1980 Purdue Boilermakers football team explained

Year:1980
Team:Purdue Boilermakers
Sport:football
Conference:Big Ten Conference
Short Conf:Big Ten
Coachrank:16
Aprank:17
Record:9–3
Conf Record:7–1
Head Coach:Jim Young
Hc Year:4th
Off Coach:Doug Redmann
Oc Year:1st
Def Coach:Leon Burtnett
Dc Year:4th
Mvp:Mark Herrmann
Captain:Tom Kingsbury, Pete Quinn
Champion:Liberty Bowl champion
Bowl Result:W 28–25 vs. Missouri

The 1980 Purdue Boilermakers football team was an American football team that represented Purdue University during the 1980 Big Ten Conference football season. In their fourth season under head coach Jim Young, the Boilermakers finished in a tie for second place in the Big Ten Conference, compiled a 9–3 record (7–1 against Big Ten opponents), defeated Missouri in the Liberty Bowl, were ranked No. 16 in the final AP Poll, and outscored all opponents by a combined total of 328 to 233.[1] The team played its home games at Ross–Ade Stadium in West Lafayette, Indiana.

Quarterback Mark Herrmann gained national attention for breaking the NCAA's career record for passing yardage. He finished his collegiate career having completed 772 of 1,309 passes for 9,946 yards, 71 touchdowns, and 75 interceptions.[2] Herrmann and teammate Dave Young, a tight end, were the only two Big Ten players to be recognized as consensus first-team players on the 1980 College Football All-America Team.[3] Herrmann also won the Chicago Tribune Silver Football as the most valuable player in the Big Ten Conference.

Several Purdue players ranked among the Big Ten leaders in various statistical categories, including the following:

Schedule

[6]

Roster

[7]

Season summary

At Notre Dame

In non-conference play, Purdue (AP No. 9) opened its season with a 31–10 loss to Notre Dame (AP No. 11) at Notre Dame Stadium. Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann was sidelined with a bruised thumb (injured in practice during the week) and did not play. Phil Carter rushed for 142 yards for Notre Dame.[8] After the game, the Boilermakers fell from No. 9 to No. 11 in the AP Poll.[1]

Wisconsin

Purdue (AP No. 20) defeated Wisconsin, 12–6. Mark Herrmann passed for 347 yards (27-43), including 200 yards to wide receiver Bart Burrell, but the Boilermakers were unable to score a touchdown, settling for three field goals.[9] After the game, Purdue dropped out of the top 25.[1]

UCLA

Purdue lost to UCLA, 23–14, in West Lafayette. Mark Herrmann passed for 282 yards, and his two touchdown passes gave him the Big Ten career record with 50 touchdown passes. Herrmannalso threw two interceptions in the defeat. The loss broke a 12-game winning streak for Purdue at Ross–Ade Stadium.[10]

Miami (OH)

Purdue defeated Miami (OH), 28–3, as Mark Herrmann passed for 291 yards and three touchdowns.[11]

Minnesota

[12]

Purdue defeated Minnesota, 21–7, in West Lafayette. In the first half, Purdue took a 21-0 lead, as Mark Herrmann completed 14 of 19 passes for 163 yards and two touchdowns. Purdue was shut out in the second half, and Herrmann had only 28 passing yards in the second half, but Purdue's 21 points in the first half were enough for the victory.[13]

Illinois

Purdue defeated Illinois, 45–20, before a crowd of 62,121 at Memorial Stadium in Champaign. In a remarkable passing exhibition, the Big Ten single-game record for passing yardage was broken twice in the same game. Mark Herrmann broke the record first with 371 yards on 24-of-35 passing, surpassing the mark set two years earlier by Eddie Smith. Bart Burrell caught 10 passes for 186 yards. Herrmannwent to the bench halfway through the fourth quarter, only to watch his record broken by Illinois quarterback Dave Wilson who tallied 425 passing yards as the Illini passed with abandon through the final minutes. Wilson also broke Big Ten single-game records with 58 passes and 35 completions.[14]

Michigan State

Purdue defeated Michigan State, 36–25, in West Lafayette. Mark Herrmann completed 24 of 46 passes for 340 yards to break the NCAA career record for passing yardage. Herrmann passed the prior record of 7,747 yards set by Jack Thompson from 1976 to 1978. Dave Young caught 12 passes for 172 yards. Michigan State quarterback John Leister threw more passes (54) than Herrmann, but completed only 18, had five interceptions, and lost a fumble. After the game, Michigan State coach Muddy Waters said, "John is pretty disgusted with himself."[15]

Northwestern

Purdue (AP No. 20) defeated Northwestern, 52–31, before a crowd of 17,744 persons at Dyche Stadium in Evanston. Purdue's 52 points was its highest scoring output in a game since 1947. Purdue running back rushed for 190 yards and scored four touchdown. Mark Herrmann passed for 210 yards and three touchdowns. Herrmann also set the all-time record for career pass completions (651) and interceptions (69).[16]

Iowa

Purdue (AP No. 17) defeated Iowa, 58–13, at Ross–Ade Stadium in West Lafayette. Mark Herrmann set a Purdue single-game record with 439 passing yards on 26 of 34 passing. Herrmannalso set an NCAA career record with 1,151 pass completions.[17]

Michigan

Michigan defeated Purdue, 26–0, for Michigan's third consecutive shut out. The victory was particularly impressive as the Wolverines held Purdue's record-setting quarterback, Mark Herrmann, to 129 passing yard (24 in the second half), intercepted four of Herrmann's passes, and did not allow a first down by Purdue in the second half. Coach Schembechler credited Michigan defensive coordinator Bill McCartney with the strategy of playing six defensive backs that held Purdue's offense scoreless.[18]

Indiana

In the annual battle for the Old Oaken Bucket, Purdue defeated Indiana, 24–23, in West Lafayette. Purdue led, 24–17, with 21 seconds left when Tim Clifford threw a touchdown pass to Steve Corso (Indiana coach Lee Corso's son). Rather than kick an extra point to tie the game, Indiana coach Corso called for a pass play to win the game; the pass was knocked down by linebacker Mike Marks, and Purdue preserved a one-point lead. The Hoosiers regained possession on the onside kick but Don Geisler missed a 59-yard field goal as time expired. In his final home game, Mark Herrmann finished 19 of 23 for 323 yards and a touchdown.[19] [20]

Liberty Bowl

At the Liberty Bowl in Memphis, Purdue defeated Missouri, 28-25. Mark Herrmann completed his Purdue career with his third MVP award in a bowl game, and the Boilermakers' third consecutive bowl game victory.

Awards

[7]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 1980 Purdue Boilermakers Schedule and Results. Sports Reference LLC. SR/College Football. November 8, 2016.
  2. Web site: Mark Herrmann. Sports Reference LLC. SR/College Football. November 8, 2016.
  3. Web site: 2014 NCAA Football Records: Consensus All-America Selections. National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). 2014. November 8, 2016. 3, 7. May 13, 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200513011009/https://web.archive.org/web/20141006082159/http://fs.ncaa.org/Docs/stats/football_records/2014/Awards.pdf. dead.
  4. Web site: 1980 Big Ten Conference Year Summary. Sports Reference LLC. SR/College Football. November 2, 2016.
  5. Web site: 1980 Big Ten Conference Year Summary. Sports Reference LLC. SR/College Football. November 2, 2016.
  6. Web site: . 2022 Purdue Football Record Book . Purdue University Athletics . 90 . January 29, 2023 .
  7. 2011 Purdue football information guide.
  8. News: Purdue Misses Its Mark, Irish Roll. The Indianapolis Star. September 7, 1980. 4-1.
  9. News: Purdue Gets Its Kicks From Rick. The Indianapolis Star. September 14, 1980. 4-1.
  10. News: Bruins Bruise Boilers. The Indianapolis Star. Max Stultz. September 21, 1980. 4-1, 4-10.
  11. News: Herrmann's Passes Rescue Dozing Boilers: Purdue Comeback Tops Miami, 28–3. The Indianapolis Star. October 5, 1980. 4-1.
  12. Eugene Register-Guard. 1980 Oct 12. Retrieved 2018-Sep-01.
  13. News: Purdue, Too. The Indianapolis Star. October 12, 1980. 4-1, 4-12.
  14. News: Purdue Routs Illini In Pass-Happy Show. The Indianapolis Star. October 19, 1980. 4-1, 4-8.
  15. News: Herrmann eclipses MSU, 36-25. Detroit Free Press. October 26, 1980. 1H, 11H.
  16. News: Purdue batters 'Cats. The Indianapolis Star. John Bansch. November 2, 1980. 4-1, 4-8.
  17. News: Purdue Mark-smanship bombs Hawkeyes. The Indianapolis Star. Max Stultz. November 9, 1980. 4-1.
  18. News: Herrmann Bottled Up, 26–0: U-M picks Purdue apart. Detroit Free Press. Mick McCabe. November 16, 1980. 1H, 6H.
  19. News: Boilers beat I.U., 24–23, for Bucket: Marks this one up for Purdue. The Indianapolis Star. Max Stultz. November 23, 1980. 4-1.
  20. https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=mq6pegT_rlEC&dat=19801123&printsec=frontpage&hl=en "Late 2-Point Pass Fails; Purdue Edges Indiana." Palm Beach Post. p. 140. 1980 Nov 23.