Northwestern vs Purdue: 3rd Quarter Recap

The Purdue offense picked up where it left off in the third quarter, at least to some extent. They steadily fed running back Azeem Hunt the ball, making their way to the NU 17-yard line. But linebacker Anthony Walker and defensive lineman Dean Lowry sacked Austin Appleby on third down, forcing the field goal unit to come out for the Boilermakers. However, Paul Griggs’s 42-yard attempt hit the left upright, and Purdue came away with no points.

Northwestern’s first drive of the second half didn’t start until 6:44 left in the quarter. About a minute later, they’d punt the ball back to Purdue.

After an uneventful third quarter, Northwestern heads into the 4th quarter with a 24-7 lead.

Northwestern vs Purdue: First Half Recap

After an awful couple weeks for Tony Jones, the senior wide receiver found redemption in the form of a 64-yard punt return touchdown about a minute into the second quarter.

On the next Purdue possession, safety Ibraheim Campbell forced and recovered yet another Akeem Hunt fumble. But after a failed attempt on 4th-and-1, quarterback Trevor Siemian suffered what appeared to be a left ankle injury. He would later be ruled out for the remainder of the game.

Zack Oliver came appeared in one play the next Northwestern poseession before Matt Alviti stepped in. He completed his first career pass to Jayme Taylor for three yards, but later fumbled the ball at the 11:54-mark.

Though Northwestern heads into halftime with a 24-7 lead, Siemian’s injury is a cause for concern. The senior played a pretty good first half despite throwing a pick nine seconds into the game. Alviti and Oliver combined to run six times, maybe signaling that the coaching staff doesn’t have much confidence in the arms of their backup quarterbacks. Even on plays where Oliver threw, he was not accurate.

If Siemian is not fit to return next week, then his career comes to an end this afternoon.

Northwestern vs Purdue: 1st Quarter Recap

The opening minutes of the game were weird, to say the least.

Nine seconds in, quarterback Trevor Siemian threw an interception to Purdue’s Danny Ezechukwu. Two plays later, Jimmy Hall picked off an Austin Appleby pass that deflected of a receiver’s helmet. A couple nice runs by Justin Jackson and Treyvon Green – the latter going for 44 yards – then led to a 25-yard touchdown pass from Siemian to super back Dan Vitale.

All this happened with 12:15 left in the first quarter.

Hall continued his solid play, forcing and recovering a fumble with 4:11 left. He’s recovered three fumbles in the last two games.

Jackson had seven carries for 31 yards, including a touchdown, as well. His touchdown capped off a drive in which Kyle Prater caught two passes for 40 yards, including a 19-yard catch on 4th-and-14.

Northwestern heads into the 2nd quarter with a 14-0 lead.

Pat Fitzgerald Purdue week press conference

By Ethan Cohen

Coach Fitzgerald spoke to the media Monday, Nov. 17.

[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Go24BNfxF8&w=560&h=315]

  • Offensive player of the week: Kyle Prater
  • Siemian was “a couple drops away from having one of those games that goes down in Wildcat history”
  • Defensive player of the week: Ibraheim Cambell
  • Specialist of the week: Jack Mitchell (duh)
  • Purdue has been dynamic offensively since making the QB change
  • Probably the best special teams unit they’ve seen this year, critiques return units against Notre Dame
  • Talked a lot about being a playoff situation, the team has its back against the wall
  • Thought 4 of the 5 offensive linemen played very well
  • On defense we shouldn’t have given up as much as we did
  • “our holder outplayed their holder” that’s what the game came down to
  • Miles Shuler is out this week, Greg Kuhar needs surgery for a lower body injury, and he’s out for the year
  • “the hardest thing to do is to respond to success” despite the win, there were a lot of mistakes that the team is going to look at internally
  • Being able to hug his father after the win was “really special”
  • Prater’s catch in the two minute was a “big time play” for a great football player
  • Offensive line success is due to them taking their play personally and have stopped thinking as much
  • Siemian being mobile allowed him to feel more confident, also allowed the team to do different things schematically
  • Fitz talked to Gary Barnett on the way back and facetimed his sons in the locker room after the game
  • Also heard from a lot of other Big Ten coaches
  • Fitz hopes they can keep playing that game going forward but it might be difficult given the schedules

Jimmy Hall: the turnovers were really key. After the PI call was thinking that the game couldn’t end like that.

