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Kansas head football coach Mark Mangino speaks during a press conference Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2008 at the Camelback Inn in Scotsdale, Arizona.
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2008 Insight Bowl
KU will face the Minnesota Golden Gophers in the 2008 Insight Bowl at Sun Devil Stadium in Tempe, Ariz.
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Tempe, Ariz There was not too terribly much for the Minnesota University football team to smile about in 2007.
In the team’s first year under coach Tim Brewster, the Golden Gophers finished 1-11, their worst record in school history. Defensive end Willie VanDeSteeg anointed it “probably the toughest thing I’ve ever been through,” and today, players still can remember the sting of watching the bowl season from the comfort of their homes, as the Gophers failed to earn a postseason invitation for the first time in six years.
“I sat there,” senior linebacker Steve Davis said, “and thought, ‘I don’t want to end (up) not going to a bowl game ever again.’”
Mission accomplished.
No team in the country enjoyed a better turnaround in 2008, as the Gophers improved by six victories — and possibly seven, with today’s 5 p.m. Insight Bowl matchup with Kansas University still on deck — over their ’07 record.
During a regular season in which it finished 7-5 and ascended to as high as No. 20 nationally, Minnesota improved in nearly every facet of its game, from its defensive execution — UM finished 74th in the nation in total defense this year compared to 119th in ’07 — to its newly implemented spread offense, orchestrated by sophomore quarterback Adam Weber.
And despite a late-season swoon in which the Gophers lost their final four games, including a 55-0 home drubbing by Iowa, there was little for Minnesota fans to be disappointed in during the 2008 season.
“I think the biggest question that I’m asked is, ‘How did you do it? How did you turn it?’” said Brewster, who spent five years as an NFL assistant before taking over at UM. “And it is just a commitment from within to make the team more important than individuals. ... And guys, I know that may sound corny or whatnot, but you know what? I truly believe that’s what made us a better football this season.”
The players insist that this year’s performance came as no surprise to them. They point to the focused preparation heading into the season, and the fact that, in spite of their dismal ’07 record, they managed to keep things close in many of their games.
This season, they say, they’ve learned how to finish games, and the result has been favorable.
“We have a lot of talent on this team,” VanDeSteeg said. “And we have a lot of kids who are ready to lead. Like coach Brewster said, we lost six games last season by a combined 23 points. We were in every single one of those games, we just couldn’t finish them. That’s what we worked on in the offseason, in the fourth-quarter program. We tried to figure out how to win the last quarter.”
Time will tell whether the Gophers can parlay this year’s success into future prominence. Brewster understands that building a consistent winner will be key, and he points to Kansas coach Mark Mangino as an example of a coach who has brought respectability to a downtrodden program in a short amount of time.
Like Minnesota, the Jayhawks overcame a rough transition season under first-year coach Mangino in 2002, when they finished 2-10 and were outscored by an average of three touchdowns a game, to become bowl-eligible the following year. Since then, Kansas has finished with at least six victories every year but one — 2004 — while emerging as Orange Bowl champs last season after posting a 12-1 record.
“What (Mangino) has done is nothing short of amazing,” Brewster said. “In seven years, Mark has built a program at Kansas that can play with anybody in the country.”
That, in essence, is what Brewster hopes to accomplish at Minnesota.
Much of that likely will depend on how well the Gophers can respond to the occasional bout of adversity — such as the loss to Iowa — and while their short-term focus is ending their season on a winning note today, building off this year’s success is no doubt a priority heading into 2009.
“To me, winning is what it is about at the University of Minnesota,” Brewster said. “The bar, the standard of excellence, has been set well before I got there. And what we want to do is just kind of reclaim what we feel like is Minnesota’s rightful place amongst the elite teams in college football.”
More like this
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- Dugan Arnett’s Insight Bowl notebook 4 comments / December 31, 2008
- Gophers favored in omens 7 comments / December 31, 2008
- KU familiar with Gophers’ spread 3 comments / December 31, 2008
- KU vs. UMinn: Head to head 2 comments / December 31, 2008
















Comments
jayhawkr34 (anonymous) says...
i really dont recall the minn goofers being considered one of the "Elite" teams in college fb, did i miss something?
December 31, 2008 at 1:49 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Toto_the_great (anonymous) says...
