GOLD AND BLACK ILLUSTRATED VOLUME 28, ISSUE 6 12
kind of got starstruck by ourselves,
almost," senior D.J. Knox said. "We
believed in the coaching, and it actu-
ally got us to a point where we were
like, 'Wow.'"
And then came Rutgers.
And that really was shock and defi-
nitely awwww … dang.
Maybe the Boilermakers weren't
ready for this? Maybe they weren't
ready to experience success? But a
wise captain, cornerback Da'Wan
Hunte, gave a proper dressing-down
in the locker room after the hiccup
and Purdue was able to get focused
again.
Yes, they could do it. Yes, they
deserved it, they preached to them-
selves.
And the focus, the purpose, the
fight came back. And Purdue ral-
lied, even after its captain quarterback went down, even
when its other top QB played through a significant inju-
ry, to deliver at Iowa, against Indiana and finish against
Arizona to secure its first bowl game victory since 2011.
Purdue finished 7-6 in 2017, pushed above the .500
Tom Campbell
Senior tight end Cole Herdman is part of an experienced group of skill players on the offense,
although there's one major question: Who develops as a playmaker on the perimeter?
Securities offered through Regulus Advisors, LLC. Member FINRA/SIPC. Investment advisory services offered through Regal Investment Advisors, LLC, an SEC Registered
Investment Advisor. Regulus Advisors and Regal Investment Advisors are affiliated entities. Summit Retirement Advisors, LLC and Summit Financial Group of Indiana are
affiliated entities. Summit Retirement Advisors, LLC and Summit Financial Group of Indiana are independent of Regulus Advisors and Regal Investment Advisors.
Jon McCardle, President
Summit Financial Group of Indiana
4050 Britt Farm Dr
Lafayette, IN 47905
866-582-5721
jon@summit-fp.com
www.summitfinancialgroupofindiana.com
Financial Advisory
for Academics and
Top Tier Professionals