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Ebook311 pages
Tiller: Not Your Average Joe
By Joe Tiller and Tom Kubat
Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
2/5
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About this ebook
The former Purdue Boilermakers football coach looks back on his storied career in this memoir.
When opportunity knocked, Joe Tiller busted the door down. Tiller became a major college head football coach somewhat late in his career. He was hired as the head coach at Wyoming just twelve days after his forty-eighth birthday and became the head coach at Purdue two weeks before his fifty-fourth birthday. A disciple of the wide-open offenses used in the former Western Athletic Conference, Tiller enjoyed great success with his Wyoming teams in what he fondly refers to as the “Wacky WAC.”
After leaving the Cowboys for Purdue, some coaches insisted that his one-back, spread offense wouldn’t fly in the Big Ten Conference, with its physical, smash-mouth style of play. Instead, Tiller’s fast-breaking offense, now nicknamed “basketball on grass,” took the Big Ten by storm. Before Tiller came aboard, Purdue had endured 12-consecutive losing seasons. But under Tiller, the Boilermakers enjoyed one of their most successful winning stretches ever. Tiller’s first eight teams went to bowl games, including the Rose Bowl. Before becoming a head coach, Tiller had served as an assistant at Montana State (his alma mater), Washington State, Purdue and Wyoming. He also spent nine years in Canada with Calgary of the CFL as an assistant coach, interim head coach, and in the front office—where he was responsible for booking rock star Alice Cooper and evangelist Billy Graham for appearances at McMahon Stadium, home of the Stampeders.
In many ways, Tiller was a typical who has spent most of his life in the conservative Midwest and the open spaces of the western United States. A regular Joe, Tiller’s laid-back style, wry sense of humor and, of course, winning ways has made him a hit with Purdue players and fans alike.
When opportunity knocked, Joe Tiller busted the door down. Tiller became a major college head football coach somewhat late in his career. He was hired as the head coach at Wyoming just twelve days after his forty-eighth birthday and became the head coach at Purdue two weeks before his fifty-fourth birthday. A disciple of the wide-open offenses used in the former Western Athletic Conference, Tiller enjoyed great success with his Wyoming teams in what he fondly refers to as the “Wacky WAC.”
After leaving the Cowboys for Purdue, some coaches insisted that his one-back, spread offense wouldn’t fly in the Big Ten Conference, with its physical, smash-mouth style of play. Instead, Tiller’s fast-breaking offense, now nicknamed “basketball on grass,” took the Big Ten by storm. Before Tiller came aboard, Purdue had endured 12-consecutive losing seasons. But under Tiller, the Boilermakers enjoyed one of their most successful winning stretches ever. Tiller’s first eight teams went to bowl games, including the Rose Bowl. Before becoming a head coach, Tiller had served as an assistant at Montana State (his alma mater), Washington State, Purdue and Wyoming. He also spent nine years in Canada with Calgary of the CFL as an assistant coach, interim head coach, and in the front office—where he was responsible for booking rock star Alice Cooper and evangelist Billy Graham for appearances at McMahon Stadium, home of the Stampeders.
In many ways, Tiller was a typical who has spent most of his life in the conservative Midwest and the open spaces of the western United States. A regular Joe, Tiller’s laid-back style, wry sense of humor and, of course, winning ways has made him a hit with Purdue players and fans alike.
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Reviews for Tiller
Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
2/5
1 rating1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I have read MANY books by coaches... and this was probably one of dullest ones I have read thus far. Not overly interesting or well written.... I couldn't wait to get through it. Ironically I found no ordinary Joe very ordinary and FAR from extraordinary.