Boilermakers trying to keep momentum going after bye week

The Purdue Boilermakers finally look like the team Jeff Brohm envisioned.

They're improving on defense, making big plays on offense and are chalking up wins. After a slow, mistake-prone start to his second season in West Lafayette, Brohm suddenly has the Boilermakers back on track and ready to jump into the Big Ten's West Division race.

"I think through the first three losses, we knew we had to improve a great deal and we have worked hard to do that," he said Monday. "I think we have been somewhat brutally honest as far as what our weaknesses are and how to try to go about getting them fixed. Now that we have had two wins, we need to have that same hunger, that same desire to win and improve."

Maintaining momentum won't necessarily be easy after taking last weekend off.

Yet Purdue (2-3, 1-1 Big Ten) never seemed to be too far off.

It blew the first two games on late personal foul calls and lost their third straight after a replay review overturned a go-ahead touchdown — a call Big Ten officials later said should not have been reversed. The Boilermakers then responded with a stunningly convincing upset over then No. 23 Boston College and followed it with a win at struggling Nebraska.

Now Brohm is hoping last week's bye won't slow his improving team down when it heads to Illinois (3-2, 1-1) on Saturday.

"I think we've gotten back to being more aggressive," Brohm said. "We've played some good football teams where we knew, 'Hey, we're going to have to take some shots in order to win the games and really, based where our defense was at a certain point, we're going to have to take some more shots to win the game, so let's go down and be aggressive.' "

The other big factor has been the play of quarterback David Blough.



After losing the starting job in preseason camp, Blough replaced Elijah Sindelar late in the first half of the season opener. After splitting time in Week 2, Blough became the full-time starter duties in Week 3 when Sindelar went down with an undisclosed injury.

He played the final 3½ games last season with a torn anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee.

But Blough's re-emergence has made everyone forget about Sindelar's absence.

Blough has completed 85 of 125 passes for 1,196 yards with seven touchdowns and only one interception over the past three games. He also rushed for two scores during that span, breaking Curtis Painter's single-game school record for yards passing with 572 and the Big Ten's single-game record for total yards (590) in a Week 3 loss to Missouri.

"He (Blough) feels comfortable with it and our receivers have made plays at certain times and they have improved," Brohm said, referring to the aggressive play calls. "David definitely has taken the reigns and ran with it, and his ability to be aggressive up the field but yet sometimes pull it down and get first downs when it's not there has definitely helped our offense."

And he's excelled despite losing one of Purdue's most reliable targets, tight end Cole Herdman, with an undisclosed injury two weeks ago.

Brohm said Herdman has "improved greatly" and a decision on his availability this weekend could come as soon as Tuesday.

Regardless of Herdman's status, though, the Boilermakers look like they're back in sync at just the right time.

"We have to make sure we coach the effort and intensity still, and stay on the small things so that they don't beat us," Brohm said. "I think if we're doing that, hopefully we have a chance to win when we step on the field."