed to reach double figures. Sharika Webb recorded her lone block of the game on Indiana guard LeeAnn Stephenson. The Boilermakers broke a singlegame school record with 13 blocks and held the Hoosiers to just 31 points, the fewest in IU history and the lowest by a Boilermaker Big Ten opponent since Jan. 30, 2000 when Coach Kristy Curry’s first team dismantled Northwestern 70-31. Following the Michigan win, the Boilermakers salute the announced crowd of 11,783. The combined 74 points given up against the Hoosiers and Wolverines was the best back-to-back defensive effort since the 2001 Big Ten season. Junior forward Aya Traore battles Michigan’s Kelly Helvey for a loose ball. Traore has struggled to get a lot of playing time of late and saw a combined 15 minutes of action in the Indiana and Michigan victories. She managed four points and grabbed three rebounds in nine minutes against Indiana. Check us out at our website PurdueGear.com Curry looks up sheepishly at official Dave Stewart during the Indiana game as sophomore guard Katie Gearlds looks on. Curry has now won 10-of-11 games against the Hoosiers during her tenure at Purdue. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 14 GoldandBlack.com GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 15 GoldandBlack.com MEN'S BASKETBALL PHOTO PAGE BADGERED BY THE THREE Loss At Home First To UW Since 1972 Photos by Tom Campbell Due to an ice storm warning in the Lafayette area, the Mackey Arena crowd was well short of the announced attendance of 7,925. It was estimated to be the smallest crowd to ever witness a Big Ten game in the 37-year history of the building. Wisconsin 77, Purdue 68 Jan. 5, 2005 Mackey Arena West Lafayette, Ind. Making his first appearance in Mackey since transferring from Penn State, Wisconsin point guard Sharif Chambliss works to avoid junior forward Gary Ware. Chambliss had a solid game, with a team-high six assists to go along with 16 points in 34 minutes. He also proved effective in penetrating the Boilermaker defense. Coach Gene Keady gets whistled for his second technical of the season as he complains to official Tom Clark during first-half action. Keady was objecting to a traveling violation called on Brandon McKnight moments earlier. Charles Davis (45) and Bryant Dillon (5) try to defend Wisconsin forward Alando Tucker in second-half action. Tucker connected on two of Wisconsin’s 14 threepoint field goals, as the Badgers managed an impressive 63.6 percent from long range. Wisconsin's 14 threes tied a Mackey Arena record first set by Purdue in 2001. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 16 GoldandBlack.com MEN'S BASKETBALL: ILLINOIS GAME Almost Everything Perfect In Weber’s World Former Longtime Purdue Assistant Has Illini On Top BY DOUG GRIFFITHS DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com have excellent coaching, are extremely talented and have plenty of ne would think that things experience. couldn’t be any better for Bruce The aforemenWeber. tioned traits should After all, the longtime Purdue sound familiar assistant and current Illinois head to Boilermaker coach has guided the Fighting Illini fans. Remember to one of their best starts in school the '87-88 team history (16-0 overall, 2-0 in the Big that finished 25-5, Ten) and the nation’s No. 1 ranking. winning the Big Ten Think again. Although his with a 16-2 record. Illini have been perfect this season, Weber says Tom Campbell Former Boilermaker Troy Lewis (wearing hat), who everything isn’t perfect in Weber’s there are a lot of talked with associate head coach Matt Painter (far world. similarities between left) before the Illinois game, believes Weber's You see, the 48-year old Weber his team this year Illini are similar to his 1987-88 Purdue team. aches for his mentor — Gene Keady. and Troy, Todd and since Jan. 25, 2004) because I After Illinois beat Purdue, 68-59, always thought he (Keady) Everette’s ‘87-88 team as well as Purdue’s Jan. 8 in Mackey Arena, as Weber was would at least be .500 all the ‘93-94 team led by Robinson. leaning up against a wall outside his “We have the three guys (Dee time because he would get so team’s locker room, he told Gold & Brown, Deron Williams and Luther much out of the kids,” Weber Black Illustrated just how difficult it’s Head) like Troy, Todd and Everette said. been for him to stomach the kind of “He always said, ‘You and have some guys that are pretty season Keady’s enduring in his swan can’t squeeze blood out of good complimentary players,” Weber song on the Boilermaker sideline. a rock,’ and right now the said. “I just hope we don’t end up like “It’s just horrible,” said Weber, rock is there and there is those guys.” who is 42-7 in two seasons at Illinois. Those guys’ season ended when only so much you can do “I’ve talked with Troy Lewis, Doug Kansas State stunned their top-seeded Tom Campbell with it. Lee, Greg Eifert, Kevin Stallings and Illinois coach Bruce Weber never thought Gene Keady's “They’re better than team, 73-70, in the NCAA Midwest Steve Lavin … you just feel bad for Boilermakers would endure the kind of season they're they were against Oklahoma Regional semifinals in The Silverdome having this year. him because he’s had such a great and some of those other in Pontiac, Mich. One would think after his team’s career and done so much for this For now, Weber’s team has its sights teams,” Weber added. “We’re victory over Purdue, Weber would want supposed to be the No. 1 team in the on a second consecutive regular-season university and for college basketball.” Purdue is enduring one of its worst to talk solely about the Illini being country and they battled us so they’ve Big Ten title and winning a conference seasons in the last 40 years, but Keady will on top of the college basketball world. made some strides.” tournament championship in Chicago. leave as the school’s all-time winningest But that wasn’t the case. Instead, the Weber also finds it hard to believe If that happens, Illini nation won’t have coach and the second-winningest coach Milwaukee, Wis., native chose to relive how attendance has plummeted at to travel far to see if they can win the some of Purdue’s glory days. in Big Ten history. national championship. The Orange and Purdue. Keady and Weber formed quite a Weber says all of the blame for what “Even when we weren’t as good as Blue would likely play first- and secondhas transpired with Purdue basketball dynamic duo on the Boilermaker sideline other years (at Purdue), we always had round NCAA Tournament games in recently shouldn’t entirely be put on from 1981-98. Those two led Purdue to the crowd behind us,” Weber said. “That Indianapolis’ RCA Dome, then regional six Big Ten championships, including made a difference and helped us win contests in Chicago’s Allstate Arena with Keady’s shoulders. “The situation with him not getting three straight from 1994-96, made 14 games. That’s not there now. That was the Final Four destination being in St. some kind of extension or fake extension NCAA Tournament appearances and the secret ingredient to getting a lot of Louis’ Edward Jones Dome. killed them in recruiting and now it has three NIT appearances in 18 years, had wins here that we probably shouldn’t If Illinois is cutting down the nets caught up so I’m not sure that all of it is 12 20-win seasons and won 70.1 percent have gotten.” on April 4, then you can bet everything his fault,” Weber said. “I’m sure maybe of their games (394-168), including 66.8 There isn’t a secret ingredient in will be perfect in Weber’s world. j the same thing has happened with (Joe) percent of their Big Ten contests (215- Illinois’ success this season. The Illini 107). Paterno at Penn State.” Considering how much they Weber always dreamt of being Purdue’s head coach, taking over for achieved in West Lafayette, Weber can’t Keady. In fact, in the spring of 2003 believe how far Boilermaker basketball before becoming Illinois’ head coach, has fallen. He vividly recalls Keady’s Kids being Weber would’ve returned to Purdue had the university been willing to put the team to beat in the Big Ten, a a succession plan into motion. The standing room only crowd at Mackey university wasn’t willing to do that at Magic as Glenn Robinson and Co. tipped that time, and as they say, the rest is off the 1993-94 season, Troy Lewis, Todd Mitchell and Everette Stephens ‘87-88 history. Now, Weber couldn’t be happier how team that was ranked No. 2 for much things unfolded. However, one can sense of the season and thousands of students that deep down there’s a part of Weber lining up for season tickets. “It’s hard to believe (that Purdue that wishes things transpired differently and that he would be preparing to take is 4-8 this season, 28-38 in the Big Ten since 2000, including 3-10 in league play over for Keady instead of Matt Painter. O GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 17 GoldandBlack.com MEN’S BASKETBALL NEWS AND NOTES OVERTIME 2004-05 BIG TEN STANDINGS Weber Glad He