Woody and Chad Austin, Greg and Gary McQuay all have done what Terone and Ronnie Johnson chose to do- play basketball at Purdue. But the Johnsons are the only pair of Boiler brothers in the last 20 years that have the ability to be on the court at the same time. And with Ryne Smith and LewJack both graduating at the end of this year, they will probably both be starting very early next season.
We received an e-mail from Indiana Recruiting Guide telling us they were about to post a look at the younger Johnson, so we wanted to pass it on to you.
Johnson's court vision, quickness, ability to find the open man and keep the defense honest with his three-point shot all make him a player that will be tough to keep off the court next season. The void LewJack will leave will be sizable and tough to fill...but Johnson like Jackson seems to have the tools that will allow his game to translate to the next level in spite of being shorter than many high recruits at the PG position.
Click HERE for videos and info about Ronnie Johnson.
All News is Bad News
As Purdue gets ready for the bowl game on the 27th more bad news than good seems to be coming out of West La La. First we heard about OJ Ross being suspended for academic concerns...two days ago, we heard what we thought we'd be hearing- Ross will not be playing in the bowl due to missing too much practice.
Gary Bush will be picking up the slack that Ross' suspension leaves. I've been a fan of Bush all season as he's been very consistent, runs crisp routes and doesn't take plays off. There's no doubt that Ross is a gifted guy, but talent alone only takes you so far...and Bush's ability to do the little things made the offense better when he played this season.
Atop of Ross' academic woes, starting linebacker and leading tackler Dwayne Beckford was arrested for DWI this weekend. Purdue had kept it pretty quiet, but Beckford had been arrested back in July for possession of drug paraphernalia...and in June was arrested for leaving the scene in which he had hit a parked car.
The most-recent charge is made more serious because Beckford was already on probation due to the previous arrests.
One of the aspects of Hope's time at Purdue has been this type of stuff has been less prevalent than it was in the latter seasons of Tiller's tenure at Purdue. I didn't have any time for repeat offenders then, and really don't now. Making one mistake isn't the same as getting arrested three times in a six month period...And while I really like Hope's focus on academics, there is no comparison to the severity of not going to class or doing poorly on tests and drinking while driving.
Seems to me that Beckford should be suspended right away- not because he's automatically guilty, but because he's already had a history of poor behavior...so I'd think he'd not only be on probation with the police, but also with the coaches.
Prior to Beckford's arrest, the coaches had already announced they'd be playing more nickel defense to counter Western Michigan's pass-happy offense...so Beckford not playing shouldn't be the end of the world. Harris was going to see the field more and on running downs, I'd think Carlino will play. Carlino of course has been a starter and plays with a ton of intensity, which is never bad for a defense.
Losing a RB like Ralph Bolden with only weeks to prepare a back-up would have been catastrophic in previous seasons...but as we've talked about ad nauseaum, this year's Purdue backfield is just different. Shavers was Bolden's 1A when healthy, and the guys behind him proved themselves to be talented time and again.
The other Akeem that'll be getting more carries, Hunt, gives up about 25 pounds in the stead of Bolden/Shavers...but is a shiftier runner and has better break-away speed.
All this said, the way Nord called the offense this season, the loss of an RB really doesn't affect Purdue's game plan at all. Edison, Pegram, Crank and even Mostert will probably all get chances to carry the ball in Detroit.
Hope says there are a few guys that are still not out of the woods academically and there might be more that can't play in Detroit. The coaches will know in the next week.
Regardless of academic attrition, injuries or problems with the law, I don't think these issues should matter. Heck, even if Purdue were to lose a QB, would we really see a quantitative difference in offensive output?
Purdue would be hurt with the loss of Allen and/or Johnson...or if Short and/or Gaston couldn't play v. WMU. And if Kelly couldn't play, that'd be costly...and obviously, there's a tipping point when you lose 3, 4, 5...starters, but I've heard nothing to make me think any of these guys are in danger.
So let's just enjoy the 10th-best B1G bowl for 2011/12, regardless of which Boilers can suit up, shall we?
