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Husker Down

Posted on November 20, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Richie Incognito

How creatively obscure. Husker down/hunker down… Nahhh, doesn’t work for me, either.

University of NebraskaThe Huskers are coming to town, bringing a 7-3 overall record and a 4-2 conference performance. They’re coming off a 41-28 beat down by Moo U., and they previously had their clocks cleaned by UCLA and Minnesota. So, you’d think they’re beatable, especially with Martinez out indefinitely.

Whited out Beaver Stadium is an intimidating place to play. Advantage Lions.

Last week, they turned the damn ball over five times while Moo U. protected the ball on their end. Increasing one’s negative turnover margin by five has to hurt. Two of those were unforced. Freshman quarterback Tommy Armstrong is an interception-throwin’, fumblin’ machine.

With no further discredit meant to Armstrong, the boys must be completely bummed about starting senior quarterback Taylor Martinez being done, having suffered a potentially career ending foot injury. That hurts even thinking about it. They’ll be playing in hostile Beaver Stadium on Senior Day. So, there are plenty of intangibles going against Nebraska.

Senior Day

Speaking of Senior Day, 17 Nittany Lions will be honored as senior warriors who will be playing their final home game. There are some surprises. Coach O’Brien apparently had a little tête-à-tête with a few guys about next year’s eligibility. What went on at those conferences is known only to a select few, but it appears as if the coach is cleaning out some scholarships for the future.

 “I’m not going to get into the discussions because those are personal between myself and some of these guys including Garry [Gilliam], Kyle Baublitz, Alex Kenney, those guys basically they sat down with me and they’ve decided to move on to the next stage of their lives next year. They’d like to be introduced on Saturday, so especially Baublitz and Gilliam. So that’s what we decided to do.”

Meanwhile, da coach is trying to get Matt Lehman made eligible for another year. Him, he wants to keep. Yet, he’ll be honored among the departing seniors.

Here’s the list: Baublitz, Blanchard, Butterworth, Carson, Davie, Felder, Gilliam, Gress, Howle, Jones, Kenney, Lehman, Obeng, Shrive, Urschel, Willis, and Zerbe.

Run Forest, Run

Ameer Abdulla is a superb junior speedster who must be corralled for Penn State to have a chance to win this game. Here’s a guy who suffered the criticism of media detractors who told him he couldn’t run against Moo U, so he responded by producing a 100+ yard day against arguably the best run defense in the B1G.  Behind the usual, beefy, Nebraska offensive line, yet one that has suffered some media heat this year, Abdulla can be expected to present problems for the thin Penn State defense as the game wears on. Penn State’s 34th overall ranked rushing defense allows 144 ypg, while Nebraska’s rushing offense, ranked #16, puts up 240 yards per game. Last week, Nebraska coach Bo Pelini said they would run on Moo U., and they did, for 182 yards. Michigan State has the top ranked run defense in the country, yielding only 57.3 yards per game. How’s that for some clutch running? Eh?

A well planned passing attack that spreads the field might open things up against Penn State, as other teams have found. Nebraska is not a great passing team, with only a 200 yard per game average. Penn State’s improving secondary still gives up more than that per game. One of the keys to this game will be putting pressure on the young Armstrong kid in passing situations while trying to shut down Sheikh Abdulla. That might be a tall order for the PSU defense.

Aside from the serious, season-ending injuries we all know about, Penn State goes into this game relatively healthy. One has to believe that the Lions will focus on the run once again, with ZZ and Belton pretty much salt and pepper, with Akeel Lynch thrown in for a little added spice. The offensive line has come around, too, but don’t expect the same effectiveness against Nebraska as was had against Purdue — the Huskers are only half as bad against the run as are the Boilermakers. Expect some success from the run.

Passing opportunities will exist for the Lions, too, as long as the run is working. This is not a situation in which the Lions need to rely on the pass to get them out of a hole they dig for themselves. If they have to play from behind, they’ll lose this tame. So, a solid run game with a few passes spread around (typically, with eight of them going to #8 “Gimme da Damn Ball” Robinson), coupled with some offensive screwups on Nebraska’s part, could be a winning formula.