Matt Alviti: Part of the reason I chose Northwestern was to go to Notre Dame and beat them. Fitz said that after the ND win in 95 they lost to Miami (OH) at home the next week.

Nick VanHoose: with our backs against the wall it increases pressure to “keep the family together”

 

NORTHWESTERN @ NOTRE DAME POST-GAME REPORT: WILDCATS STUN SOUTH BEND

The Fighting Irish had not played a home game in more than a month before today; the Wildcats had not won across the same stretch. Needless to say, Northwestern and Notre Dame fans alike did not expect such a scene in South Bend.

Both teams scored rapidly; the early highlight being Everett Golson’s 61-yard touch down run 44 seconds into the game. For Northwestern fans, the moment of excitement might have been Matt Alviti’s two-yard touchdown rush.

The Wildcats did have some more bright spots on offense. Siemian established the pass game early on with a pair of receptions to the Dickerson brothers. With the pressure off of the run early in the game, Justin Jackson broke free for a 44-yard rush downfield. Treyvon Green outdid the freshman phenom with his own big run, notching 45 yards on one carry. The two Northwestern backs combined for 221 yards rushing.

There were nearly as many blunders as highlights in this contest.  Notre Dame’s special teams bobbled its first two kick off returns and even suffered a blocked PAT, which Nick VanHoose returned for two points.  The two teams combined for 10 turn overs, including three interceptions.

Northwestern’s offense had the worst of it, with two picks. The Irish also sacked Siemian twice for a loss of 17 yards .  Siemian’s passes were REPEATEDLY tipped, picked, and dropped. In fact, Tony Jones had three different passes—two with great separation and one in the end zone—that all should have been touchdowns in the first half.

Siemian found a few receivers along the way, including Cameron Dickerson for a 60-yard pass. The play stands as the longest by the Wildcats all year, replacing Dickerson’s 54-yard catch against Cal in August. This Wildcat reception also marks the largest single-play-gain by a Notre Dame opponent this season.  Kyle Prater also had a big game with 81 yards on 10 catches, one for a touch down.

Notre Dame’s William Fuller made some great plays, including a 42-yard reception; he grabbed 3 touch down passes along the way.

The run game seemed just as impressive. The two squads combined for 302 yards and 4 rushing touch downs in the first half alone.  The Wildcats ran for 52 more yards than the Irish, seemingly making the difference in the game.

Late in the game, Northwestern continued to contend with the Irish, although Notre Dame extended its lead to as many as 11 points.  The Wildcats battled back in the fourth quarter, going on a 14-6 run to force an overtime.

A strong defensive stand and wide field goal from Notre Dame set the stage for a Jack Mitchell miracle.

Mitchell had already drilled three of four kicks throughout the game, two of them from more than 40 yards out.

With an opportunity to seize victory, Mitchell came out for the kick and Brian Kelly promptly iced him, taking  a time out.

“I knew I had to rush and just get a swing in,” explained Mitchell,  adding “I felt comfortable after that.”

Coach Pat Fitzgerald called it “probably our most consistent kicking performance of the year,” saying that it “was obviously the difference going down the stretch.”

It goes without saying, Mitchell knocked through the dagger from 41 yards to give Northwestern the win 43-40.

Northwestern came into today’s contest as a true underdog.  Few expected the Wildcats to put up a strong fight with the Irish, but they held their own.

This is surely a tough loss for Notre Dame to swallow, considering the game was literally in their hands as time wound down, until a fumble.  As Coach Brian Kelly explained,  there were multiple mistakes that cost his team the game.

“We’re not making small errors, we’re making critical errors and on defense giving them 15 yards to hold on to drives and then, heck, one key third down we had ten guys on the field,” he said. “We had ten guys. We have a guy that’s a veteran that didn’t know he was supposed to be on the field. That’s unacceptable.”

These surprises and lucky breaks just seem to be the theme of Pat Fitzgerald’s squad: there is no rhyme or reason to the Northwestern Wildcats.

And with the “W” at Notre Dame, as Fitz reminded everyone, Northwestern could have a 13th game pop onto the schedule.

“We’ve advanced to another week to keep this team alive for post-season play.”

Northwestern @ Notre Dame: Half Time Report

On a chilly day in South Bend, things heated up quickly between the Northwestern Wildcats and Notre Dame Fighting Irish.

