Darrell Hazell plans to take more than a win or a loss away from his trip to Minnesota this weekend. Purdue's second-year coach is always collecting inspiration in his quest to revive and restructure a damaged program. And the Gophers meet his criteria.
Fourth-year coach Jerry Kill has the Gophers at the top of the Big Ten West standings at 5-1, 2-0 entering Saturday's game. Hazell can take some solace knowing that Kill's teams had their share of rough times in the turnaround process.
The Boilermakers have scrapped together three wins and restored hope midway through Hazell's second year of change. The coach believes the program is close to turning the corner the way Kill and the Gophers have.
"You look at [turnaround stories] all of the time," Hazell said. "Jerry was one of the guys, Kirk Ferentz at Iowa was one of those guys that started struggling the first couple years and got it flipped and did some great things and is still doing great things.
"You draw inspiration from those guys. You know that the process works and that you have to stay with the process and the guys start to see that. They start to feed off that. As long as you don't waver as a coach, they go full steam ahead and do the things you're asking them to do."
The commitment to Hazell's new system has been obvious throughout the first half of the season. The Boilermakers scored 31 points against No. 8 Michigan State's stout defense last Saturday and had a chance to tie the score in the final minutes.
The Spartans intercepted sophomore quarterback Austin Appleby and returned it for a touchdown to secure a 45-31 victory. It was the most points allowed by Michigan State since the 2011 Big Ten Championship Game.
Purdue is 2-3 in its past five games but built early leads against ranked Notre Dame and then Iowa, and rallied against Michigan State. The offense has scored 30 or more points in three of the past four games and continues to improve under Appleby, who took over at quarterback two weeks ago against Illinois.