Won’t Face Keady Again In Mackey BY DOUG GRIFFITHS DGriffiths@GoldandBlack.com I llinois coach Bruce Weber finished 2-0 against Gene Keady in Mackey Arena. Both games were dogfights so it's not a surprise that the former Purdue assistant coach is glad he won’t have to face Keady again in West Lafayette. “I really don’t like it (having to play his PURDUE VS. NO. 1 ALL-TIME Purdue is 2-15 all-time against No. 1 ranked teams including 1-3 since Mackey Arena opened in 1967. Gene Keady is now 1-4 against top-ranked teams and 0-1 at home. Date Teams Jan. 8, 2005 Illinois 68, PURDUE, 59 Nov. 25, 2000 Purdue 72, Arizona 69@ Mar. 15, 1997 Kansas 75, Purdue 61& Feb. 21, 1993 INDIANA 93, No. 14 Purdue 78 Nov. 30, 1986 North Carolina 73, Purdue 62# Jan. 13, 1979 PURDUE 52, Michigan State 50 Feb. 16, 1976 Indiana 74, PURDUE 71 Jan. 19, 1976 INDIANA 71, Purdue 67 Feb. 22, 1975 Indiana 74, PURDUE 71 Jan. 25, 1975 INDIANA 104, No. 20 Purdue 71 Mar. 22, 1969 UCLA 92, No. 6 Purdue 72& Nov. 30, 1968 UCLA 94, No. 10 Purdue 82 Dec. 2, 1967 UCLA 73, PURDUE 71 Jan. 29, 1962 Ohio State 94, PURDUE 73 Jan. 22, 1962 OHIO STATE 91, Purdue 65 Jan. 28, 1961 OHIO STATE 92, No. 10 Purdue 62 Jan. 28, 1952 ILLINOIS 84, Purdue 57 @Conseco, Fieldhouse &NCAA Tournament #Great Alaska Shootout teams),” Weber said. “I really don’t like having to come in here (Mackey Arena). “It’s tough. There are a lot of people that I know and I have a lot of friends, and have a lot of great memories.” Weber complimented how classy Keady has been during his most difficult season at Purdue. “He’s just done a great job of dealing with this,” Weber said. “He’s never lost like this. It’s very frustrating. I talked with Kevin Stallings the other day and he had called Coach and couldn’t believe how positive he was and how professional he was, but that’s just how he is. “Kevin brought up all the things he always preached to the team, which we all listened to, about life. Now, he’s having to do it. When the times get tough, he’s living up to what he’s always preached about. He got us through a lot of tough times. “I know the other night Tom Campbell After two Big Ten games, forward Carl Landry, here (after the Wisconsin loss) he drawing a charge from Illinois’ James Augustine, who was named the Big Ten Player-ofthe-Week Jan. 10, finds himself second in the conference in scoring averaging 17.9 points per game (behind IU’s Bracey Wright’s 18.8 average). Day Mon. Sun. Fri. Tue. Team Illinois Michigan State Minnesota Michigan Ohio State Wisconsin Northwestern Indiana Iowa Penn State PURDUE Opponent WASHBURN (KAN.) ST. JOSEPH’S (IND.) @ Miami (Ohio) DETROIT TV None None None None Wooden Tradition @ Indianapolis, Ind. (Conseco Fieldhouse) Sat. Nov. 27 Cincinnati WB4-Indy BIG TEN RESULTS UPCOMING BIG TEN GAMES Jan. 11 Ohio State @ Wisconsin Jan. 12 PURDUE @ Minnesota Penn State @ Illinois Northwestern @ Michigan Jan. 15 Indiana @ PURDUE Illinois @ Northwestern Minnesota @ Iowa Michigan @ Penn State Ohio State @ LSU Jan. 16 Michigan State @ Wisconsin Time/Result E, 81-72 E, 103-87 L, 71-81 W, 66-56 L, 59-79 ACC/Big Ten Challenge @ Raleigh, N.C. (Entertainment and Sports Center) Mon. Nov. 29 No. 17 North Carolina State ESPN2 L, 53-60 Fri. Wed. Sat. Dec. 3 Dec. 8 Dec. 11 MEMPHIS OKLAHOMA COLORADO STATE ESPN2 ESPN ESPN-Plus Local L, 51-62 L, 48-66 W, 69-68 Boilermaker BlockBuster @ Indianapolis, Ind. (Conseco Fieldhouse) Sat. Dec. 18 Evansville ESPN-Plus Local W, 62-61 Thu. Dec. 30 BAYLOR ESPN-Plus Local L, 72-73 Sun. Jan. 2 EASTERN ILLINOIS ESPN-Plus Local W, 87-67 Wed. Jan. 5 WISCONSIN ESPN-Plus Local L, 68-77 Sat. Jan. 8 No. 1 ILLINOIS CBS L, 59-68 Wed. Jan. 12 @ Minnesota ESPN-Plus Local 8 p.m. Sat. Jan. 15 INDIANA ESPN 12 p.m. Tue. Jan. 18 @ Michigan State ESPN 7 p.m. Sat. Jan. 22 @ Iowa ESPN-Plus Regional 2:32 p.m. Wed. Jan. 26 WISCONSIN-MILWAUKEE ESPN-Plus Local 6 p.m. Sun. Jan. 30 MICHIGAN CBS 1:30 p.m. Wed. Feb. 2 @ Ohio State ESPN-Plus Local 8 p.m. Sat. Feb. 5 @ Northwestern ESPN-Plus Regional 4:37 p.m. Wed. Feb. 9 PENN STATE ESPN-Plus Local 8 p.m. Wed. Feb. 16 IOWA ESPN-Plus Local 8 p.m. Sat. Feb. 19 MICHIGAN STATE ESPN 12 p.m. Tue. Feb. 22 @ Indiana ESPN 7 p.m. Sat. Feb. 26 MINNESOTA ESPN-Plus Regional 2:32 p.m. TBA TBA @ Illinois TBD TBA TBA TBA @ Wisconsin TBD TBA Big Ten Tournament — Chicago, Ill. (United Center) Thu.-Sun. March 10-13 Big Ten Tournament ESPN, ESPN-Plus, CBS TBD *Exhibition GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 18 Overall W-L/Pct. 16-0/1.000 10-2/.833 11-3/.786 10-5/.667 12-3/.800 10-3/.769 8-6/.571 6-7/.462 12-3/.800 6-9/.400 4-8/.333 Jan. 5 Wisconsin 77, PURDUE 68 Illinois 84, Ohio State 65 Michigan 65, Iowa 63 Northwestern 73, Indiana 52 Michigan State 84, Penn State 58 Jan. 8 Illinois 68, PURDUE 59 Indiana 74, Wisconsin 61 Ohio State 81, Iowa 69 Michigan State 87, Northwestern 58 Minnesota 83, Penn State 62 2004-05 Purdue Boilermakers Men’s Basketball Schedule Date Nov. 8 Nov. 14 Nov. 19 Nov. 23 (through Jan. 10) Big Ten W-L/Pct. 2-0/1.000 2-0/1.000 1-0/1.000 1-0/1.000 1-1/.500 1-1/.500 1-1/.500 1-1/.500 0-2/.000 0-2/.000 0-2/.000 went off a little bit, but shoot he did that 20 years ago. He said then he shouldn’t be the coach here. You guys (the media) just don’t remember. He’s won a whole bunch of games since then.” Of course, playing Purdue in Mackey won’t be much easier for Weber next season when his former assistant coach — Matt Painter — will be guiding the Boilermakers. “But Matt is different since he worked for me,” Weber explained. “With me, it was sounusualbecause of the long time I worked for Coach (Keady), the relationship we had and the highs and lows that we went through. “It will GoldandBlack.com ## Player 14 Landry, Carl 02 Teague, David 10 McKnight, Brandon 42 Kiefer, Matt 30 Price, Xavier 33 Ware, Gary 21 Nwankwo, Ije 05 Dillon, Bryant 45 Davis, Charles 03 Hartley, Chris 04 Ford, Andrew 32 Carroll, Matt 44 Liddell, Adam TEAM Total Opponents GP-GS 12-12 10-10 12-12 10-7 12-3 12-5 2-0 12-4 3-0 3-0 12-7 7-0 4-0 Min 356 355 438 252 241 166 28 277 34 11 138 67 37 12 12 2400 2403 PURDUE 2004-05 SEASON STATISTICS Avg 29.7 35.5 36.5 25.2 20.1 13.8 14.0 23.1 11.3 3.7 11.5 9.6 9.3 LANDRY EARNS BIG TEN HONOR Tom Campbell Illinois coach Bruce Weber was impressed by forward Charles Davis, here blocking Illini forward Roger Powell, Jr.’s shot. The second-year Illinois coach said when Davis gets in basketball shape he’ll have even more of an impact. be tough (squaring off against Painter’s Boilermakers), but nothing like this for me.” PURDUE’S EFFORT DOESN’T SURPRISE WEBER After his performances against Baylor and Eastern Illinois, junior forward Carl Landry was named Big Ten Player-of-the-Week. The Milwaukee, Wis., native averaged 26.5 points and 8.0 rebounds in the games against the Bears and Panthers, hitting 18-of-24 shots from the floor. He had his third doubledouble of the season against Baylor (a career-high 29 points and 10 rebounds). Against EIU, Landry poured in 24 points and had three steals. He is the first Purdue player to earn Big Ten Playerof-the-Week honors since Kenneth Lowe, who received the honor Dec. 1, 2003. DID YOU KNOW? S In Purdue’s first two Big Ten games, its opponents shot 62.5 percent from threepoint range (25-of-40). S Mackey Arena isn’t as hostile an environment as it once was, but Weber said it still can be deafening at times. “That roof in Mackey is so low that the noise just bounces off it and comes right back down,” he said. “It’s about the only place where we play that when I call out plays, they can’t hear me.” S Due to a winter storm, Purdue FG-FGA 73-118 49-146 57-161 46-87 15-44 14-26 2-5 10-33 3-6 1-3 4-17 3-10 1-3 Pct 3FG-FGA .619 2-8 .336 21-77 .354 14-54 .529 5-11 .341 7-17 .538 0-0 .400 0-0 .303 3-7 .500 0-0 .333 1-3 .235 2-11 .300 0-0 .333 0-0 Pct .250 .273 .259 .455 .412 .000 .000 .429 .000 .333 .182 .000 .000 278-659 290-631 .422 .460 .293 .456 55-188 98-215 FT-FTA Pct 67-96 .698 13-22 .591 21-36 .583 21-34 .618 10-13 .769 11-20 .550 2-2 1.000 7-11 .636 0-0 .000 0-0 .000 1-2 .500 0-0 .000 1-2 .500 154-238 140-223 .647 .628 Off 36 12 11 15 7 13 3 6 2 0 3 9 6 21 Def 53 40 29 28 21 14 1 17 5 1 4 11 2 17 Tot 89 52 40 43 28 27 4 23 7 1 7 20 8 38 Avg 7.4 5.2 3.3 4.3 2.3 2.3 2.0 1.9 2.3 0.3 0.6 2.9 2.0 3.2 PF 37 23 21 33 14 27 6 16 1 0 15 11 11 1 FO 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 A 16 8 50 16 20 4 1 30 2 0 18 1 0 TO 30 17 18 31 17 7 4 20 2 0 5 6 2 Blk 9 3 3 4 1 9 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 Stl 14 8 15 14 8 2 5 4 2 0 3 2 3 Pts 215 132 149 118 47 39 6 30 6 3 11 6 3 Avg 17.9 13.2 12.4 11.8 3.9 3.3 3.0 2.5 2.0 1.0 0.9 0.9 0.8 144 135 243 265 387 32.2 400 33.3 216 215 4 - 166 188 161 184 33 55 80 77 765 818 63.8 68.2 FACTOID Purdue has never started a Big Ten season 0-3 under Gene Keady. At 4-8, the Boilermakers are already off to their worst start under Keady. Previously Keady’s worst start in West Lafayette was in 1981-82 when his Boilermakers were 4-7. allowed fans free admission to the Wisconsin game. Despite the offer, there were still thousands of empty seats. S Purdue recruit Nate Minnoy was suspended by his school — Chicago Hales Franciscan High School — for two games after a recent incident at the Rich South “Big Dipper” basketball tournament. Minnoy went into the stands to approach a heckler who allegedly was using profanity during Hales’ semifinal win over Bloom. Minnoy and the heckler, Anthony Blakemore of Chicago Heights, were taken to the Richton Park police station and issued citations. The Illinois High School Association also placed Minnoy on probation for the remainder of the season. After Minnoy entered the stands with 1:35 left in the third quarter, he was assessed a technical foul — his second of the game after an earlier technical for arguing an official’s call, which resulted in his ejection. Minnoy’s 10th-ranked team beat Bloom, 64-62. He had 12 points before being thrown out of the game. The 6-foot-4, 265-pound Minnoy, a second-team Chicago Tribune All-State selection as a junior, who led Hales to the Class A championship as a sophomore, also had to sit out of the championship game of the Rich South tournament as an automatic penalty for the ejection. The final game that he’ll miss is Jan. 16 against Farragut at North Park College. S Former Boilermaker Ije Nwankwo, who quit the team on Thanksgiving, recently visited Marshall. Other schools he was considering transferring to are Western Michigan and Cleveland State. j For thorough, daily coverage of Boilermaker basketball, visit GoldandBlack.com Weber expected the Boilermakers to play their best against his Illini. After all, the two teams split last year’s meetings with Purdue stunning Illinois, 5854, in Champaign, and the Illini nipping the Boilermakers, 81-79, in overtime in West Lafayette. “It’s a big, emotional game,” Weber said. “I tried to explain to our kids that I’ve been here (in “It was to the point that we were talking Mackey) for so many games about salary. That’s how far along everything when the Boilermakers rose up was. But the final sticking point became that and won games they maybe should never have won … there was no certainty about when Gene that’s what Coach Keady is (Keady) would depart, and I didn’t want to wind known for, getting his kids to up giving up the Southern Illinois position for play at another level against two or three more years of uncertainty on the better teams. Purdue bench.” “We talked as a staff that — Illinois assistant coach Bruce Weber in they may wear down and I a recent edition of the Chicago Sun-Times in think that’s what happened. regards to discussions he had with Purdue about They’re trying to rely on possibly replacing Keady in the spring of 2003 Andrew Ford. He’s busting his butt, but he can’t give them “My understanding was that Bruce didn’t much, and they’re bench is very slim. The football kid, go for the arrangement because the university (Charles) Davis does some nice did not want to come up with enough things for them, but he just money.” needs to get in shape.” — Keady in the same edition of the Chicago Sun-Times GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 19 GoldandBlack.com BASKETBALL RECRUITING REPORT: MARCUS WHITE GREAT WHITE Painter Thrilled To Land Connecticut Transfer BY BRIAN NEUBERT BNeubert@GoldandBlack.com M arcus White — a highly sought-after transfer from Connecticut — made soon-to-be Purdue coach Matt Painter a very happy man Jan. 6, when it was announced he was landing in West Lafayette for the spring semester. The 6-foot-8, 228-pounder found himself in a log jam in the post for the Huskies, and when he elected to transfer, he sought schools close to his Chicago home. White’s already begun practicing with the Boilermakers. However, due to NCAA transfer rules, he’ll be ineligible for one year, meaning he’ll able to join the team at the start of the second semester of the next school year. He’ll have one-and-a-half years of eligibility. “We’re ecstatic we were able to land someone who can give us an immediate impact on our front line,” Painter said, referring, of course, to “immediate” as one year from now. “It’s close to impossible to find high school big guys who can play in this league immediately and make an impact. We think he can make that impact and be one of the better front-line players in the Big Ten.” The Chicago Whitney Young product played in 32 games for Connecticut, but was stuck on the Husky bench behind some top-shelf talent, restricting his playing time in Jim Calhoun’s program. Blue- chip sophomores Josh Boone and Charlie Villanueva — both of whom will be playing in the NBA one day, maybe in the near future — were each ahead of White in Calhoun’s rotation. Last season, White took a medical redshirt because of a bulging disc in his back and watched the Huskies win the national title before he underwent back surgery following the season. It’s also been reported that a desire to be closer to his Windy City home was a reason for White’s decision to transfer from Connecticut. He originally signed with DePaul out of Getty Images high school but Former UConn forward Marcus White headed east after has joined the Demon coach Boilers in practice Pat Kennedy was after transferring to Purdue. fired. During his UConn career, he averaged 3.2 points and an impressive five rebounds per game. He is known as a rebounding specialist. That ability will help the Boilermakers immediately on the practice floor. “That’s one of the areas Coach (Gene) Keady’s really talked to us as a staff about,” Painter said, “to have somebody to go head up on Carl Landry every day in practice, to challenge him, to go after him.” In 2002-03, White appeared in 23 games, averaging 4.1 points and 5.6 rebounds. In five games this season, White averaged 3.2 points and 4.6 boards in 7.4 minutes. White has been characterized in reports as a popular player among teammates and coaches and a strong student. His parting words with Calhoun were described by one Connecticut newspaper as “extremely amicable.” Playing time was the primary reason for White’s transfer. And he’ll likely get plenty of it in West Lafayette. Next year, barring any unforeseen attrition GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 20 QUICK TURNAROUND Boilermaker associate head coach Matt Painter and his staff will have their hands full recruiting for 2006-07. You see, Purdue will have at least six scholarships available for its next signing class. Next year, the scholarships currently occupied by juniors Carl Landry, Matt Kiefer, Gary Ware, David Teague, Matt Carroll and Bryant Dillon will all come open at once. This is assuming no unforeseen attrition or eligibility changes (like redshirt years). After five spots were filled with Painter-recruited players this past year, that means only two current scholarship players (freshmen Xavier Price and Adam Liddell) are in line to still be around in ‘06-07. or redshirts, he’ll join seniors-to-be Matt Kiefer, Landry, Gary Ware and Matt Carroll on the front line. Then, in 2006-07, with all those players gone, he’ll have only yet-to-be-determined youngsters to compete with for action. Painter hasn’t seen White play since high school, when he was a bluechip recruit, but says he came highly recommended. “The main thing you do when you get a transfer … more than anything, you don’t want someone else’s problem,” Painter said. “Everybody said, ‘Take him. He’s a great student, a great kid and a hard worker.’ There wasn’t a person we contacted who didn’t say the same things about him.” Painter and Co. have seven scholarships to use for their next recruiting class. They’ll undoubtedly look for several big men. But White should provide a nice bridge between personnel groups, from the old to the new. “He understands that his senior year he’s going to be the only front-line player we have right now,” Painter said. “But I told him he will play as many minutes as he earns. “We have a lot of guys coming back (next year) — Carl Landry, Matt Kiefer, Gary Ware, Matt Carroll — but he was able to come see our game (against Baylor in late December) and evaluate it for himself. He was very confident he can come right in and play major minutes.” White becomes the fifth signee for Painter this year. He joins fall high school signees Korey Spates, Chris Lutz, Marcus Green and Nate Minnoy. White’s enrollment will also help stagger the program’s scholarships, which right now are bunched way too closely together. j For thorough, up-to-the-minute coverage of Boilermaker basketball recruiting, visit GoldandBlack.com. GoldandBlack.com WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: NO. 24 PURDUE 60, MICHIGAN 43 Wisdom-Hylton Shines In Win Over Michigan Freshman Breaks Out, Shows Offensive Aggression BY KYLE CHARTERS KCharters@GoldandBlack.com and being more aggressive,” “We sort of had some Curry said. “I’ve been on complacency to us in the first her a lot about looking to half,” Lawless said. “We came he Boilermakers have spent the score instead of looking to out really aggressive … but first part of the season searching for a pass.” then all of the sudden we kind consistent third scorer to compliment Although the Boilers got of laid back at the defensive the play of sophomores Katie Gearlds a solid effort from Wisdomend.” and Erin Lawless. Hylton, Curry still wasn’t But as Purdue’s defensive Against Michigan on Jan. 9, Purdue ready to say that the Boilers and rebounding effort seemed to find that missing piece, as had found a third scorer. improved in the second half, so freshman Lindsay Wisdom-Hylton While Wisdom-Hylton was did its offensive output. After contributed 11 points, six rebounds, five playing well, Gearlds and the Boilers outrebounded the assists, five blocks and two steals in the Lawless, the Boilers’ top two Wolverines 23-14 in the final 24th-ranked Boilermakers' 60-43 win scorers, struggled, combining 20 minutes, the Wolverines over Michigan in Mackey Arena. for just eight points in the finished with just a slight “I just thought that I needed to first half. advantage on the boards. take initiative and start being more “We need to all come For the second straight aggressive,” Wisdom-Hylton said, “and out and be aggressive,” game, the Boilers held their get to the basket and shoot a little bit Curry said. “I still look for opponent to under 30-percent Campbell more. That’s just one part of my game the day when we all come Junior guard Sharika Webb comes away with the looseTom shooting from the field. In ball after that I need to improve.” together on the offensive a pileup in Purdue's 60-43 win over Michigan. The Boilers had a Purdue’s win over IU on Jan. While Wisdom-Hylton’s offense end and things really season-high 18 steals and six blocks in the victory while creating 6, the Hoosiers shot just 18.8 25 Wolverine turnovers. has been inconsistent this season, her just start to click at each percent, while setting a schooldefensive effort has not. The 6-foot-2 position.” record low for points with 31. forward’s five blocks set a career-mark, Purdue's offense, which has been prone With Gearlds and The Wolverines were better, beating her previous high of four, which Lawless starting slowly, the Boilers led 27- to lapses this season, suffered through but still made only 28.8 percent of their she has reached three times. She leads 25 at halftime against a young Wolverine another one against the Wolverines, shots while committing 25 turnovers on the team with 37 rejections. team (4-11, 0-4) that featured just two scoring just six points over the next 10 a season-high 18 Purdue steals. Freshman Brina Pollack said there seniors, no juniors, a sophomore and minutes. In that span, Michigan scored The Boilers, who have been plagued is an obvious explanation for Wisdom- seven freshmen. Purdue extended its lead 15 to tie the game at 19 — where the by turnovers all season, had only 13 Hylton’s shot-blocking ability. to 12 points with 10:38 left in regulation, score stayed from about the six-minute against Michigan, including zero for “Huge calves,” Pollack joked, but a 9-2 Wolverine run over the next mark until three-and-a-half minutes Wisdom-Hylton, who’s been one of the “they’re like implants.” three minutes brought them to within remained in the first half. major culprits this year. “Umm, anyway,” Wisdom-Hylton five. The Wolverines shot only 31.8 “I’ve just been waiting for this kind countered, slightly embarrassed, “I just That was as close as the Wolverines percent in the first half with 14 turnovers, of game, I guess you could say,” Wisdomthink it’s my timing and I can jump so got, however, as a free throw by Wisdom- but they held a 21-11 rebounding Hylton said. “I knew I had to cut my that kind of helps.” Hylton spurred a 13-0 stretch which advantage to help them stay within two turnovers down and step everything else Coach Kristy Curry, whose team gave the Boilers an 18-point lead with at the break. up.” j improved to 10-4 overall, 3-1 in the Big less than a minute remaining. Ten, said she was happy to see WisdomDuring the Boilers’ impressive Hylton, who’s averaging about six points second-half run, Lawless started to take and 4.5 rebounds per game, get started charge on the inside. early against the Wolverines. “Coach was screaming to get the “First of all I think she’s coming out ball inside,” said Lawless, who finished with 16 points and five rebounds. “So if Michigan she’s saying get the ball PLAYER MIN FGM-A FTM-A OFF REB AST PF PTS T. Pool 36 4-18 3-3 1 8 0 3 11 in, then I have to do T Walker 37 8-14 3-4 3 7 0 3 20 something with it.” B. McPhilamy 13 0-1 0-0 1 1 0 1 0 B Flippin 13 0-1 4-4 0 2 0 2 4 Lawless was the J Cooper 15 0-0 0-1 1 1 0 2 0 C. Starling 25 0-4 0-0 0 3 1 2 0 focal point of a physical K Clement 27 2-7 2-2 0 2 4 3 6 K. Helvey 34 0-5 2-2 0 4 3 3 2 Wolverine defense, Totals 200 14-50 14-16 6 28 8 19 43 which frequently .280 .875 TEAM REBS: 7 sent two or even TURNOVERS: 25 (J Starling6, T Walker 5, T Pool 4, B Flippi 4, K Helvey 3, B Mcphilamy 2, K Clement) three defenders in her BLOCKED SHOTS: 2 (T Pool 2) direction. STEALS: 5 (T Pool 2, K Helvey 2, K Clement) 3-PT FGS: 1-8, .125 (T Pool 0-2, T Walker 1-1, B Flippin 0-1, J Starling 0-2, K Clement 0-1, K “As soon as I got Helvey 0-1) hit in the nose (at the Purdue end of the first half) PLAYER MIN FGM-A FTM-A OFF REB AST PF PTS it kind of woke me up L Wisdom-Hylton 28 5-10 1-2 2 6 5 4 11 E. Lawless 36 5-13 5-6 1 5 0 2 16 a little and told me E. Heikes 27 3-6 0-0 2 7 0 2 6 K. Gearlds 37 5-9 2-2 0 8 3 0 12 that this team is pretty S. Webb 18 0-3 1-3 0 4 2 1 1 tough,” Lawless said. N Bogdanova 3 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 1 0 A. Traore 6 0-2 0-0 0 0 0 1 0 “We knew they were B Pollack 19 2-3 3-3 0 0 3 2 7 T Jackson 19 3-7 1-2 0 1 0 2 7 going to come in hard C. Duncan 7 0-1 0-0 0 0 0 2 0 Totals 200 23-55 13-18 5 31 13 17 60 defensively.” .418 .722 As has been the TEAM REBS: 3 TURNOVERS: 13 (E Lawless 3, K Gearlds 3, S Webb 2, T Jackson2, A Traore 2, E Heikes) case recently, Purdue BLOCKED SHOTS:6 (L Wisdom-Hylton 5, K Gearlds) STEALS: 18 (E Lawless 4, E Heikes 3, C Duncan 3, K Gearlds 2, T Jackson 2, B Pollack 2, L got off to a quick start, Wisdom-Hylton 2) leading 13-4 with about 3-PT FGS: 1-7, .143 (E Lawless1-2, K Gearlds 0-1, S Webb 0-1, A Traore0-1, T Jackson 0-2) Technicals: None 13 minutes remaining Attendance: 11,783 in the first half. But T GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 21 GoldandBlack.com WOMEN'S BASKETBALL: NO. 24 PURDUE 54, INDIANA 31 Boilers Hold Hoosiers To Historic Low Heikes Breaks Out Of Slump In Purdue Victory BY KYLE CHARTERS KCharters@GoldandBlack.com F or the six games leading up to the Boilers’ matchup with the Hoosiers on Jan. 6, the stat lines for Purdue starting center Emily Heikes were not pretty. After a 13-point performance against UCLA in early December, Heikes struggled, scoring just 13 points in the six games that followed. Tired of the inconsistent play, however, Heikes broke out of the slump against Indiana, recording her second double-double of the season as the No. 24 Boilers defeated the Hoosiers, 54-31, in front of 8,350 fans in Mackey Arena. “I personally thought I needed to play better because I haven’t been playing very well,” said Heikes, who finished with 11 points (tying Katie Gearlds for gamehigh honors) and 11 rebounds. “With my teammates encouraging me, it was just a matter of time. I couldn’t really go down any more than I was playing; the only way to go was up.” After Purdue’s loss to Ohio State on Jan. 2, in which Heikes finished with zero points, three rebounds and two turnovers in 14 minutes, she wanted to come out more aggressive against Indiana. Heikes said some credit should go to assistant coach Kelly Curry. “Kelly was telling me before practice the other day that I tend to get down on myself a little too much,” said Heikes, who also contributed two blocks and an assist. “He said I just need to let things go and start playing my game.” With Purdue’s offense struggling for much of the intermission. game against Indiana, however, could the Hoosiers, not get any closer. On a Sharika the defense was Webb layup at about the 17forced to respond. minute mark of the second The Boilers, who half Purdue extended it’s lead suffered through to double-digits and — despite two long field goal not hitting another field goal droughts totaling until Webb’s three-pointer with nearly 18 minutes, 7:10 remaining — the Hoosiers limited the Hoosiers could not cut the deficit back to a school-record to single figures. low 31-point “It was a scary period performance. there for a few minutes,” T h e Kristy Curry said. “But we Boilermakers were able to overcome it. Tom Campbell held the Hoosiers “The biggest thing we’re After six-straight sub-par games, center Emily Heikes responded with 11 to just 18.8- points and 11 rebounds to lead the Boilers to a 54-31 win over the Hoosiers. It struggling with is finding percent shooting, was the senior’s second double-double