Both teams reached the end zone before 4 minutes had been played; the early highlight being Everett Golson’s 61 yard run 44 seconds into the game. For Northwestern fans, the moment of excitement might have been Matt Alviti’s two-yard touchdown run.

Northwestern applied good defensive pressure on that first Irish drive. But a big third down stop was not in the cards for the men in purple.

The Wildcats wasted no time getting their own offense up and running. Siemian established the pass game early on with a pair of receptions to the Dickerson brothers. With the pressure off of the run, Justin Jackson broke free for a 44-yard rush downfield. Treyvon Green outdid the freshman phenom with his own big run, notching 45 yards. The two Northwestern backs have combined for 132 yards in the first half alone.

30 minutes in and we are definitely not looking at a perfect game. Notre Dame’s special teams bobbled its first two kick off returns and even suffered a blocked PAT, which Nick VanHoose returned for two points.

Northwestern’s offense has had even worse luck. Siemian’s passes have been tipped, picked, and dropped. Tony Jones had three different passes—two with great separation and one in the end zone—that all should have been touchdowns.

Fitz didn’t feel the need to pull him from the field after the first two drops. Maybe that’s because Siemian’s other options weren’t much better: Austin Carr dropped one as well for a turn over on downs.

Siemian has found a few receivers along the way, including a 60-yard pass to Cameron Dickerson. The play stands as the longest by the Wildcats all year, replacing Dickerson’s 54-yard catch against Cal in August. That Wildcat reception also marks the largest single-play-gain by a Notre Dame opponent this season.

Yet the bright spot for both teams has definitely been the rush. The two squads combined for 302 yards and 4 rushing touch downs in the first half.

This game has certainly been anything but ordinary as the two teams are virtually identical, statistically speaking.

Brace yourself for a thrilling second half because the Fighting Irish of Notre Dame, ranked 15th in the AP Poll, have only 7 more yards of offense than the Northwestern Wildcats and lead by a mere four points.

27-23 ND over NU with 30 minutes to play…

This is ANYONE’S game.

Game Recap- Northwestern vs. Houston Baptist

After an impressive 102-52  exhibition route of McKendree last week, Northwestern looked poised to start fast against Houston-Baptist Friday night. That was not the case, as the Wildcats overcame a tough first half to win 65 to 58 behind Alex Olah’s second career double-double.

The Huskies came out firing to begin the game, taking an early 10-2 lead they wouldn’t lose until late in the first half. Northwestern would make some noise — thanks to their new and exciting freshman class. Bryant McIntosh led all first-half scorers with 9 points and 4 assists, continuing his good play from the week before.

JerShon Cobb and Tre Demps struggled to find the net in the first half, both going 0 for 4. Joined by fellow freshman Vic Law, McIntosh helped keep the Wildcats in the game.

“The two freshman were fantastic,” Coach Collins said. “I thought B-mac really carried us for awhile. He’s a baller.”

The momentum changed with under five minutes to play in the first half as McIntosh seemed to get in rhythm. The Huskies countered with solid play of their own, giving them a three-point lead at halftime.

Alex Olah was the story in the second half with his more physical play. Coach Collins noticed something was off in the first half— and let him know during the break.

“[HBU] was bothering Alex early,” he said. “We had to take halftime to settle him down and get on him. At that position, we should have the advantage every night we play.”

Olah gave the Wildcats that advantage early in the second half. After collecting just 3 points in the opening half, he finished with 21. Last year, Olah was able to take over games when the ‘Cats were struggling. He did the same tonight, rising up to give the fans at Welsh-Ryan something to cheer about. His 10 rebounds were desperately needed as well after losing that margin to the Huskies 21 to 15 in the first half.

Olah said he knew he had to be more physical when he came out for the second half.

“I knew I was soft in the first half… so I just went out there and didn’t stop,” Olah said.

Despite Northwestern’s improved second half play, the Huskies wouldn’t go away. Senior Ricmonds Vilde led the Huskies in scoring, with 13 points and 10 rebounds. His double-double was a major reason the Huskies kept the Wildcats close until the last few minutes.

Northwestern is back in action Monday as they head East to take on Brown at 6pm. The ‘Cats begin the season playing six games in a twelve day stretch.

-Jacob Murphey