Westfall: Get Over It Golden Gophers – PJ Fleck is the Best Minnesota Can Get

BleedGopher

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2008
Messages
61,982
Reaction score
18,172
Points
113
Per Westfall:

The Boat Has Been Rowed in Some High Seas​

In 2019, the Minnesota Golden Gophers finished 11-2 with a final AP Ranking of 10th and won the Outback Bowl 31-24 against the Auburn Tigers. It was Minnesota's first Top 10 finish since 1962, its best win total since 1905, and the highest in its modern history. It was just the third time since 1962 that Minnesota finished ranked in the Top 20. Indeed, 2019 was a dream season for Minnesota.

Under PJ Fleck, Minnesota has gone to and won five bowls in the last six seasons. Fleck has led Minnesota to three 9-wins or better campaigns. His career win percentage is the best for any Minnesota coach who led the program since 1951.

Despite that success, fans are growing tired of Fleck. Fleck is issuing dire warnings that the Minnesota program will be in lean times if it does not pick up the pace in NIL. Many fans are more upset with Fleck than with the reality of the situation that he has truthfully analyzed.

PJ Fleck - Beyond the Noise​

PJ Fleck has many facets. He is often described as a carnival barker, used car salesman, sloganeer, and full of gimmicks.

Fleck is famous for his “Row the Boat” mantra. However, instead of being a cheap slogan, “Row the Boat” is meant as an inspirational message related to the loss of Fleck’s infant son, Colt. He uses it as a tribute to Colt and to encourage his players never to give up and to do their part in ensuring the team’s success. But to outsiders, it has become an object of scorn and ridicule.

Still, for substantive fans, Minnesota has enjoyed its best era of success since Murray Warmath reached his zenith with three consecutive Top 10 finishes from 1960 through 1962, winning the 1960 national championship during the stretch. That national championship was the 7th and final for the Golden Gophers.

As college football went through integration in the early 1970s, talented black players from the South stayed home instead of moving north to play in the big time. Minnesota has never recovered from losing that former advantage.

Fleck’s teams play an old-school style that contradicts the noise surrounding the coach. Fleck emphasizes complementary and physical football with power running, strong offensive line play, and reliable defense. Ironically, his on-field coaching philosophy is without gimmicks, and that is one of the key reasons for his success.

Minnesota's Institutional Challenges​

The University of Minnesota is in Minneapolis, a pro sports town with teams in all four major leagues. Traditionally, major metropolitan megamarkets with pro sports are not homes to perennial power college football programs. The best programs are typically located in college towns, isolated from big cities.

Minnesota is known as the “State of Hockey,” where its high school state tournament is a cultural event. The state is home to several major college hockey programs. Despite being the only Power Five school in the state, Minnesota does not have a natural football recruiting advantage. Top-level recruits are not plentiful in the Land of Ten Thousand Lakes.

In 2024, Minnesota ranked 34th in the nation for its recruiting class, an improvement of 12 spots from 2023 and their best ranking since 2021, a finish of the nation’s 28th-ranked class. Like its arch-rivals from Iowa and Wisconsin, the Golden Gophers have never been a recruiting juggernaut and emphasize development and culture over flashy 5-star players.

The recruiting limits of Minnesota play into Fleck’s approach of fundamentally sound complimentary football. But that institutional fact puts a ceiling on just how far Minnesota can realistically finish. In that epic 2019 season, The Golden Gophers pierced the program’s gravity.

The Elephant in the Room​

Last season, PJ Fleck warned that Minnesota was in danger of becoming the equivalent of a baseball or hockey “Triple-A ballclub” because of its lack of NIL programs. Fleck warned Minnesota would develop but lose its best players to the transfer portal because of NIL.

In fact, Fleck already lost key players who should have been playing for the Gophers but either were not paid or not paid enough. Previously, Minnesota lost key running backs such as Bucky Irving, Ky Thomas, and Trey Potts. For Fleck’s type of offense, those were devastating departures.

So far this offseason, Minnesota lost a whopping 18 players to the portal. The headliner is 2023 starting QB Athan Kaliakmanis, who defected to Rutgers, where former Minnesota offensive coordinator Kirk Ciarocca now serves. Athan’s brother Dino Kaliakmanis also transferred to Rutgers. In Fleck’s defense, he warned all QBs that there would be an open competition. And Kaliakmanis had an ineffective finish to the 2023 campaign.

Of major concern is a defense that ranked 6th (2021) and 4th (2022) for points allowed fell to 70th in that category in 2023. Injuries and roster transition decimated Minnesota. But most fans didn’t want to hear about that or NIL, instead complaining that Fleck was making excuses.

Also, Fleck took full advantage of the extra COVID season to post 9-4 records in 2021 and 2022. Once those key veteran players finally departed, Minnesota was caught flat-footed and outclassed. And without competitive NIL, the cupboard is not stocked with as much quality as in the past.

PJ Fleck and Minnesota face a fork in the road season. The question is if the University of Minnesota is committed enough to its football program to either adapt or die. Fleck is a proven coach. Flack loves Minnesota and has rejected other offers to stay. And Minnesota would be foolish to think it could do better.

It's time to ante up and start rowing, Golden Gophers.


Go Gophers!!
 

All true Gopher football fans know, understand, acknowledge PJ's greatness & feel truly Blessed he is our Head Coach. Haters have that in common with Iowa & Wisconsin fans. "Ask not what Gopher football can do for you. Ask what you can do for Gopher football" JFK
 



Poorly written. Talks about the players that have left but largely disregards who they've brought in from the portal. I would argue that the portal has been a net positive (by a good margin) this offseason. Certainly some players I would have liked to see stick around but overall the portal has gone pretty well this offseason.
 



Trey Potts was a devastating departure?
By stats and based on how our backs performed after his departure, no. It would've been nice to have an extra upperclassman on the roster for experience/leadership. He was a good dude and had a ton of heart, especially coming back from what could've been a life threatening injury based on my understanding of things (was his injury ever officially disclosed?)
 

All true Gopher football fans know, understand, acknowledge PJ's greatness & feel truly Blessed he is our Head Coach. Haters have that in common with Iowa & Wisconsin fans. "Ask not what Gopher football can do for you. Ask what you can do for Gopher football" JFK
LOL. What a disturbing commentary to say we are blessed and bestow greatness on an average coach. Not a knock on Fleck but like those before him, not a champion of anything since 1962. 2019 was this generations pinnacle. Three decent whacks at going to Indy, only to choke. Before him two chances.
 

P.J. brought some joy to long-suffering Gopher fans. We have a lot more thirst for success. Thanks to PJ Fleck.

The Gophers' Offense under Greg Harbaugh is a concern. We need someone to work with and develop the quarterbacks like Kirk Ciarrocca did.
 
Last edited:





I am certain that if Minnesota backed up a dump truck full of cash to Smart's house then he would be wearing a maroon shirt by the end of the day. Everyone works for money. PJ just happens to be probably the best deal that fits in Minnesota's preferred budget.
 




P.J. brought some joy to long-suffering Gopher fans. We have a lot more thirst for success. Thanks to PJ Fleck.

The Gophers' Offense under Greg Harbaugh is a concern. We need someone to work with and develop the quarterbacks like Kirk Ciarrocca did.
Kirk had one good year with a QB.
 


PJ has been a pretty good coach and I'm not quick to turn on him after a crummy season. If the season record keeps trending down then we will have to reassess. No coach is bulletproof anymore. Just because Maturi hired Brewster doesn't mean we will screw up every hire...right?!
 

I don't think it's quite as simple or binary as "Fleck Good" or "Fleck Bad." like most things in life, there is nuance involved and sometimes, two things can be true at the same time.

2019 was an excellent season - True!
in 2019, the Gophers lost to Iowa and Wisconsin, and missed an opportunity to play for the B1G Championship - also True!

for a long time, a lot of Gopher fans went into the season thinking, "just don't suck." well, the Gophers don't suck under Fleck. but, a little success makes fans want more success. that was Mason's ultimate downfall - he made fans hungry for more, but couldn't deliver. Now, Fleck has done the same thing - made fans hungry for more. only history will judge whether Fleck succeeds where Mason came up short.
 





Top Bottom