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Category: Gophers Football

U Looks for 3rd Straight Over Nebraska

Posted on October 12, 2015October 12, 2015 by David Shama

 

Things I think I am clear about after getting out of bed at 3 a.m. Saturday morning for travel to West Lafayette for the Gophers-Purdue football game:

Be skeptical of anyone telling you he is mostly correct about which teams will win college football games each week and how they’re going to do it.  Second-year Texas coach Charlie Strong was all but fired before his 1-4 Longhorns went to Dallas last Saturday to play No. 10 ranked Oklahoma.  Washington State was more than a two touchdowns underdog at once mighty Oregon.  The Gophers managed only 10 first half points against Purdue’s lowly defense and the Minnesota offense, entering the game last in points per game among Big Ten teams, looked stalled out again.

Shannon Brooks
Shannon Brooks

Well, Texas and Washington State pulled off upsets, and the Gophers produced 31 second half points to pull away from the Boilermakers with a 41-13 win.  The offensive line lifted the spirits of worried Gophers fans by opening some of the biggest holes of the season after halftime, and freshman running back Shannon Brooks left no doubt he is by far the team’s most explosive player by gaining 176 yards including a 71-yard touchdown run.

It was a must-have win for the Gophers, now 4-2 and within two wins of bowl eligibility.  The one thousand or more Gophers fans at the stadium knew, or should have known, the win over Purdue could be followed by a victory this Saturday against 2-4 Nebraska.

Hard to believe but the Gophers can win for a third consecutive time against Nebraska, one of college football’s winningest programs.  The Gophers had 16 straight losses to the Cornhuskers from 1963-2012.  After the Nebraska game at TCF Bank Stadium this Saturday, Minnesota will look for additional wins during a daunting remaining schedule that features national powers Iowa, Michigan and Ohio State, plus a pair of 4-2 teams, Illinois and Wisconsin.

But let’s not go too far into the future.  Let’s return to the wisdom of paragraph No. 2 above.  Who knows for sure how the remainder of the schedule will turn out for Minnesota and other teams?  What is known about the Gophers is that despite playing without more than one-third of their starters lost to injuries, they managed to win last Saturday.  No, it wasn’t a tear down the goalposts victory against 1-5 Purdue, but it kept the word hope alive in the Gophers’ vocabulary for a successful 2015 season.

An early flight to Chicago with friend Tim Murray and drive to West Lafayette had us on the Purdue campus by early afternoon.  At Mackey Arena the Purdue band entertained mostly Boilermakers fans before the game.  The arena public address announcer acknowledged the Gophers fans in attendance and the band dialed up the “Minnesota Rouser.”

All afternoon we experienced Purdue hospitality.  Even walking out of the stadium after a Gophers rout we were wished safe travels.  Boilermaker fans certainly had reason to be in a bad mood.  Purdue is struggling through yet another discouraging season, and both its offense and defense were inept last Saturday.  Purdue’s tackling was at times awful and Boilers’ defensive coordinator Greg Hudson, who once held the same position at Minnesota, had reason to be livid.

Yet despite Purdue’s performance we never saw or heard a boobird all day.  I have travelled to Gophers games at Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, Northwestern, Ohio State and Wisconsin.  The most classless experience anywhere was in Ann Arbor awhile back when our group was harassed after the game while walking on campus.

Our crime? Wearing Gophers clothing.  It wasn’t enough the Wolverines had won another yet game against Minnesota.  These jerks had to mouth off after the win.

A trip to West Lafayette provided a lesson in hospitality and kindness. Go Purdue fans!

Worth Noting

Brooks, who averaged 10.4 yards per carry against Purdue on 17 carries for 176 yards, was named the Big Ten’s Co-Freshmen Player of the Week along with Michigan safety Jabrill Peppers.  Chris Streveler, then a quarterback, was the last Gophers player to win the award (September, 2014).  Streveler, now a receiver, caught his first college pass in the Purdue game.

It’s interesting to note that three coaches who once had their names in credible rumors about the Gophers head coaching position are now either out of work or under fire.  Brady Hoke was at San Diego State and Randy Edsall at Connecticut when Minnesota was looking to replace Tim Brewster who had been let go during the 2010 season.  The Gophers hired Jerry Kill while Hoke went to Michigan and Edsall moved on to Maryland.  Hoke was fired after last season and Edsall dismissed yesterday.  Texas head coach Charlie Strong was the defensive coordinator at Florida when the Gophers were replacing Glen Mason in early 2007.  Strong moved on to Louisville and is now at Texas where he is under intense pressure.

Vikings wide receiver Mike Wallace didn’t practice today.  Head coach Mike Zimmer wouldn’t disclose why at his news conference this afternoon.  Wallace reportedly didn’t practice last Tuesday—the last time the team worked out prior to its bye on the schedule this past weekend.

Will Wallace play on Sunday against the Chiefs?  “We’ll see.  The injury report will come out on Wednesday,” Zimmer answered.

Mike Wallace (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Mike Wallace (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

A starting wide receiver acquired from the Dolphins in the offseason, Wallace had his best regular season game as a Viking on October 4 against the Broncos.  He caught eight passes for 83 yards and a touchdown.

Some Vikings players put in extra time to improve during the bye week.  Zimmer indicated rookie center Nick Easton, acquired last week in a trade with the 49ers, was one of them.  Asked about the learning curve for Easton, Zimmer said, “He spent a lot of extra time last week (learning).  He’s a pretty sharp guy.  I think he’ll get up to speed quickly.”

This week Zimmer will watch to see if his players are tuned in after returning from extra time off because of the bye.  “For awhile, a year ago, we’d give them a long weekend or something like that.  They’d come back and they weren’t as crisp or sharp as when they left,” he said.

Twins president Dave St. Peter talking about his franchise that finished 83-79 this  season after a record of 70-92 in 2014:  “I think advancing to postseason play has to be a goal for us next year.  I’d like to think we could put ourselves in a position to contend for the American League Central.

“The Royals are good and I think the path to winning our division certainly goes through Kansas City. …I expect the Royals will be the favorite to win our division next year.  I don’t expect we’ll be picked (again) to finish last in our division but none of that matters unless we get it done on the field.”

The Lynx hopes history repeats Wednesday night at Target Center.  Minnesota plays the Fever in the deciding fifth game of the WNBA Finals.  The franchise is 3-0 in close-out playoff games at Target Center.

Comments Welcome

Sky Not Falling on Gophers Football

Posted on October 7, 2015October 7, 2015 by David Shama

 

Dark clouds above the Minnesota tundra are expected (as usual) this fall but that doesn’t mean the sky is falling on Gophers football.

The pessimists are all atwitter over the Gophers offensive miseries.  Indeed, production has been awful.  Through five games (four nonconference and one league game), Minnesota ranks last in scoring among Big Ten teams at 15.4 points per game.  The Gophers are also last among the 13 other teams in rushing offense (141.2 yards per game) and tied for ninth with Michigan State in pass offense (195.4).

But more of the not so positive details later.  The day brightener these days is the Gophers defense—a unit that, despite the loss of injured defensive backs, ranks fourth in the Big Ten versus the pass giving up 154.6 yards per game.  The overall defense has lived up to the preseason hype of being among the best units in the Big Ten and although allowing an eighth-best 20.2 points per game the defense has sometimes been put with their backs near the end zone because of miscues not of their doing.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

Jerry Kill inherited a mess, including personnel shortages, when he took over the program as Gophers coach after the 2010 season.  He set a goal of fixing the defense first and he has done just that.  He has also upgraded the kicking game with senior Peter Mortell being one of the nation’s better punters.  Sophomore Ryan Santoso has a powerful leg and he has shown accuracy in his early career while both kicking off and booting field goals.

Kill is five games into his fifth season at Minnesota.  His overall record is 28-28.  In the last 29 years the Gophers have had two other head coaches who were around long enough to coach 56 games—Glen Mason with a 25-31 record and John Gutekunst, 26-28-2.

The opinion here is Kill is the best coach at Minnesota since Lou Holtz made a stopover (1984 and 1985) between assignments at Arkansas and Notre Dame.  In the last two seasons the Gophers have twice had overall records of 8-5, with 4-4 and 5-3 records in the Big Ten.  The 1999 and 2000 seasons were the last ones the Gophers were at .500 or better in the Big Ten during consecutive years.

The Gophers are 9-6 in their last 15 conference games.  The 9-6 ties Iowa for the fourth best mark in the Big Ten during that period.  Excluding the results of Big Ten title games, the records of other teams include Ohio State 15-0, Michigan State 14-1, Wisconsin 12-3, Nebraska 8-7, and Michigan and Penn State, both 6-9.

Kill has turned around the football program beyond the playing field.  His team collectively had a 3.04 GPA last spring semester and his players are earning their degrees after he inherited a program where players were on academic probation and not attending classes.  Also, ask the University police and Minneapolis police if there hasn’t been a dramatic change in off-field behavior.

This week the University Board of Regents is expected to approve detailed plans to move ahead on the $190 million project to improve athletics facilities.  Included in that project will be a badly needed new football practice facility.  Kill has been adamant about such a facility becoming a reality and has hinted he might not be at Minnesota long-term without it.

Without Kill, the reported $80 million or so that has been fundraised wouldn’t be in place.  He is the single most important fundraiser in the athletic department and millions of dollars have been donated because of him.

The anticipated good news about the athletic facilities project is well timed after the offensive debacle at Northwestern.  The Wildcats, who shut out Minnesota 27-0, have one of the Big Ten’s best defenses but the Gophers’ biggest obstacle offensively is themselves.

It’s disappointing that after five seasons the Gophers haven’t developed an above average Big Ten quarterback.  Instead, there has been a parade of quarterbacks unable to consistently perform at a high level.  Kill and his staff developed outstanding quarterbacks in just three seasons at Northern Illinois.  Look for them to get the QB riddle solved by next year, perhaps with true freshman Demry Croft who has promising skills both passing and running.

The offensive line has made many misplays this season, another disappointment since that unit was supposed to be among the best in the Big Ten’s West Division.  Injuries have kept starters Ben Lauer and Jon Christenson from playing, although Christenson is expected back for Saturday’s game at Purdue.  Injuries have slowed other players and forced the coaches to reshuffle assignments.  The results have been a mess with the Gophers sometimes unable to pass block or run block.

The offense’s failures include an inability to make long gains.  Freshman running backs Rodney Smith (one 30 yard run) and Shannon Brooks (40 yards) show some big play potential but the Gophers are still looking for receivers to consistently step up.

The Gophers might be advised to focus on a power run game, rather than use it occasionally along with their spread offense.  Load up the offense with extra tight ends and a blocking fullback.  Run not only using the tailbacks, but also let the quarterbacks carry the ball.  Both Croft and Mitch Leidner are effective runners, with Croft offering elusiveness while Leidner runs with power.

Mitch Leidner
Mitch Leidner

The offense needs a spark and it seems likely both Croft and Leidner, who has been the starter since going back to last season, will play at Purdue.  One or both of them could make plays with their feet and arms to give Minnesota a lift against a less than impressive Boilermakers defense.  Purdue is giving up a Big Ten worst 33 points per game.

If the offense can raise its level of play and the defense can cause turnovers, and turn them into points, the dark skies over the program will fade at least for next Saturday.  A win gives the Gophers a 4-2 record and moves them within two victories of bowl eligibility.

If Minnesota earns a 2015 bowl win, that will be the program’s first postseason victory since 2004.   That would lift spirits, too, as fans anticipate a much less demanding schedule in 2016 than the Gophers are facing in 2015.  Michigan and Ohio State go off the schedule while Maryland and Rutgers come on.  A better Minnesota record in 2016 is likely.

Gophers fans down in the dumps can remember success doesn’t always follow an ascending line on a chart.  Consider nationally-ranked 5-0 Northwestern, riding high at the moment, but coming off consecutive 5-7 seasons.  Iowa is also 5-0 after a 7-6 record last season.  Head coach Kirk Ferentz, the longest tenured head coach in the Big Ten season, came into this season on the hot seat.

