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KU looking to make history
A win next week would give the Jayhawks 20 wins in two seasons for the first time ever.
It’s not an offense, it’s an identity.
Sounds like an ad for something, doesn’t it? But, so far, the Minnesota Gophers football team is buying. Offensive linemen are happy, running backs are grinning. Even quarterback Adam Weber, whose offensive perspective is changing, is thrilled.
After the regular season ended with offensive inconsistency and a four-game losing streak, coach Tim Brewster took action. Actually, you get the feeling that the wheels were in motion long before the offensive wheels came off in a 55-0 loss to Iowa to end the season.
Two days later, offensive line coach Phil Meyer resigned. By the next day, the Gophers had a new line coach — and running game coordinator — in Tim Davis, stripping Mike Dunbar, who remains the offensive coordinator, of some of his power. Brewster was talking about fullbacks and tight ends, three-point stances and downhill running.
The Gophers, a pure spread team since Brewster arrived last year, have spent their 15 pre-bowl practices adding a power-running facet to their playbook, in the process moving closer to the kind of football Brewster holds dear.
“It’s me, it’s who I am,” said Brewster, who played tight end at Illinois in the 1980s. “I know we need to be balanced. I know we have to run to win. ... I wanted to establish the fact that we were a spread team. I knew we would work toward my identity as a football coach, and that’s what we’re doing.”
That said, don’t forget the spread.
For all the talk of lead blockers and H-backs, the Gophers have not abandoned the spread. Indeed, Brewster seems eager to dispel the idea that multiple-receiver sets will disappear in the offense.
“We are going to continue to be a spread football team,” Brewster said. “There are a lot of teams that have the same ideas and thoughts as I do, of continuing the spread. We will continue to spread the field, throw the football. And we’ll also be able to close the formation and take a physical approach to the running game.”
The bottom line is that Brewster believes teams have to run effectively to win.
The statistics bear that out. The Gophers started the season 7-1. A big part of that was the level of the opposition, but they were running relatively well at the time, too. Minnesota averaged 126.6 rushing yards per game and 3.4 yards per rush over their first eight games.
But in their 0-4 finish, the Gophers running game evaporated, with those averages dropping to 64.3 and 2.5.
A change was needed, and fans will see it Wednesday when the Gophers play Kansas in the Insight Bowl. The offensive linemen, who previously usually lined up in a two-point stance, will have their hand on the ground more often than not, even on passing plays.
The Gophers will use a fullback, either Jon Hoese or Nick Tow-Arnett. They will use multiple-tight end sets. Not all the time, not even most of the time. But enough so that the Gophers can play a more hard-nosed game, get a new identity.
Or, maybe, a new attitude. That’s the way Weber sees the tweaks in the offense — as a way to promote aggressive football.
“Sometimes, guys just don’t flip that switch,” Weber said. “Coach Brewster is intense, both personally and as a coach, and that attitude needs to be carried over to our players. Some guys naturally have that, some guys don’t. I think there’s been that challenge to develop that attitude.”
Weber sees a more aggressive approach to running the ball carrying over into everything the team does offensively. The new running style promotes that, he said. “These offensive linemen know it starts up front,” he said. “We have the talent, it’s about realizing it.”
Brewster sees a better running game helping everything, period. It will keep the offense on the field longer and provide the Gophers defense — which wore down at the end of the season -more rest.
It has meant Weber has needed to relearn the art of taking a direct snap from center, take the rust off his drop-back skills and get used to the perspective of scanning the field from a different point. The running backs have relearned the art of the true tailback, 7 yards deep in the backfield. It’s a point of view DeLeon Eskridge, Shady Salamon and Jay Thomas like.
For offensive linemen, it is a chance to play a kind of football that might remind some of the Glen Mason years.
“It’s all good stuff,” center Trey Davis said. “As offensive linemen, we like being in that three-point stance, getting off the ball, hitting people. It’s nice to have the changeup, from spread to the power run game. It will make the other team prepare for more.”
More like this
- Gophers get desert trip for Insight Bowl December 8, 2008
- Gophers’ offense stalls 3 comments / January 1, 2009
- Minnesota QB his own worst critic 1 comment / December 28, 2008
- FINAL: Briscoe's 201 receiving yards lead KU to 42-21 Insight Bowl win 55 comments / December 31, 2008
- Gopher turnaround reminiscent of KU’s 14 comments / December 31, 2008













Comments
kranny (anonymous) says...
I'll bet Mangino and Co. will be glad to know this tidbit of info. Thanks, Mr. Youngblood.
December 27, 2008 at 12:46 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
springtxhawk (anonymous) says...
It's what newspapers do. They write about their teams, what is happening. Who is making an impact in practice, who is rising, who is falling, etc.I doubt it affects more than 10% of what they intend to do against Kansas for this game.How do you run 1 scheme for 12 football games and then think you are a better football team by changing your identity for the finale?Makes no sense at all. So, doubt this is code breaking.I do appreciate the effort by LJW. What ever happened to "Know the Foe"? I miss that. If memory serves, and it might not, I seem to remember something all week long about the upcoming opponent with a major story on either Thursday or Friday evening for Saturdays opposition.
December 27, 2008 at 6:49 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KU (anonymous) says...
Desperate times call for desperate measures. Minnesota knows the Big 11 version of the spread offense is child's-play compared to the Big 12 version. They know KU would eat them alive if they stuck with their stuff. I'm tellin' ya, they would actually have been better off sticking with the spread because KU's senior linebackers want to go out with a bang and if they are asked to stuff the power run they will be like sharks sensing blood in the water.
December 27, 2008 at 9:41 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jhawkclassof02 (anonymous) says...
"How do you run 1 scheme for 12 football games and then think you are a better football team by changing your identity for the finale?"Remember last year in the Orange Bowl? For the first time all year we lined up under center in an I-form and played some good ole fashion smash mouth football for a series or two. I think Tech was looking for something tricky and then we just crammed it down their throats. I got pumped up when I saw Reesing go under center with two backs behind him. I don't think Minnesota is completely changing their game, they're just looking for something that works on the ground. Fortunately for us we've got some backers that foam at the mouth when they see the run. I think we're still in good shape.
December 27, 2008 at 10:05 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
dagger108 (anonymous) says...
James, Joe, & Mike must be licking their chops at the thought of stuffing the run. I'd say it definitely plays into KU's strength all the more. To me, it sounds like a rebuilding team searching for an identity in the face of adversity. The gophers have squeaked by all the way to 7-1, then got seriously exposed in the last 4. It may not be 55-0, but I look for at least +3 scores Wednesday.
December 27, 2008 at 3:03 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jayhawkr34 (anonymous) says...
In high school(and yes i know there's a difference), but we changed our offence completely, we changed to the wishbone and ran up and down on that team cause they were expecting us to pass alot like we had before.
December 27, 2008 at 3:56 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
fihsch (anonymous) says...
Switching to "Power Running" just doesn't sound smart against a defense that starts three senior linebackers. Our linebackers are the core strenght of KU's defense. Run, Gofers, run...into the wall.
December 27, 2008 at 4:18 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KGphoto (anonymous) says...
"It’s not an offense, it’s an identity."Too funny. Well, call it what you want. It's still getting stuffed down your throat.
December 28, 2008 at 3:01 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )