Sun bowl: Boilermakers snap bowl skid – Purdue 34, Washington 24

? Purdue didn’t have much success in its bowl games the last few years.

Quarterback Kyle Orton wanted to change that. Orton passed for 283 yards and two touchdowns as Purdue overcame a 17-point deficit to beat Washington 34-24 in the Sun Bowl on Tuesday.

Although Purdue (7-6) has gone to six straight bowl games under coach Joe Tiller, it had lost its last three before beating Washington.

In last year’s Sun Bowl, Orton broke three game records with 74 passing attempts, 38 completions and 419 yards. But Purdue lost 33-27 to Washington State.

“We haven’t proved how good we are in our last four bowl appearances, so today we redeemed ourselves,” Orton said.

Tiller has never had a losing season at Purdue since taking over for the start of the 1997 season.

“We played well here last year, but came up a little bit short,” Tiller said. “But we were not to be denied this year.”

John Standeford caught 10 passes for 105 yards and a touchdown, and Taylor Stubblefield caught seven passes for 92 yards for Purdue, which had 400 yards of offense to the Huskies’ 316.

Purdue coach Joe Tiller, right, embraces team captain Ralph Turner. The Boilermakers beat Washington, 34-24, in the Wells Fargo Sun Bowl on Tuesday in El Paso, Texas.

It wasn’t easy for the Boilermakers, who overcame an early 17-point deficit.

“We got behind, but we never rolled over,” Tiller said. “In an era where many teams do, we did not.”

Cody Pickett was 25-of-54 with one interception and a touchdown for Washington (7-6). The Huskies took a 17-0 lead after the first quarter but did not score again until the fourth quarter.

“I can’t explain why we played so poorly,” Huskies coach Rick Neuheisel said. “We weren’t clicking, but it was OK because Purdue hadn’t caught their stride. But once they caught their stride, the game got away from us.”

Purdue started its rally with 5:09 left in the second quarter when Orton threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to Standeford.

The Boilermakers scored again with 35 seconds before halftime. Brandon Jones fumbled on the 1, but Ray Williams recovered the ball in the end zone to cap a 66-yard drive and make it 17-14 at the break.