Yeah, short-term things aren’t so cheery with the Gophers because of on-field scoring problems this fall.  But big picture—including the successes already achieved, the new facilities coming and Kill’s commitment to coaching here—things look much better.  The sky isn’t falling, and brighter days are ahead.

Big Ten Power Rankings

1.  Ohio State (5-0, 1-0):  As the nation’s No. 1 ranked team, the Buckeyes are targeted for each team’s best shot.

2.  Michigan State (5-0, 1-0):  Spartans not playing like a top-five ranked team and after a warm-up game Saturday at Rutgers better get ready for October 17 at Michigan.

3.  Michigan (4-1, 1-0):  After an opening loss to nationally-ranked Utah, the Wolverines have outscored their opponents 122 to 14.

4.  Northwestern (5-0, 1-0):  Wildcats now in a key schedule stretch with games at Michigan on Saturday and then home versus Iowa.

5.  Iowa (5-0, 1-0):  The planets align for the Hawkeyes every few years—and this might be one of them.

6.  Wisconsin: (3-2, 0-1):  These may not be Barry Alvarez’s, Bret Bielema’s or Gary Andersen’s Badgers.

7.  Penn State (4-1, 1-0):  After the offensive line faltered in opening game loss to Temple, Nittany Lions looking better.

8.  Illinois (4-1, 1-0):  Illini made an upgrade in August when interim coach Bill Cubit took over for Tim Beckman.

9.  Minnesota (3-2, 0-1):  Gophers might have the most unproductive offense in the Big Ten after producing a total of 37 points in the last three games.

10.  Nebraska (2-3, 0-1):  Huskers can’t win the close games, losing three by a total of nine points, and that’s no endorsement of new coach Mike Riley and his staff.

11.  Indiana (4-1, 0-1): After a softie nonconference schedule and close loss to OSU, much more will be learned about the Hoosiers after their game at Penn State on Saturday.

12.  Purdue (1-4, 0-1):  Boilers got a moral victory in 24-21 loss at Michigan State last week.  You better believe they’re thinking real win against the Gophers.

13.  Rutgers (2-2, 0-1):  Wins over Norfolk State and FBS punching bag Kansas don’t impress.

14.  Maryland (2-3, 0-1):  Porous Terps defense gave up 121 points in losses to Bowling Green, West Virginia and Michigan.  No relief in sight as Maryland plays at Ohio State on Saturday.

Comments Welcome

Coughlin Gives Spielman Gopher Hints

Posted on October 2, 2015October 2, 2015 by David Shama

 

Carter Coughlin hasn’t given up on Eden Prairie High School football teammate J.D. Spielman changing his mind about playing for Nebraska.  Coughlin has verbally committed to the Gophers and hasn’t been bashful about encouraging other high school prospects to follow him to Minnesota.

Coughlin committed to his home state school last winter, while Spielman announced for Nebraska this summer.  The two Eden Prairie teenagers are captains and buddies.  Coughlin told Sports Headliners he was disappointed to learn Spielman chose Nebraska over Minnesota but he understands and respects the decision.

Still, that doesn’t mean Coughlin has lost interest in seeing Spielman sign a National Letter of Intent with the Gophers next winter when high school players can make official commitments. “I make hints every now and then but for the most part I am not drilling him too hard,” Coughlin said.

Spielman likes how the slot receiver is used in the Nebraska offense, so that’s provided an opportunity for Coughlin to promote Minnesota and its slot specialist, KJ Maye.  “Whenever I am at the Gopher games and KJ Maye makes a play I always take a video of what he did, or whatever, and say this is you out there, or something like that,” Coughlin said.  “He chuckles, but that’s pretty much the most I do.”

Eden Prairie is 6-0 and considered the best prep football team in the state.  Spielman has been an extraordinary game changer and headline-maker with long runs and  touchdowns.  He is a headache for defenses with his ability to run and elude tacklers on rushes, pass receptions, punts and kickoffs.  Opposing offenses see plenty of Spielman too when he plays in the Eden Prairie secondary where he is a continual threat to intercept passes and run them back for touchdowns.

“J.D. has been making a ton of plays,” Coughlin said.  “He’s got like the most incredible vision of any high school player I’ve ever seen.  The way he can minupulate his body (is special). Before you even know what you’re going to do, he knows what you’re going to do.  It’s pretty incredible.”

Carter Coughlin
Carter Coughlin

Coughlin and Spielman are two of the top college prospects in the Upper Midwest.  Coughlin turned down Ohio State for Minnesota.  He played defensive end for Eden Prairie last season but has been moved to linebacker, the position he will play at Minnesota.  He is 6-foot-4 and his weight is up to about 220 with the goal of adding 10 more pounds before he becomes a Gopher.  He has run close to 4.5 in the 40-yard dash.  “I’ve kept my speed and I’ve just gotten bigger,” he said.

The Eagles have won 36 straight games and are targeting another 6A title.  Coughlin believes this year’s team is better than last season’s champs.  “We’ve been running over teams that we’ve been playing,” he said.  “Maple Grove gave us a really good game, but to be honest with you we didn’t play very well.  So the fact that we beat one of the top teams in the state when we had an off game just goes to show that if we’re playing at our full potential we can beat anybody in the state.”

Eden Prairie defeated Maple Grove by eight points early last month.  It was the kind of close game the Eagles always seem to find a way to win under coach Mike Grant and his staff.

“It’s kind of our identity at Eden Prairie,” Coughlin said.  “The coaches have created a culture that is unquestionably a winning culture.  You look at coach Grant’s statistics (winning record) and he instills that in you right from freshman year.  You go in your freshman year, and you’re expecting to beat everybody.”

Grant has a saying that you don’t have to be a great player, just make great plays.  “He believes you don’t have to have a bunch of great players that are all going Division I, you just have to have a bunch of players that are going to play great,” Coughlin said.

With Coughlin and Spielman, Grant has players who are great talents who play that way.

Worth Noting

Gophers interim athletic director Beth Goetz told Sports Headliners the University of Minnesota Board of Regents will be presented the final design and plan details next week for the proposed $190 million athletic facilities project.  “We feel good about where we are with that presentation and are hopeful we will get approval,” Goetz said.

Beth Goetz
Beth Goetz

Approval could come next Thursday as the regents gather for two days to review University matters.  The project will include an Athletes Village to benefit the more than 700 Gopher athletes, and new practice facilities for the football and basketball teams.  Goetz said groundbreaking details could be announced next week.

Although fundraising revenues aren’t in place to cover the entire project cost, the University is expected to finance remaining expenses.  Look for a Sports Headliners feature next week profiling Goetz, who assumed her new responsibilities last summer replacing AD Norwood Teague.

Justin Jackson, Northwestern’s sophomore running back who the Gophers will see tomorrow in Evanston, is second among Big Ten Conference runners with 516 yards and is averaging 129 yards per game in four games.  He has rushed for at least 100 yards in nine of his last 11 games.  The Gophers recruited the Carol Stream, Illinois native.  “If you don’t get him wrapped up, he’s going to bounce off of you, and you don’t want to give him any creases,” Gophers coach Jerry Kill said.

Craig James, who was steady and impressive returning punts for the Gophers last year as a freshman, has struggled with judgment and ball security in 2015.  Receivers KJ Maye and Drew Wolitarsky have experience as Gophers punt returners and might be options if James is replaced tomorrow.  Wolitarsky suffered a concussion last Saturday against Ohio but Kill said earlier this week the junior will be available in Evanston.

Despite marketing itself as “Chicago’s Big Ten team,” the Wildcats have difficulty attracting fans to home games at Ryan Field.  The stadium’s capacity is 47,330, the smallest in the 14-member Big Ten Conference.  The 4-0 and nationally ranked Wildcats have played three games at home this season, reporting attendance of 36,024 (Stanford), 29,131 (Eastern Illinois) and 30,107 (Ball State).

Tomorrow’s game against the 3-1 Gophers won’t come close to selling out.  Minnesota, though, has sold out its first three home games for the first time since the 2009 season.  That was the opening year at TCF Bank Stadium.

Northwestern is ranked No. 16 in the AP Poll and No. 17 in the Amway Coaches Poll.  Gophers quarterback Mitch Leidner said his team can compete with anyone and deserves to be ranked.  “We feel like we should be,” he said.  “Being 3-1 and the schedule we played in the nonconference, we feel we should have that opportunity as well.”

The NCAA annually recognizes academic progress rates for teams that are in the top 10 percent of all teams in each sport.  In May the NCAA recognized 79 percent of Northwestern’s teams in various sports, the best ranking of any FBS school.  The Gophers ranked fifth nationally with 58 percent of their teams.

Adrian Peterson (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Adrian Peterson (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

Despite gaining only 31 yards in the opening game, Adrian Peterson leads the NFL in rushing yards after three games with 291 yards.  The Vikings play the Broncos on Sunday and Denver’s defense is No. 1 in the NFL.  The Broncos rank No. 6 in the league against the rush, No. 1 versus the pass.

Minneapolis-born Ryan Harris has been a starter at offensive tackle for the Broncos in their first three games.  Denver assistant coaches Fred Pagac (outside linebackers) and Joe Woods (defensive backs) are former Vikings assistants.

The Vikings have tickets available for their remaining six regular season home games including with the Packers on November 22.  A team spokesman said the club has sold 86 percent of its seat license inventory and 90 percent of its suites in the new U.S. Bank Stadium.

The most attention given to MIAC football on Saturday will likely be the game between Bethel and Concordia, two teams with 3-1 overall records.  The Royals are 2-0 in league games, while the Cobbers, who host the game, are 1-1.  Concordia is giving up only 13.8 points per game, while Bethel is allowing 17.

Playmakers on offense include Bethel running back Marshall Klitzke and Cobber receiver Brandon Zylstra.  Klitzke is second in the MIAC with 509 rushing yards and has five scores.  Zylstra has 16 catches for 289 yards and two touchdowns.

Both teams have new quarterbacks this season.  Bethel’s Trey Anderson has completed 71 percent of his passes, while throwing seven touchdown passes and no interceptions.  Michael Herzog threw for 211 yards and a score last week in leading the Cobbers to 37 points in a win over St. Olaf.

If the Twins could sweep the Royals with wins tonight, Saturday and Sunday they would finish the season series with 10 victories and nine losses against the Central Division champs.  Saturday’s game time was switched from an evening start to 12:05 p.m. at the request of Fox Sports.

With three games remaining in the season, the 83-76 Twins are a cinch to finish above .500 for the first time since 2010 when they were 94-68.  The Twins were 5-2 on the last road trip that ended in Cleveland with a win last night.  Minnesota finished 15-13 in September, the most wins in one month since April when the club was 20-7.

Former Twins Rod Carew and Jeff Reardon had 70th and 60th  birthdays yesterday.

Prominent sports agent Ron Shapiro, who represents Twins first baseman Joe Mauer, spoke about negotiations recently to a group of Minnesota business and nonprofit leaders at the Metropolitan Club at Target Field.  The event organizer was the National Mentoring Partnership, based in Boston and led by Shapiro’s son David.

The Lynx won both of their games during the regular season against the Indiana Fever.  The teams open the WNBA Finals on Sunday at Target Center in the best three of five series.  Sunday’s game will be televised by ABC, with the remaining games, including next Tuesday, on ESPN.

The Wild purchased 500 tickets for Sunday’s game to be made available complimentary to the first 250 fans requesting tickets on the Lynx website.  The Wolves Tyus Jones and the Twins were involved with purchases for Western Conference semifinals games.

Joe Schmit, the KSTP TV sports anchor, said sales for his book have reached 13,000.  Sudden Impact: Stories of Influence through Purpose, Persistence & Passion is now in its third printing.

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