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Yahoo
2 days ago
- Yahoo
Barry Odom aiming to resurrect Purdue football the same way he made UNLV a winning program
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Purdue coach Barry Odom isn't concerned that the Boilermakers won just one game last season, or that they were in the 2022 Big Ten championship. He certainly isn't bothered that they've been picked to finish last in the 18-team league this season. 'We'll be defined by what we do,' Odom said Thursday, the last of three Big Ten media days. 'If we take the approach from the day that we got the job, every single day our approach is you get up and make Purdue football better and you find a way to consistently instill those habits in everyone around in the organization. Then by the time that the season rolls around, we'll be ready to be the best versions of ourselves.' After turning around one of the worst programs in college football history, Odom spoke with vigor and confidence about resurrecting a Purdue program that went 5-19 the last two seasons. Odom pulled off the unthinkable at UNLV two seasons ago, turning around a program that annually ranked near the bottom of college football in every aspect, and prior to his arrival, was a combined 29-74 the previous nine seasons. In two seasons under Odom, the Rebels made it to the Mountain West championship twice and and were one win away from advancing to the College Football Playoff last season, when they won 11 games for the first time since 1984 and cracked the AP top 25 rankings for the first time in their 46-year history. Now, he has his sights set on the Boilermakers, who ranked near the bottom of nearly every statistical category, including an offense that gained just 299.3 yards per game (127th nationally) and a defense that allowed 452.7 yards per contest (123rd). After a 49-0 season-opening win against Indiana State, the Boilermakers lost their next 11 games — eight by double digits — including the season finale against in-state rival Indiana, 66-0. With an uncertain depth chart entering camp, and a scarce number of returning starters across all three units, Odom's message has at least one of the program's leaders buying in. 'I mean, I feel like it's sort of intrinsic ... especially as big of a turnover that we had, you have a whole new room of guys and basically a new program,' fourth-year running back Devin Mockobee said. "Having that aspect of coming in and having a fresh start, it's easy for everyone to get on board very fast and be able to build a culture very fast.' If there's anyone who can attest to Odom's approach and wherewithal to improve a program, it's defensive back Tony Grimes, who followed his coach from UNLV to West Lafayette, Indiana. 'Hard, smart and tough,' Grimes described Odom during spring practice. 'How he practices, how he makes us work, his schedule, his routine got us built on ... building calluses, meaning every day we're gonna go hard until we can't go no more. 'He took me in out of the portal when honestly no one really wanted me. He gave me that confidence that I needed back and now I am here what I am today.' It's the same confidence and will to get the best out of players that Odom is ready to instill while bringing life back to the Boilermakers. 'From the day that we got the job, every single day, our approach is you get up and you make Purdue football better,' Odom said. 'You find a way to consistently instill those habits in everyone around the organization. Then by the time that the season rolls around, we'll be ready to be the best versions of ourselves.' ____ AP college football:

Associated Press
2 days ago
- Associated Press
Barry Odom aiming to resurrect Purdue football the same way he made UNLV a winning program
LAS VEGAS (AP) — Purdue coach Barry Odom isn't concerned that the Boilermakers won just one game last season, or that they were in the 2022 Big Ten championship. He certainly isn't bothered that they've been picked to finish last in the 18-team league this season. 'We'll be defined by what we do,' Odom said Thursday, the last of three Big Ten media days. 'If we take the approach from the day that we got the job, every single day our approach is you get up and make Purdue football better and you find a way to consistently instill those habits in everyone around in the organization. Then by the time that the season rolls around, we'll be ready to be the best versions of ourselves.' After turning around one of the worst programs in college football history, Odom spoke with vigor and confidence about resurrecting a Purdue program that went 5-19 the last two seasons. Odom pulled off the unthinkable at UNLV two seasons ago, turning around a program that annually ranked near the bottom of college football in every aspect, and prior to his arrival, was a combined 29-74 the previous nine seasons. In two seasons under Odom, the Rebels made it to the Mountain West championship twice and and were one win away from advancing to the College Football Playoff last season, when they won 11 games for the first time since 1984 and cracked the AP top 25 rankings for the first time in their 46-year history. Now, he has his sights set on the Boilermakers, who ranked near the bottom of nearly every statistical category, including an offense that gained just 299.3 yards per game (127th nationally) and a defense that allowed 452.7 yards per contest (123rd). After a 49-0 season-opening win against Indiana State, the Boilermakers lost their next 11 games — eight by double digits — including the season finale against in-state rival Indiana, 66-0. With an uncertain depth chart entering camp, and a scarce number of returning starters across all three units, Odom's message has at least one of the program's leaders buying in. 'I mean, I feel like it's sort of intrinsic ... especially as big of a turnover that we had, you have a whole new room of guys and basically a new program,' fourth-year running back Devin Mockobee said. 'Having that aspect of coming in and having a fresh start, it's easy for everyone to get on board very fast and be able to build a culture very fast.' If there's anyone who can attest to Odom's approach and wherewithal to improve a program, it's defensive back Tony Grimes, who followed his coach from UNLV to West Lafayette, Indiana. 'Hard, smart and tough,' Grimes described Odom during spring practice. 'How he practices, how he makes us work, his schedule, his routine got us built on ... building calluses, meaning every day we're gonna go hard until we can't go no more. 'He took me in out of the portal when honestly no one really wanted me. He gave me that confidence that I needed back and now I am here what I am today.' It's the same confidence and will to get the best out of players that Odom is ready to instill while bringing life back to the Boilermakers. 'From the day that we got the job, every single day, our approach is you get up and you make Purdue football better,' Odom said. 'You find a way to consistently instill those habits in everyone around the organization. Then by the time that the season rolls around, we'll be ready to be the best versions of ourselves.' ____ AP college football:

Indianapolis Star
2 days ago
- Indianapolis Star
Journey of Purdue football's former top-20 recruit goes full circle with loyalty: 'He still believed'
LAS VEGAS — Tony Grimes planned to show his Purdue football teammates a small glimpse of a true Vegas experience. The transfer from UNLV wanted to take Devin Mockobee and CJ Madden to his favorite dining spot, Nico's, inside the off-strip Durango Casino Resort. He would have shared his go-to order: Burger for an appetizer, lamb chops for the entrée. Flight delays ruined those plans. Instead, the trio grabbed some carryout Wahlburgers inside Mandalay Bay and headed back to their rooms after arriving Wednesday night. In its own way, that truly reflected Grimes' year with UNLV. 'When I came to Vegas last year, yeah, I was expecting it to be something crazy,' Grimes said. 'But about two weeks in, I was like, oh, it's Vegas. You can have fun on the strip, but I'm here for football.' Grimes returned to Vegas for football Thursday, in some ways bringing his career full circle. Well, more of a figure eight. Actually it most resembles a completely haphazard doodle — not unlike one his 18-month-old daughter, Gianna, might draw. At Big Ten media days he represented his fourth (and final) team and conference. Such is the modern story of college football. Grimes began his career a blue chip recruit, weaved his way across the country through adversity and followed Barry Odom to Purdue for one final challenge. After only six-plus months on campus, though, Grimes earned a media day distinction typically reserved for a team's best leaders. Mockobee said he saw it on Day 1, when the freshly arrived transfer's spontaneous 'Purdue on three' declaration broke down a team meeting. 'He talks what he lives, and with him being an older guy, people see that and ultimately just respect it,' said Madden, in his second season after transferring from Georgia. 'He's done a great job and he's going to do great things this fall.' When he left Virginia Beach, Virginia, in 2020, Grimes could not have expected to one day wear a gold Purdue pin on his black suit at Big Ten media days. He took the long route there, too, starting at … North Carolina: Odom, as Arkansas' defensive coordinator, recruited the five-star prospect. Grimes picked the Tar Heels, though, then reclassified and entered college a year early. He began starting as a freshman, started regularly as a sophomore and junior and earned honorable mention All-ACC honors along the way. The coaches who brought Grimes to Chapel Hill began to leave. He didn't mesh with some of their replacements. So he entered the transfer portal — when Odom first tried to land him — and signed with … Texas A&M: The Aggies needed defensive back help, and Grimes was considered a big boost for a program which never quite reaches its lofty expectations. However, two weeks into preseason camp, went down with an MCL injury and knee tendinitis. He never played a snap for A&M. Grimes said he became too easily influenced by a group of teammates who 'didn't want it bad enough.' His time in College Station became a frustrating yet enlightening period. At this juncture, he stopped chasing those five-star expectations. Texas A&M fired Jimbo Fisher after the season, and Grimes looked elsewhere. He stayed in the Power Four by committing to … Michigan State: That's right — technically, Purdue is not Grimes' first Big Ten affiliation. Not every transfer goes smoothly, though. Grimes' credits transfer from A&M to East Lansing hit a snag. He would not be able to join the Spartans until the end of the summer. Grimes did not believe he could afford to miss spring football. So he decommitted and reconnected with a familiar face in a new place, called … UNLV: Odom's third attempt to reel in Grimes paid off. He started 13 games and recorded 20 tackles and six pass breakups. The Rebels won 11 games for the first time since 1984 and cracked the AP top 25 rankings for the first time in their 46-year history. Grimes completed his degree in communications and media studies. He could have stayed in Vegas for another year. Could have kept ordering those burger-lamb chop combos at Nico's. Instead, he felt a sense of loyalty to Odom. 'He saw something in me a lot of coaches didn't see in me,' Grimes said. 'He still believed I can be this top player in the country one day. He brought me in, and our journeys keep going.' That single honorable mention All-ACC selection remains the only conference recognition of Grimes' career. Odom, though, sees flashes of what made Grimes a top-20 national recruit more than half a decade ago. He said Grimes is in the best shape of his career and playing his best football right now. 'I think he's an NFL player,' Odom said. 'I think he's got the physical measurables to align with that. He's become a student of the game. He understands that part of that now. I think he's just scratching the surface of what he can be.' In keeping with Purdue's insistence on thinking bigger than expectations, though, Grimes set his goals higher than the Stratosphere towering over the north end of the strip. 'I have to be the top corner in the draft this year,' Grimes said. Come again? 'Yes, I will be,' Grimes said. His reasoning? He will play against great competition throughout the season. Ohio State, USC, Washington — the modern Big Ten features no shortage of receivers who can make a defensive back look fantastic or foolish. His motivation? He wants to help Purdue win immediately, and he wants to build momentum for recruiting the cornerbacks who will succeed him. Yet he's also no longer playing merely for pride and competition. He met Guadalupe Avalos-Castro when she was a pre-med student at North Carolina. She and Gianna will be with him in West Lafayette at he takes graduate school classes and closes his college football career. Grimes has already penned an epic script with this coast-to-coast journey. He's also an aspiring film maker who has been working on a screen play since his time with the Tar Heels. He declined to divulge the subject. 'I can't get into too much stuff, but it's gonna be good,' Grimes said. 'It's gonna be real good.' If Grimes' Purdue season goes as planned, they'll be calling it, 'Worth the wait.'