Showing posts with label Ralph Bolden. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ralph Bolden. Show all posts
Tuesday, December 20, 2011
Brother Boilers and Pizza Prep
This will go on the shelf with
2011 purdue football,
aclU,
attrition,
Detroit is lovely this time of year,
Dwayne Beckford arrested again,
OJ Ross,
Pizza Pizza,
Purdue basketball recruiting,
Ralph Bolden,
Ronnie Johnson,
suspensions
Monday, November 28, 2011
Seeing Red: A Trip Behind Enemy Lines (and Gumbo)
A pal of mine sent me a text this afternoon asking if I'd like to go to the Butler v. IU game in Ass. Hall...so after making sure LBD, TBD and Mrs. Boilerdowd were all good for the evening, I took the trip to the wretched squalor town of Bloomington, IN.
I worked on a project a few years ago that took me into the bowels of the Hall, and hadn't been back since...and tonight's visit provided me with some much-neededammo info.
First off, I was reminded of my first sports hate: IU fans congregating at Ass. Hall. Back when Knight was there, I loved watching Bobby clones in their red sweaters over-react to each of the two or three fouls called against IU each contest. While there's no doubt the Hall can be a loud venue, it's at its most-deafening when the IU faithful are giving a collective groan or boo. They've always been great at group-think negativity, but they've added chanting mediocre and underexperienced players to their repertoire as well.
I worked on a project a few years ago that took me into the bowels of the Hall, and hadn't been back since...and tonight's visit provided me with some much-needed
First off, I was reminded of my first sports hate: IU fans congregating at Ass. Hall. Back when Knight was there, I loved watching Bobby clones in their red sweaters over-react to each of the two or three fouls called against IU each contest. While there's no doubt the Hall can be a loud venue, it's at its most-deafening when the IU faithful are giving a collective groan or boo. They've always been great at group-think negativity, but they've added chanting mediocre and underexperienced players to their repertoire as well.
This will go on the shelf with
Ass Hall,
bad coaching,
Butler fans can suck it,
coaching moves,
emotional coaches,
overrated IU,
Ralph Bolden,
Ron Zook,
Savior of the week
Sunday, November 13, 2011
The Tampa Kid Finishes Strong: Another Look at Yesterday's Win
I promised J that I'd post last night, but after heading straight out of West LaFiesta after the most-recent shocker of aOSU, I had plans back in the Indy area. At the end of the night, I was exhausted. So if you got a few minutes and are still jonesin' for some flavor from yesterday's game, this piece is for you.
This morning, my throat hurts and my voice is still gone as a physical reminder of yesterday's OT victory. Ohio State fans called the '09 game "Purdue Harbor" as the Buckeyes were physically superior, highly-ranked and fully expecting an easy win in Ross Ade...but there's the rub, right? Purdue has taken Bucknut teams to the brink before- easy wins are the exception, not the norm in this series over the past few decades...and I have no idea why. Both Joe Tiller and Danny Hope had and have no fear of the scarlet and gray. (Kinda wish we could say the same for some other color combos.)
My older brother and I got to go to the game...and BS's good pal Ed down in Texas provided the club level seats.
I had never sat in that section...I had toured the facility, but and marveled how this didn't look like Purdue football years ago, but yesterday I got to watch from it. It's a bit cloistered, but not as much as the super-high-end Buchannan Club. You've heard me complain about Purdue fans not being enthusiastic enough...and I'll still do that because as a group, we're not vociferous-enough on gameday, in my opinion. But the people around me in Section C-2 were pretty great...with one exception.
There was a young kid down to my right who kind of was the section leader- probably 12 years old, this kid was more situationally-aware than any Purdue coach on the sideline or QB on the roster...and along with the young guy, there were old wealthy alums and families around our seats. And the best part- not one of them told me to sit down all day (that's all but guaranteed to happen usually, sadly).
I had the chance to stop by the Purdue Tailgate Show prior to the game...and neither of the hosts, nor myself felt good about this one. If you came by this site on Friday, you heard the same thing at that time...and not just from me. But as I said following the Illinois game, I love being wrong in the way I was this week.
Let's be honest for a moment though- this year's Purdue team is enigmatic. As aOSU comes off of three straight victories (two v. ranked opponents) and Buckeye fans were predicting a run at the B1G championship, Purdue was coming off of two of the ugliest losses in recent memory. Purdue had no offensive rhythm the past two weeks...couldn't run the ball...couldn't stop the run...and looked like a gradeschool team in really nice uniforms at times versus a bunch of grown-arsed men.
But from the kickoff under a beautiful sky in God's country, yesterday's game was different. Purdue's front played resolute on defense getting into the backfield and hitting Boom Herron immediately after he got the ball. And on the other side, the offensive line was giving TerBush time and Bolden space to do what they needed to do. And at the end of the first quarter, the good guys were up 10-0 and the RA faithful let the team know how much they appreciated the effort.
But as it's been in many games this season, the second quarter was different...at least it felt that way. aOSU now had the stiff wind at their backs and Purdue was heading directly into it...and the Bucks could at least move the ball. They put points on the board as the TerBush-led offense struggled to get into rhythm. Then late in the quarter, Marve came in and led Purdue on a drive that was mostly on the ground, but earned our Boilers 7...and the score was 17-7 at the half.
While the score didn't look like it, it kind of felt like aOSU had figured some things out...and the third quarter showed that. Even with Herron unavailable after being dinged up by the stingy (at times) Purdue defense, the Buckeyes began to move the ball...and everyone was getting involved in it. Miller looked tough creating time as Purdue would collapse his pocket, their wildcat offense was extremely-effective and they chewed up yards in the way I expected the Bucks to do coming into the contest. In fact the only thing that wasn't working was vertical routes, but that didn't stop the coaches on the evil sideline from calling the plays nor did it deter Miller from overthrowing his receivers by 7-10 yards with regularity. Watching Miller in person showed me a few things though. If he had a better system to play within, I think he'd be a pretty damned good QB. He's no Pryor in the fact that he makes good fakes, actually reads the defenses, has a better throwing motion, keeps his eyes downfield and doesn't seem at all lazy. This makes him a potentially-great quarterback, in my opinion (eventually).
So while the Buckeyes weren't lighting up the scoreboard, they were definitely winning the field position battle...and at the end of three, they had drawn the game to just a three-point margin. I think the whole stadium felt rightfully-antsy as the fourth quarter started and aOSU climbed back into the game. And even with the wind at their back, Purdue couldn't get back into the rhythm we had seen in the first quarter. Other than Ralph Bolden's shiftily chewing up the Buckeye defense, Crank being efficient when given limited opportunities and Siller playing a very solid game, there wasn't a whole bunch of production out of the good guys.
So after a decent drive stalled in aOSU territory, Wiggs put the final Purdue points on the board in regulation in the fourth quarter and the good guys were up by six points.
Herron came back in the game and made a difference earning tough yards. aOSU's wildcat was effective again and each time Purdue's defense needed a stop on 3rd and long, Purdue's defense couldn't come up with it. Ohio State got down deep into Purdue territory as the clock ticked down to inside 2:00 and aOSU decided to try to put the game in Miller's hands. Purdue's front collapsed the pocket and Miller narrowly escaped a costly sack as he rolled right and threw off of his back foot across his body. The pass fluttered over Johnson and into the hands of a Buckeye receiver tying the game and seemingly-sealing Purdue's fate. All it would take was a simple point after to put the nail in Purdue's coffin.
I actually had given up, as a fan. I saw this movie a few years ago in the Holy Buckeye game. Sure, that Tressel-coached team had firepower for days, and the Tiller-coached squad had a ton of pros on defense, but this one felt pretty heartbreaking too...even though the game wasn't yet over.
It's easy to avoid the view on the field when you're 5'4" and everyone's standing around you. So I didn't watch, but I heard the kick get blocked and felt my brother grab and yank me to the side as Purdue still had a pulse. One of Purdue's never-say-die DTs, this time it was Gaston, squirted through the OSU line to get his big paw on the kick...and with the unexpected block, the good guys were alive!
After a decent Mostert return (he didn't get many chances to get his hands on the ball due to deep, wind-aided kick offs...and bad offense) Purdue started the drive with Marve at the controls. And they drove into OSU territory. It looked like Purdue's mega-legged kicker would get a chance to set a record and win a game in the process. Purdue had to avoid the sack or turnover though. But Marve made yet another awful throw when he merely needed to manage the game.
