10 Reasons Gophers Will Finally Win the Big Ten West… And my 3 Biggest Worries coming true for them to fail to win it

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10 Reasons Gophers Will Finally Win the Big Ten West… And my 3 Biggest Worries coming true for them to fail to win it​

By: Noel Thompson | August 26, 2021


With a handful of players taking advantage of an extra year of eligibility (given by the NCAA due to the COVID-19 Pandemic that drastically affected the 2020 season) P.J. Fleck leads one of the oldest and most experienced football teams in the nation. Minnesota returns the reigning Big Ten RB of the year and his offensive line should even be better this year. Does Minnesota really have a chance to win the Big Ten West? Below I give 10 reasons why I think they will. I will also add my 3 biggest worries that could come true and hinder their goal to become Big Ten West Champions.

1. Mo Ibrahim will have a Heisman Type Season.

In just seven games, Mo ran for 1,076 yards with 15 touchdowns. What makes those stats more impressive is that all seven games were against Big Ten opponents. Ibrahim currently stands ninth place in all-time rushing yards at the U with 2,840 yards. There is no reason why I think Mo won’t pass the 4,000-yard mark and become one of the best running backs in Minnesota history. His offensive line was pretty good last year and they all return, with the addition of Daniel Faalele who opted out last season and Curtis Dunlap coming back from injury. Not much of a stretch to think Mo can have a Heisman Type Season leading the Gophers to a Big Ten West Title. I think he has a great year.

  1. Defensive line goes from being a weakness to a big strength.
No doubt this was a big weakness last year as opponents had no problem running the ball against Minnesota (Defense allowed 201 yards a game). Minnesota attacked the transfer portal and landed a stud in Clemson DT Nyles Pinckney and a solid pass rusher in North Carolina State Val Martin. One big takeaway the media has been consistent on this fall camp is that this DL group has given the OL group fits during media availability at practice. Micah Dew-Treadway comes back for his 7th year and Boye Mafe has all the tools to be a 1st round draft pick. I also think Esezi Otomewo is primed to have a great season and I also love the motor on DeAngelo Carter, who is one of my favorite players on the team. To win games, you have to control the line of scrimmage and this group is poised to win games for Minnesota. I expect the Gophers to have their best defensive line in years this upcoming season and they should cause plenty of disruption.

  1. Tanner Morgan has another 2019 season.

Tough to judge Morgan’s season last year. He loses Tyler Johnson to the NFL, Rashod Bateman opts out then in and then out again. Morgan basically gets zero time to break in a new offensive coordinator’s playbook and develop a relationship with coach Sanford, and on top of all of this was the COVID-19 pandemic. I believe Tanner’s 2019 season was not a fluke and I think he can replicate it to lead the Gophers to a Big Ten West title.

  1. Minnesota’s Special Teams Wins Games.
Incoming Transfer and former All Mac First Team kicker Matthew Trickett has been as good as advertised so far and gives Minnesota stability at the kicking position for the first time since Emmitt Carpenter left the Gophers in 2018. Punter Mark Crawford has shined as well at camp and Minnesota should be in a position where their special teams steals games from opponents. This has the potential to be Fleck’s best special teams so far in his time at Minnesota (although that isn’t saying much).

  1. Wide Receiver Core steps up to give Tanner Morgan dangerous weapons.
The good news with Chris Autman-Bell’s injury is that it isn’t very serious as Fleck says he could possibly play versus Ohio State. Daniel Jackson shined last year as a true freshman hauling in 12 catches for 167 yards and more will be expected of him this year. The Gophers got an excellent playmaker in Texas A&M transfer Dylan Wright. Wright can spread the field with his speed and has been making plays daily at camp according to Fleck. Brady Boyd is also having a great camp and could see time as a true freshman. Tanner Morgan has weapons around him, health will obviously be a factor. This is arguably the biggest question mark for the Gophers team leading into the season.

  1. Brevyn Spann-Ford triples his career receptions in one season.
Can you believe Brevyn has only 5 catches in the last 3 years at the U? I’m going on record now that he will triple that number this season as Sanford has clearly made an effort involving the Tight Ends in the passing game this camp. To help out Mo in the running game and the young WR core, the tight ends will step up this year and be a factor in the red zone.

  1. The best offensive line in the Big Ten will reside in the Twin Cities.
P.J. Fleck has a great problem on his hands and his answer is going to be rotating 6 offensive linemen from series to series. Gophers have great depth in the trenches. Blaise Andries can play anywhere, Connor Olson is one of the best guards in the conference, and they get back studs Curtis Dunlap and big man Daniel Faalele. The young WR’s might need a little extra time to get open and this offensive line should be able to give them that. Don’t be surprised if you hear 3 or 4 names from this group get called on draft day next year.

  1. Jack Gibbens has an All-Big Ten Season and Mariano Sori-Marin is the most improved player on defense.
Jack comes in as a graduate transfer from Abilene Christian where he led the team last year with 49 total tackles and 4.5 tackles for loss. Gibbens gives the Gophers experience and leadership where they desperately need it the most from last year. Mariano’s season last year wasn’t the greatest nor was it consistent. While nobody questions his IQ and effort, it was clear he was trying too hard last year and needed to simplify his game. The addition of Gibbens should help him with that. The linebacker core will get back Braelen Oliver who will see extended time as well and has become an excellent blitzing threat for Minnesota.

  1. Floyd and Paul coming home.
While I listed these games in the top 3 of the toughest games for the Gophers this year, that doesn’t mean they are guaranteed losses. While Iowa had a strong 2020 season, this year could be the year I see Minnesota winning in Iowa City. Iowa loses 3 starters up front on offense and they are replacing three of the top four tacklers on defense. While their secondary should be solid, their front seven could be weak against the run. Minnesota finishes their regular season against Wisconsin at home. While they are Big Ten West favorites, you can bet Minnesota will be motivated to win this game as they had every chance to win in Madison last year. To win the Big Ten West, all roads go through Wisconsin and Iowa.

  1. Tyler Nubin becomes Winfield Jr 2.0 and Corey Durr becomes a lockdown CB.
In my opinion, Minnesota will go against 4 of the top 5 wide receivers in the Big Ten this year. Chris Olave (Ohio State), Garrett Wilson (Ohio State), Ty Fryfogle (Indiana), and David Bell (Purdue). What’s scary is that each wide receiver has a good QB throwing them the ball as well. For Minnesota to win the Big Ten, they need Nubin to dominate the open ground in the secondary and Durr to lockdown his counterpart. Bottom line, I think Minnesota’s secondary will be the biggest X factor this season along with the wide receivers.


My 3 biggest worries coming true and the Gophers don’t win the Big Ten West


Below are my biggest worries heading into this season. As I stated above, I believe these 3 things will be a huge factor in how many wins or loses the Gophers will have this season.

  1. The passing game doesn’t bail out the running game.
The biggest worry for every defensive coordinator facing Minnesota will be stopping the run game of Minnesota. It doesn’t matter if it’s inside zone, outside zone, or RPO. Every DC is going to focus on Mo, which puts extra pressure on the passing game. The only way to combat opponents stacking the box is by completing passes. I think the Gophers can run against anybody, but I don’t have that same confidence in the passing game… Especially with Chris Autumn-Bell dealing with an injury. Tanner Morgan should have time to throw the ball, the question is if his wide receivers can get open and catch it.

  1. Special Teams continue to be special for all the wrong reasons.
P.J. Fleck has definitely improved the Minnesota Football Program in almost every way but there is one thing in my opinion that hasn’t improved, and that is the special teams. (Keep in mind, he inherited Emmit Carpenter when he came here in 2018.) The kicking and kick returner positions seem to be a revolving door the last 3 years and it truly has been a big factor in games. The extra point miss in overtime during the Maryland game last year still makes my blood boil. If there is any coach in the hot seat this year, it has to be special teams coordinator Rob Wenger and it is well deserved.

  1. Minnesota secondary gets exposed.
No doubt Minnesota has talent in the secondary, especially in freshman stud Justin Walley. They just don’t have a ton of experience. Coney Durr is a lock at CB but the replacement for Benjamin St. Juste is not solidified, although you could pencil in Terell Smith. Outside of those two at CB, you don’t have much experience behind them. Safeties Tyler Nubin and Jordan Howden had their ups and downs last year and the coaches are relying on them to solidify the backend of the defense. With the talent this group is facing this year, this has the potential to get ugly quickly. It was no secret Fleck tried his hardest to add more experience in the secondary via transfer portal this off-season with no luck.
 

Staying relatively injury-free especially in the back half of the season is my primary concern.

Yes, special teams and defensive secondary are big worries. These are two areas ripe for exploitation.

I have never seen a stacked Gopher Defense like this edition of the Gophers. I suspect many out of this group will make it into the NFL.

Mariano Sori-Marin was overwhelmed last season with key losses on defense. With a full complement of players on defense, I would speculate that he will have a better season than last year.

IMHO, the Gophers are becoming an NFL minor league team. The NFL knows the value of players that are disciplined and sound on fundamentals. That is what they will get drafting Gophers.
 

No doubt Minnesota has talent in the secondary, especially in freshman stud Justin Walley. They just don’t have a ton of experience. Coney Durr is a lock at CB but the replacement for Benjamin St. Juste is not solidified, although you could pencil in Terell Smith. Outside of those two at CB, you don’t have much experience behind them. Safeties Tyler Nubin and Jordan Howden had their ups and downs last year and the coaches are relying on them to solidify the backend of the defense. With the talent this group is facing this year, this has the potential to get ugly quickly. It was no secret Fleck tried his hardest to add more experience in the secondary via transfer portal this off-season with no luck.
You can eliminate your concern about experience in the secondary as one of your three worries!

Howden is VERY experienced. He will be a fourth year starter. Sealed the victory vs PSU two years ago, has seen a lot of QBs/WRs/offenses.

Projected starting nickel Harris is in his fifth year in the program and has been a starter off and on over the past four years!

Nubin is only in third year, but played a lot as a true frosh...on all four special teams and got some run in secondary. Started every game last year at safety and led the team in solo tackles.

Backups will include sixth year Swenson, sixth year Howard, and sixth year McDonald.

Figure in what sixth year Durr brings and what fourth year Smith bring experience-wise and this is probably the most experienced secondary in Gopher historry, maybe NCAA history!
 

It all boils down to the trophy games.

It really is that simple.
 



You can eliminate your concern about experience in the secondary as one of your three worries!

Howden is VERY experienced. He will be a fourth year starter. Sealed the victory vs PSU two years ago, has seen a lot of QBs/WRs/offenses.

Projected starting nickel Harris is in his fifth year in the program and has been a starter off and on over the past four years!

Nubin is only in third year, but played a lot as a true frosh...on all four special teams and got some run in secondary. Started every game last year at safety and led the team in solo tackles.

Backups will include sixth year Swenson, sixth year Howard, and sixth year McDonald.

Figure in what sixth year Durr brings and what fourth year Smith bring experience-wise and this is probably the most experienced secondary in Gopher historry, maybe NCAA history!
How are they going to cover this guy when there is a top 5 draft choice on the other side. Scary
 

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You can eliminate your concern about experience in the secondary as one of your three worries!

Howden is VERY experienced. He will be a fourth year starter. Sealed the victory vs PSU two years ago, has seen a lot of QBs/WRs/offenses.

Projected starting nickel Harris is in his fifth year in the program and has been a starter off and on over the past four years!

Nubin is only in third year, but played a lot as a true frosh...on all four special teams and got some run in secondary. Started every game last year at safety and led the team in solo tackles.

Backups will include sixth year Swenson, sixth year Howard, and sixth year McDonald.

Figure in what sixth year Durr brings and what fourth year Smith bring experience-wise and this is probably the most experienced secondary in Gopher historry, maybe NCAA history!
I'd be OK but not joyful with 8-4 if it included Iowa and Wisconsin wins. Assuming three noncon wins, that means one maybe two B1G losses to lesser teams.
 

@ Iowa, @Indiana, Ohio State, Wisc

Good chance NW won't be the same, because of QB, and hurt RB. But we'll see. There is a chance, sure, that IU will regress. But I wouldn't bet on that yet.

Road games are tough no matter what. Even @Purdue, who knows. They owe us one.


If Gophers lose those top four competitively, then it is what it is. Fight hard, give them hell.

Go to a decent bowl game. Win it.


No way in hell that's a disappointment. I won't have it
 

I'd be OK but not joyful with 8-4 if it included Iowa and Wisconsin wins. Assuming three noncon wins, that means one maybe two B1G losses to lesser teams.
IF the Queen had balls, she’d be king. November is as scary as schedule as there can be! I mean, look at the last 25-30 years. Both teams (Iowa and Wisconsin)are loaded and both teams have the inside track to win the west. Just a realist here. Both teams are 12-15 deep on their OL’s and both D’s are very stout. We shall see.
 



I'd be OK but not joyful with 8-4 if it included Iowa and Wisconsin wins. Assuming three noncon wins, that means one maybe two B1G losses to lesser teams.
Wow, I'd be extremely happy with that. We haven't beat Iowa since 2014 and we all know how rare wins against Wisconsin are. 8-4 is a very solid season and would give us lots of momentum going into the future, especially with rivalry wins.

I'm 26, we've beat Wisconsin 3 times since I was born. Any season with a win over the Badgers is a good season.
 


Wow, I'd be extremely happy with that. We haven't beat Iowa since 2014 and we all know how rare wins against Wisconsin are. 8-4 is a very solid season and would give us lots of momentum going into the future, especially with rivalry wins.

I'm 26, we've beat Wisconsin 3 times since I was born. Any season with a win over the Badgers is a good season.
Wow, you have really low expectations. Change your best. Coyle did not bring in Fleck (and pay him $5 million/year) to beat rivals a little more often but still be a 5-7 regular season win program, with an 8-9 win regular season ever once in a while. Fleck has said numerous times this is the best team he has ever had.
 

in the last 21 seasons, the Gophers have won 8 or more games 6 times. so adchester is absolutely correct - by traditional Gopher standards, 8-4 is a very solid season.

and - in case anyone has forgotten - Gophers under Fleck:
5-7
7-6
11-2
3-4

So, if you choose, you can believe that 2019 is or should be the norm for the program. From the outside looking in, it looks like the outlier, not the norm.

I do not think that 8 wins equates to "really low expectations." I think it is a fairly realistic assessment of where this program is at.

Yes - if not for covid, the record could have been better in 2020. But, without covid, a lot of the 'super-seniors' would not be back this year, and this would be a very different looking roster.

If I was in Vegas and had to bet my own money, I would say 8 or 9 wins.
 



in the last 21 seasons, the Gophers have won 8 or more games 6 times. so adchester is absolutely correct - by traditional Gopher standards, 8-4 is a very solid season.

and - in case anyone has forgotten - Gophers under Fleck:
5-7
7-6
11-2
3-4

So, if you choose, you can believe that 2019 is or should be the norm for the program. From the outside looking in, it looks like the outlier, not the norm.

I do not think that 8 wins equates to "really low expectations." I think it is a fairly realistic assessment of where this program is at.

Yes - if not for covid, the record could have been better in 2020. But, without covid, a lot of the 'super-seniors' would not be back this year, and this would be a very different looking roster.

If I was in Vegas and had to bet my own money, I would say 8 or 9 wins.
Again, I said I'd be OK with it (your "Solid season"). Not Coyle's expectations, especially after getting what many out here said was the top HC hire in 2016, and paying him accordingly. Super seniors are on a lot of rosters, not just Gophs. The expectation is to elevate beyond the more recent success, not compare to "traditional" standard. Fleck has made it a point to say this is by far the best team he has had. This is year five. Change your best.
 




Wow, you have really low expectations. Change your best. Coyle did not bring in Fleck (and pay him $5 million/year) to beat rivals a little more often but still be a 5-7 regular season win program, with an 8-9 win regular season ever once in a while. Fleck has said numerous times this is the best team he has ever had.
Yes and if they become a 5-7 win team with 8-9 as the outlier i wouldn't be very impressed...I see 8-4 as what should be the baseline for a good program with 10+ every once in a while.

But if you see 8-4 this season with wins over Iowa AND Wisconsin as a failure, I'm not sure you would view any season as a success since the 1960s outside of 2019.
 

Oops!!!!!!:( But I agree that if there's four losses.... the four teams MplsGopher mentioned are the most likely.
Indiana essentially took over Michigan's "normal" place as 2nd/3rd best in the East, last season. We'll see what happens this year.

I already know your opinion, that that was a one-year blip due to Covid. As I said, we will see.
 

But if you see 8-4 this season with wins over Iowa AND Wisconsin as a failure, I'm not sure you would view any season as a success since the 1960s outside of 2019.
Well that too ... but it's hard for me to rationalize how we could beat both Iowa and Wisc and yet only go 8-4, unless some bad -- yet temporary -- injury stuff happens and/or some teams do really unexpectedly well.

Could see losing to Ohio St and Indiana perhaps. But which teams would be the other two losses, in this scenario?? @NW and @Purdue? The timing of all those, would just be weird. @Colorado of course could be a wild card.
 
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Yes and if they become a 5-7 win team with 8-9 as the outlier i wouldn't be very impressed...I see 8-4 as what should be the baseline for a good program with 10+ every once in a while.

But if you see 8-4 this season with wins over Iowa AND Wisconsin as a failure, I'm not sure you would view any season as a success since the 1960s outside of 2019.
When did I say it would be a failure?
 

A bit off topic, but because we know how difficult it is to win on the the road, what is Flecks best "away " win?
If this is PJ's best team...he's got to win at either Iowa or Indiana, imo.

Cause by history, losing those two and home games with tOSU and Wisconsin, it seems 8-4 is the ceiling.
 

It would have to be the win in Madison, regardless what you think about that Wisc team.

It could seem like that. But, that's why they play the games! :)
 

Yes and if they become a 5-7 win team with 8-9 as the outlier i wouldn't be very impressed...I see 8-4 as what should be the baseline for a good program with 10+ every once in a while.

But if you see 8-4 this season with wins over Iowa AND Wisconsin as a failure, I'm not sure you would view any season as a success since the 1960s outside of 2019.
I agree that 8-4 should be the baseline with 10 wins once in a while. What I would say is that this team is set up for ... maybe not 10 wins, but better than eight. We don't have this experience and talent both lines, QB and RB very often. If the "once in a while" season doesn't happen this year, we may be waiting a while.
 
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The team to your east will be 10-1 when they come here to finish their season…maybe even 11-0
 

The team to your east will be 10-1 when they come here to finish their season…maybe even 11-0
press-x-to-doubt-la-noire.jpg
 

I agree that 8-4 should be the baseline with 10 wins once in a while. What would say is that this team is set up for ... maybe not 10 wins, but better than eight. We don't have this experience and talent both lines, QB and RB very often. If the "once in a while" season doesn't happen this year, we may be waiting a while.

Also, 8-4 means we went at least 5-4 in the B1G! A winning conference record is what it’s all about.
 




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