Legendary Purdue football coach Joe Tiller, 74, dies
He was not on the list.
The Big Ten lost one of its most innovative, influential and
beloved coaches with the passing of Purdue's Joe Tiller, who was 74.
Tiller forever changed the face of Big Ten football upon
being hired at Purdue in 1997, showing a wide-open offense could be a success
in the black-and-blue Big Ten. And in doing so, Tiller reversed the fortunes of
Purdue during a 12-year run that included 10 bowl trips and the school's first
Rose Bowl since the 1966 season.
Tiller left West Lafayette as the school's all-time
winningest coach, passing Jack Mollenkopf by going 87-62 overall and 53-43 in
the Big Ten from 1997-2008. While Tiller's prowess as a coach was formidable,
he was an even better person who I enjoyed getting to know over the years.
I'll never forget first sitting in his office in the winter
of 1998. I was in West Lafayette to do a story on his magical 9-3 debut in
1997. I soon discovered: No one told stories like Tiller. He just had a knack.
We all know people like that. So, I'm asking Tiller if recruiting is getting
easier for him since he led the Boilermakers to a bowl win in his first season
after the school hadn't been to the postseason since 1984. He leans back in his
chair ?
"In recruiting, most kids had a real phone number and a
chump phone number," Tiller said. "We aren't getting the chump line
too often anymore."
There was an "Everyman" quality about Tiller whose
personality was perfect for slow-paced West Lafayette and conservative Purdue.
His house in West Lafayette was nice-but modest. No gated community or five-car
garage. Nope. Tiller bought his milk and bread just down the street at Marsh
supermarket, cut his lawn and just may even borrow your chainsaw. And Tiller
went to church every day. He made it easy by living a short walk from Blessed
Sacrament Catholic Church on Sacramento Drive in West Lafayette.
Tiller had a presence about his. He was a big man, a former
offensive lineman at Montana State who filled a room. I first encountered
Tiller when he was the Boilermakers' defensive coordinator-that's right,
defensive coordinator-while I was at Purdue from 1983-86. The guy was
intimidating for a student assistant in the school's sports information
department who was looking for a quote for program feature stories I wrote on
guys like Rod Woodson, Fred Strickland, Cris Dishman and Kevin Sumlin.
But as the years past, and he circled back into my life as
Purdue's head coach, Tiller softened-at least a little bit. But he still was
intimidating. I recall being in his office on another occasion and watching him
rip into a misbehaving player. It made me slump in the chair.
On my last visit with Tiller as Purdue coach prior to the
2008 season, he had something we wanted to show me. Tiller reached over to a
shelf in his office and showed me the plans for his house in Wyoming. Man, was
he proud. Tiller beamed as he unfurled the papers and showed me the layout. He
had dreamed and yearned for this for years.
"Just me and the trout," Tiller said. "They
don't tell me what play I should have called on third-and-five."
And then there were the calls. When you looked at your phone
and saw it was Tiller, you knew it wasn't going to be a short conversation.
Tiller told stories of Purdue fans who would stop by his cabin and visit.
"You should see these people, Tom," Tiller would say. "They look
at my Purdue memorabilia and almost cry."
Tiller loved to talk-about pretty much anything-but
especially his love of the West. Tiller fell in love with Big Sky county as a
player at Montana State-and then as an assistant and later head coach of
Wyoming. Now, he was living among the coyotes, wolves and bears. And, he loved
it. Tiller was living his dream. How many of us can say that?
The last time I heard from Tiller was via a phone call about
a year ago.
"Do you know how much snow we got out here last
winter?" Tiller asked, waiting for me to say: "How much?"
I asked him about what he thought of Purdue's chances in the
coming the season. He didn't seem too interested, relating he had lost desire
to follow the team as his connections to the school faded. Understandable.
I could go on about Tiller's football resume. Yes, it was
impressive. The Big Ten never had seen an offense like the one Tiller brought
with him from the plains of Wyoming to take over for Jim Colletto. Tiller
introduced a wide-open offensive style to the button-upped Big Ten. Some
analysts affectionately called Tiller's spread attack "basketball on
grass." And many of those same analysts doubted such an offense could be
successful in the Big Ten. Boy, were they wrong.
A big key to Tiller's success: He built some fine staffs in
West Lafayette, hiring the likes of Brock Spack, Kevin Sumlin, Jim Chaney, Greg
Olson, Mark Hagan, Danny Hope, Terrell Williams, Ted Gilmore, Bill Legg, Bob
DeBesse, Randy Melvin, Gary Emanuel and Scott Downing, among others. Those
assistants played a large role in Purdue's rise to relevancy, as the program
produced talented quarterbacks who went on to the NFL in Drew Brees, Kyle Orton
and Curtis Painter.
And the program developed defensive talent under Tiller,
cultivating a reputation as the "den of defensive ends," as future
pros like Rosevelt Colvin, Akin Ayodele, Chike Okeafor, Ray Edwards, Rob
Ninkovich, Cliff Avril, Shaun Phillips, Ryan Kerrigan and Anthony Spencer went
on to success in the NFL.
But Brees, of course, was the prized pupil. Whenever you
asked Tiller about the two-time Heisman finalist, he got a bit excited. Why
not? Brees is a Big Ten icon who delivered Tiller to the Rose Bowl in the 2000
season.
Can you believe that? Purdue? In the Rose Bowl? Yep.
As Tiller liked to say about himself: "Not bad for a
guy from a dead-end street in Toledo."
I am gonna miss Joe Tiller.
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