I’ll tell you what won’t be a winning formula. Crap like unforced fumbles, ill-advised throws resulting in interceptions, crappy punting, and a coverage unit that would give up 30 return yards to a Pop Warner team. Departing senior Butterworth didn’t have to punt at all against Purdue, so he should be well rested. As for the return team, O’Brien said that he needs to coach them better. That’s BoBspeak for, “they suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuckk!” Third down conversions were finally something to write home about against Purdue, but that’s my point. Put it in perspective. It was against Purdue.

A mistake-free game might well be all the Lions need. But are they capable of that?

Appropriately Named Alumnus of the Week

Richie Incognito
Richie Incognito

For this week’s featured opponent’s alumnus, this turkey had to dig deep into a pile of offal. At the bottom of that pile, it wasn’t hard to find the guy I was looking for, as he smelled worse than the rest of it. This week’s opponent’s alumnus of the week is the infamous, notorious, assholatristic Richie Incognito.

You’re probably all aware of Incognito’s recent notoriety, having been suspended indefinitely by the Miami Dolphins after allegedly bullying fellow lineman Jonathan Martin to the extent that he bolted the team. During the investigation it surfaced that Incognito has done some wild crap such as holding offensive line meetings at strip clubs and fining linemen who didn’t show up, as well as requiring junior players to buy $15,000 dinners for their elder peers.

Another incident occurred last year at a celebrity golf tournament, when a drunken Incognito harassed a female volunteer, rubbing her lady bits with a golf club, twerking her from behind, and pouring water in her face. While the volunteer filed a police report with Little Richie failed to apologize, the matter was later settled with the signing of a confidentiality agreement. You know what that means. Yep. $$$

This walking case of  ‘roid rage is enough to make one believe that his name is appropriate. It means “unknown.” I wish I hadn’t known about any of this.

In 2002, Incognito became the first freshman offensive lineman to start in the season opener for the Huskers. He was a first-team freshman All-American. However, his career at Nebraska was checkered with incidents both on and off the field.  Frequently suspended, he was sent to an anger management program at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka. In his senior season, which began with great expectations, he was shifted to center and was on several trophy watches.  However, on September 1, he got into a fight in the locker room and was suspended indefinitely. Incognito responded by withdrawing from school.

After that, he transferred to University of Oregon, where the Ducks dismissed him after only a week. Incognito has failed to meet the conditions that were required of him in order to come to Oregon. Those conditions were not disclosed, but it is thought that one of them was attending more anger management classes.

However, Incognito impressed pro scouts at the NFL Combine and wound up being drafted in the third round by the St. Louis Rams. He would have been drafted higher were it not for the “character flag”.

Incognito played for the Rams until 2009, when he got into more trouble for his temper. He had drawn 38 penalties during that time. Buffalo picked him up off waivers for the balance of the 2009 season, but they did not re-sign him. He then signed a one-year deal with the Dolphins and was later extended by three more.

So, who knows where all this will wind up. No knock on Nebraska. We all have our notorious ones. Sometimes a little schadenfreude is good.

Da Wedda

Should be a chilly day at the Big Beave, with a forecast high of 38° and a low of 24° under mostly cloudy skies. Snow flurries and colder weather will be moving into the area. Cold hands mean a warm heart. The  13 mph crosswinds with gusts to 23 might be somewhat troublesome for passers and kickers.

The windup… and the pitch…

Oh, yeah. I have to predict this game. This is getting hard, very hard for the old turkey. The time for the Official Turkey Poop Prognostication is upon us and I’ve been sucking big time. At least I’m 7-3 straight up, which is better than are the Lions. On the other hand, I’m just 5-5 versus the spread and 5-5 on the over/under.

My thoughts have been all over the map on this one. Sure, there’s a chance for the Lions to win if everything happens in their favor. There’s also a chance that Jupiter will fly up my ass.

The way I see it, though, Penn State is in the middle of the pack nationally, not low-middle, not high-middle, but right in the damn middle, as in mediocre. Nebraska is slightly better in all respects, but then again, their star QB is lost to injury, an evening factor. The home field advantage is another evening factor, even though the game is being played in the afternoon, not evening. (That was a joke, son.)

Penn State is favored by two points in this game, with an over/under of 50. That suggests that the gamblers are seeing a PSU victory to the tune of 26-24. Hah!

I normally like Penn State to fail to cover the spread, but this is a negligible one, so yeah, it could be a close game, but no, I don’t think it’s gonna be. Penn State owns the record with meetings in Beaver Stadium, including McCloskey’s Corner. Pelini is going to want to save his job or he’ll be going to parties with his brother. Nebraska has something to play for — a better bowl. Penn State has to play for — the seniors.

Soooooo, I’m going to say that in a turnover prone game with each team committing an equal number of screwups, someone’s going to break this thing wide open. If special teams need to be counted on, Penn State has nothing special. See how I’m vacillating. I can’t decide.

So, I best pull one out of my ass because I’m having a bit of a birthday celebration tonight with Artificially Sweetened and the remaining at home kiddos and I am anxious to get my ass out of this chair and into party mode. This is the same ass about which I have said there’s about the same chance of Penn State winning this game as Jupiter flying up my tailpipe, and I’ll stick with that. Nebraska 27, Penn State 20. Take the under.

I’ll be back with my take on the game after the game sometime. This Turkey is getting ready to lay low for Thanksgiving, so duck and cover is the drill for the week.

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Nebraska

Nicely Run

Posted on November 18, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

We knew that the would-be bowl eligible Nittany Lions (6-4, 3-3 B1G) could run all day on the porous Purdue (1-9, 0-6 B1G) defense, but we didn’t know what sort of game plan Bill O’Brien would employ to beat the Boilermakers. It turned out that he relied heavily on the rushing attack to do the job quite well, rushing 58 times versus 23 passes for a total of 501 yards.

Zach Zwinak was the featured running back of the week, with 26 carries for 149 yards and 3 touchdowns. Bill Belton added 19 for 81 and a touchdown, and we saw the return of Akeel Lynch who carried the ball 9 times for 44 yards. Although Zwinak and Belton were able to get some tough yards on their own, this turkey is encouraged by the progress of the offensive line. I will remind you, however, that this was Purdue, the dregs of the Big Ten in just about every category — except maybe kick returns, and I’ll touch on that later.

The passing attack was tame, and while Hacky committed one egregious error, he survived a day on the upswing, completing 16 out of 23 for 212 yards, with one passing touchdown and the aforementioned heinous INT. Allen “Gimme Da Damn Ball” Robinson led all receivers with 8 catches for 98 yards, while the ball was spread around to other receivers, including freshman tight end Adam Breneman, who scored the only passing TD.

Both teams, as expected, were sloppy with the ball, but Penn State managed to reduce its season differential by one to -7, whereas Purdue augmented its differential to -9.

Amazingly, Penn State was penalized only twice for 15 yards, which means they got away with a lot of holding, while Purdue were assessed 61 yards on five penalties. I don’t know why I mentioned penalties — I never have made a big deal out of them before — but I wanted to touch on the holding thing just because.

Now, look at this: third down conversions were 10-12!!!! Holy shit, that’s 83%! But I’ll remind you that this was against Purdue.

The Penn State defense held up well, speaking of third downs, allowing only 4 of 11 and holding hapless Purdue to 264 yards, of which 223 were through the air. But you can’t run on Penn State — not if you’re Purdue, anyway — so the mere 20 rushing attempts yielded a crappy 41 yards. Alas, they allowed Purdue to score 21 points, which equaled Purdue’s point output in the four prior games — BELIEVE IT OR NOT!

As I predicted, special teams suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuucked. Although Penn State never had to punt, which meant that one point of suckage — namely, Alex Butterworth — didn’t get to rear its ugly head. And Sam Ficken was one for one, so that wasn’t an issue. However, all of the potential good or benignity in general was wiped out by a 100-yard kickoff return by junior running back Raheem Mostert from, of all places, New Smyrna Beach, Florida, about 35 miles from here. Yeah, nobody stayed at home on that return. Without it, Purdue would have been held to the number of damn points I told you they’d score.

I am pleased that the boys were able to score 45. Sure beats having 45 scored on them. On the other hand, put this in perspective. It was against Purdue, the crappiest team in the B1G. There is no statement gleaned to have been made here, even  though some Sanguinarians will say that Penn State actually won 70-3 (I guess the 3 would be the three extra points because the touchdowns didn’t count due to cheating) and they’re really 9-1 at this point, poised to win out and show the world what an 11-1 team with the best offense and second best defense in the B1G really looks like. OK, that’s them, and this is I, your cynical and sometime all too realistic Turkey. Whazzup wit dat?

I’ll tell you. Win or no win, we’re dealing with quite an ordinary team here. Some writers have used the word “average”, but I have no idea just what the hell that means. I think it is a sloppy adjective meant to be a euphemism for mediocre or even crappy. I’m saying ordinary, meaning replete with flaws and nothing spectacular — middle of the B1G pack material at best. The 3-3 conference record is a very accurate depiction of what they are and where they are. But they’ll get better eventually. How much better is anyone’s guess, as the sanctions and the scandal will have a negative impact on recruiting, whether we like to admit it or not, as will the forthcoming flux at the prexy’s office and potentially in the AD’s office and head coach’s position. This is not going to be an easy hole to dig ourselves out of, and even if we beat Wisconsin and Nebraska, I’ll probably go into next season expecting 6-6  at best, along with a potential visit to the Toilet Bowl in Kohler Wisconsin on Christmas Eve.

So, am I bitter because my prediction sucked? Nahhhhh. PSU whacking the spread and hitting the “over” never pisses me off. It’s an unexpected pleasure. But I’m now 7-3 straight up, 5-5 against the spread, and 5-5 on the over/under.

Looking forward, we have two games left. At the beginning of the season, I regarded both of them as losses. Watching Nebraska falter through the middle part of the season and get bitch-slapped by Moo U. last week made me believe the 7-3 Huskers might be beatable, but putting the whole thing into perspective, I was looking through rose colored glasses. We tend to do that, you know. Think about “what is” in terms of “what should be if only…” Well, I’m still sticking with my 6-6 prediction for the season, but it will still be interesting to see how these guys step up for Nebraska and Wisconsin.  Hey, at least Nebraska is a 3:30 start!

On another note, how about ex-Nittany Lion quarterback Matt McGloin today? In his first NFL start, subbing for the ailing Terrelle Pryor, McGloin threw for 197 yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions, leading Oakland to a 28-23 victory over Houston, the Raiders’ first away game victory. He received plenty of favorable comments from the broadcasting booth, and one Tweet I saw nominated him for secretary-general of the moon.

I’ll be back soon with some real (i.e., not out of the ass) comments about the Nebraska game, and of course, the usual flawless prediction.

 

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Filed Under: Penn State Football Tagged With: Purdue

Just keep matriculatin’ the ball down the field, boys!

Posted on November 14, 2013 Written by The Nittany Turkey

Hank Stram (1923-2005)

Welcome back, turkophiles and turkophobes everywhere! Wait, I was the one who was gone. Never mind! I took a sanity trip to southwest Florida to do some swamp tromping, and now I consider myself well-adjusted. That’ll last about until Saturday!

Purdue BoilermakersWe’re here today to preview and predict the forthcoming game pitting hapless, feckless, meaningless, and damn near lifeless Purdue (1-8, 0-5 B1G) against the once mighty, see-sawing, fumbling, bumbling, yet awe-inspiring Nittany Lions ( 5-4, 2-3 B1G). Both teams lost last week, Purdue at the behest of Iowa, 38-14, and as you well know, PSU fell to the Golden Gophers 24-10.

On paper, out of left field, and out of other dark places, this would seem to be an eminently winnable game for the short-handed Lions, a “lock”, as it were. The Boilermakers are in the tank in just about every statistical category, both offensive and defensive. They are truly the suckiest team of the sucky, albeit once proud Big Ten Conference. They’ve won only one game, over Larry Bird’s alma mater, Indiana State, but even that was by less than a touchdown. They ran completely out of steam for the Buckeyes, who beat them 56-0 on November 2. The previous outing against Moo U. was also a shutout, 14-0. They average only 11.8 points per game. PSU homies, better known as The Sanguinarians (cue Spring Song by Mendelssohn — OK, I won’t start that shit again!), can’t see this one going any other way but a win. They’re not yet willing to concede that the talent drain and injuries have made this game a lot closer than it might have appeared to those who still think Penn State is a national title contender and have dismissed it out of hand.

In fact, this turkey did just that way back when. I wrote the following, prior to this season’s inception:

Purdue. Another dregs of the Big Ten season ahead for the Boilermakers. Are you reading this, Larry Cottrell, retired from UCF and living somewhere up there back home in Indiana? The Boilermakers suuuuck! Posting a solid (?) 6-7 record last year, including minimum bowl eligibility so they could get the shit kicked out of them by the Oklahoma State Cowboys 58-14, the Boilermakers notched wins over such superpowers as Eastern Kentucky, BDU (Brick Dick University), Marshall, EFU (Epic Fail University, aka Iowa), The Illinois Laughingstock, and in-state rival Indiana. Can you see Purdue actually winning in Beaver Stadium? I sure as hell can’t.

Arguably, Purdue has a pretty difficult schedule, with the roughest patch leading up to this game. Early in the season, they battled #21 Notre Dame hard, losing by a touchdown, then crumbled at Camp Randall 41-10. Northern Illinois laid 55 points on them, and Nebraska 44. They have allowed an average of 37.2 points per game.

Their running game is atrocious. A mere 68.1 yards per game, and 2.4 yards per carry. Of course, against Penn State’s notably porous rushing defense, they might do better than that, but still…

All they’ve got is a passing attack that has produced 191 yards per game. Between freshman quarterback Danny Etling and freshman receiver DeAngelo Yancey, they’ve got a thang going. Yancey averages 19.9 yards per catch. But they’re freshmen and that should tell you something about the Purdue offense. So should the fact that aside from two senior tackles, the starting offensive line is composed of two freshman guards and a sophomore center. They just aren’t going to be able to run on Penn State, and Etling will need to get the ball out of there quickly to avoid the mighty DaQuanslaught, as the Boilermakers rank 113 in sacks allowed, averaging over three per game.

Much to the chagrin of this week’s alumnus of the week, there is no way an offense with no essence of running ability can employ his invention, the play-action pass. Read more about Purdue alumnus Hank Stram below.

Obviously, with no running capability and a penchant for allowing sacks, you might want to consider this an impotent offense. That’s a pretty fair assessment. However, there is no redemption in the defense. Look at any category and you’ll find pain and misery. The Zombie Apocalypse. If there’s any game that should make the Nittany Lions temporarily feel good about themselves, this is the one.

But, you know what? Some of Penn State’s performances rival Purdue in frustration factor for fans. In third down completions, Purdue ranks 114th. Penn State is a dominating 112th. That suuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuucks. A .316 conversion percentage bites the big one. In turnover margin, they both rank 105, with a sparkling -8 average. That suuuuuuuuuucks. These two categories paint them both as losers.

I hate calling my boys losers, but I will if they can’t clean up those two things. They’ve played nine damn games and they’re still making fundamental errors. I can’t walk around with my head up my ass pretending that this is a great team that should easily handle our peers from Indiana. They couldn’t beat the other team from Indiana; why should they be able to beat this one?

I won’t tell you what you already know. Ben Kline is gone for the year, but you know that. You know how well ZZ and Belton should run against this defense. You know that Allen Robinson is playing with a hurt shoulder and will be testing the one decent cornerback Purdue has. You know all that and I’m lazy today, so I’m not writing about it. Akeel Lynch might make an appearance, as he’s been practicing.

Desire to Win

What this game boils down to is the desire to win. If our guys aren’t too demoralized by the mediocre season, it’s an easily winnable game. Remember that they’re pretty much leaderless, and the pouting Allen “Gimme da Damn Ball” Robinson isn’t exactly doing his share of motivating by whining about not getting the ball. This is a noon start being played out in a stadium with probably about 25,000 empty seats, broadcast on the fetid backwater of BTN. No one cares, other than die-hard fans of both schools. This could be a setting for an emotional letdown. I don’t know what goes on in the locker room, and I don’t really know how strong a motivator is Bill O’Brien. For this leaderless team with its fragile ego, he simply has to be that.

So, I’m thinking that it will come down to more than just statistical superiority once the boys hit the field. I’m thinking it will be the motivation of these two squads with nothing to play for that matters. Fundamentals, boys. Just keep matriculatin’ the ball down the field, boys. No screw-ups. Turnovers’ll killya. Third down conversions’ll killya.

Da Wedda

The weather should be no factor in this game, as our intrepid weatherman predicts a high of 55°F on a calm, partly cloudy day.

Officiating

This section is for K. John. The officials will miss calling lots and lots of holds. See Purdue holding. See Penn State holding. Hold hold hold. Cheat cheat cheat. Officials suck and they’re all out to get Penn State, who should be 8-1 as I write this. Given that they have more talent than anyone but Ohio State, there should be no way to lose four games unless the black helicopters are circling and directing the officials to undermine the hapless Lions (cello). And if you’re not careful with that crazy shit, you might wind up being Lavon Chisley’s cell mate one of these days!

Miscellanea

So, whattya think? Did Urban Meyer’s secret plant in the Tallahassee DA’s office dredge up those year-old rape charges against Jameis Winston? Sorry for the non-sequitur, but it wasn’t worth a whole post. I’m lazy today.

Opponent Alumnus of the Week: Hank Stram

Hank Stram (1923-2005)
Hank Stram (1923-2005)

The great and legendary football coach Hank Stram is today’s opponent alumnus of the week. Stram was born in Chicago in 1923, son of a Polish-born professional wrestler named Henry Wilczek, who wrestled under the name Stram. He grew up in the beautiful suburb of Gary, Indiana and later attended Purdue, where his academic and football career began in the early 1940s, took a break for his military service in World War II and finished up in 1946-47.

After his playing career and graduation, Stram became an assistant football coach from 1948-1955 and the head baseball coach for the Boilermakers from 1951 to 1955.

It was his professional football coaching career that we all remember about Hank Stram, particularly his time with the AFL Kansas City Chiefs. Stram was a motivational genius and a football innovator. The play-action pass offense is credited to him, as is the I-formation, the two-tight end offense, and the triple-stack defense. He coached the Chiefs from 1963 to 1974 and took them to two Super Bowls, losing the first to Green Bay in the inaugural Super Bowl before the leagues merged, and the beating Minnesota in Super Bowl IV, the first super bowl after the merger.

Stram was the first NFL head coach to wear a microphone on the sidelines, and many of his finer moments have been preserved for posterity as a result. Fans of football history revel in hearing  his classic quotes, like, “Just keep matriculatin’ the ball down the field, boys!” or “Kassulke was running around there like it was a Chinese fire drill!”

ESPN ranked Stram 16th in their Greatest Coaches of the NFL. Although his winning percentage doesn’t look all that swift, it was tainted by his post-KC stint as head coach of the original New Orleans Saints — “the Ain’ts”. He wound up his NFL career 131-97-10.

Late in life, Stram was devastated by diabetes and had to be wheeled up to the stage for his induction to the NFL Hall of Fame by his former quarterback, Len Dawson. Too weak to speak at the event, Stram had previously recorded his acceptance speech, which was played for the misty eyed audience. Hank Stram died on July 4th, 2005 in Covington, Louisiana, at the age of 82.

Official Turkey Poop Prognostication

Oh, yeah. We’re here. How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. Purdue is the tasty yellow chicken — looking good. We’re all lickin’ our lips over this one, because Purdue purdon’t! 

This season thus far, the Turkey is 6-3 straight up, 5-4 against the spread, and 5-4 on the over/under. I’m just about as mediocre as the Nittany Lions.

So, how do the punters in Sin City see this? They don’t. No one cares. However, the line on the game at the moment is PSU favored by 21.5 with an over/under of 45. Pitiful! That suggests a final score of 34-13 in Penn State’s favor. Make sure you don’t miss the match on TV!

Piffle! I watched a sputtering offense last week that made one of nine third downs and couldn’t keep the defense off the field. I watched two bookend turnovers that pretty much bracketed an incompetent offensive performance that had only one good drive. With plenty of credit due to last week’s opponent, even though at times it seemed as if either they wanted to give us a break or the officials did, they dominated the game. Even the black helicopters couldn’t help Penn State win if they played like that. So what can we look for this week? More incompetence on offense, an even thinner, weaker defense, and an overall lackadaisical attitude if the trend is maintained. Fortunately, even with all those negatives, Penn State has enough juice to win this one. Penn State 24, Purdue 13. Take Purdue and the points — 21.5 is a juicy spread. And with these two offenses, ya gotta take the under.

I’ll be back after the big game with my post-game observations.

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Whodat Turkey?

The Nittany Turkey is a retired techno-geek who thinks he knows something about Penn State football and everything else in the world. If there's a topic, we have an opinion on it, and you know what "they" say about opinions! Most of what is posted here involves a heavy dose of hip-shooting conjecture, but unlike some other blogs, we don't represent it as fact. Read More…

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