this season. a way to score. And score including a 3-of-30 consistently beyond Katie per game. Against Purdue, she finished performance in the second half when with a point on 0-of-10 shooting. and Erin (Lawless). I think the big keys are Indiana scored just 11 points. The 31-point “I know I didn’t want her to touch the little things. Sometimes their motors total by Indiana was less than its previous the ball,” Purdue guard Tye Jackson said. are going too hard and sometimes they’re all-time low of 33 points — set in a loss to “And I know no one else did either.” not hard enough. So we’re trying to find William Penn in 1976. Spurred by a Heikes’ jumper to open that happy medium.” “I think they missed a lot of open the game, the Boilers got off to a quick In the second half, the Boilers attempted looks for whatever reason,” Coach Kristy start against the Hoosiers, gaining a 25- only 15 shots — half as many as the Hoosiers Curry said. “Maybe they were rushed or 8 advantage with just more than five — but hit nine, which is three times more out of their comfort zone. But give our minutes to go in the first half. than IU. Purdue also outrebounded Indiana defense credit. I have been pleased with it, “I thought it was probably, if not by a 45-36 margin and forced the Hoosiers but I still see room for improvement.” our best start of the year, I’d have to sit into 14 turnovers with just six assists. Against the Hoosiers, though, there and think about it for a few minutes,” Indiana coach Kathi Bennett called wasn’t much room to improve. Indiana’s Kristy Curry said. “But I thought we came her team’s performance embarrassing. two top scores — Cyndi Valentin and out offensively and really understood the “It was really just a lack of trust and LeeAnn Stephenson — combined to shoot game plan. We were able to get some looks confidence on our part,” she said. “I do just 2-of-28 from the floor. and some things early and when they go want to credit Purdue. I mean they are The Boilers were especially pleased in, it makes it look really, really good.” really long and big on the perimeter, with their performance on Valentin, a The Hoosiers, though, closed the half which as you saw definitely affected us. junior guard who averages nearly 18 points on a 12-2 run — as Purdue went the final But we’ve got to take a lot of responsibility. eight minutes of the half without a field I thought that our ability to concentrate goal — to narrow the margin to 27-20 at and finish was just woeful.” j Indiana ## Player Name 54 Gathing, Jamie 30 Hawkins, Angela 03 Valentin, Cyndi 20 Stephenson, LeeAnn 31 Enterline, Leah 04 Smith, Nikki 13 Boyd, Annika 24 Kullberg, Kali 44 Smith, Carrie 45 Branson, Brigett Team Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % f c g g g TOT-FG 3-PT FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA 3-8 0-0 0-0 3-10 0-0 2-4 0-10 0-4 1-2 2-18 1-4 2-2 2-8 0-1 1-2 0-2 0-2 0-0 1-5 0-1 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 1-3 0-0 0-0 12-64 1st Half: 1st Half: 1st Half: 9-34 1-8 1-2 1-12 OF 0 1 1 3 1 0 1 0 1 2 8 18 6-10 26.5% 2nd Half: 12.5% 2nd Half: 50.0% 2nd Half: 3-30 0-4 5-8 REBOUNDS DE TOT 4 4 3 4 3 4 2 5 2 3 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 4 2 10 18 36 PF 3 3 3 3 2 0 0 0 1 1 TP 6 8 1 7 5 0 2 0 0 2 A 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 2 TO 2 3 2 2 3 0 1 0 0 1 BLK 0 1 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 S 0 0 0 5 2 0 1 0 0 1 MIN 22 32 29 34 33 6 14 2 8 20 16 31 6 14 4 9 200 BLK 1 1 2 2 1 2 0 0 3 1 S 3 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 1 0 MIN 21 31 23 33 25 10 9 12 20 16 13 7 200 10.0% Game:18.8% 0.0% Game: 8.3% 62.5% Game:60.0% DEADB REBS 2,2 Purdue ## Player Name 32 Wisdom-Hylton, L 35 Lawless, Erin 52 Heikes, Emily 01 Gearlds, Katie 43 Webb, Sharika 03 Bogdanova, Natasha 05 Traore, Aya 11 Pollack, Brina 23 Jackson, Tye 42 Duncan, Carol TEAM Totals TOTAL FG% 3-Pt. FG% F Throw % f f c g g TOT-FG 3-PT FG-FGA FG-FGA FT-FTA 3-5 0-0 1-2 2-10 0-0 2-3 4-5 0-0 3-4 4-10 1-2 2-2 2-3 1-2 3-4 1-3 0-1 0-0 1-3 0-0 2-2 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-3 0-2 4-6 0-1 0-0 1-2 17-43 1st Half: 1st Half: 1st Half: 8-28 1-4 10-11 2-7 Officials: Bob Trammell, Dave Stewart, Barb Smith Technical fouls: Indiana-None. Purdue-None. Attendance: 8,350 Score by Periods 1st 2nd Indiana 20 11 Purdue 27 27 GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 22 18-25 28.6% 2nd Half: 25.0% 2nd Half: 90.9% 2nd Half: - OF 0 2 4 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 9 9-15 1-3 8-14 REBOUNDS DE TOT 3 3 3 5 7 11 4 4 4 5 2 2 2 3 3 3 0 0 6 6 2 3 36 45 PF 0 0 3 2 2 0 0 2 1 0 TP 7 6 11 11 8 2 4 0 4 1 A 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 0 2 0 TO 1 2 1 4 4 2 2 1 1 1 10 54 10 19 60.0% Game:39.5% 33.3% Game:28.6% 57.1% Game:72.0% DEADB REBS 4 Total 31 54 GoldandBlack.com WOMEN'S BASKETBALL FEATURE: ERIN LAWLESS ‘The Worm’ Lawless Leads Boilers In Sophomore Season BY KYLE CHARTERS KCharters@GoldandBlack.com “Erin (Lawless) just has great effort, day in and day out. One thing about Erin is that she practices extremely hard, and I think when you practice that way, you play that way, too.” I n this case it’s not a dance move, but in forward Erin Lawless’ sophomore season at Purdue, she seems to have nearly perfected ‘The Worm.’ The post move involves some combination of leans, fades, flails, dives, spins, drop-steps and any other kind of contortion you can imagine. “It’s just kind of weird,” said Lawless, a native of Berwyn, Ill. “Most post players have like an established move — whether it’s an up-and-under or hook shot or something. Me, I just get the ball in the post and do something with it.” Using 'The Worm,' Lawless has seen a big jump in her performance this season. Moved into the starting lineup after the graduation of four seniors last year, Lawless’ scoring average has more than doubled — from 7.2 points per game last season to 15.8 this, while her rebounding average is up to 5.6 per game — an increase from 3.5 last season. “She just has great effort, day in and day out,” Coach Kristy Curry said. “One thing about Erin is that she practices extremely hard, and I think when you practice that way you play that way, too.” Lawless can trace the history of ‘The Worm’ back to her grade-school days while working out with her dad, Daniel, in a gym. While Daniel Lawless never coached his daughter in an official capacity, the two often spent hours together working on interior moves. That experience helped Lawless learn how to get position against bigger, more physical opponents. See, explains Lawless, “my father is 6-foot-8 and 300 pounds. “And trying to get around someone like that is pretty hard to do,” she said. “I guess working with him has made me just do different things in the post. I’ve never really had a chance to look at myself on tape as far as what the moves look like, but I know they feel weird when I’m in there. But I guess it works, so I’m just going to keep going with it.” Lawless said working against a bigger defender such as her dad prepared her for similar experiences in college basketball. Although not a center, Lawless is still one of the tallest Boilers, meaning she’s often charged with guarding the opponent’s biggest players. That’s meant matchups against 6-8 Duke center Alison Bales, 6-5 Georgia center Christi Thomas, who has graduated, and 6-2 Minnesota post player Janel McCarville, among others. “Just working around my father — somebody who is so big — I think that does help me against them,” Lawless — Coach Kristy Curry Tom Campbell Forward Erin Lawless has taken on more responsibility during her sophomore season, averaging a team-high 15.8 points per game. She has provided a steady influence for a young Purdue squad. Gearlds, who is second to Lawless in scoring at about 13 points per game. “She’s still got two more years left here and it’s going to be amazing watching her and fun to play along side her.” Lawless has tried to add variety to her offensive game this season. Besides ‘The Worm,’ she has also refined her skills facing the basket, often spotting up from 15feet. “I’ve kind of always had that range,” Lawless said. “I just wasn’t always able to show it as much last year just because we had other players out there. My role at that point wasn’t really needed, but obviously now we just need it more from there.” Lawless is also willing to step out even farther this season, creating problems for the defense. She was 6of-16 from beyond the three-point line last season, and appears to be looking for that shot more often this year, hitting 7-of-15 attempts. “The three-point shot is something that I have been working on,” Lawless said. “And that’s something that I’ve always wanted to improve on.” Curry said the offensive improvement has been evident so far this season. “I think she’s done a nice job of increasing her physical presence,” she said. “She had a nice finesse game, but I think she’s become more physical and more aggressive while