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Notre Dame–Purdue football rivalry

The Notre Dame–Purdue football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team of the University of Notre Dame and Purdue Boilermakers football of Purdue University.

Notre Dame–Purdue football rivalry
First meetingNovember 14, 1896
Purdue 28, Notre Dame 22
Latest meetingSeptember 18, 2021
Notre Dame 27, Purdue 13
Next meetingSeptember 14, 2024, in West Lafayette
StadiumsNotre Dame Stadium
South Bend, Indiana, U.S.
Ross–Ade Stadium
West Lafayette, Indiana, U.S.
TrophyNone (1896–1956)
Shillelagh Trophy (1957–present)
Statistics
Meetings total87
All-time seriesNotre Dame leads, 57–26–2 (.682)[1]
Trophy seriesNotre Dame leads, 38–19 (.667)
Largest victoryNotre Dame, 48–0 (1970, 1992)
Longest win streakNotre Dame, 11 (1986–1996)
Current win streakNotre Dame, 6 (2008–present)
Locations of Purdue and Notre Dame

Trophy edit

The Shillelagh Trophy is a trophy exchanged between Notre Dame and Purdue, being held by the winner of the game. The two in-state rivals first played each other in 1896. The game occurred annually from 1946 to 2014.[2] The trophy, first presented in 1957, is a shillelagh donated by Joe McLaughlin, a merchant seaman and a Fighting Irish supporter who brought it from Ireland.[3]

Notable games edit

Notable games since 1946 include:

1950 – Purdue 28, Notre Dame 14
Notre Dame's 39-game unbeaten string came to an end at the hands of the Boilermakers. Future NFL QB Dale Samuels threw two touchdowns to defeat the Irish. The Irish finished 4–4–1, easily the worst season for head coach Frank Leahy.
1954 – #19 Purdue 27, #1 Notre Dame 14
The top-ranked Irish were done in by their intrastate rival as their 13-game unbeaten streak ended. It was their only loss of the year as they finished 9–1 under new coach Terry Brennan.
1957 – Notre Dame 12, Purdue 0
A psychological ploy enabled the Irish, coming off their worst season in history at that point, to start off on the right foot. Purdue coach Jack Mollenkopf heard that Terry Brennan had installed the single wing after spending some time in Knoxville, and wasn't sure how to prepare for Notre Dame. As it turned out, the single wing was not used against the tentative Boilermakers.
1960 – Purdue 51, Notre Dame 19
Purdue set two records for Notre Dame opponents in this game that still stand: most points ever scored against the Fighting Irish in the second quarter (31) and the most points ever by an opponent in Notre Dame Stadium. To date, it is the only time the Irish have ever given up 50 points in a game at Notre Dame Stadium. It was the worst defeat for the Fighting Irish under coach Joe Kuharich and at the time, it was only the fourth time in which the Fighting Irish had ever given up 50 points in a game.
1964 – Notre Dame 34, Purdue 15
The Fighting Irish made a statement under new coach Ara Parseghian as they throttled the Boilermakers. Alan Page blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown and defensive back Nick Rassas caught a touchdown pass late in the game.
1965 – Purdue 25, Notre Dame 21
In a seesaw battle, Purdue scored the winning touchdown late in the game. Bob Griese set a Notre Dame opponent record by completing 19 of 22 passes, a record that stood until 1991.
1966 – Notre Dame 26, Purdue 14
This game is best remembered for the debut of one of Notre Dame's greatest passing combinations – Terry Hanratty to Jim Seymour. Hanratty completed 16 of 24 passes for 304 yards and three touchdowns, all to Seymour, who had 13 receptions. The teams traded quick touchdowns early on when Purdue's Leroy Keyes grabbed an errant pitch out of the air and returned it 95 yards for a score, only to have Fighting Irish halfback Nick Eddy return the ensuing kickoff 97 yards for the equalizer. Notre Dame finished 9–0–1 and win the national championship while Purdue made its first trip to the Rose Bowl a memorable one, beating USC, 14–13. Purdue was allowed to go to the Rose Bowl because Michigan State's 9–0–1 record prevented the Spartans from repeating as Big Ten Champions and the Rose Bowl berth.
1967 – Purdue 28, Notre Dame 21
Once again, the top-ranked and defending national champion Fighting Irish were done in by the Boilermakers despite the efforts of Terry Hanratty, who completed 29 out of 63 attempts. The loss snapped a 12-game unbeaten streak by the Fighting Irish.
1968 – Purdue 37, Notre Dame 22
In the only #1 vs #2 matchup in the history of this rivalry, the top-ranked Boilermakers and quarterback Mike Phipps walloped the #2 Fighting Irish.
1970 – Notre Dame 48, Purdue 0
After three years of frustration, the Irish exploded all at once against the Boilermakers, holding them to 144 total yards and six first downs. Joe Theismann threw three touchdown passes to Tom Gatewood and Ara Parseghian was carried off the field after the game.
1971 – Notre Dame 8, Purdue 7
In a game played in the rain, the Fighting Irish, trailing 7–0, took advantage of a botched snap on a punt to score a touchdown late in the game, then executed a successful two-point conversion to win. It was their first win in West Lafayette since 1961.
1974 – Purdue 31, Notre Dame 20
A four-touchdown underdog, Purdue once again broke a Notre Dame winning streak and derailed any hope for the Fighting Irish to repeat as national champions by jumping out to a 24–0 lead in the first quarter, setting a record for most points scored against Notre Dame in the opening stanza. Boilermaker coach Alex Agase finally notched a victory against his close friend, Ara Parseghian.
1975 – Notre Dame 17, Purdue 0
Notre Dame led, 3–0 in the fourth quarter when Purdue threatened to take the lead. Luther Bradley's 99-yard interception return for a touchdown on a halfback-to-quarterback pass attempt broke the game open, and the Fighting Irish, who had played five days earlier and won, improved to 2–0 under new coach Dan Devine.
1977 – Notre Dame 31, Purdue 24
Notre Dame trailed, 24–14 in the fourth quarter when Joe Montana entered the game. Montana, who had not played since 1975, engineered a comeback victory and nailed down the starting quarterback job for the remainder of his Notre Dame career. The Fighting Irish, coming off a 20–13 loss to Ole Miss, did not lose the rest of the way and won the national championship.
1979 – Purdue 28, Notre Dame 22
Notre Dame, rotating three quarterbacks in place of the injured Rusty Lisch, took a 20–7 lead in the third quarter before Boilermaker quarterback Mark Herrmann came alive. Purdue took an intentional safety late in the game, downing the ball in its own end zone out of punt formation rather than risking a blocked punt.
1980 – Notre Dame 31, Purdue 10
The Irish opened Dan Devine's final season with an impressive win over the Boilermakers in a game that was moved up to September 6 to accommodate national television. Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann did not play, having injured his throwing hand earlier in the week, and freshman Scott Campbell took his place. The Irish finished 9–2–1, losing to eventual national champion Georgia in the Sugar Bowl.
1981 – Purdue 15, Notre Dame 14
Purdue pulled this one out late in the game after the Fighting Irish had taken a 14–7 lead. It was the start of a pattern under new coach Gerry Faust, whose teams developed a knack for losing games in the closing moments.
1983 – Notre Dame 52, Purdue 6
Notre Dame could do no wrong as they rang up the highest point total by a Purdue opponent in Ross-Ade Stadium. Despite the impressive start, the Fighting Irish lost their last three games of the season to finish 6–5 before holding off Boston College in the Liberty Bowl.
1984 - Purdue 23, Notre Dame 21
Jim Everett clinched his first victory as the Purdue Quarterback over the Irish at the Hoosier Dome; the win marked the first season Purdue defeated Notre Dame, Michigan and Ohio State in the same season.
1986 – Notre Dame 41, Purdue 9
Lou Holtz notched his first victory as head coach of the Fighting Irish and the first of eleven straight wins against the Boilermakers.
1988 – Notre Dame 52, Purdue 7
En route to a national championship, Notre Dame took a 42–0 halftime lead and coasted the rest of the way. Irish coach Lou Holtz cleared the bench in the second half.
1997 – Purdue 28, Notre Dame 17
The Boilermakers ended their 11-game losing streak against the Fighting Irish in a matchup of new head coaches, Purdue's Joe Tiller and Notre Dame's Bob Davie. Tiller's predecessor, Jim Colletto, was now the offensive coordinator for the Fighting Irish.
1998 – Notre Dame 31, Purdue 30
Tony Driver's two interceptions late in the game enabled the Fighting Irish to squeak by Purdue. His first interception set up a game-winning field goal while the second moments later sealed the victory.
1999 – Purdue 28, Notre Dame 23
For the second week in a row, Notre Dame came up short as Fighting Irish quarterback Jarious Jackson was sacked on the game's final play with the Fighting Irish at the Purdue nine-yard line.
2000 – Notre Dame 23, Purdue 21
Nick Setta's field goal as time ran out lifted the Fighting Irish to a come-from-behind victory. Fighting Irish quarterback Gary Godsey, making his first start in place of the injured Arnaz Battle, outdueled Drew Brees.
2001 – Notre Dame 24, Purdue 18
This game was played on December 1, having been rescheduled after the September 11 attacks. The Fighting Irish finished a dismal season with a 5–6 record. It was Bob Davie's last game as head coach; he was fired the next day.
2002 – Notre Dame 24, Purdue 17
Notre Dame's defense and special teams accounted for all three touchdowns.
2004 – Purdue 41, Notre Dame 16
The Boilermakers notched their first win at Notre Dame Stadium since 1974 despite the efforts of Fighting Irish quarterback Brady Quinn, who set a stadium record by passing for 432 yards because they were playing from behind the entire game.
2009 – Notre Dame 24, Purdue 21
Fighting Irish quarterback Jimmy Clausen's touchdown pass to Kyle Rudolph with 24 seconds left lifted the Fighting Irish to a come-from-behind victory.
2010 – Notre Dame 23, Purdue 12
Coach Brian Kelly notched his first win as Notre Dame's coach by incorporating the spread offense and 3–4 defense. Dayne Crist makes his first start as Notre Dame's quarterback, throwing for 205 yards and 1 TD. On the other side of the ball, quarterback Robert Marve makes his debut for the Boilermakers after transferring from Miami (FL) throwing for 220 yards, 0 TDs, and 2 INTs.
2013 – Notre Dame 31, Purdue 24
The #21-ranked Irish came in to West Lafayette a 3-touchdown favorite over Purdue. Purdue took the ball to start the game and drove it 75 yards to score first. Purdue had a 10–0 lead before the Irish were able to make it 10–3 at halftime. The game went back and forth until up 24–17, Notre Dame picked off quarterback Rob Henry and took it to the house to go up 31–17 with 8 minutes left. The Boilermakers drove down the field and scored to get the game within 7. Purdue forced a Notre Dame fumble on the next drive, but could not take advantage of it as Notre Dame went on to win 31–24.

After the 2014 game, the annual series ended. The rivalry resumed in 2021 and will be an annual game from 2024 until at least 2028.[4]

Game results edit

Notre Dame victoriesPurdue victoriesTie gamesVacated wins[n 1]
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
1 November 14, 1896 South Bend, IN Purdue 28–22
2 November 18, 1899 West Lafayette, IN Tie10–10
3 November 9, 1901 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 12–6
4 November 27, 1902 West Lafayette, IN Tie6–6
5 November 24, 1904 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 36–0
6 November 24, 1905 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 32–0
7 November 3, 1906 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 2–0
8 November 23, 1907 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 17–0
9 November 23, 1918 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 26–6
10 November 22, 1919 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 33–13
11 November 6, 1920 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 28–0
12 October 15, 1921 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 33–0
13 October 14, 1922 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 20–0
14 November 3, 1923 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 34–7
15 November 3, 1933 South Bend, IN Purdue 19–0
16 October 13, 1934 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 18–7
17 September 30, 1939 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 3–0
18 October 12, 1946 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 49–6
19 October 11, 1947 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 49–6
20 September 25, 1948 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 28–27
21 October 8, 1949 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 35–12
22 October 7, 1950 South Bend, IN Purdue 35–12
23 October 27, 1951 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 30–9
24 October 18, 1952 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 26–14
25 October 3, 1953 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 37–7
26 October 2, 1954 South Bend, IN Purdue 27–14
27 October 22, 1955 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 22–7
28 October 13, 1956 South Bend, IN Purdue 28–14
29 September 28, 1957 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 12–0
30 October 25, 1958 South Bend, IN Purdue 29–22
31 October 3, 1959 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–7
32 October 1, 1960 South Bend, IN Purdue 51–19
33 October 7, 1961 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 22–20
34 October 6, 1962 South Bend, IN Purdue 24–6
35 October 5, 1963 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 7–6
36 October 3, 1964 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 34–15
37 September 25, 1965 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 25–21
38 September 24, 1966 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 26–14
39 September 30, 1967 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–21
40 September 28, 1968 South Bend, IN #1 Purdue 37–22
41 September 27, 1969 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–14
42 September 26, 1970 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 48–0
43 September 25, 1971 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 8–7
44 September 30, 1972 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 35–14
45 September 29, 1973 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 20–7
No.DateLocationWinnerScore
46 September 28, 1974 South Bend, IN Purdue 31–20
47 September 20, 1975 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 17–0
48 September 18, 1976 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 23–0
49 September 24, 1977 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 31–24
50 September 30, 1978 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 10–6
51 September 22, 1979 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–22
52 September 6, 1980 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 31–10
53 September 26, 1981 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 15–14
54 September 25, 1982 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 28–14
55 September 10, 1983 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 52–6
56 September 8, 1984 Indianapolis, IN Purdue 23–21
57 September 28, 1985 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 35–17
58 September 27, 1986 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 41–9
59 September 26, 1987 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 44–20
60 September 24, 1988 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 52–7
61 September 30, 1989 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 40–7
62 September 29, 1990 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 37–11
63 September 28, 1991 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 45–20
64 September 26, 1992 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 48–0
65 September 25, 1993 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 17–0
66 September 24, 1994 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 39–21
67 September 9, 1995 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 35–28
68 September 14, 1996 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 35–0
69 September 13, 1997 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–17
70 September 26, 1998 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 31–30
71 September 11, 1999 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 28–23
72 September 16, 2000 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 23–21
73 December 1, 2001 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 24–18
74 September 7, 2002 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 24–17
75 September 27, 2003 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 23–10
76 October 2, 2004 South Bend, IN Purdue 41–16
77 October 1, 2005 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 49–28
78 September 30, 2006 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 35–21
79 September 29, 2007 West Lafayette, IN Purdue 33–19
80 September 27, 2008 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 38–21
81 September 26, 2009 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 24–21
82 September 4, 2010 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 23–12
83 October 1, 2011 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 38–10
84 September 8, 2012 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 20–17
85 September 14, 2013 West Lafayette, IN Notre Dame 31–24
86 September 13, 2014 Indianapolis, IN Notre Dame 30–14
87 September 18, 2021 South Bend, IN Notre Dame 27–13
Series: Notre Dame leads 57–26–2[1]
† Vacated by Notre Dame[8]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Notre Dame's wins in 2012 and 2013 were vacated as a result of NCAA sanctions against the Notre Dame football program issued on November 22, 2016, after the NCAA found that a student-trainer committed academic misconduct for two football players and provided six other players with impermissible academic extra benefits. The NCAA also rejected Notre Dame's appeal on February 13, 2018. This win is not included in Notre Dame's all-time record, nor is it counted in the series record between the two teams.[5] See Wikipedia:WikiProject College football/Vacated victories for an explanation of how vacated victories are recorded.[6][7]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Winsipedia - Notre Dame Fighting Irish vs. Purdue Boilermakers football series history". Winsipedia.
  2. ^ . College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from the original on August 15, 2004. Retrieved October 27, 2007.
  3. ^ "Purdue Sports Football Game Notes". Archived from the original on July 12, 2012. Retrieved September 26, 2007.
  4. ^ "FB Adds to Future Schedules". Purdue University Athletics.
  5. ^ NCAA orders Notre Dame Fighting Irish to vacate wins from 2012, 2013 seasons. ESPN, November 22, 2016.
  6. ^ Low, Chris (June 16, 2009). "What does vacating wins really mean?". ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  7. ^ Taylor, John (July 4, 2009). "Vacated Wins Do Not Equal Forfeits". NBCSports.com. NBC Sports. Retrieved July 9, 2011.
  8. ^ "Forfeits and Vacated Games". College Football at Sports-Reference.com.

notre, dame, purdue, football, rivalry, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, sch. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Notre Dame Purdue football rivalry news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Notre Dame Purdue football rivalry is an American college football rivalry between the Notre Dame Fighting Irish football team of the University of Notre Dame and Purdue Boilermakers football of Purdue University Notre Dame Purdue football rivalryNotre Dame Fighting IrishPurdue BoilermakersFirst meetingNovember 14 1896Purdue 28 Notre Dame 22Latest meetingSeptember 18 2021Notre Dame 27 Purdue 13Next meetingSeptember 14 2024 in West LafayetteStadiumsNotre Dame StadiumSouth Bend Indiana U S Ross Ade StadiumWest Lafayette Indiana U S TrophyNone 1896 1956 Shillelagh Trophy 1957 present StatisticsMeetings total87All time seriesNotre Dame leads 57 26 2 682 1 Trophy seriesNotre Dame leads 38 19 667 Largest victoryNotre Dame 48 0 1970 1992 Longest win streakNotre Dame 11 1986 1996 Current win streakNotre Dame 6 2008 present 50km30miles Notre Dame Purdue Locations of Purdue and Notre Dame Contents 1 Trophy 2 Notable games 3 Game results 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesTrophy editThe Shillelagh Trophy is a trophy exchanged between Notre Dame and Purdue being held by the winner of the game The two in state rivals first played each other in 1896 The game occurred annually from 1946 to 2014 2 The trophy first presented in 1957 is a shillelagh donated by Joe McLaughlin a merchant seaman and a Fighting Irish supporter who brought it from Ireland 3 Notable games editNotable games since 1946 include 1950 Purdue 28 Notre Dame 14 Notre Dame s 39 game unbeaten string came to an end at the hands of the Boilermakers Future NFL QB Dale Samuels threw two touchdowns to defeat the Irish The Irish finished 4 4 1 easily the worst season for head coach Frank Leahy 1954 19 Purdue 27 1 Notre Dame 14 The top ranked Irish were done in by their intrastate rival as their 13 game unbeaten streak ended It was their only loss of the year as they finished 9 1 under new coach Terry Brennan 1957 Notre Dame 12 Purdue 0 A psychological ploy enabled the Irish coming off their worst season in history at that point to start off on the right foot Purdue coach Jack Mollenkopf heard that Terry Brennan had installed the single wing after spending some time in Knoxville and wasn t sure how to prepare for Notre Dame As it turned out the single wing was not used against the tentative Boilermakers 1960 Purdue 51 Notre Dame 19 Purdue set two records for Notre Dame opponents in this game that still stand most points ever scored against the Fighting Irish in the second quarter 31 and the most points ever by an opponent in Notre Dame Stadium To date it is the only time the Irish have ever given up 50 points in a game at Notre Dame Stadium It was the worst defeat for the Fighting Irish under coach Joe Kuharich and at the time it was only the fourth time in which the Fighting Irish had ever given up 50 points in a game 1964 Notre Dame 34 Purdue 15 The Fighting Irish made a statement under new coach Ara Parseghian as they throttled the Boilermakers Alan Page blocked a punt and returned it for a touchdown and defensive back Nick Rassas caught a touchdown pass late in the game 1965 Purdue 25 Notre Dame 21 In a seesaw battle Purdue scored the winning touchdown late in the game Bob Griese set a Notre Dame opponent record by completing 19 of 22 passes a record that stood until 1991 1966 Notre Dame 26 Purdue 14 This game is best remembered for the debut of one of Notre Dame s greatest passing combinations Terry Hanratty to Jim Seymour Hanratty completed 16 of 24 passes for 304 yards and three touchdowns all to Seymour who had 13 receptions The teams traded quick touchdowns early on when Purdue s Leroy Keyes grabbed an errant pitch out of the air and returned it 95 yards for a score only to have Fighting Irish halfback Nick Eddy return the ensuing kickoff 97 yards for the equalizer Notre Dame finished 9 0 1 and win the national championship while Purdue made its first trip to the Rose Bowl a memorable one beating USC 14 13 Purdue was allowed to go to the Rose Bowl because Michigan State s 9 0 1 record prevented the Spartans from repeating as Big Ten Champions and the Rose Bowl berth 1967 Purdue 28 Notre Dame 21 Once again the top ranked and defending national champion Fighting Irish were done in by the Boilermakers despite the efforts of Terry Hanratty who completed 29 out of 63 attempts The loss snapped a 12 game unbeaten streak by the Fighting Irish 1968 Purdue 37 Notre Dame 22 In the only 1 vs 2 matchup in the history of this rivalry the top ranked Boilermakers and quarterback Mike Phipps walloped the 2 Fighting Irish 1970 Notre Dame 48 Purdue 0 After three years of frustration the Irish exploded all at once against the Boilermakers holding them to 144 total yards and six first downs Joe Theismann threw three touchdown passes to Tom Gatewood and Ara Parseghian was carried off the field after the game 1971 Notre Dame 8 Purdue 7 In a game played in the rain the Fighting Irish trailing 7 0 took advantage of a botched snap on a punt to score a touchdown late in the game then executed a successful two point conversion to win It was their first win in West Lafayette since 1961 1974 Purdue 31 Notre Dame 20 A four touchdown underdog Purdue once again broke a Notre Dame winning streak and derailed any hope for the Fighting Irish to repeat as national champions by jumping out to a 24 0 lead in the first quarter setting a record for most points scored against Notre Dame in the opening stanza Boilermaker coach Alex Agase finally notched a victory against his close friend Ara Parseghian 1975 Notre Dame 17 Purdue 0 Notre Dame led 3 0 in the fourth quarter when Purdue threatened to take the lead Luther Bradley s 99 yard interception return for a touchdown on a halfback to quarterback pass attempt broke the game open and the Fighting Irish who had played five days earlier and won improved to 2 0 under new coach Dan Devine 1977 Notre Dame 31 Purdue 24 Notre Dame trailed 24 14 in the fourth quarter when Joe Montana entered the game Montana who had not played since 1975 engineered a comeback victory and nailed down the starting quarterback job for the remainder of his Notre Dame career The Fighting Irish coming off a 20 13 loss to Ole Miss did not lose the rest of the way and won the national championship 1979 Purdue 28 Notre Dame 22 Notre Dame rotating three quarterbacks in place of the injured Rusty Lisch took a 20 7 lead in the third quarter before Boilermaker quarterback Mark Herrmann came alive Purdue took an intentional safety late in the game downing the ball in its own end zone out of punt formation rather than risking a blocked punt 1980 Notre Dame 31 Purdue 10 The Irish opened Dan Devine s final season with an impressive win over the Boilermakers in a game that was moved up to September 6 to accommodate national television Purdue quarterback Mark Herrmann did not play having injured his throwing hand earlier in the week and freshman Scott Campbell took his place The Irish finished 9 2 1 losing to eventual national champion Georgia in the Sugar Bowl 1981 Purdue 15 Notre Dame 14 Purdue pulled this one out late in the game after the Fighting Irish had taken a 14 7 lead It was the start of a pattern under new coach Gerry Faust whose teams developed a knack for losing games in the closing moments 1983 Notre Dame 52 Purdue 6 Notre Dame could do no wrong as they rang up the highest point total by a Purdue opponent in Ross Ade Stadium Despite the impressive start the Fighting Irish lost their last three games of the season to finish 6 5 before holding off Boston College in the Liberty Bowl 1984 Purdue 23 Notre Dame 21 Jim Everett clinched his first victory as the Purdue Quarterback over the Irish at the Hoosier Dome the win marked the first season Purdue defeated Notre Dame Michigan and Ohio State in the same season 1986 Notre Dame 41 Purdue 9 Lou Holtz notched his first victory as head coach of the Fighting Irish and the first of eleven straight wins against the Boilermakers 1988 Notre Dame 52 Purdue 7 En route to a national championship Notre Dame took a 42 0 halftime lead and coasted the rest of the way Irish coach Lou Holtz cleared the bench in the second half 1997 Purdue 28 Notre Dame 17 The Boilermakers ended their 11 game losing streak against the Fighting Irish in a matchup of new head coaches Purdue s Joe Tiller and Notre Dame s Bob Davie Tiller s predecessor Jim Colletto was now the offensive coordinator for the Fighting Irish 1998 Notre Dame 31 Purdue 30 Tony Driver s two interceptions late in the game enabled the Fighting Irish to squeak by Purdue His first interception set up a game winning field goal while the second moments later sealed the victory 1999 Purdue 28 Notre Dame 23 For the second week in a row Notre Dame came up short as Fighting Irish quarterback Jarious Jackson was sacked on the game s final play with the Fighting Irish at the Purdue nine yard line 2000 Notre Dame 23 Purdue 21 Nick Setta s field goal as time ran out lifted the Fighting Irish to a come from behind victory Fighting Irish quarterback Gary Godsey making his first start in place of the injured Arnaz Battle outdueled Drew Brees 2001 Notre Dame 24 Purdue 18 This game was played on December 1 having been rescheduled after the September 11 attacks The Fighting Irish finished a dismal season with a 5 6 record It was Bob Davie s last game as head coach he was fired the next day 2002 Notre Dame 24 Purdue 17 Notre Dame s defense and special teams accounted for all three touchdowns 2004 Purdue 41 Notre Dame 16 The Boilermakers notched their first win at Notre Dame Stadium since 1974 despite the efforts of Fighting Irish quarterback Brady Quinn who set a stadium record by passing for 432 yards because they were playing from behind the entire game 2009 Notre Dame 24 Purdue 21 Fighting Irish quarterback Jimmy Clausen s touchdown pass to Kyle Rudolph with 24 seconds left lifted the Fighting Irish to a come from behind victory 2010 Notre Dame 23 Purdue 12 Coach Brian Kelly notched his first win as Notre Dame s coach by incorporating the spread offense and 3 4 defense Dayne Crist makes his first start as Notre Dame s quarterback throwing for 205 yards and 1 TD On the other side of the ball quarterback Robert Marve makes his debut for the Boilermakers after transferring from Miami FL throwing for 220 yards 0 TDs and 2 INTs 2013 Notre Dame 31 Purdue 24 The 21 ranked Irish came in to West Lafayette a 3 touchdown favorite over Purdue Purdue took the ball to start the game and drove it 75 yards to score first Purdue had a 10 0 lead before the Irish were able to make it 10 3 at halftime The game went back and forth until up 24 17 Notre Dame picked off quarterback Rob Henry and took it to the house to go up 31 17 with 8 minutes left The Boilermakers drove down the field and scored to get the game within 7 Purdue forced a Notre Dame fumble on the next drive but could not take advantage of it as Notre Dame went on to win 31 24 After the 2014 game the annual series ended The rivalry resumed in 2021 and will be an annual game from 2024 until at least 2028 4 Game results editNotre Dame victoriesPurdue victoriesTie gamesVacated wins n 1 No DateLocationWinnerScore1November 14 1896South Bend INPurdue28 222November 18 1899West Lafayette INTie10 103November 9 1901South Bend INNotre Dame12 64November 27 1902West Lafayette INTie6 65November 24 1904West Lafayette INPurdue36 06November 24 1905West Lafayette INPurdue32 07November 3 1906West Lafayette INNotre Dame2 08November 23 1907West Lafayette INNotre Dame17 09November 23 1918West Lafayette INNotre Dame26 610November 22 1919West Lafayette INNotre Dame33 1311November 6 1920South Bend INNotre Dame28 012October 15 1921West Lafayette INNotre Dame33 013October 14 1922West Lafayette INNotre Dame20 014November 3 1923South Bend INNotre Dame34 715November 3 1933South Bend INPurdue19 016October 13 1934South Bend INNotre Dame18 717September 30 1939South Bend INNotre Dame3 018October 12 1946South Bend INNotre Dame49 619October 11 1947West Lafayette INNotre Dame49 620September 25 1948South Bend INNotre Dame28 2721October 8 1949West Lafayette INNotre Dame35 1222October 7 1950South Bend INPurdue35 1223October 27 1951South Bend INNotre Dame30 924October 18 1952West Lafayette INNotre Dame26 1425October 3 1953West Lafayette INNotre Dame37 726October 2 1954South Bend INPurdue27 1427October 22 1955West Lafayette INNotre Dame22 728October 13 1956South Bend INPurdue28 1429September 28 1957West Lafayette INNotre Dame12 030October 25 1958South Bend INPurdue29 2231October 3 1959West Lafayette INPurdue28 732October 1 1960South Bend INPurdue51 1933October 7 1961West Lafayette INNotre Dame22 2034October 6 1962South Bend INPurdue24 635October 5 1963West Lafayette INPurdue7 636October 3 1964South Bend INNotre Dame34 1537September 25 1965West Lafayette INPurdue25 2138September 24 1966South Bend INNotre Dame26 1439September 30 1967West Lafayette INPurdue28 2140September 28 1968South Bend IN 1 Purdue37 2241September 27 1969West Lafayette INPurdue28 1442September 26 1970South Bend INNotre Dame48 043September 25 1971West Lafayette INNotre Dame8 744September 30 1972South Bend INNotre Dame35 1445September 29 1973West Lafayette INNotre Dame20 7No DateLocationWinnerScore46September 28 1974South Bend INPurdue31 2047September 20 1975West Lafayette INNotre Dame17 048September 18 1976South Bend INNotre Dame23 049September 24 1977West Lafayette INNotre Dame31 2450September 30 1978South Bend INNotre Dame10 651September 22 1979West Lafayette INPurdue28 2252September 6 1980South Bend INNotre Dame31 1053September 26 1981West Lafayette INPurdue15 1454September 25 1982South Bend INNotre Dame28 1455September 10 1983West Lafayette INNotre Dame52 656September 8 1984Indianapolis INPurdue23 2157September 28 1985West Lafayette INPurdue35 1758September 27 1986South Bend INNotre Dame41 959September 26 1987West Lafayette INNotre Dame44 2060September 24 1988South Bend INNotre Dame52 761September 30 1989West Lafayette INNotre Dame40 762September 29 1990South Bend INNotre Dame37 1163September 28 1991West Lafayette INNotre Dame45 2064September 26 1992South Bend INNotre Dame48 065September 25 1993West Lafayette INNotre Dame17 066September 24 1994South Bend INNotre Dame39 2167September 9 1995West Lafayette INNotre Dame35 2868September 14 1996South Bend INNotre Dame35 069September 13 1997West Lafayette INPurdue28 1770September 26 1998South Bend INNotre Dame31 3071September 11 1999West Lafayette INPurdue28 2372September 16 2000South Bend INNotre Dame23 2173December 1 2001West Lafayette INNotre Dame24 1874September 7 2002South Bend INNotre Dame24 1775September 27 2003West Lafayette INPurdue23 1076October 2 2004South Bend INPurdue41 1677October 1 2005West Lafayette INNotre Dame49 2878September 30 2006South Bend INNotre Dame35 2179September 29 2007West Lafayette INPurdue33 1980September 27 2008South Bend INNotre Dame38 2181September 26 2009West Lafayette INNotre Dame24 2182September 4 2010South Bend INNotre Dame23 1283October 1 2011West Lafayette INNotre Dame38 1084September 8 2012South Bend INNotre Dame 20 1785September 14 2013West Lafayette INNotre Dame 31 2486September 13 2014Indianapolis INNotre Dame30 1487September 18 2021South Bend INNotre Dame27 13Series Notre Dame leads 57 26 2 1 Vacated by Notre Dame 8 See also edit nbsp American football portal nbsp College football portal List of NCAA college football rivalry gamesNotes edit Notre Dame s wins in 2012 and 2013 were vacated as a result of NCAA sanctions against the Notre Dame football program issued on November 22 2016 after the NCAA found that a student trainer committed academic misconduct for two football players and provided six other players with impermissible academic extra benefits The NCAA also rejected Notre Dame s appeal on February 13 2018 This win is not included in Notre Dame s all time record nor is it counted in the series record between the two teams 5 See Wikipedia WikiProject College football Vacated victories for an explanation of how vacated victories are recorded 6 7 References edit a b Winsipedia Notre Dame Fighting Irish vs Purdue Boilermakers football series history Winsipedia Notre Dame vs Purdue series history College Football Data Warehouse Archived from the original on August 15 2004 Retrieved October 27 2007 Purdue Sports Football Game Notes Archived from the original on July 12 2012 Retrieved September 26 2007 FB Adds to Future Schedules Purdue University Athletics NCAA orders Notre Dame Fighting Irish to vacate wins from 2012 2013 seasons ESPN November 22 2016 Low Chris June 16 2009 What does vacating wins really mean ESPN com ESPN Internet Ventures Retrieved July 9 2011 Taylor John July 4 2009 Vacated Wins Do Not Equal Forfeits NBCSports com NBC Sports Retrieved July 9 2011 Forfeits and Vacated Games College Football at Sports Reference com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Notre Dame Purdue football rivalry amp oldid 1211432609, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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