September 24, 2012
Marshall punter savors his trip home
Indiana native Williams feels he was snubbed by Purdue, others
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HUNTINGTON - He's not stomping his feet over it - not his punting foot, anyway - but Marshall punter Tyler Williams has a point to make this week in his home state.

The 6-foot, 195-pound freshman from Fort Wayne, Ind., wouldn't have minded kicking for Purdue or any other Hoosier State school offering him a scholarship. But, like most others in his trade, he had to find a place to walk on and prove his case.

So far, Williams has made a profound statement with the Thundering Herd. After regaining the minimum 3.6 punts per game to qualify for an NCAA ranking, he is fourth in the nation at 47.53 yards per attempt.

Fresh off the 54-51 double-overtime win over Rice, Williams and the Herd hit the road again this weekend, taking on Purdue at Ross-Ade Stadium. Kickoff time is 3:15 p.m. Saturday, with the game airing on the Big Ten Network.

"I've got a little chip on my shoulder I think," Williams said Monday. "Coming out like I did, I felt like I had a good senior year [in high school] and was a little disappointed that I didn't get any looks, especially no scholarships. I was definitely disappointed. I feel like everything happens for a reason. I'm here for a reason.

"But it will be neat to go back to my home state and perform well, show everybody and show Purdue what they're missing."

About the time Williams uttered that statement, he was honored by Conference USA as the league's special teams player of the week. He averaged 50.8 yards on his five kicks against Rice, pinned the Owls inside their 20-yard line three times and launched bombs of 62 and 66 yards.

The 62-yarder came on his first attempt, and it was the most majestic. When the suborbital shot finally came down, the football hit the Rice Stadium floor a perfect pointed-end down. After the ball all but stuck in the turf, the Owls were stuck at their 4-yard line.

"You only get couple of those, I tell everybody. Nine times out of 10 the ball would have bounced into the end zone," Williams said. "That's hard to beat."

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