Showing posts with label Joe Tiller skinny-dipping in Wyoming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joe Tiller skinny-dipping in Wyoming. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: Joe Tiller Talks To An Interwebnetter

Okay, okay, so it's not all that breaking. But you may recall, Joe doesn't think too highly of the series of tubes.

Anyway, he must have softened in retirement, as he did a Q&A with Illini HQ. (Who wants to tell Joe he didn't coach Illinois? Nobody? Okay.)

Turns out, Joe Tiller thinks last year was "horrible." At least he admit it. And as Boilerdowd's brother said to us via email, "Having two head coaches on the same staff is not a good idea....There's a news flash."

Other tidbits include the fact that Joe's out landscaping, shooing deer off his new sod, trying to get his satellite dish hooked up to the RV so he can watch the Big Ten Network on the road, and planning a couple of visits to Purdue this year, starting with this weekend.

There's also a feeling among at least one of your BS staff that Cowboy Joe may be coaching somewhere next year. We'll see.

Enjoy.

Friday, August 29, 2008

Final Scrimmage- "We are going to have a good defense."

Maybe it's just because he's intoxicated on thoughts of his home in Wyoming being less than a year away, but in his last season at the helm, Joe Tiller surely isn't following his own advice about managing expectations...at least on the defensive side of the ball.

"As I have said all camp, I like the way our defense runs to the ball, and that continued today," Tiller said. "I thought we came out ready to go defensively and made some plays. We are going to have a good defense."


Unlike the last scrimmage, the offense scored with more regularity, with the story, statistically being the running game seemed to dominate the play-calling. Ex-QB Siller had the most carries and the most yards (right around 6 yds/carry), but Bolden and Dierking both averaged around 8 yds/carry.

Vlad Tiller is still controlling the info coming out of camp, so we don't know the situations (ones, twos, types of plays, etc.) in which the yards were accrued, so it's hard to judge anything...But Brandon Whittington and Kieth Smith both had nearly 100 yards receiving and a lot of grabs while Orton didn't seem to be noteworthy. Painter completed nearly 70% of his passes w/ 260+ yards...and Elliot was just over 50% for 155 yds.

Honestly, I don't think these stats are worth too much, but the quote about the defense, to me is very interesting.

Friday, August 01, 2008

Joe v. Mid-Majors

For the next week or so, we'll sporadically write upon a topic that is controversial, at least among the black and gold faithful- What Joe Tiller means to Purdue football.

Today, we're going to focus on conferences that Tiller has "owned" (pwned in interwebnet terminology) during his tenure at Purdue. And away we go...

Mid-Major Programs

It's become a joke as of the last three years that Purdue has been declared MAC champs despite not being in the conference...and while Tiller-coached teams may have played well versus conferences like the MAC of late, it didn't start out that way.

In Tiller's very first contest as a Purdue coach, Joe faced his hometown team, the Toledo Rockets in Toledo. While this was a schedule he inherited, he couldn't have been too upset with the draw as it was a chance to show that this hometown boy had made good and become a major conference coach...Things didn't go according to plan. Purdue lost the contest 36-22...and the Tiller era looked to be a mere continuation of what Colletto, Akers and Burtnett had created- a program that simply wasn't good...not even versus mid-majors. But we all know now that that wasn't the case...Tiller was re-building a once-great football program. And he would do it on the back of games just like his first game at the helm.

Two weeks later, Tiller played another MAC foe and beat Ball U. 28-14.

In 1998 Purdue played two Con-USA opponents in Rice and Central Florida. Rice created problems for Purdue's defense with their throwback offense...and Brees wasn't exactly on track in just his second game under center as a starter. But Purdue got the close win 21-19. The next week, the Culpepper-led CFU Knights came into Purdue on the shoulders of their QB. He did his job in the fact that he passed for a lot of yards...about 100 more than the young Brees. But, he only engineered one TD as Purdue's D got on track for an easy 35-7 victory.

In 1999, once again, Purdue had two Mid-Major opponents- one a repeat from Con-USA another from the MAC. The first, CFU, this time at their place was a lot worse of a game than the media thought it might be. Brees and Culpepper combined for 91 passes, but neither really played as the hype might indicate that day. Purdue won going away 47-13. Next up, Tiller's love affair with Central Michigan began as Purdue whipped the Chipps of CMU 58-16...Brees dominated and the team did as well.

In 2000, Purdue started off with two MAC foes...CMU was the first game as Purdue ran away with a 48-0 victory. The second contest, another game in Ross-Ade yielded another laugher as Purdue rolled versus lowly Kent State, 45-10.

In 2001, Purdue started off on the road at Con-USA's Cincinnati. A bright-eyed and optimistic Boilerdowd attended the game with his older brother and friends as we watched a late interception by Stu Schweigert seal a too-close-for comfort victory, 19-14. The next week, Ross-Ade hosted Akron, where Purdue cruised to a 33-14 victory.
Not even a badass like Hardwick could look tough in these unis

2002 began with a D-IAA opponent, then two weeks later, Purdue hosted Western Michigan...a respectable MAC opponent, that season. While they were supposed to be an OK team, the game shouldn't have been as close as it was...Purdue squeaked out a victory, 28-24. Also noteworthy, Purdue was wearing their urine-gold jerseys/white pants (see photo) for the second time under Tiller.