Pre-1960. UMinn has won several Big 10 titles (most before 1960).
December 31, 2008 at 7:31 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
KU (anonymous) says...
Minnesota was a power when they wore leather helmets.
December 31, 2008 at 8:02 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
haroldp69 (anonymous) says...
First off all. Tim Brewster is full of it. He took over a team that had been to a bowl game the year before he took over ( with almost everybody returning) and ran it into the ground. Every frozen head in Minnesota has read into his b.s. used car saleman pitch. He cheats and can't coach worth a lick. He has not turned anything around! This has been the norm for almost a decade now. Fans are not happy. 55-0 against Iowa is the worst big ten loss ever at home for minny.. Good job Brewster and you accomplished this in your 2nd year. Just go to the Minnesota papers and see how Brewster is percieved.Not even close to Mangino's 2nd season... Mangino took over for Terry Allen who had his best year in his first year of being head coach with another coaches players. Brewster took over for a coach who had been to 7 bowl games in the last 8 years and before that could barely win two games a year.Minnesota should stick to hockey. Go Hawks! Time to cook ribs and tailgate in Tempe!
December 31, 2008 at 8:42 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
dagger108 (anonymous) says...
Nice post Harold.
December 31, 2008 at 9 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
chuckberry32 (anonymous) says...
I like how they changed the time of the game on the website from 4 to 5. I was getting confused seeing so many different times...nfln.com has it listed as 5:30 (est) but their coverage doesn't start till 6...hmmmanyone with any insight on how to watch this game online?
December 31, 2008 at 10:34 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
rockchalk_dpu (anonymous) says...
Harold is right though. I went on the Minneapolis Star website and the fans on there are more critical than we are (shocking, I know). They are embarrassed about the game against Iowa and are also very nervous about stopping a faster offense and better quarterback than they have seen all season.The fact that they are coming in with 4 straight losses and the last one was a beat-down worries me though. That makes me think that the Gophers will be fired up and wanting to prove they belong in a bowl, giving them the momentum out of the gate. We just have to match intensity, play to our strengths and follow the gameplan and we should be fine. Its going to be a great game I think and I'm glad Fox 4 is able to air it in the KC area.RCJ
December 31, 2008 at 10:39 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
jayhawkr34 (anonymous) says...
so let me get this straight, we're going to miss the first hour of the game on the nfl network? or did i misunderstand chuckberry?
December 31, 2008 at 11:54 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
chuckberry32 (anonymous) says...
Jayhawkr34...those times were for east coast where the game doesn't start until 6...I think...
December 31, 2008 at 12:19 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Topside (anonymous) says...
In the immortal words of Jean Paul Sartre, 'Au revoir, gopher'.
December 31, 2008 at 1:34 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Strikewso (anonymous) says...
We've got this. Anyone know if this game is on the internet? I guess I don't get the NFL network and can't find the game on any of my 1200+ channels here in Hawaii.
December 31, 2008 at 2:04 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
njjayhawk (anonymous) says...
Great post, Haroldp69. My sentiments exactly.You have to go w-a-y back to the age of the Neanderthals to find Minn football to be national prominence. In fact, I think a few Neanderthals played for them when Minn was any good on the gridiron. Glen Mason was the best thing that ever happened to Minn football, and I know such from experience having lived in the Twin Cities for some time, and having to put up with Gopher fans who constantly had to live in the ancient past to find any figment of U of M football glory to speak about. Minn was not surprisingly dumb enough to fire Mason.KU must beat the Gophers tonight to keep the KU football program marching forward. I pick KU 35 - 21.
December 31, 2008 at 2:43 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
erik847 (anonymous) says...
The Kansas football team earned a great victory in the IUnsight Bowl. Congratualtions! After reading the postings here I feel it is too bad that they have such classless supporters. Still a bunch of prarrie neanderthals that can only feel smart when they are ripping someone else. The football team is a winner; the fans are whinners! I guess there is no accounting for low class!
January 1, 2009 at 6:28 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Hebgen2f (anonymous) says...
Way to go Erik847! You said it exactly right! The team earned the victory. The posters here are really just a bunch of loosers that probably have never put on a jock strap and all their feeble minds put together couldn't equal any one of the Minnesota players' for heart and class! loosers!!!
January 1, 2009 at 6:34 p.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )