It's back to business for the Boilermakers, albeit with a lot more attention on Jeff Brohm's squad headed to a showdown with an angry Michigan State team on their turf this weekend.
Series History- Michigan State leads 35-28-3
- In East Lansing: Michigan State leads 21-12
- First Meeting: Nov. 9, 1918 – Purdue won 14-6 on the road
- Last Meeting: Oct. 3, 2015 – Michigan State won 24-21 at home
Noteworthy: Dramatic wins at Michigan State in 2002 and 2006 propelled Purdue to bowl games. On Nov. 16, 2002, the Boilermakers trailed 42-37 with just over three minutes to play. Quarterback Brandon Kirsch was forced to the sideline after having the wind knocked out of him, and the Boilermakers were facing fourth-and-8 from the Michigan State 40-yard line. Kyle Orton, who had been standing on the sideline for nearly three and a half hours with the temperature barely above 30 degrees, entered the game, audibled the play at the line of scrimmage and gracefully threw a perfect pass to John Standeford, who caught it inside the 5-yard line and fell into the end zone. Following a two-point conversion and ensuing defensive stand, the Boilermakers emerged with a 45-42 victory. Then, on Nov. 4, 2006, fifth-year kicker Casey Welch was called on to attempt his first career field goal and knocked through an 18-yarder with 4:49 remaining to provide the deciding margin in a 17-15 victory.
This Date in History: October 27- Record: 8-10
- First Game: 1894 – Lost at Minnesota 24-0
- Last Game: 2012 – Lost at Minnesota 44-28
Noteworthy: On this date in 1984 and 1928, the Boilermakers recorded the third- and fourth-largest victory margins in Big Ten road games in school history. Purdue won 49-7 at Northwestern in 1984 and 40-0 at Chicago in 1928. The only two greater victory margins in conference road games are 49 points at Indiana on Nov. 22, 1997, and 45 points at Illinois on Oct. 25, 1997.
Let's Go Streaking!After opening the 2018 season with three straight losses, the Boilermakers are back on track with four consecutive wins, including a victory over No. 23 Boston College, back-to-back Big Ten road wins at Nebraska and Illinois and a thrilling upset of second-ranked Ohio State. The current streak marks the longest run of success for the Boilermakers since opening the 2007 slate with five consecutive victories. Purdue's back-to-back conference road wins this season are the first for the Boilermakers since winning at Illinois and Iowa in 2012. With a road trip to Michigan State this Saturday, Purdue is vying for three consecutive B1G road victories for the first time since winning at Northwestern, Michigan State and Illinois in 2006.
The Numbers Don't LieDuring the four-game winning streak, the Boilermakers are posting some pretty impressive numbers in all three facets of the game. Purdue is averaging 41.8 points, 24.3 first downs, 163.0 yards rushing, 346.5 yards passing and 509.5 yards of total offense per game during the streak. Purdue has outscored the opposition 167-68 in the last four. Defensively, Purdue is limiting its opponents to 17.0 points per game, with red-zone defense the primary reason. The Boilers' last four games has seen the opposition score on merely 55 percent of its trips inside the 25 (6 of 11), with only 36 percent of those points coming in the form of a touchdown (4 of 11). On special teams, kickers Spencer Evans (4 for 4) and J.D. Dellinger (1 for 2) are a combined 5 of 6 on field goal attempts, while punter Joe Schopper has placed nine of 20 punts inside the opposition's 20-yard line and is averaging 42.7 yards per kick.
Margin of VictoryPurdue's 39-point margin of victory at Illinois last Saturday was the largest since a 48-6 win over Eastern Kentucky on Sept. 1, 2012; largest against an FBS opponent since a 62-10 win over Indiana on Nov. 22, 2008; and largest in a Big Ten road game since a 56-7 win at Indiana on Nov. 22, 1997. The Boilermakers boast seven Big Ten road wins by 30-plus points in the last 50 seasons and 16 in school history.
30-Plus Point Big Ten Road Wins Last 50 Seasons| 49 | Purdue 56, Indiana 7 | Nov. 22, 1997 |
| 45 | Purdue 48, Illinois 3 | Oct.25, 1997 |
| 42 | Purdue 49, Northwestern 7 | Oct. 27, 1984 |
| 39 | Purdue 46, Illinois 7 | Oct. 13, 2018 |
| 37 | Purdue 51, Indiana 14 | Nov. 24, 1995 |
| 35 | Purdue 35, Northwestern 0 | Oct. 17, 1981 |
| 35 | Purdue 56, Northwestern 21 | Nov. 7, 1998 |
David Blough's three straight games with 300 or more yards passing has placed him among the most celebrated quarterbacks in school history. Merely four other signal callers in the Cradle of Quarterbacks have achieved the feat in so many straight games. Jim Everett and Drew Brees did it twice in their Purdue careers, while Kyle Orton and Curtis Painter accomplished it once apiece. Blough, Everett and Brees are the only three to pull it off against three straight Big Ten opponents. No player in school history has thrown for over 300 yards in four straight games.