One of the most-painful losses, for me as a fan, came against Purdue's first and only Mid-Major opponent of 2003. Purdue came out clad in the different-but-still-crappy gold uniforms for their first home game of the '03 schedule and played as badly as they looked. Bowling Green, whose quarterback had earned a bit of national attention, beat Purdue in yet another heartbreaker, by the closest of margins, 27-26. This was on the tail of a 2002 season that Purdue last a slew of games by three points or less...So it stung quite a bit.

(sidebar- You might have seen the "Bring Back Black" T-shirts around Ross-Ade during the 2002-2003 seasons. I'm happy to say that those T-shirts were designed by me. While I'm not the only person in the stands who found the gold unis horrible, I like to believe that my grassroots campaign helped the athletic department figure out the error of their ways.)

In '04, Purdue faced only one Mid-Major, repeat Ross-Ade visitor, Ball State. The Orton/Stubblefield-led Boilers crushed the Cardinals, 59-7.

The short Brandon Kirsch era began as Akron came back to West Lafayette in 2005...This time, the Zips faired poorly yet again as Purdue's silly triple-option dominated for a 49-24 victory.
For 2006, Purdue once again had two MAC foes visit West Lafayette. The first game saw a lousy Miami of Ohio team take Purdue to overtime. In overtime Purdue sealed a gut-wrenching 38-31 victory. Painful. The next week, thousands of high school band members watched Purdue beat Ball State in a relatively close game, 38-28. This is the game that Dustin Keller broke about 50 tackles and Painter threw for over 400 yards for the first time in his career.

In what I thought would be Tiller's last season, Purdue played three games versus the MAC in 2007; two versus one opponent- Tiller's BFF, Central Michigan. In the first game, Tiller traveled to his hometown once again, but this time the results were much different. I was actually very worried about this game coming into it...It's a good thing I'm wrong a lot. Purdue rolled as comfortably as a family in a Winnebago, 52-24. Two games later, they hosted CMU and won in a closer-than-the-score-indicates 45-22 victory. Our Boilers capped the season with Curtis Painter setting Purdue's single-game yardage record en route to a 51-48 MCB victory.

Tiller's record versus mid-majors, coming into 2008 is 17-2...Some say it's hard to always beat the teams you're supposed to beat- Tiller has nearly done just that every time.

Thursday, July 24, 2008

Tiller Love Fest in Chi-Town

Today was media day up in Chicago. So, coach Tiller put on a golf shirt, packed up the station wagon, and took Greg Orton, Anthony Heygood, Curtis Painter North a few hours for a dog and pony show.

In most years, the talk will revolve around the potential Heisman candidate player or a coach that had a surprising, exceptional season the previous year or new players and coaches alike. This year though, nearly every coach was asked at least one question about Joe Tiller...You know- How did you meet Joe? -Where was your first kiss with Joe? -Do you think he's more handsome with or without the big sun hat that he wears away from gameday? Important, hard-hitting stuff. Talk also focused on JoePa's future in Happy Valley.
Paterno delighted and entertained the press crowd with an assortment of "ehhhhhs", "ahhhhs", inadvertant gas-passing and other old guy-isms. But, like a seasoned politician, Paterno never really answered any of the questions directly about his future at the program that he first started coaching in the late 1890s.
Tiller himself answered questions about fishing, his successor and his the state of the team that he'll be leaving at the end of the season. One point of interest, at least to this knucklehead, was the fact that Tiller blames the poor view of the Big Ten on people like J, Tim and I. I guess EspN's lemmings constantly bashing on the Big Ten doesn't matter, but sites like BS, with a readership in the hundreds are really hurting the perception of the league. Rrrrrright.

Another thing Tiller talked about was Wyoming...Ahhhh, Wyoming. The air's a bit sweeter there, the rivers flow with golden honey and are stocked with steelhead that jump right into your boat, and when it rains, monarch butterflies and lilacs fall softly from the sky. It's a pretty great place- we get the point. Like most years, Purdue's head man has spent the three weeks prior to the Big Ten presser away from campus. Oh, I know what you're thinking- I'm sure Tressel has a place in Montana where he lives the majority of the summer...Wait, no he doesn't, he's in Columbus or at speaking arrangements in the state like nine of the other coaches in the league. Hey, I'm just saying.

While I can't say I blame him for wanting to take it easy, I can say that it's probably not the best way for a CEO to lead. The tireless efforts and general hustle from Purdue's basketball coach is a refreshing departure from Wyoming Joe's way of running his ship. I've said it before, I'd probably love Coach Tiller as a neighbor...But I am pretty happy he's decided to follow his heart back West. He knows it's time, so do we. That said, even if he's not as excited about football as he used to be, I'm still excited to see what his team looks like in the first Saturday of September.

Recruiting Notes
While much of the Big Ten, and major programs elsewhere have 10-15 verbal committments at this point, Purdue only has three. But, they're in the final five schools for a bunch of kids- hopefully half of these four or high-three-star guys can end up in West Lafayette.

All three of the verbals are Florida kids- all three seem to be very athletic, but each seems to have an asterisk of sorts that is keeping interest in each player low.

-Aristide is coming off of a knee injury
-Bush has some academic questions
-Henry's only played QB for one season

As the old adage says, "It's not how you start, but how you finish..." That's true, but if signs of life don't start coming in the form of some August verbals, Coach Hope may have trouble filling his first class with Big Ten-type talent.