Purdue (4-7, 3-4) @ Indiana (4-7, 1-6)
Posted: Wednesday, September 02, 2009 4:20:00 PM EST
Published: Wednesday, November 18, 2009 10:24:10 PM EST
| THE ESSENTIALS |
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| TV: Big Ten Network, 3:30 p.m. ET Announcers: Craig Coshun (play-by-play), Anthony Herron (sideline) Site: Memorial Stadium You should know: Both quarterbacks had more than 50 pass attempts in losses last week. Last meeting: 2008 - Purdue, 62-10 All-time series: Purdue, 69-36-6 Big question: Will either pass-first team try to surprise the other and establish some sort of a running game? How we see it playing out: Indiana 37, Purdue 34 |
In the Hoosiers' minds, they still can.
On Saturday, Indiana and Purdue will square off for the 85th Old Oaken Bucket - or in this ever-changing world, what some would dub the first Old Oaken Bucket Bowl.
"This is our bowl game, right here,'' senior defensive end Jammie Kirlew said Tuesday. "This is our last game, the last time the senior class will play together.''
The Hoosiers and Boilermakers have no choice but to accept the fact that they will not be making the postseason.
Indiana (4-7, 1-6 Big Ten) watched those hopes vanish with Saturday's loss at Penn State. The Hoosiers have lost four straight and seven of eight since starting 3-0, leaving them two wins short of becoming bowl-eligible with only one game left.
Purdue (4-7, 3-4) also came up short, despite improving in the second half of the season.
The Boilermakers rallied from a 1-5 start to win three of four, including a rare sweep of Ohio State and Michigan, before Saturday's home loss to Michigan State ended their bowl hopes.
Though Purdue's players want to keep the Bucket every bit as much as the Hoosiers want it back in Bloomington, they see this game a little different.
"It's been a great season. A lot of good memories, a lot of ups and downs. I think our football team has made a lot of strides in a good way,'' Purdue quarterback Joey Elliott said. "The Indiana game is always a big one on our schedule.''
The disparity in emotions may have more to do with how this series has gone over the past 12 years.
Purdue holds a 10-2 advantage since 1997. Indiana's only wins during the stretch came in Antwaan Randle El's next-to-last college game in 2001 and in 2007 when Austin Starr made a 49-yard field goal with 30 seconds left to end the Hoosiers' 13-year bowl drought.
The Boilermakers, meanwhile, have scored at least two dozen points in each of the series' past seven games, topping 60 twice since 2004.
But this season's matchup won't come close to matching the emotions of the last two years.
Starr's long kick in 2007 set off a jubilant celebration at midfield, fulfilling Terry Hoeppner's promise to play in a bowl game five months after the Hoosiers coach died of complications from a brain tumor.
Last year, the Boilermakers said farewell to coach Joe Tiller with a 62-10 win, the largest victory margin in the series since 1892. Tiller celebrated by leading the band.
- The Associated Press provided this report.


