Consecutive Games with 300 Yards Passing- 1985 - Jim Everett (398 at Pitt, 340 vs. Ball State, 368 vs. Notre Dame - 796 total)
- 1985 - Jim Everett (464 vs. Illinois, 497 at Ohio State, 315 vs. Michigan State - 1,276 total)
- 1998 - Drew Brees (522 vs. Minnesota, 494 at Wisconsin, 361 at Penn State - 1,377 total)
- 1999 - Drew Brees (317 vs. Notre Dame, 320 vs. Central Michigan, 405 vs. Northwestern - 1,042 total)
- 2004 - Kyle Orton (329 vs. Ball State, 366 at Illinois, 385 at Notre Dame - 1,080 total)
- 2007 - Curtis Painter (348 vs. Eastern Illinois, 360 vs. Central Michigan, 338 at Minnesota - 1,046 total)
- 2018 - David Blough (328 at Nebraska, 377 at Illinois, 378 vs. Ohio State - 1,083 total)
The Boilermakers have knocked off a pair of ranked opponents this season - No. 23 Boston College and No. 2 Ohio State. This year marks the first time since 2003 that Purdue has defeated two ranked opponents in the same season since 2003 (No. 14 Wisconsin and No. 10 Iowa) ... The Boilers' triumph over the Buckeyes was the first over the second-ranked team in the nation since besting No. 2 Ohio State 28-23 on Oct. 6, 1984, and the fifth time in school history to knock off a school in that slot ... Purdue sent No. 23 Boston College to its first loss of the season and booted it out of the AP Top 25 with a 30-13 win Sept. 22. That victory marked the Boilermakers' first win over a ranked opponent since defeating No. 23 Illinois 21-14 on Oct. 22, 2011.
Defeating No. 2- Oct. 24, 1953 - Purdue 6, No. 2 Michigan State 0
- Sept. 28, 1968 - No. 1 Purdue 37, No. 2 Notre Dame 22
- Sept. 28, 1974 - Purdue 31, No. 2 Notre Dame 20
- Oct. 6, 1984 - Purdue 28, No. 2 Ohio State 23
- Oct. 20, 2018 - Purdue 49, No. 2 Ohio State 20
Since the Big Ten began naming an Offensive, Defensive, Special Teams and Freshman of the Week in 2010, no school had ever swept all four categories. That is, until this week. After knocking off No. 2 Ohio State, David Blough (O), Markus Bailey (D), Joe Schopper (ST) and Rondale Moore (F) made history by being the first quartet from same school to be recognized by the conference office for the weekly honor. Purdue's eight player of the week selections this season is tied for the most in a year (also 2000 and 2001)
2018 B1G Weekly Honors- Sept. 3 – Rondale Moore (Freshman)
- Sept. 17 – David Blough (Offense)
- Sept. 24 – Rondale Moore (Freshman)
- Oct. 1 – Joe Schopper (Special Teams)
- Oct. 22 - David Blough (Offense), Markus Bailey (Defense), Joe Schopper (Special Teams), Rondale Moore (Freshman)
With six straight starts this season, David Blough is the sixth quarterback at Purdue (since 1960) with 31 or more career starts. Purdue Quarterback Career Starts – Since 1960
Purdue Quarterback Career Starts (Since 1960)
- 45 - Mark Herrmann, 1977-80
- 41 - Curtis Painter, 2005-08
- 37 - Drew Brees, 1998-2000
- 35 - Kyle Orton, 2001-04
- 32 - Scott Campbell, 1980-83
- 31 - David Blough, 2015-Present
Purdue's defense limited Ohio State to 76 yards rushing last Saturday. The run-stoppage marked the fourth time this season that Purdue's D has held an opponent to double digits on the ground, and the ninth time in 20 games to do so under second-year head coach Jeff Brohm's staff.
Brothers in ArmsWhen Jacob Thieneman and Brennan Thieneman took the field together against No. 23 Boston College on Sept. 22, it marked the first time in 16 years that a pair of Boilermaker brothers shared the field at the same time. The last siblings to play together at Purdue were offensive lineman Rob and Matt Turner, who started five games together in 2002.