At BS, we like Marve a lot. But as his pass drifted into the hands of the Buckeye safety, I couldn't help but think of a pal of mine's words that said, "Nothing good happens when Marve's in the game". It looked like that might be true yesterday.
But as the Fightin' Fickells decided to run out the regulation clock, we knew that Purdue would at least have a shot at winning in front of the small, but passionate home crowd.
aOSU got the ball first and chose to have the wind at their backs and the Purdue students in their ears. The Boiler defense got tough yet again and forced the 'Nuts into a fieldgoal. So Purdue would take over.
And here's where it gets weird- Robert Marve would get the call, again. I think many Danny Hope detractors were pissed at this point (I could hear a few of them). Purdue struggled against the statistically-stingy Buckeye defense for a few plays. And on third and short, needed to grind out a few yards. And in his first success of the abbreviated drive, Robert Marve finished a run like a halfback a while grinding out a first down...and Purdue again had a pulse.
Again, Purdue was shut down up front and faced a third and long, this time from around OSU's 13. Marve rolled right and found a streaking Gary Bush coming from the left side of the field and put the ball in the right place. Bush controlled the ball and went out of bounds on the one...but the officials wanted to review it.
As Purdue fans, we thought the worst- Bush had bobbled it and there would be no completion...but as they showed the replay on the board, we saw Bush not only control the ball, but extend it toward the pylon and perhaps break the goal line? Hell, we didn't know, the RA video people didn't give us too much to look at...but we all raised both hands to inform the officials that the game should be over. It wasn't...and my favorite football team would have the ball inside the 1 with 4 cracks at earning an improbable victory.
Marve broke huddle in the gun, with Bolden to his side. After some hand signal theatrics, Bolden split wide, the bunch goal line formation flexed out to a spread and Marve got under center.
I began yelling, "Run this damned thing in, Robert...Put 'em away!!" I could see what was coming...but it seemed the Buckeyes didn't know...and they didn't. Gary Nord's not-so-sneaky attack playcall was about to seal the victory.
Marve kept the snap, pushed to the left and broke the imaginary plain with the Nike pigskin...and something very good had happened with Marve under center- The good guys had beaten the unlikable Buckeyes in overtime...and if for just one afternoon, Robert Marve's transfer to Purdue had paid off.
The place erupted, my usually- not-too-emotional brother ran up and down the aisle high fiving...as was everybody...except one guy who had disappeared. The one unpleasant person in our section- a foul-mouthed Buckeye had evaporated. His game-long antagonism had earned Purdue fans the right to put him in his place...but he wasn't there (predictably)...so we enjoyed the victory ourselves.
Up Next
J will be attending a BS summit in God's country next Saturday. So we'll have the chance to meet a couple of you guys (as promised). And once again, we'll be sitting in the higher-brow section of RA thanks to our friend Ed. So you'll get an eye-witness account of Purdue either getting into a bowl game for the first time in four years or forcing a one-game self-imposed playoff v. the lowly Hoosiers in Bloomington.
Nice job Boilers......and congrats to the beleaguered Robert Marve and Danny Hope...But don't savor this victory too long- you guys now have a couple of important football games in front of you...The type of games that could change the trajectory of your Purdue careers.
This morning, my throat hurts and my voice is still gone as a physical reminder of yesterday's OT victory. Ohio State fans called the '09 game "Purdue Harbor" as the Buckeyes were physically superior, highly-ranked and fully expecting an easy win in Ross Ade...but there's the rub, right? Purdue has taken Bucknut teams to the brink before- easy wins are the exception, not the norm in this series over the past few decades...and I have no idea why. Both Joe Tiller and Danny Hope had and have no fear of the scarlet and gray. (Kinda wish we could say the same for some other color combos.)
My older brother and I got to go to the game...and BS's good pal Ed down in Texas provided the club level seats.
I had never sat in that section...I had toured the facility, but and marveled how this didn't look like Purdue football years ago, but yesterday I got to watch from it. It's a bit cloistered, but not as much as the super-high-end Buchannan Club. You've heard me complain about Purdue fans not being enthusiastic enough...and I'll still do that because as a group, we're not vociferous-enough on gameday, in my opinion. But the people around me in Section C-2 were pretty great...with one exception.
There was a young kid down to my right who kind of was the section leader- probably 12 years old, this kid was more situationally-aware than any Purdue coach on the sideline or QB on the roster...and along with the young guy, there were old wealthy alums and families around our seats. And the best part- not one of them told me to sit down all day (that's all but guaranteed to happen usually, sadly).
![]() |
A Jerk Guest on the Purdue Tailgate Show |
Let's be honest for a moment though- this year's Purdue team is enigmatic. As aOSU comes off of three straight victories (two v. ranked opponents) and Buckeye fans were predicting a run at the B1G championship, Purdue was coming off of two of the ugliest losses in recent memory. Purdue had no offensive rhythm the past two weeks...couldn't run the ball...couldn't stop the run...and looked like a gradeschool team in really nice uniforms at times versus a bunch of grown-arsed men.
![]() |
Sexy Beast KK Short played large v. Bucknuts |
But as it's been in many games this season, the second quarter was different...at least it felt that way. aOSU now had the stiff wind at their backs and Purdue was heading directly into it...and the Bucks could at least move the ball. They put points on the board as the TerBush-led offense struggled to get into rhythm. Then late in the quarter, Marve came in and led Purdue on a drive that was mostly on the ground, but earned our Boilers 7...and the score was 17-7 at the half.
While the score didn't look like it, it kind of felt like aOSU had figured some things out...and the third quarter showed that. Even with Herron unavailable after being dinged up by the stingy (at times) Purdue defense, the Buckeyes began to move the ball...and everyone was getting involved in it. Miller looked tough creating time as Purdue would collapse his pocket, their wildcat offense was extremely-effective and they chewed up yards in the way I expected the Bucks to do coming into the contest. In fact the only thing that wasn't working was vertical routes, but that didn't stop the coaches on the evil sideline from calling the plays nor did it deter Miller from overthrowing his receivers by 7-10 yards with regularity. Watching Miller in person showed me a few things though. If he had a better system to play within, I think he'd be a pretty damned good QB. He's no Pryor in the fact that he makes good fakes, actually reads the defenses, has a better throwing motion, keeps his eyes downfield and doesn't seem at all lazy. This makes him a potentially-great quarterback, in my opinion (eventually).
So while the Buckeyes weren't lighting up the scoreboard, they were definitely winning the field position battle...and at the end of three, they had drawn the game to just a three-point margin. I think the whole stadium felt rightfully-antsy as the fourth quarter started and aOSU climbed back into the game. And even with the wind at their back, Purdue couldn't get back into the rhythm we had seen in the first quarter. Other than Ralph Bolden's shiftily chewing up the Buckeye defense, Crank being efficient when given limited opportunities and Siller playing a very solid game, there wasn't a whole bunch of production out of the good guys.
So after a decent drive stalled in aOSU territory, Wiggs put the final Purdue points on the board in regulation in the fourth quarter and the good guys were up by six points.
Herron came back in the game and made a difference earning tough yards. aOSU's wildcat was effective again and each time Purdue's defense needed a stop on 3rd and long, Purdue's defense couldn't come up with it. Ohio State got down deep into Purdue territory as the clock ticked down to inside 2:00 and aOSU decided to try to put the game in Miller's hands. Purdue's front collapsed the pocket and Miller narrowly escaped a costly sack as he rolled right and threw off of his back foot across his body. The pass fluttered over Johnson and into the hands of a Buckeye receiver tying the game and seemingly-sealing Purdue's fate. All it would take was a simple point after to put the nail in Purdue's coffin.
I actually had given up, as a fan. I saw this movie a few years ago in the Holy Buckeye game. Sure, that Tressel-coached team had firepower for days, and the Tiller-coached squad had a ton of pros on defense, but this one felt pretty heartbreaking too...even though the game wasn't yet over.