looking for her shot.” j said. “But I don’t have him here (at Purdue) so it’s kind of hard for me to be able to have that presence behind me, to have him still be able to coach me. So I try to do it as much as I can on my own.” Lawless is helping to lead a young Boiler squad which is trying to gain some consistency this season. After the graduation of Shereka Wright, Erica Valek, Beth Jones and Lindsay Hicks last year, Lawless knew that although she was entering just her second season with the Boilermakers, a lot would be asked of her. “The coaches have come up to me and said that they need me to go out and have a presence,” Lawless said. “Obviously, if they’re asking that of me then I need to go out there and try to do as much as I can — whether it’s scoring or playing defense.” Guard Katie Gearlds, the other super sophomore at Purdue, said Lawless has accepted that responsibility well this season. “If she continues to rebound and play defense, she’s going to be one heck of a good basketball player,” said GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 23 GoldandBlack.com WOMEN’S BASKETBALL: NEWS AND NOTES DOUBLE OVERTIME BY KYLE CHARTERS KCharters@GoldandBlack.com S ophomore Katie Gearlds is planning to have surgery after the season to repair a frayed nerve in her right ankle. The ankle, which has been turned numerous times during her basketball career, has bothered the guard all season. “The nerve is giving me trouble, but it is something that can be fixed,” Gearlds said. “But I’m going to wait until the end of the year (to have surgery). When we do that, I think we’re going to go in and probably reconstruct my whole ankle and tighten it up because that’s what they think caused the nerve to start giving me some trouble.” Gearlds said the injury often “hurts like crazy,” comparing it to feeling like someone is stabbing her ankle with a knife. “There are times when I can’t even lay in bed and lay my leg on my bed without it hurting,” Gearlds said. “I’m taking some medicine that’s supposed to kill the nerve to see if that gives me any relief. But it’s just something I have to play through. I’ve already been playing on it for two or three more months, so what’s two or three more.” The ankle problem, however, is not the latest injury to affect Gearlds this year. During a practice leading up to Purdue’s win over Indiana on Jan. 6, Gearlds strained her abdomen, causing Gearlds To Face Ankle Surgery After Season’s End her to grimace in pain several times, especially during the first half. The Purdue trainers taped Gearlds abdominal area twice — once in the first half and again at halftime. While the sore abdomen is expected to heal, Gearlds, who is averaging about 13 points per game this season, said the sore ankle is affecting her game, but she’s trying to adjust to the limitations. “I still feel like I can’t explode off of it like I want to,” she said. “And sometimes I don’t want to land on it so I’ll take an offbalance shot so I can land on my left leg. It’s something where I just have to be more mentally strong and play through it.” Pollack Improves At The Point With continuing concerns over the play at the point guard position, the Boilers are turning their attention more and more to freshman Brina Pollack. The 5-foot-8 guard from Marlboro, N.J., played her best game of the year against the Michigan Wolverines on Jan. 9, scoring a career-high seven points and dishing out three assists with no turnovers in 19 minutes coming off the bench. Pollack said she’s starting to feel more comfortable in the rotation. “Coach (Kristy) Curry’s been giving me a lot of confidence and wanting me to step up,” said Pollack, who’s averaging 1.5 points per game. “So I’m going to do what I have to do to help the team win and be successful. I definitely feel more confident. “Early in the season I was feeling nervous. At times I was just like ‘I can’t do this.’ My confidence was down and everything was getting to me. But luckily everything turned around.” Pollack’s emergence as a viable option at point guard is a welcomed occurrence for the Boilers, who Tom Campbell are averaging more Sophomore Katie Gearlds is expected than 20 turnovers to have surgery on her right ankle after per game this season. the season. A nerve in the ankle has caused problems this season for the After the graduation of Boilers’ second-leading scorer. Erica Valek last year, point guard became 2004-05 Purdue Boilermakers one of the Boilers’ biggest question Women’s Basketball Schedule marks. Junior Sharika Day Date Opponent TV Time/Result Webb has struggled Sat. Nov. 6 AUSTRALIAN TEAM None E, 65-46 with inconsistency Sun. Nov. 14 BB TRAVELERS (SLOVAKIA) None E, 60-39 throughout the season, Sun. Nov. 21 IPFW None W, 107-39 Thu. Nov. 25 vs. Arkansas* None W, 55-51 starting 11-of-14 games Fri. Nov. 26 vs. Texas A&M C.C./ None W, 73-44 at the position. The Tue. Nov. 30 HOUSTON None L, 60-63 Boilers have also taken Fri. Dec. 3 @ UC Santa Barbara None W, 66-65 OT Gearlds away from her Sun. Dec. 5 @ No. 25 UCLA Fox Sports Net L, 64-70 natural position to Thu. Dec. 9 No. 15 DEPAUL None W, 69-61 Sun. Dec. 12 WESTERN MICHIGAN None W, 74-42 have her help — with Sat. Dec. 18 vs. No. 3 Duke^ None L, 48-66 mixed results — at the Tue. Dec. 28 SOUTH DAKOTA STATE None W, 57-50 point. Thu. Dec. 30 @ Wisconsin FSC W, 72-67 Curry said Pollack Sun. Jan. 2 @ No. 9 Ohio State None L, 50-63 Thu. Jan. 6 INDIANA None W, 54-31 is going to continue to Sun. Jan. 9 MICHIGAN None W, 60-43 get an opportunity to Thu. Jan. 13 MINNESOTA FSC 8 p.m. see increased playing Sun. Jan. 16 @ Notre Dame ESPN 2 5 p.m. time. Thu. Jan. 20 @ Penn State FSC 8 p.m. “We’re struggling Sun. Jan. 23 IOWA None 2 p.m. Wed. Jan. 26 @ Michigan State None 7 p.m. with an energy level Sun. Jan. 30 @ Northwestern None 2 p.m. on the perimeter, with Thu. Feb. 3 ILLINOIS None 7 p.m. getting somebody Sun. Feb. 6 PENN STATE FSC 1 p.m. who is vocal and Sun. Feb. 13 @ Minnesota ESPN2 4 p.m. Thu. Feb. 17 @ Michigan None 7 p.m. outgoing and beeSun. Feb. 20 @ Indiana None 2 p.m. bopping around, highThu. Feb. 24 OHIO STATE FSC 8 p.m. energy, enthusiastic,” Sun. Feb. 27 WISCONSIN None 2 p.m. Curry said. “And the only person on the Big Ten Tournament — Indianapolis, Ind. (Conseco Fieldhouse) March 3-7 FSC/ESPN2 TBD perimeter that God E Exhibition made that way was * Flint Hills Islander Classic (Corpus Christi, Texas) Brina. And so she’s got ^ Boilermaker BlockBuster (Indianapolis, Ind.) to understand that we All times local to site and subject to change GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 24 GoldandBlack.com need that. “We’ve talked to her a lot about being that for our team because we don’t have that. I’ve given folks a chance to become it, but until they do, I’m not handing it to them.” PURDUE 2004-05 SEASON STATISTICS ## Player 35 Lawless, Erin 01 Gearlds, Katie 23 Jackson, Tye 32 Wisdom-Hylton, L 05 Traore, Aya 52 Heikes, Emily 43 Webb, Sharika 03 Bogdanova, Natasha. 24 Freeman, Kiki 11 Pollack, Brina 42 Duncan, Carol 21 Mays, Ashley 10 Anderson, Hannah TEAM Total Opponents GP-GS 14-14 14-14 13-5 14-5 14-4 14-14 14-11 14-0 3-0 12-0 13-0 11-3 2-0 Min 406 482 279 276 230 299 310 159 15 124 126 113 6 14 14 Avg 29.0 34.4 21.5 19.7 16.4 21.4 22.1 11.4 5.0 10.3 9.7 10.3 3.0 FG-FGA 85-163 63-147 33-103 40-78 34-88 25-49 17-41 16-40 4-6 6-10 5-10 5-25 0-1 2825 333-761 2825 272-855 Tom Campbell Freshman Brina Pollack is seeing increased playing time at point guard in the Big Ten season. She scored a career-high seven points, while dishing out three assists in the Boilers' victory over Michigan on Jan. 9. Pct 3FG-FGA .521 7-16 .429 18-59 .320 14-50 .513 1-2 .386 2-10 .510 0-2 .415 7-16 .400 0-3 .667 0-0 .600 0-1 .500 0-0 .200 0-0 .000 0-0 Pct .438 .305 .280 .500 .200 .000 .438 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 FT-FTA 44-54 42-48 18-26 7-15 16-24 18-30 20-29 16-26 0-0 6-8 5-10 1-2 1-4 Pct .815 .875 .692 .467 .667 .600 .690 .615 .000 .750 .500 .500 .250 Off 31 2 7 26 11 33 8 15 1 1 8 7 0 18 Def 47 55 29 37 31 51 37 14 3 11 26 16 0 38 Tot 78 57 36 63 42 84 45 29 4 12 34 23 0 56 Avg 5.6 4.1 2.8 4.5 3.0 6.0 3.2 2.1 1.3 1.0 2.6 2.1 0.0 4.0 PF 26 15 29 16 16 39 24 21 0 14 16 8 0 0 FO 1 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 1 0 0 6 A 15 45 24 24 12 14 41 3 0 14 5 10 0 TO 37 40 30 32 37 19 37 17 1 11 7 16 0 Blk 8 13 4 32 9 12 4 7 1 0 3 1 0 .438 .318 .308 .276 194-276 153-229 .703 .668 168 227 395 301 563 40.2 528 37.7 224 252 5 - 207 158 290 278 94 39 49-159 58-210 After seeing sporadic playing time during the nonconference season — including two games in which she didn’t play — Pollack now appears to be getting a regular turn in the rotation. In the last three games, she has averaged 15 minutes of action. Pollack said she feels like she can compete for a bigger share of the playing time. “It’s not like … (Webb’s) going to play 40 minutes or I’m going to play 40 minutes,” Pollack said. “There’s always competition and I’m hoping to split it with her and do what I can to help the team.” Freeman Sitting Out As Medical Redshirt Freshman Kiki Freeman is officially sitting out this season as a medical redshirt. The 6-foot-1 forward from Saginaw, Mich., had surgery last month to repair a hernia. “Every thing went fine (with the surgery),” Curry said. “But she’s still not allowed in contact drills in practice so we’re just taking it day by day, following doctors orders.” Freeman scored eight points in the Boilers’ season-opening win over IPFW on Nov. 21 but saw just limited action during the rest of the non-conference season. Duncan’s Extra Work Paying Off For Boilers With five highly-regarded freshmen arriving on campus this season, it would have been possible to think that a veteran or two could get lost on the bench. But, as the season has gone on, that has not been the case for junior Carol GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 25 Duncan, who’s seeing the most playing of her three-year career. Stl Pts Avg 11 221 15.8 Duncan is 25 186 13.3 averaging nearly 16 16 98 7.5 25 88 6.3 minutes per game 9 86 6.1 during the Boilers’ 22 68 4.9 four Big Ten contests 18 61 4.4 6 48 3.4 — up from about 0 8 2.7 seven minutes per 7 18 1.5 game during the non6 15 1.2 8 11 1.0 conference season. 0 1 0.5 “It’s very simple, she’s working harder,” 153 909 64.9 Curry said, “therefore 143 755 53.9 she’s getting the opportunity to play more. What you put into something is what you’re going to get back. She’s having success because of what she’s putting into practice.” Duncan’s statistics aren’t outstanding, averaging 1.3 points and 2.8 rebounds per game. But her 6-1 frame gives Curry more options on the interior. “She’s spent more time on her own,” Curry said, “I’ve seen her alone in the gym working out. That pays dividends and it really makes us better as a team.” Did You Know? The Boilers are ranked 26th in the latest WBCA/Summerville RPI ranking, released on Jan. 9. Purdue’s strength of schedule is ranked No. 28, while the Big Ten conference has the fifth-highest RPI ranking in the country. j For thorough, up-to-the-minute coverage of Boilermaker basketball recruiting, visit GoldandBlack.com. GoldandBlack.com FRESHMEN Continued from page 8 season. On paper, Sheets would appear to be the prototype. R Defensive tackle Ryan Baker could be a He’s a rock-solid 6-foot, 200 major contributor on defense after spending most pounds, and was strong and of his freshman season at tight end. tenacious enough to break R Running back Kory Sheets dominated in enough tackles in practice to practice all year, and could even compete for a turn hopeless situations into starting position in the spring, despite Purdue’s huge plays. And his speed already excessive depth at the position. looked like everything it was R Offensive tackles Garret Miller and Sean expected to be, as the former Sester could compete for David Owen’s vacant right star high school sprinter tackle spot. Miller, however, injured his leg before repeatedly broke free for long the bowl game and will be set back from an allruns and was never so much as important strength and conditioning standpoint. threatened from behind. After Sophomore-to-be guard Jordan Grimes is slated to practices, it was commonplace step into the starting five up-front as well. for all the buzz to center R Cornerbacks Fabian Martin and Zach Logan around Sheets’ showing that are expected to add talent and depth to a corps day. that was down to its last straw in the Sun Bowl. “I was a little nervous at R Receivers Brandon Whittington and first,” Sheets said following Desmond Tardy are said to have progressed well one Boiler Bowl session this and could enter a receiver rotation that the fall, “but now I’m calm and coaches would like to go more than a half-dozen cool and starting to run like I Tom Campbell did in high school.” players deep. Running back Kory Sheets was so R In addition to a talented scholarship crop, At least in terms of impressive during fall scrimmages that the program welcomed a number of promising physical gifts, Sheets could the coaches believe he has a chance to start in 2005. walk-ons. Tiller and his staff seem infatuated be the most talented running with rookie defensive end Jermaine Guynn, a back Tiller’s signed at Purdue, in shotgun most of the time. scout-team terror who could contribute next year, “We knew he had pass- and it’s possible you’ll see for yourself next according to Tiller. The 6-foot-1, now 260-pound blocking ability, and he hasn’t fall. Guynn (pronounced “Gun”) could become a “Kory’s a guy everyone around here disappointed there, and he’s a very JONATHAN PATTON defensive tackle. Tight end Jerry Wasikowski is excited to see on the field,” Tiller said. smart kid. But the question I might Redshirted • Defensive Tackle proved to be a nice get, also. have had early on was how tough “He’ll probably start slow, but as he gets This was truly a developmental and how competitive he would more comfortable and learns our offense, year for Jonathan Patton, a former really be. But he will compete like he could be a real force. I think he could high school defensive end who’s playing time next season. The Boilermakers a son of a gun, and he’s everything we contend for playing time, perhaps even being built up into a tackle. return senior starters Brent Grover and a starting job next fall, though the guys Distinct progress has been made. After Brandon Villarreal, but the backup ranks thought he’d be athletically.” in front of him certainly won’t concede Indeed, Tiller added that the staff coming in originally listed at 250 pounds, at tackle are again thin, meaning there anything to him.” has been thoroughly impressed with Patton exited his freshman season pushing will be opportunities for Patton, Baker and Sester’s size and rangy physique, his long 270, hoping to complement his already maybe a true freshman or two to help out ZACH SMITH arms, athleticism, footwork, leverage and very good athleticism with added bulk. in the trenches. Redshirted • Offensive Line balance, among other things. Hagen calls Patton “explosive” and Just as Zach Smith had become an Tiller admitted that Miller was a little seems to like the Chicago native’s passSEAN SESTER intriguing utility man on the offensive “ahead” of Sester, solely because of Miller’s rush potential. Redshirted • Offensive Tackle line, he met the same fate as Miller, nasty demeanor. “Jonathan’s very coachable,” Hagen Right there with Miller in an offensive “Sester’s more of a thinker,” Tiller blowing out his knee on Purdue’s indoor said. “Football’s very important to him, line class that’s repeatedly been referred said. “But the thing I like about him is that turf. (This has now happened to three and I saw a pretty big move with him the to as a “jackpot” by Tiller has been tackle he bends, twists and turns and can make of the seven linemen Purdue’s recruited last couple of weeks of the season during Sean Sester. adjustments; he’s not awkward or clumsy. for scholarships in its 2003 and ’04 class practice. It just seemed like things were The 6-8 Sester exited the season at He’s an athlete.” combined, with Nick Fincher starting it coming more natural for him. around 270 pounds, putting him within off last year.) The ninth-year Boilermaker coach “I think the thing we’re looking for striking range of reaching desirable playing Smith spent the year practicing at said he expects both Miller and Sester to from him is more consistency from play weight. His strength, however, must be weigh well in excess of 300 pounds during tackle, but the promise of Miller and Sester to play; his intensity. Once he figures that continue to develop. gave the coaches the luxury to experiment their careers. out, he’ll be fine. Right now, he’s up and “The kind of thing you deal with with Smith at center and redshirt freshman down.” with a kid as quiet as Sean is the question Robbie Powell at guard. KORY SHEETS Patton missed a month of practice of how tough he’s really going to be,” “We said, ‘Sester’s everything we Redshirted • Running Back with a high ankle sprain in the late fall, Legg said of Sester, a terrific student. “We thought he’d be and Miller’s everything Those who watched Purdue’s Sunday but returned to full strength in time for knew Sean was a pretty good athlete. we thought he’d be, so let’s move Smith Boiler Bowl scrimmages throughout the pre-bowl work. He played in a system like ours in high season might have simply stood in awe inside, where he might be a better player Patton will have every opportunity for school, a spread offense where they were of the performances put forth by Kory anyway,’” Legg said, before the injury. “He’s a wide body and he’s light on his Sheets when the ball was in his hands. Granted, there’s an enormous feet like a tackle. He’s very intelligent and difference between running against can hand-direct traffic. He could become Purdue’s scout team and running against a more vocal leader, because he’s a quiet the likes of Michigan, but if the practice kid.” Tiller, probably tiring of having to field offered any accurate indications of Sheets’ ability, then Purdue has a lot to move starting guards to center every two years, was eager to see Smith in the look forward to. Tiller goes so far as to suggest Sheets middle. “He’s smart and calm, which are could even beat out two seniors (Jerod Void and Brandon Jones) for the starting important at the center position, where position in Purdue’s backfield next being an anxious person can be a detriment,” Tiller said of the soft-spoken, season. In fact, if Sheets hadn’t been prone cerebral Smith, also before the injury. to fumble early on — a flaw he has since “The center has to sort out the blocking curtailed — he might have played this and have tremendous poise when the lose anything,” Bennett said. “Curtis is the same way. You don’t worry about him like that.” Painter has good size for his position, as he’s listed at 6-4 and he topped out in the fall around a solid 210 pounds. Bennett likes Painter’s intelligence and said the youngster learned quickly this season. Tiller, though, would like to see Painter pick up a certain intangible. “I hope as he grows he develops a little more of a personality in that he’s a very business-like, no-nonsense kind of guy,” Tiller said. “I’d like him to enjoy himself a little more.” Kirsch enters the spring as the unquestioned No. 1 QB, but the coaches would like to gauge Painter’s competitiveness by his willingness or lack thereof to accept his place on the depth chart. “What we’d like to see is him come out in the spring and in August and really, really compete,” Tiller said. “We believe he can close the gap, and we’ll see when he can do that.” REDSHIRTS TO LOOK FOR IN ‘05 GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 26 GoldandBlack.com quarterback’s already into his cadence and the defense is moving around. Then, you can’t mess up on the snap count and you have to handle your assignment. Smith might be that kind of guy.” But just days into bowl prep, Smith was injured and Powell was right back at center. Prior to Smith’s injury, Tiller had said he’d like to see the 280-pounder add 1020 more pounds and get stronger. Like with Miller, meeting those goals on the heels of rehabilitation will be especially challenging now. DESMOND TARDY Redshirted • Wide Receiver Even if he was a lousy football player, Purdue’s coaches would probably still love having the ultra-charismatic Desmond Tardy around. “You talk about energy and a sense of urgency, and he has all that,” said DeBesse, who oversees Tardy’s move from high school option quarterback to college slot receiver. “He comes out on the field a half hour early and catches punts. Coaches love guys like that.” But Tardy can play football, so it’s a moot point. The former state champion QB from Indianapolis Warren Central High School “hasn’t disappointed at all,” according to DeBesse. Tardy is a smooth, savvy athlete, and coaches were particularly impressed this season with his quickness and ability to get in and out of his breaks. Physically, there seems to be many a likeness to Stubblefield at this stage of his career. “The biggest thing for him is going to be adjusting to the physicality of the position, going out there and having to mix it up with linebackers every now and then,” Tiller said. “He’s going to have to be a tough guy, but he has soft hands, and we think in time he can have the ability to make a play in space.” Thus, the challenge for the slightly built receiver is to add weight and strength. It was the same story for Stubblefield five years ago; the difference is that Tardy is already almost 15 pounds heavier than Stubblefield. Tardy topped out this fall at 186 pounds. “If he can get stronger and develop that toughness,” DeBesse said, “he could maybe help us sooner rather than later.” Tiller said he’s been pleased with how Tardy has grasped his new position and said he likes “everything” about the rookie. The coach added that he expects Tardy to contribute in 2005. LUIS VASQUEZ Redshirted • Defensive End After spending the entire season as a middle linebacker, Luis Vasquez moved to defensive end prior to the bowl game. Facilitating the move was Vasquez’s ability to get bigger through the course of his redshirt season. After weighing 233 pounds at the start of September, Vasquez was 245 by November. Vasquez’s move wasn't surprising, as he, like Baker, often moved to the defensive line during scrimmage work. Defensive ends coach Gary Emanuel said he likes Vasquez’s toughness, which has been a common dominator among all Tom Campbell Tom Campbell Free safety Torri Williams' future appears to be awfully bright as he's expected to contend with Kyle Smith this spring for a starting spot. the players Purdue’s signed from Vasquez’s native Connecticut of late. It is conceivable also that Vasquez could grow right out of defensive end also and into a defensive tackle, much like Purdue’s two current starting tackles — Grover and Villarreal — did. BRANDON WHITTINGTON Redshirted • Wide Receiver Had Brandon Whittington not been redshirting, he’d have played in the second half of the season, according to Tiller. That statement might seem to not make sense, but the translation is this: Whittington was deemed good enough to help the Boilermakers this season. That’s the same comment Tiller made about Stubblefield in 2000, and all he did is catch more passes in his career than any other receiver ever in college football history. That’s where the comparisons should end, though. What Purdue has in Whittington is a big receiver — he’s 6-3 and weighed as much as 205 pounds this fall — who’s shown the ability to get up and make plays on balls down the field. Throughout Boiler Bowls this fall, Whittington was able to extend over smaller defensive backs to snare passes down the field for big gains. There might be a little bit of a hold-up on Whittington, however. “What Brandon has to do is pick up his energy level in the (football) classroom and on the field and develop more of a sense of urgency. I mean from everything from breaking the huddle and running to the line of scrimmage,” said DeBesse, conveying the exact opposite of his comments on Tardy. “There’s a tempo you need to learn to play with, and as soon as you do that, you elevate your performance. He has skills, but he has to mature to that point.” The coaches love receiver Desmond Tardy's charisma and say he'll earn some playing time sooner rather than later if he adds more weight and continues to get stronger in the weight room. TORRI WILLIAMS Played • Safety/Special Teams Any way you look at it, Torri Williams would appear to have a very bright future at Purdue. A few games into the season, Tiller and Co. made a commitment to getting the 6-2 safety on the field, both on special teams and as a reserve in the secondary. They’re not sorry they did, as the coaches exited the season thrilled with Williams, who made 14 tackles, with one interception. Williams closed the season playing four different roles in Purdue’s depleted secondary in the Sun Bowl, and nearly was pressed into playing corner as well. GOLD & BLACK ILLUSTRATED • VOLUME 15, ISSUE 15 • 27 For a player who topped out around 195 pounds this season, Williams was surprisingly physical for a freshman DB, laying down some big hits, particularly when asked to blitz straight up the middle. “He plays bigger than he is,” Anarumo said. “He plays like he’s about 210.” Tiller loves Williams’ toughness. “I think that was the Leander, Texas, in him coming out,” Tiller said, referring to Williams’ hometown. Now, with a season of experience on his résumé, Williams will almost certainly get every opportunity to move into the starting lineup in the spring, when he’ll compete at free safety with incumbent Kyle Smith for the No. 1 job. j GoldandBlack.com Salutes This Week’s Boilermaker Difference Makers Senior Forward Emily Heikes and the Boilermaker Defense Emily Heikes, pictured here defending Indiana’s Angela Hawkins during the Boilermakers’ 54-31 win Jan. 6, had a solid week averaging 8.5 points and nine rebounds in Purdue’s blowout wins over the Hoosiers and Michigan Wolverines. The Boilermaker defense limited the two foes to a combined 22.8-percent shooting (26-of-114), including a stunning 17.2 percent in the second half. Junior Forward Matt Kiefer Playing his best game since returning from a knee injury Dec. 30, Matt Kiefer scored 17 points and added six rebounds against Illinois. Kiefer scored 13 of those points in the first half, when the Boilers were building a 39-33 lead over the No. 1-ranked Illini at intermission. In the opening period, Kiefer and teammate Carl Landry combined for 23 points in 28 minutes of action. PurdueGear.com University Spirit celebrates the spirit of Purdue Athletics. For the 2004-05 season, University Spirit will bring you the present and past difference makers captured in pictures. TIME DATED MATERIAL PLEASE RUSH! DELIVER BY JAN. 14, 2005