Hanging with Mr. Cupito

Gopher Football

Former Gophers quarterback Bryan Cupito (’02-’06), the school’s all-time leader in passing yards and touchdown passes, has another rare distinction. He is among only a handful of players to have experienced a bowl game each year he was on campus. Cupito engineered rivalry wins over Iowa, Penn State, and Michigan. He also was brilliant in his first collegiate start (noted below) and led the way in a 62-0 win over a D 1-A school ““ Temple.Bookmark and Share

Cupito and current QB Adam Weber overlapped in ’06. Weber, like Cupito, redshirted for a year, but undoubtedly learned a lot that particular season.

GH caught up with Cupito this week.

GH: I understand you coach a 7th grade team in Bloomington … who’s a better coach — you or Tim Brewster 🙂 ?
BC: WOW! Right off the bat – I am far from a college level coach. Tony Brinkhaus (former Gophers OL) and I coach a 7th grade team in Bloomington with the playoffs taking place this week, so we will see how good we are.

GH: Take us through your specific duties with the team, and I can bet you’re having a blast?

BC: I run the offense, Tony runs the defense. It’s that simple. We have 20 kids and just the two of us coach, which makes it nice. I always thought coaching would be great and it has actually been more than I expected. The parents have been great to deal with and the players seem to be having fun, which makes it a lot more fun for Tony and me.

GH: I know you follow the Gophers as much as any former player … if you were athletic director Joel Maturi, would you give Brewster a contract extension (he’s in year No. 3 of a five-year deal)?

BC: I think Brewster has done a good job. I would give him 2 more years for sure. When I left in “˜06 we were making bowl games every year and that is where the program stands currently, so I would give him 2-3 more years to see if he can take the Gophers to the next level (at least top 4 in Big Ten). The new stadium has created a buzz and the enthusiasm has never been greater for the fans and students at the U, so it’s time to take the next step.

GH: QB Adam Weber, in all likelihood, will break your school records for career passing yards (7,446 yds) and career touchdown passes (55) … what, for the time being, do those records mean to you, especially considering you played in a run-dominated offense?

BC: I thought Adam already broke all those records. The records are good, but I always dreamed of being the QB that took Minnesota back to the Rose Bowl and that obviously didn’t happen, so hopefully Adam can get them there. I was at the U when we ran the ball a lot but when you have Marion Barber, Laurence Maroney, Thomas Tapeh, and Gary Russell, I completely understand. I had many opportunities to make more plays and didn’t, so its 100% my fault for not helping us get to that next level.

GH: Weber is working with offensive coordinator No. 3 (Mitch Browning, Mike Dunbar, Jedd Fisch) … he’s taking a ton of heat for his so-so play so far this year, but can you put into some perspective how difficult it must be for him under these circumstances?

BC: I had the same QB coach and offensive coord. for all 5 years I was there, so I can only imagine how tough it must be. I think Adam is great and a very smart guy, so he has done a very good job keeping up with the changes. I do think it will help him to have the same coaches next year because consistency only makes thing easier I think.

GH: Weber’s mechanics/throwing motion were altered by Brewster & Fisch … your thoughts on doing that to a QB this deep into his career, and how would you have reacted if Glen Mason/Tony Petersen had done that to you?

BC: I don’t know what to think on this. I don’t understand how you could do that, but obviously the coaches saw something and made it happen. I would find it very hard, but coaches get paid a lot of $ for a reason, so they know what they are doing and you trust them. I would have tried to change, but don’t think it could have happened.

GH: You would know as well as any, how much freedom does Weber have at the line of scrimmage to switch plays? — the example that comes to my mind is the 1st-and-goal from the one-yard line in the Wisconsin game … Weber tapped his left thigh, which appeared to be a signal for WR Eric Decker.

BC: I am guessing a lot being he has started for 3 years. I don’t know the exact freedom he gets with his coaches, but I am guessing he could change almost any play he wanted depending on the defense. You can never be mad he changed a play trying to get Decker the ball – I sure know I would try and get Decker the ball as much as possible.

GH: If you were Brewster, when you came in, would you have kept the Mason-style offense (run first, run second, pass third), or if you strongly believed in the Spread Coast, would you have made the switch? Second-part is, did Brewster make a mistake giving up on the Spread just two years in, and choosing to go with the pro-style?

BC: Brewster is the head coach, so he makes the decisions so I had no problem with him changing the style of the offense. I would have tried to stay with the Spread longer I guess, but he has had coaching changes which changes that, so I understand that as well. I would prefer the Spread no doubt but whatever it takes to win is understandable. I am sure Adam would tell you as well — QBs prefer the shotgun — Spread!

GH: Your first start: you went 10 for 12 for 279 yards (206 in the first quarter) and a touchdown in a 63-21 win over 25th-ranked Toledo. The Gophers also had 704 yards of total offense … is that one of your favorite Gophers’ memories?
BC: That is a great memory, but my greatest memory would be the big games. I remember every Michigan game very clearly (lost 2 and won 1) and the Iowa games, Ohio St games, Wisconsin games. I group the big games together and those meant the most to me and they are still what I think about.

GH: Rumor has it your job has taken you to Milwaukee … catch the audience up on exactly what keeps you busy professionally, and is Milwaukee now your permanent home?

BC: I work for Forest Pharmaceuticals and just got transferred to Milwaukee. Right now, I am working there Monday-Friday and coming home on the weekends to be with my family until we sell our house. We will only be 5 hours from MN and my wife’s family is in Eagan, so we will be back quite a bit. The bad part is I have to hear about the Badgers now all the time, which is terrible but more $ is almost always a good thing at this point in my life.

Talk about the Gophers football program on Brew’s Crew message board.

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