Three things we learned in Ohio State’s loss to Purdue in Big Ten basketball opener

Ohio State went on the road for its first Big Ten game of the season and fell to Purdue 67-60. Here are three things we learned in defeat.

It was always going to be an uphill climb for Ohio State to go on the road and beat a pretty good Purdue team without your team’s best scorer and rebounder, and that’s exactly what played out. The Boilermakers took control of the game late in the first half and stayed in front until the end, winning 67-60 Wednesday night in West Lafayette.

It was a prototypical Big Ten slugfest, with a low-scoring, defensive affair that Purdue was able to grind out. We saw some good things from Ohio State, but there were also plenty of teaching moments that head coach Chris Holtmann will have for the team in tape review.

With the loss, the Buckeyes drop to 5-1 and now must get back up off the mat and play through a rough and tumble Big Ten season that will test them every night.

Here are three things we observed from the loss.

NEXT … This team needs more scoring

College golf facilities: Purdue Boilermakers

With extensive indoor and outdoor practice areas, check out the Purdue Boilermakers’ practice facility for the men’s and women’s golf teams.

The Tom Spurgeon Training Center was opened in 2005 and is the home of both the men’s and women’s golf teams at Purdue.

Indoor Features: The Spurgeon Center features five public hitting bays, as well as three Purdue-only bays. The indoor putting room has 18 hole locations. The 11,400 square-foot training center also has team locker rooms and coaches offices, a team lounge and a classroom with a 30-person capacity.

Outdoor Features: The Purdue golf teams have tee locations on the opposite side of the range. There’s also a short game area, including a large putting green and 120-yard area to hit full and half shots into a separate putting green, flanked by bunkers.

The outdoor range allows for up to 60 people to hit on grass at one time.  With the artificial mats, there are spots for up to 40 people. The public driving range golf shop is on the West end of the building and also includes a club repair shop and a ball washing/storage room.

Here is when we should know if the Purdue game is happening on Saturday

An update on the timeline surrounding the Purdue game

After a weekend where Wisconsin football cancelled their road contest against Nebraska due to rising COVID-19 numbers, Badger fans now turn towards this coming weekend with UW scheduled to face Purdue.

Although there is no definitive answer surrounding Wisconsin’s game this Saturday, Purdue head coach Jeff Brohm is expecting to have answers tomorrow.

In Brohm’s Monday morning press conference, he noted that the team is preparing as normal, and is waiting for an answer from the Badgers tomorrow.

This lines up with what Wisconsin has said about their timeline, as on Saturday the school told the media that we can expect an update this coming Tuesday.

ESPN Bowl Projections: Texas Longhorns to meet former Big 12 foe?

In their latest bowl projections ESPN puts the Texas Longhorns and Nebraska Cornhuskers in the Cactus Bowl.

Each and every week the duo at ESPN of Mark Schlabach and Kyle Bonagura release their updated bowl projections. This week’s edition has no Big 12 team making the cut for the College Football Playoffs. The usual suspects are at the top with Clemson, Alabama and Ohio State. The other team in the four-team playoff seems to fluctuate on a week to week basis.

College Football Playoffs projection

Both Bonagura and Schlabach agree on the National Championship game featuring Alabama and Clemson. Currently they are the No. 1 and No. 2 teams in the country. Here is how they believe the playoff breaks down.

CFP Projections Sugar Bowl Rose Bowl Title Game
Bonagura Clemson vs Georgia Alabama vs Ohio State Clemson vs Alabama
Schlabach Clemson vs Oregon Alabama vs Ohio State Clemson vs Alabama

Texas Longhorns Bowl Projections

For the Longhorns, both have them in the Cactus Bowl in Phoenix, Arizona. They do not agree on who the Longhorns will match up with.

Bonagura Texas Longhorns Purdue Boilermakers
Schlabach Texas Longhorns Nebraska Cornhuskers

A matchup against Nebraska would mean these two teams would meet on the field for the first time since 2010. Texas owns the all-time series 10-4 and have won the last six games. These two teams met in the first ever Big 12 Championship game in 1996, the Longhorns upset the Cornhuskers. This would bring up plenty of memories given these two teams were in the same conference for 16 years before Nebraska left for the Big Ten Conference.

A matchup with Purdue would mean these two would meet for the third time in their history. The Longhorns have won both matchups in this series. However, they haven’t met on the field in 69 years.

Big 12 Bowl Game Projections

Bowl Game Bonagura Schlabach
Cotton Bowl Oklahoma State vs BYU Oklahoma State vs BYU
Alamo Bowl Iowa State vs USC Iowa State vs Washington
Cheez-It Bowl Kansas State vs NC State Kansas State vs Miami (Fl)
Texas Bowl Oklahoma vs Ole Miss Oklahoma vs Auburn
Liberty Bowl West Virginia vs Missouri West Virginia vs South Carolina
Armed Forces Bowl Baylor vs UCF Baylor vs SMU

 

Latest ESPN bowl projections has Texas facing opponent for first time in 69 years

After the 2-2 start, ESPN has projected Texas in the Cactus Bowl. UT has never participated in the Arizona based postseason matchup.

Before the 2020 season began, Texas not only had aspirations of winning its first Big 12 championship since 2009 but making it to the College Football Playoff. An experienced quarterback and a head coach entering his fourth season running the program gave the Longhorns hope.

That has not gone to plan four games into the year as Texas has dropped its two last games against TCU and Oklahoma. The program has never been at a lower place under Tom Herman, having to climb up a steep hill just to stay alive in the Big 12.

After the catastrophic 2-2 start, ESPN has placed the Longhorns in the Cactus Bowl in their latest bowl projections. Previously named the Insight Bowl, Buffalo Wild Wings Bowl, and the Cheez-It Bowl, Texas has never participated in the Arizona based postseason matchup.

Facing Texas would be the Purdue Boilermakers out of the Big Ten conference. The two schools have faced off twice in their histories, dating back to 1950 and 1951. The Longhorns won the matchup in Austin 34-26 and then blanked the Boilermakers 14-0 in West Lafayette.

Purdue has yet to kick off their 2020 season. The Big Ten conference will begin to play on Oct. 24 after initially postponing its fall season. The Boilermakers will face Iowa at home at 3:30 pm CDT.

As for the rest of the Big 12, ESPN does not project a conference representative in the College Football Playoff. It has been since 2016 since the Big 12 (Oklahoma) has not made the playoff.

The Sooners’ in-state rival Oklahoma State is projected to represent the conference in the New Year’s Six. The Cowboys are slated to play in the Goodyear Cotton Bowl Classic against either BYU or USC.

Mike Gundy’s squad is the conference’s real last hope at the College Football Playoff. Currently sitting at 3-0, Oklahoma State still must play the Big 12’s premier opponents.

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Players we’ll miss most from the Big 10 and PAC-12: Purdue WR Rondale Moore

Ranking the 10 football players we will miss watching the most from the Big 10 and PAC-12: No. 10 Purdue WR Rondale Moore.

The Big Ten announced its decision Tuesday to postpone fall sports according to their official website.  Just minutes after, the PAC-12 made the decision to postpone their season as well.

With two of the Power Five conferences not playing, the entire college football season is now up in the air.  The SEC, ACC and Big 12 still have plans to have their conference only seasons, but there are a number of players, coaches and teams that college football fans will miss watching dearly.

The No. 10 player we will miss watching most this year from the Big Ten and PAC-12 is Purdue redshirt sophomore wide receiver Rondale Moore.  Moore had a breakout 2018 freshman season for the Boilermakers, leading the Big Ten in receptions (114), yards (1,258) and tied for the leader in touchdowns (12).

Moore went for 170 yards and 2 touchdowns in Purdue’s massive upset victory over a talented 2018 Ohio State team, handing the Buckeyes their only loss of the regular season.  He was electric to say the least.

Moore only saw action in four games in 2019 as he was injured for most of the season.  He was in the talks of the nation’s best receivers after his freshman year and was finally healthy coming into 2020.  Moore will be entering the 2021 NFL Draft.

Check out Moore’s 2018 highlight reel here.

Purdue WR Rondale Moore opts out of 2020 college football season

One of college football’s most explosive playmakers is opting out of the 2020 season amid the COVID-19 pandemic

Yet another top prospect is choosing not to play college football this season amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

Purdue wide receiver Rondale Moore is opting out of the 2020 season, he announced via social media Thursday:

One of the most explosive playmakers in all of college football, Moore was a constant headache for opposing offenses, threatening to score on every touch. Despite his lack of ideal height, Moore is a tough runner with the ball in his hands, and his versatility made him one of the most dangerous players in the country.

Now, he joins top prospects like Penn State linebacker Micah Parsons, Miami pass rusher Gregory Rousseau and more who are choosing top preserve themselves for the next level rather than playing another season at the college level amid health and safety concerns.

Moore is widely considered a first-round prospect in the 2021 NFL Draft class.

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A top Wisconsin 2021 target pushes back his commitment date

The Badgers will have to wait on the commitment of a top OLB in 2021

The Badgers are looking to round out their impressive class of 2021, and a top OLB target is still high on their target list.

Yanni Karlaftis, a four-star (according to 247Sports) OLB out of West Lafayette, Indiana has decided to push back his commitment date per his Twitter account.

The 247Sports “crystal ball” speculation sees the battle for Karlaftis as a two team race between Purdue and Wisconsin. The location of Purdue, being right in the four-star ‘backers home turf, certainly gives the Boilermakers an advantage, although the Badgers have built a special class in 2021 that could get even better. Karlaftis also has his brother George Karlaftis, who is a rising sophomore DE at Purdue, trying to sway him in the direction of the Boilermakers. His decision was supposed to come on August 9, but has now been pushed back to an unannounced date.

Cal and Oregon are also still in the mix for the four-star prospect.

Check out Karlaftis’ junior year highlights via Hudl:

https://www.hudl.com/video/3/6097629/5e2b572f9675ea0b0c7922e9

 

Veteran Purdue women’s golf coach Devon Brouse records first hole-in-one

Brouse recorded his first hole-in-one on Thursday at Purdue, but his thoughts quickly shifted to his long-time friend, Pete Dye

WEST LAFAYETTE, Indiana – More than six hours after Devon Brouse finally achieved one of golf’s elusive feats, the veteran coach of the Purdue women’s program took a moment to reflect.

Brouse recorded his first hole-in-one on Thursday at Purdue’s Ackerman-Allen course, but his thoughts quickly shifted to his long-time friend, Pete Dye, who passed away earlier this year.

Dye designed the school’s two courses and for Brouse to reach this milestone on one of his Purdue layouts made the achievement special.

“Absolutely,” Brouse said. “That course over there is near and dear because of the sweat equity we put into it and my friend Pete Dye, who we all admire. To do it right there is cool.”

Brouse’s hole-in-one set off a social media and text frenzy among his children, friends, former assistants and golf buddies that didn’t let up throughout the day.

Purdue volleyball coach Dave Shondell, who was playing in the group with Brouse, tweeted a picture of the accomplishment. And then Brouse just let the world come to him on his phone, virtually non-stop.

Brouse made his hole-in-one on the par 3, 17th hole. Drizzle was starting to fall, and the wind was slightly in his face. He used a seven-wood from 167 yards.

“It’s a little bit out of my range for my five-iron into the wind,” said Brouse, who guided the program to the 2010 NCAA Championship and a runner-up finish in 2011. “I hit it straight at the hole. I couldn’t see but nobody saw it go in.

“We’re riding up there and there’s a ball on the front of the green. I know that’s not mine because I knew mine was close. There’s nothing on the back. The other guys had missed the green.

“I asked Shondell: ‘Is there a ball in the hole?’ He walks over … ‘drinks are on Devon.’ ”

Although golf has been a huge part of Brouse’s life, coaching takes up plenty of time and playing isn’t a priority. Since the coronavirus pandemic shut down the college sports world in the spring, Brouse has spent more time on the course playing.

WALK-ON: Ashley Kozlowski sees opportunity with Purdue program

“I’ve played more golf since the lockdown in the last 3 ½ months than I’ve played the last 30 years,” Brouse said. “Being tied up with the teams in the fall and the spring and recruiting in the summer, I haven’t played a lot of golf.

“Your game doesn’t stand neglect. You have to service it and practice it.”

Brouse said Thursday was his best personal round since he recorded a 71 in the rain at Turnberry in Scotland in the mid-1980s when he was the head coach at North Carolina.

He’s also been determined to shoot his age, which is 71. He fired a 68 on Thursday. Brouse’s score wasn’t the best round of the group. Purdue men’s golf coach Rob Bradley shot a 66 but Brouse came out on top in the end.

“I was in a zone,” Brouse said. “I could’ve birdied the first seven holes.”

Mike Carmin covers Purdue sports for the Journal & Courier. Email mcarmin@gannett.come and follow on Twitter @carmin_jc

WATCH: Craig Krenzel, Michael Jenkins, Jim Tressel reminisce about “Holy Buckeye” play

BTN got the trio of Ohio State’s Jim Tressel, Michael Jenkins, and Craig Krenzel together to relieve the “Holy Buckeye” play from 2002.

Some of you weren’t around when this all happened, but there’s no doubt you’ve seen or hear about the famous “Holy Buckeye” play against Purdue in 2002.

Ohio State had gone on an improbable run through the first ten games of the season and were undefeated and looking to finish off things off and potentially make its way to the BCS National Championship Game. The Buckeyes were ranked No. 3 and facing the challenge of going to West Lafayette to play a hard-luck Purdue team that was better than its record indicated. Add that to playing on the road against a team and fans looking to spoil the season for Ohio State, and it turned into a dogfight.

The Boilermakers made it apparent early on that they came to play. The defense of Purdue throttled OSU for most of the game, allowing just a field goal barely as time expired in the first half.

Long story short, Purdue took the lead in the 4th quarter on a field goal to go up 6-3, and that set the stage for one of the most memorable moments in Ohio State football history.

Facing a 4th and 1 at Purdue’s 37-yard line, Krenzel dropped back and inexplicably threw a go-route deep down the left side of the field to Michael Jenkins who had beaten the Boilermaker defensive back by a step. He hauled in the touchdown pass and announcer Brent Musburger — who is never one short of hyperbole — exclaimed “Holy Buckeye.”

Ohio State then had to fend off a desperate attempt by Purdue to drive down the field, but that would end when two-way star Chris Gamble intercepted a deep ball to seal the deal.

If you ever wanted a further inside look at some of the moments associated with that game and play, BTN did a segment on the game and solicited the help of quarterback Craig Krenzel, receiver Michael Jenkins, and head coach Jim Tressel.

There are some interesting tidbits that I didn’t know at the time, and believe it’s worth your time to watch as well. Click on the below thanks to the BTN YouTube channel.

I can remember watching this game. I couldn’t watch the entire thing because I worked in the produce department of a local Columbus retailer. Thankfully, my boss knew what a big fan I was and summoned me back to the break room when this game was getting further along into the 4th quarter. I got to see “Holy Buckeye” and the ending of the game. To say the break room erupted would be a gross understatement. We all went back to work like a mass exodus as soon as Gamble intercepted the pass.

I apologize if you tried to buy bananas that day and they weren’t filled. There are more important things in life.

At the time, we all knew it was a big play, and it was refreshing to see this Ohio State team win so many close games after living through some pretty miserable endings in years past. However, I’d be lying if I said I knew it would be one of the most revered plays in Ohio State lore.

What a memory.

 

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