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American college football season
The 1976 Purdue Boilermakers football team was an American football team that represented Purdue University in the 1976 Big Ten Conference football season . In their fourth and final season under head coach Alex Agase , the Boilermakers compiled a 5–6 record (4–4 against conference opponents) and finished in a four-way tie for third place in the Big Ten standings.[ 1]
Running back Scott Dierking led the team with 1,000 rushing yards and 66 points scored.[ 2] He was selected by his teammates as the team's most valuable player and finished second to Rob Lytle in the voting for the Chicago Tribune Silver Football , awarded to the Big Ten's most valuable player.[ 3] Dierking was also named by the Associated Press (AP) as a second-team All-American[ 4] and by the AP and United Press International (UPI) as a first-team running back on the 1976 All-Big Ten Conference football team .[ 5] [ 6]
Other statistical leaders included quarterback Mark Vitali with 1,184 passing yards.[ 2] In addition to Dierking, three other Purdue players received honors on the 1976 All-Big Ten team: offensive guard Connie Zelencik (AP-1, UPI-2); defensive end Blane Smith (AP-1, UPI-2); and defensive back Paul Beery (AP-2, UPI-1).[ 5] [ 6]
Date Opponent Site Result Attendance Source September 11 Northwestern W 31–1946,311
September 18 at Notre Dame * L 0–2359,075
September 25 No. 19 USC * Ross–Ade Stadium West Lafayette, IN L 13–3165,425
October 2 Miami (OH) * Ross–Ade Stadium West Lafayette, IN W 42–2055,102
October 9 at Wisconsin W 18–1679,111
October 16 Illinois Ross–Ade Stadium West Lafayette, IN (rivalry ) L 17–2166,716
October 23 at No. 9 Ohio State L 3–2487,898
October 30 at Michigan State L 13–4552,222
November 6 No. 1 Michigan Ross–Ade Stadium West Lafayette, IN W 16–1457,205 [ 7] [ 8]
November 13 at Iowa W 21–044,763
November 20 Indiana L 14–2063,220
*Non-conference game HomecomingRankings from AP Poll released prior to the game
[ 9]
1976 Purdue Boilermakers football team roster
Players
Coaches
Offense
Defense
Pos.
#
Name
Class
LB
48
Fred Arrington
DT
73
Chris Barr
S
Paul Beery
DE
96
Kim Cripe
DT
Cleveland Crosby
CB
46
Pat Harris
Jr
CB
Jerome King
MG
Ken Loushin
LB
59
Bob Mannella
LB
Kevin Motts
CB , RB
24
Mike Northington
DE
91
Blane Smith (C)
Sr
S , K
20
Rock Supan
Special teams
Pos.
#
Name
Class
P
Dave Eagin
K
Scott Sovereen
K
John Turner
Head coach
Coordinators/assistant coaches
George Catavolos (DB)
Fred Conti
Jack Ellis
Bob Geiger
Jerry Hartman
Pat Naughton
Tom Roggeman
Rick Venturi
Mike Wynn
Legend
(C) Team captain
(S) Suspended
(I) Ineligible
Injured
Redshirt
Game information
First quarter
ND – Dave Reeve 39-yard field goal, 0:47. Notre Dame 3–0. Drive:
Second quarter
ND – Mark McLane 33-yard pass from Al Hunter (Dave Reeve kick). Notre Dame 10–0. Drive:
Third quarter
ND – Rick Slager 1-yard run (Dave Reeve kick). Notre Dame 17–0. Drive:
Fourth quarter
ND – Al Hunter 2-yard run (kick failed). Notre Dame 23–0. Drive: 49 yards.
Top passers
Top rushers
Top receivers
[ 10]
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(January 2021 )
Scott Dierking 28 rushes, 211 yards
John Skibinski 15 rushes, 121 yards
Paul Beery's fourth interception and Rock Supan's 20-yard field goal with a little over two minutes remaining lifted Purdue to victory.[ 11]
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(January 2021 )
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(January 2021 )
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(January 2021 )
#1 Michigan at Purdue
1
2 3 4 Total
Michigan
7
0 7 0
14
• Purdue
7
6 0 3
16
Scoring summary 1 MICH Leach 8-yard run (Wood kick) MICH 7-0
1 PUR Dierking 4-yard run (Supan kick) Tied 7-7
2 PUR Dierking 25-yard run (kick blocked) PUR 13-7
3 MICH Smith 65-yard pass from Leach (Wood kick) MICH 14-13
4 4:20 PUR Supan 23-yard field goal PUR 16-14
PUR: Scott Dierking 38 rushes, 162 yards
1
2 3 4 Total
• Purdue
6
8 7 0
21
Iowa
0
0 0 0
0
Scoring summary 1 Purdue Vitali 3-yard run (kick failed) Purdue 6-0
2 Purdue Vitali 20-yard run (Dierking run) Purdue 14-0
3 Purdue Vitali 1-yard run (Supan kick) Purdue 21-0
[ 12]
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(January 2021 )
Player
Comp
Att
Yards
TD
INT
Mark Vitali
73
172
1,184
0
16
Scott Dierking
92
Player
Att
Yards
TD
Scott Dierking
201
1,000
11
John Skibinski
173
871
Mark Vitali
100
317
Player
Rec
Yards
TD
Reggie Arnold
16
287
Raymond Smith
11
233
John Skibinski
13
118
[ 13]
Red Mackey Award: Mark Vitali
^ "1976 Big Ten Conference Year Summary" . SR/College Football . Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved February 24, 2017 .
^ a b "1976 Purdue Boilermakers Stats" . SR/College Football . Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved March 1, 2017 .
^ Roy Damer (December 25, 1975). "Lytle named Big 10 MVP: Purdue's Dierking is runnerup" . Chicago Tribune . p. 2-1.
^ "Tony Dorsett tops AP All-American Team" . Jefferson City Post Tribune . December 2, 1976. p. 13.
^ a b "Michigan, Ohio State Pace All-Big Ten Team" . Toledo Blade (AP story) . December 3, 1976. p. 27.
^ a b "Illini place two on All-Big 10" . The Pantagraph . November 24, 1976. p. A11.
^ "Purdue Stuns No. 1 Michigan" . The Victoria Advocate (AP story) . November 7, 1976.
^ "Purdue stuns No. 1 Michigan, Pittsburgh may get top ranking" . The Bulletin (AP story) . November 8, 1976.
^ "2022 Purdue Football Record Book" (PDF) . Purdue University Athletics. p. 89. Retrieved January 29, 2023 .
^ Eugene Register-Guard. 1976 Sept 19. Pg. 14B. Retrieved 2021-Jan-11.
^ Eugene Register-Guard. 1976 Oct 09. Retrieved 2018-Dec-30.
^ Eugene Register-Guard. 1976 Nov 14.
^ Broyles, Bob and Paul Guido. 50 Years of College Football: A Modern History of America's Most Colorful Sport
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