The Decatur Daily Democrat

O'CONNELL'S STEADY RISE KEEPS PURDUE IN BIG TEN TITLE HUNT

- By MICHAEL MAROT

Aidan O'Connell arrived at Purdue in 2017 as a hopeful, exuberant teenager.

He set out to prove a walk-on could win the starting job at the "Cradle of Quarterbac­ks" and lead the Boilermake­rs to postseason success. O'Connell routinely stayed after practice for extra snaps, gladly fine-tuned his skills with the scout team and even opted to stay when other schools presented more promising possibilit­ies.

The reward comes Thursday night when O'Connell celebrates his 24th birthday in front of a sold out Ross-Ade Stadium and a national television audience for Purdue's season opener against Penn State.

And he's here, on center stage, for one reason — he never stopped dreaming.

"He came in knowing he had to start from the bottom and prove to everybody beyond a reasonable doubt he could be the guy," Purdue coach Jeff Brohm said. "As coaches we gave him those opportunit­ies and sometimes we gave it to someone else, but he stayed with the same work ethic, the same mentality."

Getting to this point sure wasn't easy. O'Connell bided his time for two years behind future NFL player David Blough and strongarme­d Elijah Sindelar. Then O'Connell watched Nick Sipe and Jack Plummer move ahead of him on the depth chart. When they transferre­d out, Brohm brought in Austin Burton from UCLA.

And while each supposedly possessed more natural talent than O'Connell, none could top his moxie. Teammates noticed it from the start and eventually Brohm caught on, too.

"Obviously, I didn't recognize it soon enough," Brohm said.

Six years of college ball helped, too.

While O'Connell didn't play in 2017 or 2018 and only got his first real chance to take snaps because of injuries to Sindelar and Plummer in 2019, he took advantage of the opportunit­y by winning the quarterbac­k competitio­n heading into the pandemic-shortened 2020 season. Three games later, his season ended because of an ankle injury.

Yet today, O'Connell acknowledg­es it was that journey that allowed him to grow as a player.

"To be honest, I think I needed those times and those moments in the shadows to develop," O'Connell said. "I wasn't ready to play my first year. I probably wasn't even ready to play my second year. But having those two years to get more lifting, more film study, more practice definitely helped."

Losing records in 2019 and 2020 didn't just keep the Boilermake­rs out of the postseason or help O'Connell's cause. It had fans clamoring for a new quarterbac­k last season.

But it only made O'Connell more determined to prove the doubters wrong and this time, his historic performanc­e left no doubt he could win.

O'Connell's 71.8% completion percentage and 158.8 passing efficiency rating set single-season school records and he produced top-five numbers in completion­s (315), yards passing (3,712) and touchdowns (28) despite serving as the backup for the first 3 1/2 games.

The nine wins, six of which came with O'Connell as the starter, were the second most in school history and he beat top-five teams, won a bowl game, earned second team all-Big Ten honors and the respect of everyone around the program.

"I think the biggest difference is just his confidence, knowing he has his full team behind him, knowing we believe in him 100%," linebacker­safety Jalen Graham said.

Now the Boilermake­rs' unquestion­ed leader faces a familiar challenge against another 24-year-old quarterbac­k starting his sixth college season, Penn State quarterbac­k Sean Clifford.

 ?? ?? Cora Baker is one of the top kill and block leaders for the South Adams Starfires in the ACAC.
Cora Baker is one of the top kill and block leaders for the South Adams Starfires in the ACAC.

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