Glen Mason was “ecstatic” and thought it was “long overdue” when Greg Eslinger, the most decorated offensive lineman in Golden Gophers football history, was announced last month as a member of the College Football Hall of Fame class of 2025.
Mason, the former Minnesota head football coach, is adamant that a strong contingent of Gopher enthusiasts should turn out to support the best center he ever coached when Eslinger is inducted into the Hall of Fame December 9 in Las Vegas. The National Football Foundation sponsors the Hall of Fame which is located in Atlanta. Tickets are available at https://NFF2025.givesmart.com.
Mason would love to see a strong showing in Vegas by the Gopher Athletic Department, prominent boosters and other fans of U football. “This is a big deal,” he told Sports Headliners. “I hope they put a contingent of people together for the Hall of Fame banquet when he goes out there. …”
“Yes, we plan to have representation in Las Vegas,” Gopher athletic director Mark Coyle said in a text on Friday to Sports Headliners. (Understandably, those plans may be in the earliest stages.)
Mason, even though he didn’t have a player being inducted, used to regularly attend the induction event. He saw how successful programs made a splash at the banquet by doing even more than advertising in the printed program and buying tables.
“Typically, Ohio State or Notre Dame or Alabama or Oklahoma, when they had an inductee, they had a hospitality suite, and people used to bounce around from one suite to the other suites. That’s a big-time image.”
Regardless of whether a school has an inductee or not, Mason said it’s important to send a message to the NFF that you are a supporter, and establish relationships. Thinking about Eslinger, Mason said, a strong showing of support in Vegas next December emphatically says: “you can accomplish anything that you want if you come to the University of Minnesota.”
Major college programs weren’t pursuing Eslinger when he was playing high school football in Bismarck, North Dakota and he was definitely an under the radar prospect. But as a prep player he caught Mason’s eye when attending a Gopher summer camp in 2001. Mason had been the offensive line coach at Ohio State before a head coaching career at Kent State and Kansas before Minnesota.
“I decided we were going to recruit him because of his energy,” Mason said. “Everything he did. Everything was full speed—above board, likeable kid—and I thought, you know, we’ll take him.”
Eslinger didn’t have the weight and strength in high school that he would acquire with the Gophers. Mason had thoughts of making the prep lineman into a fullback eventually.
But prior to the 2002 season it became apparent that Eslinger, as a true freshman, was ready to be the team’s starting center. Playing at 6-3 and about 250-pounds, Eslinger became a remarkable four-year starter who was a key reason Mason’s teams made it to bowl games each season.

His resume is eye-popping. He blocked with precision for some of the best rushing teams in Gopher history and he was a two-time All-American in 2004 and 2005. He won the Outland Trophy given to college football’s best interior lineman and the Dave Rimington Trophy recognizing the game’s best center. He was the 2005 Big Ten Offensive Lineman of the Year (only Gopher ever honored) and was awarded with the 2006 Big Ten Medal of Honor (the conference’s oldest and most prestigious award). He was also a two-time Academic All-American.
Mason remembered when Bill Curry, an ESPN college football analyst, sat in his office during Eslinger’s sophomore season. The former Green Bay Packers center and college head coach marveled at Eslinger, describing him as “the best I’ve ever seen.”
Eslinger had an amazing combination of athleticism and smarts. A vivid image for fans is seeing him pull out from the line of scrimmage and move downfield knocking blockers out of the way and opening up paths for great running backs Marion Barber III and Laurence Maroney.
“It was a lot more difficult than you think because you have to (first) snap the ball,” Mason said. “You have to pull, and you know our running game was pretty sophisticated. He’d have to adjust who he was going after depending who the wide receiver was going to block, and he had to do it full speed, which he did.
“ And I remember after he (Greg) left, Tony Brinkhaus was an awful good lineman but we moved him to center, and running the same stuff, and I remember him saying to me, ‘I can’t believe how he did this stuff. This stuff is unbelievable.’ “
To write only about Eslinger’s on-field excellence is not doing him justice. “Every once in a while, you’ll come across a guy that I call a tone setter,” Mason said. “In other words, he is a cut above everybody in every degree. And what you want to do when you come across a guy like that is—and Greg was one of those guys—you put him out front and you try to encourage and motivate everybody to keep up with him.
“And so very seldom do you have a guy that is able to achieve what he did athletically and at the same time academically. And then within the program, within the University, if you would ask anybody who is the finest character on the team, almost everybody would say Greg Eslinger.”
Eslinger’s candidacy for the Hall of Fame was the result of multiple entities or individuals advocating for him, including the athletic department and Minnesota chapter of the NFF. He will be the 20th Gopher player to join the Hall of Fame.
Eslinger is now an orthopedic sales consultant for DePuy Orthopedics in Fargo. His character shines through with his activities in the community including as a motivational speaker to elementary and junior high school students, and organizer of shoe collections and donations for underprivileged.
Dave and readers:
It’s a great acknowledgment for Greg Eslinger’s induction to the College Football College Hall Of Fame. I understand coach (Glen) Mason’s call to support his induction in December in Las Vegas!
I checked out the pricing for the gala (awards dinner)! Tickets start at $900 ($1,500 tickets, too, with tables at $9,000 and $15,000.)
Need I say more!
Congrats, Greg!
Sincerely
Jumpin’ Jimmy Brunzell
U Football and track 1969-70