It's easy to avoid the view on the field when you're 5'4" and everyone's standing around you. So I didn't watch, but I heard the kick get blocked and felt my brother grab and yank me to the side as Purdue still had a pulse. One of Purdue's never-say-die DTs, this time it was Gaston, squirted through the OSU line to get his big paw on the kick...and with the unexpected block, the good guys were alive!
After a decent Mostert return (he didn't get many chances to get his hands on the ball due to deep, wind-aided kick offs...and bad offense) Purdue started the drive with Marve at the controls. And they drove into OSU territory. It looked like Purdue's mega-legged kicker would get a chance to set a record and win a game in the process. Purdue had to avoid the sack or turnover though. But Marve made yet another awful throw when he merely needed to manage the game.
At BS, we like Marve a lot. But as his pass drifted into the hands of the Buckeye safety, I couldn't help but think of a pal of mine's words that said, "Nothing good happens when Marve's in the game". It looked like that might be true yesterday.
But as the Fightin' Fickells decided to run out the regulation clock, we knew that Purdue would at least have a shot at winning in front of the small, but passionate home crowd.
aOSU got the ball first and chose to have the wind at their backs and the Purdue students in their ears. The Boiler defense got tough yet again and forced the 'Nuts into a fieldgoal. So Purdue would take over.
And here's where it gets weird- Robert Marve would get the call, again. I think many Danny Hope detractors were pissed at this point (I could hear a few of them). Purdue struggled against the statistically-stingy Buckeye defense for a few plays. And on third and short, needed to grind out a few yards. And in his first success of the abbreviated drive, Robert Marve finished a run like a halfback a while grinding out a first down...and Purdue again had a pulse.
Again, Purdue was shut down up front and faced a third and long, this time from around OSU's 13. Marve rolled right and found a streaking Gary Bush coming from the left side of the field and put the ball in the right place. Bush controlled the ball and went out of bounds on the one...but the officials wanted to review it.
As Purdue fans, we thought the worst- Bush had bobbled it and there would be no completion...but as they showed the replay on the board, we saw Bush not only control the ball, but extend it toward the pylon and perhaps break the goal line? Hell, we didn't know, the RA video people didn't give us too much to look at...but we all raised both hands to inform the officials that the game should be over. It wasn't...and my favorite football team would have the ball inside the 1 with 4 cracks at earning an improbable victory.
Marve broke huddle in the gun, with Bolden to his side. After some hand signal theatrics, Bolden split wide, the bunch goal line formation flexed out to a spread and Marve got under center.
![]() |
Number one!! (At least it felt like it...for a few minutes) |
Marve kept the snap, pushed to the left and broke the imaginary plain with the Nike pigskin...and something very good had happened with Marve under center- The good guys had beaten the unlikable Buckeyes in overtime...and if for just one afternoon, Robert Marve's transfer to Purdue had paid off.
The place erupted, my usually- not-too-emotional brother ran up and down the aisle high fiving...as was everybody...except one guy who had disappeared. The one unpleasant person in our section- a foul-mouthed Buckeye had evaporated. His game-long antagonism had earned Purdue fans the right to put him in his place...but he wasn't there (predictably)...so we enjoyed the victory ourselves.
![]() |
Walk of Shame (I'm sure the Buckeye near me wasn't the only one in the stadium who was running his mouth during the contest) |
J will be attending a BS summit in God's country next Saturday. So we'll have the chance to meet a couple of you guys (as promised). And once again, we'll be sitting in the higher-brow section of RA thanks to our friend Ed. So you'll get an eye-witness account of Purdue either getting into a bowl game for the first time in four years or forcing a one-game self-imposed playoff v. the lowly Hoosiers in Bloomington.
![]() |
Marve-lous Ending |
But, I can assure you one thing- I'll be wearing my Marve-lous T-shirt and lobbying for the Tampa Kid to be starting the game at QB. If nothing else, he's earned the chance to potentially end his career as the starter on Senior Day. (While we hope Marve will get the one-year of additional eligibility, we're not taking anything for granted)
This will go on the shelf with
2011 purdue football,
Bruce Gaston Jr.,
Danny Hope,
Gary Bush,
Joe Holland,
Kawann Short,
Purdue beats Ohio State,
Ralph Bolden,
Robert Marve
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