Purdue coach Jeff Brohm built his reputation on running creative, wide-open offenses.
He also understands the Boilermakers need a solid ground game to win consistently.
So after calling 51 pass plays in last weekend's 27-20 loss to No. 23 Northwestern, Brohm and Purdue went back to work in search of a more balanced approach.
"We've got a lot of coaches and they know that that's kind of what I've been telling them all offseason and all season — we've got to make sure we have a commitment to the run," Brohm said, blaming himself for not sticking to last weekend's plan. "At the same time, when it gets to game time and things aren't going your way, you have to be able to adjust and do what works."
For the Boilermakers (2-1), it was ugly. The Wildcats' defense gave up just 2 yards rushing on 17 carries, a minuscule average of 0.12 yards that forced Aidan O'Connell to spend most of the game airing it out in windy, rainy conditions. Northwestern also kept receiver David Bell largely in check.
With a one-dimensional offense and no serious deep threat, Purdue became too predictable.
While O'Connell produced solid numbers mostly by throwing underneath — 28 of 51 with 263 yards, two touchdowns and no interceptions — he was sacked three times and lost a fumble.
This week's goal: Reduce the workload on O'Connell's arm.