Dallas, TX (Sports Network) - The Purdue Boilermakers and Oklahoma State
Cowboys will meet up in Dallas, Texas for the Heart of Dallas Bowl at Cotton
Bowl Stadium on New Year's Day.
Purdue is playing in back-to-back bowl games for the first time since 2006-07.
However, a five-game losing streak derailed the Boilermakers' 2012 season,
resulting in the dismissal of head coach Danny Hope in late-November. Hope was
replaced by Kent State coach Darrell Hazell, the 2012 MAC Coach of the Year
who led the Golden Flashes to an 11-2 season and their first bowl game in 40
years. The Boilermakers, who sat at 3-6 following a home loss to Penn State on
Nov. 3, won their last three games to close out the regular season and earn
bowl eligibility.
Despite a season that had its share of low points to go along with the highs,
Oklahoma State is playing in a school-record seventh straight bowl game. The
Cowboys, who beat Stanford in overtime in last season's Fiesta Bowl, closed
out their schedule with back-to-back road losses at Oklahoma and at Baylor.
In the only other meeting between the two schools, Purdue beat a 24th-ranked
Cowboys team 33-20 in the 1997 Alamo Bowl in San Antonio, Texas.
Purdue wide receivers coach Patrick Higgins took over as interim offensive
coordinator for the final three games of the regular season after Gary Nord
was sidelined with a severe back injury. And when Hope was fired, Higgins was
named interim head coach for the rest of the season. Suffice to say, the
players have responded well to his direction, with the offense averaging
better than 34 points during the season-long three-game winning streak.
"I'm interim everything," Higgins quipped. "I'm all in. This is a good time"
Robert Marve took over for Caleb TerBush at quarterback midway through the
season for Purdue, and his last outing was his best of the year. Marve
completed 20-of-29 passes for 348 yards and three TDs to beat Indiana and
become bowl eligible. Akeem Shavers headlines the rushing attack with 64.8
yards per game (4.7 ypc) and six scores, while Antavian Edison is fifth in the
Big Ten with 57 catches and has caught eight touchdowns.
Purdue's defense is anchored by All-American tackle Kawann Short, who racked
up 14.5 tackles for loss, six sacks, four blocked kicks, a forced fumble and
two recoveries. Short finished the regular season tied for fourth in the Big
Ten in tackles for loss and tied for fifth in sacks. Over the course of his
career, he has blocked more field goals (six) than any other player in school
history.
Overall, the Boilermakers rank 70th in the country in total defense (407.3
ypg) and 71st in scoring defense (29.0 ppg). Sophomore safety Landon Feichter
leads the team with 76 tackles and four interceptions to go along with seven
passes defended. Senior cornerback Josh Johnson (58 tackles) is among the most
productive players at his position in college football, as he has notched
three interceptions, 16 pass breakups and 19 passes defended. Johnson has also
forced three fumbles.
Oklahoma State boasts the nation's No. 4 scoring offense (44.7 ppg) and No. 7
passing offense (333.4 ypg) despite having three different players start at
quarterback over the course of the season. In fact, the Cowboys are the first
team in Big 12 history and the first in the NCAA since 1996 with three 1,000-
yard passers in a season. OSU's 4,001 passing yards mark the second-best total
in school history, trailing only the 5,034 yards of a year ago with Brandon
Weeden running the offense. Junior Clint Chelf began the season third on the
depth chart and did not see action until the eighth game when Wes Lunt got
hurt. He has started each of the last four games and has thrown for 1,340
yards with 11 touchdowns and four interceptions.
With a string of injuries impacting the quarterback position, OSU's offense
has hardly missed a beat thanks to a couple of impact players at the skill
positions. Sophomore wideout Josh Stewart ranked seventh nationally with 96
receptions and 17th with 1,154 receiving yards. Junior running back Joseph
Randle led the Big 12 with 112.6 rushing yards per game running behind an
offensive line anchored by right guard Lane Taylor, who did not allow a single
sack in more than 850 snaps. Taylor, Randle and Stewart all earned first-team
All-Big 12 honors this season. The Cowboys also boast a potent weapon in
kicker/punter Quinn Sharp, who led the nation in kicker scoring and would have
been among the national leaders in punting if he had enough attempts to
qualify.
Consistency on defense has been an issue throughout the season for the
Cowboys, and they are coming off back-to-back subpar effort. A week after
giving up 51 points at Oklahoma, the Cowboys let Baylor put 41 points on the
board in the regular-season finale. On the season, they rank 81st in the
nation in total defense (426.3 ypg) and are 112th in pass defense (285.7 ypg).
Linebacker Alex Elkins paces the squad with 73 tackles
At the team's pre-game press conference, Cowboys defensive coordinator Bill
Young spoke about his team's preparation for Purdue.
"The offensive coordinator is the same guy that has called the plays all
year," Young said. "There's no doubt that they're going to do what was
successful. We've looked at every play of every game and they haven't changed
that much during the season. They have a great run game, then they have the
spread so you have to prepare for everything."
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