Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Purdue’s perseveran­ce on full display as wins pile up

- By Michael Marot

WEST LAFAYETTE, IND. >> Six weeks ago, the notion of Purdue fans swarming the field seemed about as far-fetched as beating Ohio State.

After losing to Eastern Michigan on a last-second field goal, the season appeared lost, their bowl hopes shattered and the troubling turnovers, mounting mistakes and persistent penalties continued to pile up. Then the Boilermake­rs dug down, fought back and turned things around.

Purdue is just one-half game out of the Big Ten West lead.

“It’s amazing how you can be sitting at 0-3 with some hard losses and find a way to do this,” coach Jeff Brohm said after Saturday’s stunning 49-20 rout over the Buckeyes set off a raucous celebratio­n at Ross-Ade Stadium. “It is a huge moment. This this goes to show you what you can do and it goes to show you what you can’t do when you lose to Eastern Michigan.”

Make no mistake: Brohm meant no offense to the Eagles; he merely wanted to illustrate how his players and coaches rebounded after losing that game and the next one, to Missouri, on last-second field goals.

Since then, the Boilermake­rs (4-3, 3-1) have turned around their season.

They ended Boston College’s one-week run in the Top 25 with a 30-13 blowout. They won back-to-back conference road games for the first time in six years. They’re on a four-game winning streak for the first time since the start of the

2007 season, and they beat a top two ranked team for the first time since 1984 by scoring a school record 49 points against the Buckeyes

(7-1, 4-1).

The reward for this sudden season to remember was getting 17 points in Top

25 voting — making them No. 33.

“It means guys are growing up,” said running back D.J. Knox, who had scoring runs of 1, 42 and 40 yards Saturday. “When you have guys locked in and everybody working for a common goal, you can’t be stopped. Especially the defense. They played lights out against a quarterbac­k (Dwayne Haskins Jr.) who’s a Heisman candidate.”

Knox and Markell Jones have given Purdue a strong, experience­d one-two punch out of the backfield. David Blough is 135 of 224 (60.3 percent) with 1,951 yards, 13 touchdowns and only two intercepti­ons since replacing the injured Elijah Sindelar as the starting quarterbac­k in Week 3. Freshman receiver Rondale Moore continues to be a matchup nightmare for opposing defenses, and Purdue has pulled no punches in calling plays.

“Once we decided to open this thing up and stay on the attack and be more aggressive, our guys have done a great job,” Brohm said Monday. “It’s not always going to be perfect, but I think David has played outstandin­g.”

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