BleedGopher
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per this article from Marcus. He also details Bennett's ankle injury:
Duane Bennett's sprained ankle is more bad news for Gophers running game
Leading rusher Bennett dealing with ankle sprain
By Marcus R. Fuller
Southern California held the University of Minnesota to a season-low 83 rushing yards in the Gophers' 32-21 loss Saturday, but there's another reason why the Gophers should be concerned moving forward.
Coach Tim Brewster said Sunday that starting tailback Duane Bennett sat the second half of Saturday's game because he wasn't the same after spraining his ankle a week earlier against South Dakota.
"He really wasn't 100 percent" in Saturday's game, Brewster said of Bennett, who had just 6 yards on seven carries in the first half against the Trojans. "He was kind of gimpy throughout the week. You could see he wasn't hitting it like we want him to."
Brewster said Bennett would play against Northern Illinois (1-2) on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium. But the Gophers (1-2) need Bennett to do more than just play. They need him to perform at the level he did the first two games.
The 5-foot-9, 210-pound junior from Fairview Heights, Ill., was the first Minnesota player to have consecutive 100-yard rushing games since 2007, including a career-best 187 yards on 30 carries in the season opener at Middle Tennessee State.
Bennett had 104 yards and two touchdowns on 18 carries in a 41-38 loss to South Dakota on Sept. 11. He had two 25-yard runs in the fourth quarter, so Brewster said he didn't know when the injury occurred.
If Bennett isn't healthy enough to regain his status as the team's feature back, the Gophers are likely to turn to freshman Donnell Kirkwood, who had a team-high 40 yards on 10 carries against USC.
Junior DeLeon Eskridge had 31 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries Saturday, but Brewster said Kirkwood is more explosive. The 5-9, 200-pound Florida native had runs of 15 and 11 yards to the outside against a quick USC defense.
"I think Kirkwood is one of those guys that, if you feed him, he's really going to get better as the game progresses," Brewster said. "He's got that kind of mentality. Most backs are going to get better the more times you hand it to them, but I particularly think Kirkwood's got a chance to be that."
No Gray ratio: Backup quarterback MarQueis Gray nearly reached 100 yards receiving for the second straight game in Saturday's loss, finishing with four catches for 98 yards and a touchdown. He had nine catches for 91 yards and a touchdown against South Dakota.
Gray has not only established himself as quarterback Adam Weber's top target, he ranks third in the Big Ten in receiving yards (211) and receptions per game (4.67).
But the Gophers don't have a set plan to give Gray a certain amount of touches a game, similar to how they used All-Big Ten receiver Eric Decker last season. Brewster said the only given offensively is running the ball every week.
"It's a different game-by-game plan," Brewster said of Gray's role. "There may be a game this year where MarQueis has 15 catches. And then the next game he might have four."
Briefly: Place-kicker Eric Ellestad will have to compete for the starting job this week with David Schwerman, Brewster said. Ellestad is 2 for 5 on field goals this season and was called for a penalty for sending a kickoff out of bounds against USC. Schwerman, a walk-on from Kettle Moraine, Wis., was an all-state kicker in high school.
# There also might be competition for two spots on defense this week. Freshman cornerback Brock Vereen replaced sophomore Michael Carter as a starter against USC, and junior defensive end Anthony Jacobs replaced starting redshirt freshman Matt Garin.
http://www.twincities.com/sports/ci_16119768?nclick_check=1
Go Gophers!!
Duane Bennett's sprained ankle is more bad news for Gophers running game
Leading rusher Bennett dealing with ankle sprain
By Marcus R. Fuller
Southern California held the University of Minnesota to a season-low 83 rushing yards in the Gophers' 32-21 loss Saturday, but there's another reason why the Gophers should be concerned moving forward.
Coach Tim Brewster said Sunday that starting tailback Duane Bennett sat the second half of Saturday's game because he wasn't the same after spraining his ankle a week earlier against South Dakota.
"He really wasn't 100 percent" in Saturday's game, Brewster said of Bennett, who had just 6 yards on seven carries in the first half against the Trojans. "He was kind of gimpy throughout the week. You could see he wasn't hitting it like we want him to."
Brewster said Bennett would play against Northern Illinois (1-2) on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium. But the Gophers (1-2) need Bennett to do more than just play. They need him to perform at the level he did the first two games.
The 5-foot-9, 210-pound junior from Fairview Heights, Ill., was the first Minnesota player to have consecutive 100-yard rushing games since 2007, including a career-best 187 yards on 30 carries in the season opener at Middle Tennessee State.
Bennett had 104 yards and two touchdowns on 18 carries in a 41-38 loss to South Dakota on Sept. 11. He had two 25-yard runs in the fourth quarter, so Brewster said he didn't know when the injury occurred.
If Bennett isn't healthy enough to regain his status as the team's feature back, the Gophers are likely to turn to freshman Donnell Kirkwood, who had a team-high 40 yards on 10 carries against USC.
Junior DeLeon Eskridge had 31 yards and a touchdown on 13 carries Saturday, but Brewster said Kirkwood is more explosive. The 5-9, 200-pound Florida native had runs of 15 and 11 yards to the outside against a quick USC defense.
"I think Kirkwood is one of those guys that, if you feed him, he's really going to get better as the game progresses," Brewster said. "He's got that kind of mentality. Most backs are going to get better the more times you hand it to them, but I particularly think Kirkwood's got a chance to be that."
No Gray ratio: Backup quarterback MarQueis Gray nearly reached 100 yards receiving for the second straight game in Saturday's loss, finishing with four catches for 98 yards and a touchdown. He had nine catches for 91 yards and a touchdown against South Dakota.
Gray has not only established himself as quarterback Adam Weber's top target, he ranks third in the Big Ten in receiving yards (211) and receptions per game (4.67).
But the Gophers don't have a set plan to give Gray a certain amount of touches a game, similar to how they used All-Big Ten receiver Eric Decker last season. Brewster said the only given offensively is running the ball every week.
"It's a different game-by-game plan," Brewster said of Gray's role. "There may be a game this year where MarQueis has 15 catches. And then the next game he might have four."
Briefly: Place-kicker Eric Ellestad will have to compete for the starting job this week with David Schwerman, Brewster said. Ellestad is 2 for 5 on field goals this season and was called for a penalty for sending a kickoff out of bounds against USC. Schwerman, a walk-on from Kettle Moraine, Wis., was an all-state kicker in high school.
# There also might be competition for two spots on defense this week. Freshman cornerback Brock Vereen replaced sophomore Michael Carter as a starter against USC, and junior defensive end Anthony Jacobs replaced starting redshirt freshman Matt Garin.
http://www.twincities.com/sports/ci_16119768?nclick_check=1
Go Gophers!!