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Who, in your life, do you want this most for tonight?

I want this for my mom, Rhonda Miller, and her dad, Raymond Dillon, who passed in 1991. He instilled a love of sports in her that she passed down to me. Her taking me to Kokomo basketball games since i could walk is a big reason Hammer & Rails and this place exist. Her dad would be proud.

My dad is the Purdue alum, but my mom is the big sports fan that started me on this path. Big thanks also to her friends Carol, Peggy, and JoAnn as the ladies she took me to games with. They are my basketball moms.

Awful Coaching Breakdown

Not sure if you guys have seen him before, but this is decent breakdown of the Purdue/UConn game defensively for Purdue and their mistakes. The guy has a schtick with this, but it's actually decent analysis in how to cover in today's game. It's stuff that you don't see always in real time, but you get the benefit of film to break it down. He does this for many big games. He killed John Calipari.

PURDUE’S god awful trash vs. UCONN | NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP

YTD - Boilerepherine sales down $1.75M...

And I couldn't be happier!

What a ride! Who cares about post-natty criticism?? My God we lost to a #16 seed last season, and this year make the National Championship. I couldn't care less what people from the Score or anywhere else want to say. Nothing gonna bring me down! PU fans have elephant skin.

A season for the ages, and hopefully CMP can keep it going. E8 and National Title appearance in the past 5 years?!?...c'mon! Nothing but love and gratitude for CMP, the boys, and our mettle. Couldn't be more proud of these kids and our program after what they went thru all offseason.

Many, way too-early 2024-25 polls. Highest... #2!

Ok, stop laughing. I know they're crazy, but soothes my wounds.
Who will meet in San Antonio, in 2025? Ok, give me hell for posting
another way-too early post. This is my therapy.

Yahoo Sports: #2 (Would not take a breathalyzer test)

Fox Sports, John Fanta: #9 , says Gillis returns, what?

The Athletic: #12... seems more reasonable.

ESPN: #6

USA Today: #9....mentions Gillis

Sports Illustrated: #8...mentions Gillis

The Sporting News,, Mike DeCourcy: #9... mentions The "ice" Berg

The Field of 68: #10
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CBS Sports 2025 Championship Odds

X's free-for-all:

In passing, I've been hearing a lot of analysts
saying that Zach should stay. I don't see it happening.
Well, I hope Ryan Walters has his game face on, 'cause
I'm ready for some football.
Boiler Spring Football Game: this coming Sat, April 13 at 12pm on BTN
Boiler Up!
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Four-star CB Mason Alexander sets Purdue official visit

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Got a note from Alexander when he got back from spring break. He'll be visiting Purdue for his official visit June 7-9 weekend. He was recently on campus recently and had another good visit.

"It was nice for sure they always show big love," Alexander said. "What stood out to me was just how they always make it known I’m one of their top prospects in the class."

It would be huge for Ryan Walters to land Alexander to pair with Tarrion Grant. I'm still waiting to hear who is getting the other OVs from Alexander but the Boilermakers have a real shot here.

Purdue recruiting 2024 Spring Football Visitors

Updating the running list of future notable unofficial visitors for this spring:

**Commit**


March 28th:

Kyler Garcia: 2025 three-star OL
Eugene Hilton Jr: 2025 four-star WR
Mason Alexander: 2025 four-star CB

March: 29th:

Jaylen Williams: 2025 four-star DE
Nolan Davenport: 2025 three-star OL
Takhyian Whitset: 2025 three-star OL
Micah Rice: 2025 three-star DB
Terry Walker: 2026 quarterback
**Tarrion Grant: 2025 four-star CB
Zyntreacs Otey: 2026 four-star CB
Joel Wyatt: 2026 three-star WR
Kaden Gebhardt: 2026 three-star DB

April 2nd:

Ace Alston: 2027 defensive back

April 4th:

Trey Boyd: 2025 two-star OL

April 6th:

Seaonta Stewart: 2025 ATH
Mack Sutter: 2026 ATH/TE

April 12th:

Denim Cook: 2025 two-star LB

April 13th: (Spring Game)

Kevin Peay: 2025 three-star OL
Clarence Taylor: 2025 three-star WR
Will Conroy: 2026 three-star OL
***Sawyer Anderson: 2025 three-star QB
Cameron Gorin: 2025 three-star OT
Deacon King: 2026 defensive back

WBB South Bend Washington Documentary

justvisualsmedia.com/panthers

Link^


If anyone is interested, the South Bend Washington Girls B-ball team made a documentary awhile back about their state championship run in 2022.

I bring this up because 3 current boilermakers were on that team and a future commit is as well.

Mila Reynolds is a senior in the docufilm, Amiyah Reynolds and Rashunda Jones are juniors. Kira Reynolds(25' commit) is a freshman.

The documentary is well produced as well.

The great thing about being a Purdue fan...I will love next year's team just as much as I love this team.

Early top 25's are coming out now and every one I've seen has Purdue in the top 10. We get way more athletic next year and will likely rely on the 3 more because we will have 8 guys that can shoot 40%. Heide and Colvin on the floor together with Smith at the point will be high-flying and I expect to see a lot of alley-oops. We still have good size but the size is different with Berg and Jacobsen (if he doesn't RS) with range out to the three line. I don't suspect we will rely as heavily on the inside game, but TKR is a good option down low.

The rumors of our demise have been greatly exagerrated. Purdue isn't going anywhere.

Humbling experience

I’m not a Hurley fan, but give credit where it’s due. He has put together a beast of a program since taking over at UConn. That team was better at 4 out of 5 positions than Purdue. They shut down every player on Purdue besides Smith and Edey. They completely took away the 3-point shot. And, I never thought I’d see Purdue get beaten that badly on the boards. Purdue had a great season, but the best team won the Natty. Really looking forward to next year—that Cam Heide one-hand tip jam has me jazzed for what next year could look like. Go Boilers!

Its Our Time, the Right Time

I am so proud of this team and happy they have their redemption. Put a lot of naysayers quiet and Matt is getting some of his just due. But it is time to win the Natty and it is the perfect time.

My father died last year at 95 years old, a die hard PU fan who never missed going to a game or watching or listening to every game. He did not go to Purdue as was in service, but his brother did and that is where his love started. Dad lived and died with every PU game. I was born into a Purdue familly and went there in late 70's. Did not go to Final 4 in 80 as I was newly married and had no money and thought there will be many more. I have been to every Sweet 16 since the 80 FF and saw us lose in each of them till this year when we had greatest time watching that victory. We have not been able to go to Arizona due to some family needs.

Why I think this is perfect situation and time to win a Natty, is that this is type of game IU fans and National talking heads have been saying forever Purdue can't win. The narrative is we are consistently pretty good but not elite and can't play with the Big Boys. That is why whenever we win the Big 10, their narrative is that the Big 10 was down. We were the national joke for losing to 3 low seeded teams in a row. Now is the time to do what Virginia did and also to satisfy the sting of that 19 loss to Virginia. Uconn is noted by media as unbeatable, one of best teams of all time, their coach is a genius, they have several NBA players on their team, they play and practice harder than anyone, their coach is smarter as to analytics than anyone, etc, etc. I went on several gambling sites today and 90% of the experts are saying taking UConn and laying the 6-1/2 points is a lock.

I am glad we get UConn and by beating them we put all the negative Purdue talk away , our players get their just due, and Matt gets full recognition.

I have full confidence we are going to shock the world Monday. I have full confidence Braden will put last night's game behind him and be great on Monday and believe Edey shows NBA scouts who is best center. Loyer's defense has been greatly improved in the tourney , Lance will hit some big shots , as will Gillis. TKR will pound the boards. And believe Cam and Colvin , now that introduction to the big stage is over will make big plays on Monday. Purdue gets total respect and due after Monday night! And wins one for my dad!

A couple of interesting things going on relative to Climate change and your money

@Boilermaker03 One thing we should all know is that politician’s wealth is astronomically higher than their salary would suggest. They are obviously making money from favors as well as policy they make relative to their investments...else they just found several pots of gold at the end of a rainbow.

In addition to the problems of ghost stations (article below) with data estimates is the projection of many more projected data locations than actually exist than the actual data coverage locations are more dense than reality. Immediately below and prior to the ghost stations is the experimental injection of particles into the atmosphere to darken or reduce the sun’s heat hitting the earth by enhancing the density of the atmosphere without any testing to know any potential problems and we certainly don’t know the cost of the experiments well as any potential problems induced by not testing on a smaller scale.

https://www.scientificamerican.com/...ietly-launches-salt-crystals-into-atmosphere/
A secretive project conducted from the deck of an aircraft carrier in the San Francisco Bay will shoot trillions of aerosol particles into the sky to increase cloud cover in the name of preventing global warming, and details have been held back to “avoid (a) public backlash.”

The experiment is being dubbed America’s “first outdoor test to limit global warming.”

“The Coastal Atmospheric Aerosol Research and Engagement, or CAARE, project is using specially built sprayers to shoot trillions of sea salt particles into the sky in an effort to increase the density — and reflective capacity — of marine clouds,” reports Scientific American.

“The experiment is taking place, when conditions permit, atop the USS Hornet Sea, Air & Space Museum in Alameda, California, and will run through the end of May, according to a weather modification form the team filed with federal regulators.”


Hidden Behind Climate Policies, Data From Nonexistent Temperature Stations

Hundreds of ‘ghost’ climate stations are no longer operational; instead they are assigned temperatures from surrounding stations.


The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) predicts July, August, and September will be hotter than usual. And for those who view warmer temperatures as problematic, that’s a significant cause for concern.

“Earth’s issuing a distress call,” said United Nations secretary-general António Guterres on March 19. “The latest State of the Global Climate report shows a planet on the brink.

“Fossil fuel pollution is sending climate chaos off the charts. Sirens are blaring across all major indicators: Last year saw record heat, record sea levels, and record ocean surface temperatures. … Some records aren’t just chart-topping, they’re chart-busting.”

President Joe Biden called the climate “an existential threat” in his 2023 State of the Union address. “Let’s face reality. The climate crisis doesn’t care if you’re in a red or a blue state.”

In his 2024 address he said, “I don’t think any of you think there’s no longer a climate crisis. At least, I hope you don’t.”

When recalling past temperatures to make comparisons to the present, and, more importantly, inform future climate policy, officials such as Mr. Guterres and President Biden rely in part on temperature readings from the United States Historical Climatology Network (USHCN).

The network was established to provide an “accurate, unbiased, up-to-date historical climate record for the United States,” NOAA states, and it has recorded more than 100 years of daily maximum and minimum temperatures from stations across the United States.

The problem, say experts, is that an increasing number of USHCN’s stations don’t exist anymore.

They are physically gone—but still report data—like magic,” said Lt. Col. John Shewchuk, a certified consulting meteorologist.

“NOAA fabricates temperature data for more than 30 percent of the 1,218 USHCN reporting stations that no longer exist.”

He calls them “ghost” stations.

Mr. Shewchuck said USHCN stations reached a maximum of 1,218 stations in 1957, but after 1990 the number of active stations began declining due to aging equipment and personnel retirements.

NOAA still records data from these ghost stations by taking the temperature readings from surrounding stations, and recording their average for the ghost station, followed by an “E,” for estimate.

The addition of the ghost station data means NOAA’s “monthly and yearly reports are not representative of reality,” said Anthony Watts, a meteorologist and senior fellow for environment and climate at the Heartland Institute.

“If this kind of process were used in a court of law, then the evidence would be thrown out as being polluted.”

Critical Data

NOAA’s complete record of USHCN data is available on its website, making it a vital tool for scientists examining temperature trends since before the Industrial Revolution.

Jamal Munshi, emeritus professor at California’s Sonoma State University, wrote in a 2017 paper that because many of the stations in the USHCN, and their data, date back to the 1800s, they’ve been “widely used in the study of global warming.”

“The fear of anthropogenic global warming has generated a great interest in temperature trends such that even minute changes in the temperature record are scrutinized, and controversial implications for their effects on climate, extreme weather, and sea level rise are weighed against the cost of reducing emissions as a way of moderating these changes,” Mr. Munshi wrote.

“Energy and development policy around the world are impacted by these evaluations.”

Mr. Shewchuk said the USHCN data is the only long-term historical temperature data the United States has.

“In these days of apparent ‘climate crisis,’ you would think that maintaining actual temperature reporting stations would be a top priority—but they instead manufacture data for hundreds of non-existent stations. This is a bizarre way of monitoring a climate claimed to be an existential threat,” he said.

“Observed data is real. Altered and fabricated data is not real. Period.”

The website, noaacrappy, lists all of the ghost, or “zombie” stations, their location, how long they’ve been closed and then links to NOAA’s recordings.

Significantly, the map shows, not all of the stations used to interpolate temperature data are near the closed station. Thus, hypothetically, it’s possible that since Oklahoma City’s stations are all “zombies,” interpolation data is coming from as far away as Gainesville, Texas, which is more than 136 miles away, and Enid, Oklahoma, which is more than 100 miles away.

“For various reasons, NOAA feels the need to alter this data instead of fixing equipment problems they think exist,” Mr. Shewchuk said.

“Fixing temperature reporting stations is not rocket science. If we can go up to space to fix the Hubble telescope, we can surely come down to earth to fix a few thermometers.”

NOAA’s use of ghost temperature stations isn’t a recent phenomenon. In 2014, Mr. Watts raised the issue of ghost stations and bad data with NOAA’s chief scientist at the National Climatic Data Center, Tom Peterson, and Texas’ state climatologist, John Nielsen-Gammon, who confirmed there was an issue.

“Anthony – I just did a check of all Texas USHCN stations. Thirteen had estimates in place of apparently good data,” Mr. Nielsen-Gammon wrote in an email to Mr. Watts, according to a report on the latter’s website.

“It’s a bug, a big one. And as Zeke [Hausfather] did a cursory analysis Thursday night, he discovered it was systemic to the entire record, and up to 10 percent of stations have ‘estimated’ data spanning over a century.”

At the time, Mr. Watts reported on his climate website, “Watts Up With That,” that NOAA was taking the issue seriously and expected them to issue a fix shortly.

That fix NOAA’s Cooperative Observer Program, which includes the USHCN stations, is a network of daily weather observations taken by more than 8,500 volunteers, its webpage states.

Mr. Watts said the process for volunteers is “labor intensive.”

never materialized. “They’re still doing it, and it’s even worse” he said.

“It requires people to record high and low temperature, rainfall, the temperature at the time of observation, and do it at a very specific time, every day. And this has to then be recorded and sent to the National Climatic Data Center in Nashville, now known as the National Center for Environmental Information,” he said.

“Some of it’s still done on paper, some of it’s still done with touchtone over the telephone. It requires a lot of dedication and effort on the part of the observer. It’s a thankless job. And as a result, observers have been disappearing. A lot of them have left due to attrition by death. And then there’s no one to take on that job.”

Mr. Watts explained that when that happens, instead of subtracting the unmanned station from the overall number of USHCN stations, NOAA creates a number from surrounding stations.

“As a result, we end up with this milkshake of data that is basically a hot mess, and isn’t real in most cases,” Mr. Watts said.

Mr. Shewchuk said as a forensic consulting meteorologist, he produced expert witness reports for legal cases.

“I only used official ‘NOAA certified’ original weather data observations,” he said. “If I were to use ‘altered’ or ‘fabricated’ data, I would have been thrown out of court.”

NOAA’s Defense

NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information confirmed to The Epoch Times that it uses “ghost” station data.

As an explanation, it said, “NOAA provides estimates for missing monthly temperature values in the USHCNv2.5 dataset. The approach to estimating missing values is described in the USHCN v2 overview paper, and values that are estimated are noted with a specific flag as described in the USHCN readme file.

“This flag is used to distinguish the observed values from estimated values. This attribute of providing estimated values to create uniform periods of record for monthly temperature stations is somewhat unique to the USHCN monthly data, which has provided estimates for several decades.

“While these estimates are provided as a service to users who may benefit from the data completeness provided by USHCN, NOAA itself does not directly use the estimates for closed stations (or for early periods before the observed record begins) in its own climate monitoring activities.”

Mr. Shewchuk didn’t buy NOAA’s response.

“It’s a shell game,” he said. “The ‘USHCN’ data is now included in a variety of larger datasets of various names, so now some can officially claim that ‘USHCN’ is not being used as a single entity.

“However, all the USHCN data is actually used for all historic climate studies because the USHCN data is the only data that goes back over 100 years. Without this historical data, we are climate-change blind.”

He added, “If NOAA doesn’t use USHCN data, then why do they use our tax monies to update the USHCN data files on a daily basis? Why do they use our tax monies to periodically go back and re-alter previously altered temperature data?”

The Bigger Issue

According to Mr. Watts, ghost stations are problematic but are only part of a much bigger problem.

He explained that several different entities—such as the European Commission’s Copernicus, NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS), Berkeley’s Earth Surface Temperatures (BEST), and NOAA—publish monthly and yearly climate data and advertise themselves as having “independent data.”

“That is a lie,” Mr. Watts said about the independent data claim.

“The USHCN data set and the [new] nClimDiv climate division data set [which uses the same stations and has the same problems] comes from the Cooperative Observer [Program] in the United States.

“Similarly, in the rest of the world, there is a Cooperative Observer [Program] that suffers from the same problems of attrition and incompetence. And it’s called the GHCN; the Global Historical Climatology Network.

“All these different entities out there, like NOAA, GISS, BEST, all the entities I listed, use the same data from GHCN. And they all apply their own set of ’special sauce' adjustments to create what they believe is true.

“It’s almost like each of these entities is creating their version of the real, true God. You know, it’s like a religion. They’re using different mathematical and statistical techniques to produce their version of climate reality.

“And it all goes back to the same original, badly-sited, badly-maintained ghost station dataset around the world. USHCN and GHCN are the same stuff. So, there is no independent temperature dataset. It’s bogus that anyone claims this.”

Mr. Shewchuk said the warming the earth has experienced since the 1800s is much less than has been reported, but even if it weren’t, warmer temperatures are natural—not manmade—and not a cause for concern.

“We are still thawing out from the Little Ice Age because the Bray and Eddy solar cycles are still in their warming phases,” he said. “[Carbon dioxide] is a greenhouse gas, but its contribution to today’s warming is trivial. Whenever someone asks me how much ’man-made‘ CO2 is increasing Earth’s temperature, I respond, ’Does the growth of a new eyelash increase your weight?’

“There is no climate emergency. In fact, all measures of severe weather are decreasing—even tornadoes and hurricanes. Furthermore, global warming (at least the little that there is) and increasing CO2 are good for life on Earth. History clearly shows us that life thrives during warm periods (like the Medieval Warm Period) and suffers during cool periods (like the Little Ice Age).


He pointed out that even NOAA and NASA report that increased CO2 has “greened the planet” and increased plant growth, which has benefited food production.

“We should celebrate CO2—not demonize it.”
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Purdue men's basketball One scholarship too many - What happens now? PT. 1

With Purdue bringing in six freshman next season as part of one of Purdue's largest classes, Painter and company is in a strange spot. The six freshman would leave Purdue one over on scholarship count with everyone already on scholarship which includes these players returning: Braden Smith (Jr.), Fletcher Loyer (Jr.), Caleb Furst (Sr.), Trey Kaufman-Renn (Jr.), Myles Colvin, (So.) Brian Waddell (Jr.), Camden Heide (Fr.), Will Berg (So.).

That's eight scholarships, add that with the six incoming, and that's how you get to 14. The magic number is 13.

And that's all without considering the complicated nature of final COVID years for two seniors, Ethan Morton and Mason Gillis. Obviously, if either would return, that means even more over the scholarship limit. So we'll start there.

Frankly, I don't think either will be at Purdue next year. Neither has given a firm answer on their future so this isn't breaking news or a scoop but after spending the last two seasons talking to both of them, I don't exactly think this is a shot in the dark either.

Let's start with Morton. Morton expressed earlier in the year that he'd like to be here as long as they'd have me. At the time, Morton was still in the rotation, but also on the fringe. The story of his seasons at Purdue is promising starts, and then diminishing minutes as the season went on. This year was even more dramatic with Morton falling completely out of the rotation by Tournament time. There's going to be even less minutes on the wing this next season with the addition of Kanon Catchings, CJ Cox, and Gicarri Harris and the growth expected from Myles Colvin and Camden Heide. I just don't think there's minutes for Morton and he's a smart guy. It probably breaks his heart, but Purdue just doesn't have a spot on the court for him. Morton will be a coach one day, but he's also said a lot that he's done a lot of work on his body and in prep to want to play as long as he can. I think he owes it to himself to see if new scenery can give him a chance to have a reliable role on a team.

As for Mason Gillis. I don't think anyone can argue that Gillis has been one of Purdue's best pieces throughout his career. There is always room for a near 50% three-point shooter who learned to be a leader and who worked as hard as he did. But sometimes things run its course. I was talking to Gillis about his future a couple weekends ago and he said he didn't know what he wanted to do after basketball. He just knew that he wanted the freedom to do whatever it is he wanted. That, of course, means financial freedom. Gillis has been investing and was money literate in high school, getting smart about it and figuring out how to set himself up for later in life. I say that because he's about to have one last chance to make some money with his college career. If there's not a big professional basketball offer somewhere, it'd be ludicrous to think that he wouldn't try to make a priority of getting money for his COVID year in a good situation and help further set up the rest of his life. I get that NIL and some of the money stuff makes people feel icky, but the truth is, it's also a chance for these players to be responsible, to set their lives up for the next twenty, thirty, forty years. That's something we all could wish for in our early twenties. Gillis is smart enough to know that one more season in college could go an even longer way in setting up the rest of his life.


I think I'll leave this part here for now while I work through a post on how Purdue gets one less scholarship.
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