Purdue’s Record-Breaking Night: Smith Makes History as Boilers Banish Demons in Madison
Saturday night at the Kohl Center felt less like a basketball game and more like an exorcism. For years, Wisconsin has been the place where Purdue dreams go to dieโa haunted house of bad bounces and worse luck. But this time? The fifth-ranked Boilermakers didnโt just survive the trip north; they walked in, rewrote the history books, and walked out with an 89-73 victory that felt sweeter than grandmaโs peach cobbler.
Letโs be real: usually, a game in Madison is a slow-motion car crash for visiting teams. Itโs gritty, itโs ugly, and it usually ends with the home crowd jumping around while the visitors limp to the bus. But Purdue flipped the script, improving to 13-1 and keeping their conference record spotless at 3-0. And they did it by finally matching that infamous Badger physicality punch for punch.
The King of the Assist
Letโs start with the headline, shall we? Braden Smith isnโt just good; heโs historic.
Going into the second half, the buzz in the arena wasn’t just about the score. Smith was hunting down Cassius Winstonโs Big Ten assist record like it owed him money. And when he finally dished out that record-breaking passโfeeding Oscar Cluff for a bucket that put Purdue up 77-52โeven the hostile crowd had to respect the moment.
Smith finished with 14 points and 12 assists, breaking a record that many thought would stand for a long, long time. Heโs now the Big Tenโs all-time assist king. The scary part? Heโs not done. Next up on his hit list is Bobby Hurleyโs NCAA record. Watching Smith operate is like watching a surgeon who enjoys his work a little too muchโprecise, clinical, and absolutely devastating to the opposition.
A Tale of Two Halves
If you only watched the first half, you might have been sweating. It was classic Big Ten basketball: a rock fight. Wisconsin came out swinging, dominating the glass and making Purdue look a little uncomfortable. The Badgers were setting the tone, winning the rebounding battle 20-13 early on. Purdue went into the locker room with a slim 45-38 lead, but it felt fragile.
Whatever Coach Matt Painter said at halftime, bottle it and sell it.
The Boilers came out of the break looking like a different animal. They stopped getting pushed around and started doing the pushing. While Wisconsin still edged them out on the boards overall, Purdue tightened up the defense, forced 11 turnovers (while only committing seven themselves), and shot the lights out.
Balance is Beautiful
Hereโs the thing about this Purdue team: pick your poison. You want to stop Smith? Fine, Fletcher Loyer will torch you for 20 points on 6-of-15 shooting. Focus on Loyer? C.J. Cox and Trey Kaufman-Renn will casually drop double digits on your head.
It was the definition of a team win. Oscar Cluff was a quiet monster, snagging a double-double with 12 points and 11 rebounds on just seven shots. When you have five guys scoring in double figures, the defense doesn’t know who to guard. Itโs like trying to plug five leaks in a boat with only two handsโeventually, youโre going to sink.
Even the bench got in on the fun. Daniel Jacobsen and Gicarri Harris provided quality minutes, proving that this team isn’t just top-heavy; theyโre deep.
The Bottom Line
This wasn’t just a win; it was a statement. Beating Wisconsin at the Kohl Center is hard. Doing it by 16 points while your point guard sets an all-time conference record? Thatโs special.
Purdue didnโt just survive the “House of Horrors”; they renovated it. They took the Badgers’ best shot, laughed it off, and then ran them out of their own gym. If this is what the Boilermakers look like when theyโre firing on all cylinders, the rest of the Big Ten better start saying their prayers.
Next up, the Boilers head home to face Washington on Wednesday. But for now, they can enjoy the bus ride home knowing they didn’t just win a gameโthey made history.
