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No Wrestlers Suspended or Expelled

Wrestling practice started this week and new Head Coach Brandon Eggum has the full team to work with as no wrestlers were expelled or suspended from the JRob Xanax scandal.

If you remember the details of the JRob / Xanax scandal, there was the main drug supplier, who had transferred to a Mid-Atlantic school about a year ago, there were 4 drug sellers - who sold Xanax to team members and to other students, and there were 10+ team members who had bought the drugs. The sellers were not charged by the police as there was "lack of evidence", but the University still had it's own investigation going on.

Many of us on this board had followed the investigation diligently and there were many strong opinions on this board about what should happen to the sellers and the users.

I and a few others were the minority opinion that thought that the 4 drug sellers should not be expelled, but should be suspended for a couple months. I also thought that the Xanax users should get a short suspension. I think the majority of the board thought the sellers should be expelled.

I know that around the time school started, the 4 drug sellers were in discussions with an internal Athletic Department "Ethics Board" and I kept waiting to see if the U would take its own actions against them. Now, this week wrestling practice started and all of the wrestlers are still on the roster...so there were no suspensions or expulsions. So the scandal is officially over.

JRob lost his job over this and almost every GR poster thought this was well deserved, as he took the policing matters into his own hands, destroyed evidence, and refused to cooperate with the police investigation and the "U" investigation. J's purpose in doing all of this was to protect his kids from getting a felony charge hung on them, which would drastically affect their lives.

Now that all of the wrestlers have been cleared and are back in action for Gopher Wrestling, I think we can say that J really did "fall on his sword" for his kids. And whether you approve of his actions or not, I commend him for doing this. These kids made a very bad mistake, but they are still good kids and diligent student athletes. They have learned from this, and because they got a second chance, they will likely never do anything wrong again.

I will do another thread shortly that goes into how the line-up looks and how the team looks (they look really good and have a good chance at being great!!). But, I wanted to put this issue out here separately so we could discuss it and get it out of the way.

So GR posters, what do you think about how this turned out?? And does it change your opinion of JRob?

This is your last chance...so have at it!!

Old Gopher season highlights

I asked about this before, without any real results, so I'll try again. Does anyone know where I could obtain old GG football highlight films, like what they used to (maybe still do) show at the MN State Fair? I remember Ray Christianson narrated the highlights for many years. I'm going to be laid up from surgeries early next year and would love to binge on Gopher football (basketball too) highlights from early 60's to present. Thx in advance for actual information - don't really need any wise-ass replies.

Rivals Recruiting Class Breakdowns

@Josh Helmholdt goes dagger on Claeys and his recruiting the past 11 months. Josh, you can't be that stupid and tied to stars are you? Claeys will be negatively recruited by every team until he is extended or canned. He is an unproven HC that has to earn a few things first. As for recruiting looking up under Kill....yes compared to previous years, but not compared to other B1G teams. Even last year the coaches stated they offered too many schollies too soon and want more for after the kids SR seasons. Claeys and staff will continue to look for football players that are dedicated and want to be at The U. Minnesota will never be like MI and offer 85 OL or be like Nebraska and cheat to get them into school.

Of our current commits, I expect Creamer, Landrews, Crosken, Hawes, Fisher, London, Abojei and Andries to be household B1G names before their careers are up.

https://n.rivals.com/news/big-ten-breakdown-grading-the-classes

The Maryland win insures that TC will be extended by the time the Bowl Match-UP has been announced!

THAT was a BIG win for the Gopher Student Athletes, all of TC's STAFFERS and TC on Saturday. In the modern era there has NEVER been a Gopher Football Coach who won a Big Ten/B1G game that has been fired in his FIRST FULL SEASON. One was not even fired when he FAILED to win a Big Ten/B1G game in his first year. And, we all know, that a coach who has less than 3 years remaining on his contract can NOT be expected to recruit in this cut-throat environment of the B1G Conference. So, look for TC to be given a two to three year extension by BOWL SEASON time!

Hiring TC is the BEST move that Prexy K has made since EXTENDING Jerry Kill before he had ever coached a game here at Minnesota because the program was in SUCH HORRIBLE shape following the Brewster tenure...or, should I say: disaster.

It IS up to mcad Coyle and Prexy K to provide TC, his STAFFERS and all of the Student Athletes the support and tools and backing they need to COMPETE in the B1G West! I now officially have NO worries about this happening. Prexy K can NOT ignore a coach that has held this football program together following Caoch Kill's health crisis and need to step down mid-season in 2015. Hats off to TC...the STAFFERS...and ESPECIALLY the STUDENT ATHLETES who form the heart and soul of Golden Gopher Football.

I look forward to the continued continuity, solid, sound leadership and EXPERIENCE to be the strength of the University of Minnesota Football Coaching Staff. Give the STUDENTS the VERY BEST and MOST stable and sound coaching that only an experienced TEAM of Coaches such as TC and the STAFFERS can give them. University of Minnesota Student Athletes need and DESERVE a chance to be taught, led, encouraged, and directed by good, sound, football strategists, leaders and mentors. In Football, just as in life: there are no guarantees of riches, fame, absolute success. There are victories and defeats. There are challenges. But, to compete is the ULTIMATE experience, need and opportunity. TC & the STAFFERS will give Student Athletes at the University of Minnesota the chance to COMPETE!

TC will be here as long as he wishes to be here. Beat Rutgers, Gopher!

  • Poll
Who has improved the most on D at mid season?

Which D player has stepped up and improved their game the most this season?

  • Winston DeLat.....

    Votes: 5 7.4%
  • Steven Richardson

    Votes: 3 4.4%
  • Damarius Travis

    Votes: 3 4.4%
  • Shoobie Timms

    Votes: 3 4.4%
  • Jonathan Celestin

    Votes: 30 44.1%
  • Hank Ekpe

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Scott Ekpe

    Votes: 1 1.5%
  • KiAnte Hardi

    Votes: 22 32.4%
  • Nick Rallis

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Other

    Votes: 1 1.5%

I am not going to include true FR in this poll.

Claeys gives injury update; talks Rhoda, WRs, unselfishness of RBs

Q. Hey, what happened to the running back that made 177 yards?
COACH CLAEYS: Well, he's got two good ones in front of him, and you can't always play three running backs, you know? So, he's playing on special teams. He's getting a few reps on offense, but right now the other two are the ones that are in front of him.

Q. Conor came in here and shared his story about the time he had to put in as a walk-on to finally get his chance. What did he show you as far as his willingness to stick with it for so long?
COACH CLAEYS: Well, you just -- you know, walk-ons, to make it, it has to be important to him, football has to. Because they got to spend the same amount of time and demands, and they have to pay for their own school and stuff, so he kept working and got himself in a position to play, at least be a back-up, and when that happens with any walk-on, we try to take care of them. I think it's -- why go and recruit somebody that you think you know, but you really don't know when you have a kid whose who's playing well enough that you do know. I mean, that's always been our philosophy, so -- to go ahead and reward those walk-ons before you recruit somebody else if a kid is helping you play, so Conor did all of the things he needed to do, got himself worked into that position, and once he did, he was awarded a scholarship, you know? I have a different philosophy that that's theirs, and we don't make a big deal out of it, you know, outside of the team. You know what I'm saying? I think kids respect him, and he's worked awfully hard and -- but we've had several who have done that same thing.

Q. Tracy, can you give us an update on how Mitch is doing?
COACH CLAEYS: I'll know more actually after practice, but they're going to let him do some light activity at practice. I guess that's the next step. So we'll do that and see what happened.

Q. So, similar to last week where you guys put the injury report out on Tuesday, but it's always subject to change, is it possible that he's back?
COACH CLAEYS: I don't know that. In my opinion, it's going to be hard for him, you know, to take enough reps and do all of that, you know what I mean? You know, we put a lot more on the quarterback's plate now than what we have in the past, and you need to practice, so I'm not saying that he won't, but I think it's extremely difficult for that. I'll have a better idea today after I see how he gets through today.

Q. You realize you were only six minutes from being unbeaten?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. Yeah. Two possessions. You know, and I think it's been -- the thing on both sides of the ball, at Penn State we needed to get them stopped defensively and we didn't, and at Iowa, you needed to do better on offense. But we did get a throw in the end zone, but for the game we needed to play better. I think we have a good football team, but at the same time, we have to play well, and I thought this last weekend was the first time that all phases kind of played together and showed what we can do, and it was on the road, so -- but, yeah. You don't get those back, so you keep moving, and we got to make sure that we do our best, prepare this week and get this week and try to get on a roll.

Q. Your running backs seemed generally unselfish. These guys are used to getting a lot of guys in high school and carrying these guys. How do you create that culture?
COACH CLAEYS: I guess the good thing is they are friends and they get along, and -- but it's hard anymore, for one back anymore to get through a whole season, and I think the kid at LSU is as good as anybody in the country, he's been banged up, missed a couple games, and you carried the ball 30 times a game. I think that's hard to do anymore. And so you can usually keep two of them happy and, you know, say that's Kobe, he's the one that's in the toughest position because he got two awfully good guys in front of him, and he's an awfully good football player and finding enough things for him to keep him happy and keep him in it is the bigger concern than the first two.

Q. Coach, the full back play at the game seemed to be a classic game where if you don't beat yourself you can win an awful lot of football games?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. No question. Late in the game -- not late. We got up 17-0, and when Garrison Wright went out, we were awfully careful. We didn't want to get in a situation we had somebody running through on a blitz, got a sack fumble or put pressure on him through an interception. We felt good the way the defense was playing. What we did, we got very conservative about it and said, hey, let's just play, and then Rodney, Conor did a good job of getting us in the right play and he took the long run and scored, and so he's -- Conor's capable of doing a lot more things than that, but because up front, we slowed that down a little bit, but yeah, he had the one dropped snap where he couldn't hand it off on the one play, but at least he got on the ball and didn't turn it over, and any time you -- I think we got 14 points off turnovers. We were creating some turnovers and getting some points, so, yeah. As a team, we didn't make the big mistake that cost you.

Q. Tracy, how is the offensive line looking and how do you evaluate the guys that are playing, the people that are getting to play now?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. Yeah. We have some kids that, you know, we played better. I still think we can improve on what we did. But we did finish some blocks, gave the backs a few more seams to be able to hit the seams but we still got to be able to make improvement up there. It's getting tougher with the injury part of it, but that's part of the game, and the guys who stepped in there played well enough to win, and we just got to be -- we got to be careful with their guys up front, because we need them on game day. So, you know, they get limited reps in practice, and we're doing everything we can to stay healthy up there with the people we think we can win with.

Q. Is Wright more banged up than you first thought? You said you thought he could play at Colorado State and now he seems to be still battling, especially on the last game?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. I think we could have put him back in the game. But it was the same thing, as long as we kept a two-score lead, we weren't going to do that and get him some rest, and, you know, we do have a conference rule that -- around here that when we win, we don't practice on Sundays, and so, you know, I'm sure that will help him out also, but I think we could have put him back in there if we absolutely had to, but with the lead, we decided not to.

Q. Cody's not on the injury report. How is he doing? Is it possible that he plays?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. He's been -- he's the same way as those other guys, so he's been injured for a while now. He's cleared to practice, and so we'll see how he handles practice. But he's been cleared to, but it's the same thing. You got to practice well, and you got to hold up during the week during practice, and so he is cleared. I don't know how much he'll play, though.

Q. When you first got here, it seemed like depth of linebacker was a real issue in terms of how many guys you played, being creative. Is that emphasis you put as far as recruiting different types of linebackers? It seems you have a lot of --
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. And it's probably not fair to the linebacker coaches, but wherever we have been, when you get here and start recruiting, it's always been D-line and secondary first, and I think that's where you win football games to start out with, you know? And so they had a lot of linebackers on scholarship when we got here, and so that's all part of the -- you know, when you're building things, is we try to take care of the D-line and the secondary first, and now, you know, start with that class a couple years ago that we signed a lot of linebackers, and since then we continue to sign three or four a year. The other thing is the special teams. It's a lot of defensive kids, and we're getting a little bit more help from some kids on offense this year and that, but when you're going to play all of those defensive kids on special teams, you got to sign a few more, too.

Q. Tracy, you see Brandon Lingen playing even more this Saturday?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah, as he knocks the rust off, you know, and gets more comfortable, then, yeah. I mean, it is -- I said last week, some of these guys, they missed three or four ball games. It's hard to just jump in there and play a whole bunch all of a sudden, and so I will work him in more and more.

Q. Tracy, when you're facing a team that struggled, like Rutgers, and your kids look at the schedule and see 58-0, 78-0, how do you kind of manage that as a staff to make sure that they keep their eye on the ball and don't take anything lightly?
COACH CLAEYS: One was 14-7, the same as ours, and the Illinois game, they moved the ball awfully well. They just turned the ball over, so they moved the ball awfully well against him. But still, it all comes down to, is you worry about yourself, you know, and if you want to have an opportunity towards the end of the year, you got to play your best each and every Saturday, and, you know, have respect for your opponent, that you prepare for them, and if you don't, then something's going to happen. I mean, it happens every week somewhere, you know? I'm -- you know, Virginia Tech's and awfully good football team this last week. They slipped up against Syracuse, you know? And so that's the challenge, and that's what we get paid for, is to make sure they're ready to go on Saturday.

Q. Tracy, I was going to ask you about Coney Durr. He, of course, has been injured and played just that one game. Is it a potential medical situation?
COACH CLAEYS: No, no. So he'll -- he still messed around a little bit. He's not 100 percent, but we're going to start getting him worked back in, and, you know, that medical depends on the type of injury and a bunch of stuff like that. You know what I'm saying? And so I don't think we can get a sprained ankle through on that, you know? And so we'll start working him back in.

Q. Tracy, is Williams going to become a more complete linebacker?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah, which you hope he would. You know, in high school, a lot of it is against the run, and not a lot of the pass, and by the time they get to their junior year, you would hope that, you know, that they would be towards the top of their game, and they do -- and he's worked extremely hard. I mean, he watches film, and he's fun to watch play, loves to play football, and we needed him to come through with the injuries, and he just seems to get better and better each game.

Q. What did you think of that play where he did the push-ups, he was so mad at himself?
COACH CLAEYS: Yeah. Yeah. I guess they all have their own ways to motivate themselves a little bit.

Q. With Winfield, you see a lot of poor tackling, guys going up top, trying to go for a kill shot. He's always going low and wrapping up. Do you see that often from a true freshman that tackle like that?
COACH CLAEYS: No. I always said, some tackling is natural. It really is. You usually get tackles. You watch film, they get tackled, but he's probably been doing tackling drills since the third grade, you know? I don't know, they may have their own set of tackling dummies, or whatever. It just -- and again, I say that in the right way. I mean, his dad is a tremendous person, and football is extremely important to that family, as you know, and so, you know, he's being critiqued on everything he's done since he started playing the game, and it's a neat deal, and the more and more comfortable he gets, I'd say the more responsibility, and he just keeps getting better and better also, and this helped us. We needed somebody to come through in the -- at safety, and he's done that.

Q. Tracy, he didn't have a lot of stars associated with his name. What did you see in him as a high school player?
COACH CLAEYS: He's awfully good on film. He showed up at camp. We knew he could run and, you know, as I say, you take good athletes, and -- you know? Everybody says, boy, you would like to have everybody in your secondary be 6'1" and 6'2", but not everybody can do that, you know? And no different than the D-line with Steve Richardson and stuff, so you take athletic football players, and because they're a couple inches short, they don't deserve how many stars or whatever, that's why, I said this before, you trust your own evaluations and your own eyes, and you sign kids that are good football players, and he definitely was.

Q. How have your wide receivers graded out the past couple of games?
COACH CLAEYS: They actually grade out pretty good, you know? Iowa did a good job of, you know, and of getting up and being physical with us, and then we didn't get the protection to throw the ball and get it where you're supposed to on time, but the kid played well. I think Brian Smith had three big blocks in a game that led to big runs, and so they're a good group. They continue to get better, and again we had five or six kids catch balls. On Saturday, it wasn't as many, but at the same time, the running game was going good. But very pleased with where they're at. Like I said, we need to get Rashad worked back in a little bit more. He's still knocking the rust off of his injury a little bit, and -- but Drew continues to be steady, and we're blocking, so I'm pleased with where they're at.

Podesta Emails, oh boy....

In the last batch of leaked emails we saw the Washington Post & Politico both being fed stories by the DNC, then the stories being sent back to the DNC for editing & off-the-record strategy sessions between the press and the DNC.

In this latest batch we see the New York Times doing the same. Literally corresponding with the DNC about what to publish & sending articles to the DNC to be edited prior to publication. We also see the NYT feeding Bill Clinton the questions he's going to be asked prior to his interview with them. For those that don't already know Carlos Slim, the Mexican billionaire owns controlling interest in the NYT & also happens to be the single largest private donator to the Clinton Foundation.

Then we see John Harwood, CNBC Chief Washington Correspondent & GOP DEBATE MODERATOR strategizing off-the-record with the Clinton Campaign, taking great pride in the way he questioned Trump.

What's great about this is that any sane person already knew the media was squarely in the bag for the Democrats, but many Democrats still tried to pretend it wasn't true. Well, debate over. Smoking gun. There's a reason people believe the mainstream media is the least trustworthy it's ever been.

https://twitter.com/HashtagGriswold

Gopher fans at Maryland

Mrs. Roses and I were at Maryland stadium and were impressed by the number and enthusiasm of the Minnesota section. At least a half a dozen Maryland fans complimented us on our turn out for the game and our vocal support of the Gophers. "You guys travel well," was the most common comment.

Anybody have an idea of the Gopher fan attendance? I'm thinking at minimum 2500, maybe 3000?
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