Spinning ItQuarterback David Blough has been in a zone tossing the ball over Purdue's last five games. Against Missouri, No. 23 Boston College, Nebraska, Illinois and No. 2 Ohio State, Blough went 135 of 204 (66 percent) for 1,951 yards and 13 touchdowns against merely two interceptions. He is averaging 390.2 yards per game passing during the five-game run and went 124 consecutive pass attempts between his two interceptions.
No Ordinary FreshmanTrue Freshman Rondale Moore has been a revelation in his initial season at Purdue. The first-year Boilermaker already has five 100-yard receiving games. He needs merely two more games with 100 or more yards receiving to tie Steve Griffin (1984) and John Standeford (2002) for the most in a season at Purdue.
Most Games with 100-plus Yards Receiving (Season)- 7 - Steve Griffin (1984), John Standeford (2002)
- 6 - Keith Smith (2009)
- 5 - Rondale Moore (tied with six others)
Brycen Hopkins' 103 receiving yards against Nebraska on Sept. 29 marked his second 100-yard receiving game of the season (also 136 vs. Missouri). He is the first Purdue tight end to reach triple-digit yards through the air more than once in a season since Dustin Keller did so three times in 2007.
Staying on ScheduleThe Boilermakers have been very successful when playing in front of the chains this season. Purdue is converting 78 percent of its third downs (25 of 32) when facing three or less yards (including a nearly perfect 15 for 16 on third-and-one). Overall, the Boilers are converting on third down 45 percent of the time, a figure that ranks fourth in the Big Ten and 25th nationally.
Rewriting the Record BookThrough the first five games of the season, Jeff Brohm's offense has rewritten decades-old records both at Purdue and in the Big Ten. The Boilermakers have established new high-water marks four different times this season alone. See the notes below for more details on the record-setting feats.
| Record | New Record | Old Record |
|---|---|---|
| All-Purpose Yards | 313, Rondale Moore vs. Northwestern | 312, Otis Armstrong vs. IU, 11/25/72 |
| Passing Yards | 572, David Blough vs. Missouri | 546, Curtis Painter vs. CMU, 12/26/07 |
| Total Offense | 590, David Blough vs. Missouri | 540, Curtis Painter vs. CMU, 12/26/07 |
| Completion Pct. (50-59 att.) |
.709, David Blough vs. Missouri | .702, Drew Brees vs. MSU, 10/16/99 |
Standing 5-foot-7 and 5-foot-9, respectively, D.J. Knox and Rondale Moore have been two of the Boilermakers' most productive players this season. Combined, the compact duo have accounted for 62 of Purdue's 146 non-penalty first downs (42 percent), 16 of 30 touchdowns (53 percent), 831 of 1,237 rushing yards (67 percent) and 799 of 2,363 receiving yards (34 percent).
Bloughing ThroughAgainst Missouri, senior quarterback David Blough set the Purdue game passing yards record (572) and the Big Ten game total offense mark (590). The previous standards were 546 passing yards by Curtis Painter against Central Michigan in the Motor City Bowl on Dec. 26, 2007, and 585 yards of total offense by Dave Wilson of Illinois against Ohio State on Nov. 8, 1980. Blough's passing yards rank second in Big Ten history, trailing only Wilson's 621 in that game (he had -36 yards rushing).
Finding PaydirtSenior running back Markell Jones' one-yard touchdown run at Illinois was the 19th total score of his career (17 rushing, two receiving). He is tied with Akeem Hunt for 18th in school history.
| 16. | Taylor Stubblefield (2001-04) | 21 |
| 17. | DeAngelo Yancey (2013-16) | 20 |
| 18. | Akeem Hunt (2011-14) | 19 |
| Markell Jones (2015-P) | 18 |
In Purdue's 49-20 win over No. 2 Ohio State, there were apparently only two options for the Boilermakers - score a touchdown or punt. On 12 offensive possessions, Purdue scored six touchdowns and punted on six others. Linebacker Markus Bailey added the defense to the mix with an interception return for a touchdown late in the fourth quarter.
Passing a LegendWith 12 carries for 109 yards against Eastern Michigan on Sept. 8, senior running back Markell Jones moved past two-time consensus All-American and 1968 Heisman Trophy runner up Leroy Keyes on Purdue's career rushing yardage list. Jones has rushed for 2,353 yards in his four-year Boilermaker career and currently sits 10th all-time.
| Career Rushing Yards | ||
|---|---|---|
| 8. | Corey Rogers (1991-95) | 2,436 |
| 9. | Jerod Void (2002-05) | 2,429 |
| 10. | Markell Jones (2015-P) | 2,365 |
| Career Rushing Attempts | ||
|---|---|---|
| 8. | Perry Williams (1966-68) | 514 |
| 9. | Corey Rogers (1991-95) | 489 |
| Markell Jones (2015-P) | 489 |
| Career Rushing Touchdowns | ||
|---|---|---|
| 9. | Stan Brown (1968-70) | 19 |
| 10. | Otis Armstrong (1970-72) | 17 |
| Markell Jones (2015-P) | 17 |
David Blough's school-record performance against Missouri ranked among the top five individual efforts in the history of Jeff Brohm's head coaching career. A look at where it stands:
Passing Yards- 593, Brandon Doughty at Middle Tennessee (Sept. 13, 2014)
- 572, David Blough vs. Missouri (Sept. 15, 2018)
- 569, Brandon Doughty vs. Bowling Green (Aug. 29, 2014)
- 517, Mike White vs. Rice (Sept. 1, 2016)
- 491, Brandon Doughty at Marshall (Nov. 28, 2014)
- 46, Brandon Doughty vs. Bowling Green (Aug. 29, 2014)
- 43, Brandon Doughty at Middle Tennessee (Sept. 13, 2014)
- 39, David Blough vs. Missouri (Sept. 15, 2018)
- 38, Brandon Doughty at Navy (Sept. 27, 2014)
- 37, Brandon Doughty at LSU (Oct. 24, 2015)
- 37, Elijah Sindelar at Northwestern (Oct. 11, 2017)
- 66, Brandon Doughty at Middle Tennessee (Sept. 13, 2014)
- 61, Brandon Doughty at LSU (Oct. 24, 2015)
- 60, Elijah Sindelar at Northwestern (Nov. 11, 2017)
- 56, Brandon Doughty vs. Bowling Green (Aug. 29, 2014)
- 55, David Blough vs. Missouri (Sept. 15, 2018)
When D.J. Knox (152) and Markell Jones (109) both topped the century mark in rushing yards against Eastern Michigan on Sept. 8, it was the first time a pair of Boilermakers went for 100-plus yards in the same game since 2002 (Brandon Jones, 131, and Joey Harris, 102). It was merely the 27th time in school history that the feat has been accomplished and only the fifth time in the last 35 years. Please see page 101 of the Purdue Records Book for the entire list of the previous 26 100-yard rushing duos. It was the fifth time Jones rushed for over 100 yards in a game in his career and the third, and also a career-high, for Knox.
100-Yard Rushing Duos Since 1984- Sept. 17, 1994 vs. Ball State - Mike Alstott (156) and Corey Rogers (124)
- Nov. 4, 1995 vs. Wisconsin- Mike Alstott (204) and Edwin Watson (194)
- Oct. 26, 2002 at Northwestern - Brandon Jones (165) and Joey Harris (132)
- Nov. 23, 2002 vs. Indiana - Brandon Jones (131) and Joey Harris (102)
- Sept. 8, 2018 vs. Eastern Michigan - D.J. Knox (152) and Markell Jones (109)
True freshman Rondale Moore became a household name when he electrified the nation with a record-breaking performance in his collegiate debut against Northwestern on Aug. 30. With a FBS-best 313 all-purpose yards against the Wildcats (79 rushing, 109 receiving, 125 kickoff return), Moore eclipsed Otis Armstrong's single game school record of 312 yards set Nov. 25, 1972. Moore had a huge first half, racking up 302 all-purpose yards in the initial 30 minutes. That alone would have placed him third in the Purdue record book. With the Boilermakers trailing 14-0 in the first 10 minutes of the opening quarter, Moore hauled in a 32-yard touchdown reception from Elijah Sindelar and ripped off a 76-yard scoring run to even the score before the quarter ended.
More on MooreRondale Moore is the first freshman (true or redshirt) in school history to make his Boilermaker debut with a 100-yard receiving game. Moore hauled in a game-high 11 receptions for 109 yards and a touchdown in his first collegiate game against Northwestern … His reception total was the highest by any player in the Big Ten on the opening week of college football and his yardage tally was second to only Ohio State's Terry McLaurin's 121 vs. Oregon State … Moore's 76-yard touchdown rush in the first quarter against Northwestern was the longest run by a Boilermaker since Akeem Hunt went 82 yards to the house at Indiana on Nov. 29, 2014 … Moore's average of 8.1 receptions per game is second in the FBS and first in the Big Ten … Moore ranks second in the FBS and first in the Big Ten with an average of 179.9 all-purpose yards per game ... Moore ranks seventh in the nation and second in the Big Ten with 57 total receptions on the year … His 728 receiving yards for the season are first among all Big Ten players and 10th nationally.
Don't BlinkFreshman Rondale Moore has held the football 91 times in his young seven-game collegiate career and is averaging 13.8 yards per touch. He has 57 receptions for a team-leading 728 yards, 11 carries for 163 yards, 16 kick returns for 318 yards and seven punt returns for 50 yards entering the Michigan State game. Moore has 21 plays of 20 or more yards this season, including a 76-yard touchdown rush and a 70-yard scoring reception.
Big PlaysThe Boilermakers are among the top teams in the Big Ten in ripping off big plays. A look at where Purdue ranks in the conference and nation on plays of 30 or more yards.
| Distance | Big Ten Rank | FBS Rank |
| 30+ (28) | 1st | 5th |
| 40+ (20) | 1st | 2nd |
| 50+ (7) | t-1st | 12th |
| 70+ (3) | t-1st | t-5th |
Fifth-year senior David Blough continues to climb further into the Purdue career record book.
| Passing Attempts | |||
| 3. | Kyle Orton (2001-04) | 1,336 | |
| 4. | Mark Herrmann (1977-80) | 1,309 | |
| 5. | David Blough (2015-P) | 1,197 | |
| Completions | |||
| 3. | Kyle Orton (2001-04) | 786 | |
| 4. | Mark Herrmann (1977-80) | 772 | |
| 5. | David Blough (2015-P) | 719 | |
| Passing Yards | |||
| 3. | Mark Herrmann (1977-80) | 9,946 | |
| 4. | Kyle Orton (2001-04) | 9,937 | |
| 5. | David Blough (2015-P) | 8,102 | |
| Passing Touchdowns | |||
| 3. | Curtis Painter (2005-08) | 67 | |
| 4. | Kyle Orton (2001-04) | 63 | |
| 5. | David Blough (2015-P) | 57 | |
| Total Offense | |||
| 3. | Kyle Orton (2001-04) | 9,653 | |
| 4. | Mark Herrmann (1977-80) | 9,134 | |
| 5. | David Blough (2015-P) | 8,355 |
For just the fifth time school history, Purdue had three different players reach the century mark in receiving yards in the same game. Freshman wide receiver Rondale Moore, junior tight end Brycen Hopkins and senior wide receiver Isaac Zico pulled off the rare feat against Missouri on Sept. 15. It was the first occurrence for the Boilermakers in 11 years.
100-Yard Receiving Trios- Oct. 3, 1998 vs. Minnesota - Randall Lane (137), Gabe Cox (133) and Cliff Jackson (101)
- Oct. 28, 2000 vs. Ohio State - Vinny Sutherland (142), Seth Morales (115) and Tim Stratton (100)
- Nov. 20, 2004 vs. Indiana - Kyle Ingraham (209), Taylor Stubblefield (138) and Dorien Bryant (131)
- Dec. 26, 2007 vs. Central Michigan - Dustin Keller (150), Greg Orton (136) and Jake Standeford (112)
- Sept. 15, 2018 vs. Missouri - Rondale Moore (137), Brycen Hopkins (136) and Isaac Zico (100)
David Blough's one-yard touchdown rush at Nebraska on Sept. 29 improved his career total to 12. He needs four more in his final season in the Old Gold and Black to overtake Mark Vitali as the program's leader among quarterbacks.
Purdue Quarterback Career Rushing Touchdowns| Mark Vitali, 1974-76 | 15 |
| Bob Griese, 1964-66 | 14 |
| Drew Brees, 1997-2000 | 14 |
| Curtis Painter, 2005-08 | 13 |
| Bo Bobrowski, 1972-73 | 12 |
| Eric Hunter, 1989-92 | 12 |
| David Blough, 2015-Present | 12 |
The 1,222 combined yards amassed by Purdue and Missouri on Sept. 15 were the most shared with a Boilermaker opponent in school history. The Boilermakers and Nebraska combined for 1,098 total yards two weeks later in Lincoln. Ohio State joined the list with 1,085 combined markers Oct. 20.
1,000-Plus Combined Yard Performances| 1. | 1,222 | Purdue (614) vs. Missouri (608), Sept. 15, 2018 |
| 2. | 1,208 | Purdue (516) at Indiana (692), Nov. 30, 2013 |
| 3. | 1,145 | Purdue (486) vs. Indiana (659), Nov. 28, 2015 |
| 4. | 1,135 | Purdue (514) vs. Notre Dame (621), Oct. 1, 2005 |
| 5. | 1,225 | Purdue (472) at Hawaii (653), Nov. 25, 2006 |