ADVERTISEMENT

Who hates Iowa...

We do!! Its Floyd week Gopher fans! Time to get back on pace for our Big Ten west title! Bring back Floyd and get this train back on track! A win versus Iowa and last weekends game is forgiven/forgotten and we can start rolling the way many of us have been hoping for! I plan to enjoy a few cold one's starting at 7 Saturday morning and going crazy from the student section. Lets get that W!!!

Hank Ekpe talks Iowa prep, CJ Beathard, and more

Link: Hank Ekpe talks Iowa prep, CJ Beathard, and more

Iowa
On if the team's better equipped to beat Iowa this year because of less injuries...
“I think we’re better equipped this year. Scott Ekpe, Steve Richardson, Andrew Stelter, and Shoobe Timms didn’t play so we only had three lineman. Wasn’t easy for them at the time, but now this year we’ve had the reps so it should be easier load to take off. Easier for them to take that load off this year.

On how much he was told about the rivalry before arriving at Minnesota...
“A lot since Scott was here before me. They definitely told me about it but it’s a big rivalry for this program so it’s great to be part of it and people coming here from all around the country. I definitely realize that and Scott told me a lot about this game and the Wisconsin game. These are the games that make you love to play college football.”

On CJ Beathard...
"He’s a good quarterback. He can scramble, just like the QB from Penn State. We have to go back to the drawing board and stay with our fundamentals, stay in our gaps and stick with our fundamentals. Last year there was a few times we didn’t stick with our gaps and he was able to break out and scramble. I feel like that’s the best thing we can do, stay with the fundamentals."


w7h417y23nfbgtxuhqqn

Ekpe has seven tackles this year, including 1.5 for loss.

Penn State
On if McSorley's scrambling ability is why the defense had no sacks...
"Yeah, I think so. He was a pretty good scrambler, and got in good positions for his team. I think we could’ve done better with our pass rush, and filled out hole more, stayed in position. It goes back to the fundamentals that Coach Phelps talks about. The noise and his pass rush is what hurt us most."

On if he was sad after the loss...
"Right after the game we felt that. But in life you go through it day by day. We reviewed the film on Sunday, and then we watched Iowa and that’s all we can worry about. It was a disappointing loss, but now we have to focus on Iowa."

On what happened on the last play of the game when Barkley scored...
"We played our gaps, it was just pretty much missed tackles. Nobody was out of position, we just missed tackles."

More quotes from Hank Ekpe:
On what the defensive line has done to limit big plays...
"As a whole, all get better at fundamentals. Specifically, our position coach Jeff Phelps has been preaching the fundamentals of things, staying in your position and doing your job. Doing your position and having your eyes in the right place. It seems like when you watch it you can blame this person and this person, but when you break down the film it’s just the fundamentals that we need to get better at."

Coach Claeys said the Colorado State game was your best game you’ve played, have you taken your game to another level?
"Yes sir. I feel like I’ve been put in the position to succeed these past two years, and I feel like what I can do to the best of my ability is flying around. I was flying around running to the ball, didn’t matter how many opportunities I got or how many tackles I got, just going out there and having fun. Going out there for my teammates. My coaches and my teammates, that’s all I can think about. As long as I go out there and do the best that I can, hustle around, and put my teammates in good situations."
  • Like
Reactions: Slab Of Bacon

Emergency Ticket Situation - Available for Saturday's Game

My boys have a Varsity High School event this Saturday and we are not able to attend the damn Gopher game tomorrow. I had someone lined up to take our tickets, he just backed out. (is there a stabbing emoji?!)

I have 6 tickets for the Iowa game, front row endzone and a parking/tailgating ticket.

If interested PM me. I want to sell them to a Gopher fan, but will resort to putting them out on the market if I can't move them. Looking to get what Gophersports is selling tix in this section ($125), parking pass free, but would consider something slightly less than that.

Mods - I'm sorry if this is NOT okay, I wanted to get this out there for Gopher fans to see and in time to act rather than posting in the Exchange thread.

Sawvel talks Dick Johnson, Winfield, recruiting Drew Wolitarsky

Link: Sawvel talks Dick Johnson, Winfield, recruiting Wolitarsky

uwiif1cqvnbsx5dje46v

Minnesota has the No. 54 defense according to the S&P+ rankings.

On if he's had conversations with Jay Johnson's about his father...

"In his situation, it’s a little different than mine. I knew mine was coming; he didn’t know his was coming in terms of that day. I went into the season knowing that is was coming, and told Coach Claeys and our staff he wasn’t going to make it thru the month. Coach Johnson was great to me when my dad died. I told him if he ever needed anything from me to let me know. It’ll be the same way for him a bit. Saturdays are actually the hardest days for me. Funeral was on the Saturday, last time I went there was on a Saturday night. Talking to my dad after games, Saturdays are tough. For him it’ll be the same, growing up the son of the coach. We all understand that and have jobs to do, but I feel for him and it’s tough. After the game already being sour and then hearing that, it’s very tough. Prayers to his family and him, he was great to me, so anything I can do for him I will.

On how the passing of their fathers has brought them together...
"It’s been good. When people go through that you don’t exactly know what to say. When he reached out to me, it felt great. You see the true character of people when that stuff happens. Jay Johnson has a big heart and is a great person, you don’t have to work with him for 10 years to see that. His professional demeanor and the way he handles himself, it’s pretty easy to see. I like working with him. We aren’t robots it doesn’t just turn off, for me time moves on a little bit it’s been a month, then at the end of the season I can grieve again but I can’t do that right now. For him it just happened so he’ still grieving. It’s still a game week. It’s a tougher turn around. He’s handling it well and every time I see him he Is doing well. There’s a lot of game planning that goes into these games, it’s not like madden. We have the week to figure out how to block this and do that, so to block that out it’s a big challenge, and he’ll do well at that because he’s a true professional.

On if any big moments against Iowa stick out...
"The thing is for me, when you win you enjoy that for that day. It’s when you lose, that stays with you. So the things that stick with me the most are when we haven’t performed the way we need to perform. Last year, that one sticks with me. We could’ve played better, a little shorthanded. It’s the burn of the failure that sticks. I have pictures with the Pig and my kids with the Pig, but I couldn’t tell you where they are. That’s not the focus. You remember the taste, the burn of losing that sticks with you. Maybe it’s because where I played growing up, the losses I take really hard. I go to practice but I’m still highly upset that we gave away a game. It’ll take probably under Thursday to get over it, I’ll block it out at practice, but on the way home I’ll still be mad.

On the play of Antoine Winfield...
"He’s coming rapidly. The biggest thing now is running the show. That’s the next step, can he do that -- can he make all the calls all game long? Penn State had limited formation sets; Iowa will do a little more. So you have to click it off instantly. I’m really pleased with him. You see in him with what he had with Murray and Boddy-Calhoun, a high intellect guy. A guy that football is everything to them. I told him before the game ‘You were born for this. You’ll be fine, you’re the least of my worries.’ He’s been playing those scenarios in his house probably when he was like eight. The stage isn’t too big for him, he just keeps playing. That’s what you like about him, very impressed.

"He played every play, and it wasn’t like end of the game we were worried about him wearing down. He was playing as well at the end of the game as he was the first play. A lot of it is maturity. He’s really mature, football comes easy to him. He can run and he can tackle. I’m super excited to watch him, and glad to have him."

On going from one of the best in the nation to stopping big plays to one of the worst...
"That’s what’s hard. We’ve had so many good plays, and then we just do some stupid stuff, or plays where we don’t fit stuff up the right way, or finish things the right way. It’s frustrating. For three quarters that game we outscored them 23-6, then one quarter we gave them 17 points. We didn’t call anything different in that one quarter, that’s execution. That’s on me -- I’m not singling out any player or anything like that; it’s on me to put guys in the best situation. And in practice we need to work on those situations so that in the game we’re ready for that situation. That’s part of it, and like I said I hate that we gave away a game. Because that’s what we did. We should’ve finished that, but that’s what happens when you make mistakes.

"We have to realize there’s a greater sense of urgency to finish a team, rather than just keep playing how we were playing. We need to outscore them in the third quarter, rather than keep it close and keep playing into the fourth. That’s not what we want to do. In our first three games, we gave up 17 points in the first half. We’ve played good football for a lot of stretches; we have to get our consistency. That’s the biggest thing that’s frustrating right now. It’s a leaky dam scenario: you plug one, then another one leaks, and you have to plug that one. I haven’t lost confidence that we can be good on defense; we can be really good there’s a lot of games left to play. We have to learn from our mistakes this past week."

On recruiting Wolitarsky and now seeing his production...
"I was dabbling out there in that area, Brock (Vereen) is from out there. His coach had me going to different schools. That school is right by where Brock was, and they told me to talkto the receiver. I liked the way he played and we brought him on a visit for the Syracuse game in 2012, night game. It was a great atmosphere and great visit. He has a tremendous family and we like them a lot.

"At that time, we were dabbling in California, and should talk to Coach Claeys about going back there. It’s a 3 ½ flight but its direct to Minnesota. Drew had a lot of credibility, when you talked to people, they said that guy is a good player. Everyone knew who he was. I was impressed with him, and I enjoyed recruiting him."
  • Like
Reactions: AhliBobwa

Trey Creamer article

Link: Creamer previews Minnesota visit, breaks down recruitment

Tulane leads right now for Creamer, but I think Minnesota is in a decent spot for him. Tulane has gone all out for Creamer and are telling him they like him as a running back. Minnesota will have to sell him Sawvel's ability to put corners in the NFL and playing in the Big Ten. The Gophers have recruited him harder than Maryland, but Maryland would be a little closer for him and I got the feeling that location may play a role. He's deciding after next weekend.

Gopher basketball practice report

Practice was open to the media today. It was a very competitive practice with a lot of energy, which was great to see.

The first part of practice was running through offensive sets, then a variety of drills, then a scrimmage-esque period that was frequently interrupted by Pitino giving instruction and feedback, then shooting.

Running and conditioning was incorporated into all the drills. This is going to be a well-conditioned team.

Eric Curry was very impressive. He's all of 6'9" or 6'9.5" and moves very well. He's not super built but is definitely big enough to not get pushed around as a freshman. His touch was decent near the hoop. The most surprising thing about Curry was his passing, as he made several excellent passes. I would think Curry will receive the third most minutes this year for bigs, behind Lynch and Murphy.

Akeem Springs' jumpers were falling. He only looks about 6'2.5", though.

Dupree McBrayer was doing as much ball-handling as anyone. He went down with what looked like maybe a knee injury momentarily but walked it off and returned to practice full speed.

Davonte Fitzgerald was out of position on defense a couple times, but also had a couple nice steals because of his length. He played much more as a big than as a wing.

Login to view embedded media Login to view embedded media
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT