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***Trey Creamer commits

I van confirm that Trey Creamer has committed to Minnesota. I apologize for being a little late on this as I just got out of a test.

Tulane led going into this past weekend but Minnesota beat them out on the visit. Maryland was the other school in his top three. He was scheduled to visit Maryland this weekend but won't. He says he's undecided on if he'll take visit them at another time.

He picked up a ton of power five offers throughout the course of his recruitment. You can watch his film here.

Jay Sawvel on KFAN Today

Jay Sawvel came in to chat on what is normally Paul Allen's time slot in the 9-Noon frame. Paul Allen was out today on schedule time off because of the Vikings bye week. Kevin Falness was the guy interviewing the Gophers defensive coordinator today.

Main Points:

-If you got a lead with five minutes or two minutes to go in the game, you don't need any more points. You got what you need and now it's time to protect it.
-We had an opportunity to make a couple tackles (on the Iowa TD run) and missed him and it was off to the races.
-On Kiante Hardin contributing at a high level last week after missing three games: He was not surprised at his performance last week. When Hardin is out there Minnesota is much better in the secondary. He is a big time playmaker and the quality of play on the defense is higher. In the next couple weeks he should get even better as he gets back into the swing of things.
-On Ray Buford: First game really playing, didn't play at corner against Oregon State. He has things to work on certainly, but he thought Buford was solid overall for his first game.
-On Tai'yon Devers: He was still a little bit hampered by the ankle injury last week. But you can see this week his snap and burst off the line is back and he is up to 100% this week and ready to roll.
-On the flu bug going through the locker room: Antonio Shenault was out the entire week last week with the sickness and was unable to play. Jack Lynn also had it and lost a bunch of weight, but he is getting back to full strength too. Doesn't see anyone else with the flu now so things are fine in that aspect.
-On Mike Sherels being back: He's just an outstanding person. It's good for the players to see what he went through and how he has over come it and continues to battle through it daily. He's just a great influence on the guys and they are all happy to have him back. From just seeing him at practice you would never know that something is wrong.
-Sherels Continued: He was at a really harrowing time, and there was even a chance that he wouldn't pull through. It shows the guys that things are much bigger than what happens from play to play and it shows how to really battle through adversity.
-On Maryland: They run a lot of misdirection and play fakes. Have to make sure they are ready to play at a high speed and confidence while being aware of everything that is going to be thrown at them. Can't play not to make a mistake, need to be ready to execute with great speed and aggressiveness.
-Tough to go on the road and win, thought they played well against Penn State on the road, just couldn't pull it out in the end.
-On being able to rebound from two tough losses: Everyone was pretty down Sunday, but Tuesday we practiced really well and Wednesday may have been our best practice all year, especially from a defensive standpoint.
-On Schedule: There are a couple teams in our half (of the division) that still have to play Michigan and Ohio State, so things are far from over. Obviously we have some work to do but we just have to take it one game at a time, and it starts with Maryland this weekend.

Pitino transcript from Big Ten Media Days

RICHARD PITINO: Exciting time of year because I feel like we've got the most complete team that I've had since we've been there, the most talented team, and the most depth. So we obviously know the Big Ten is one of the best conferences in all of college basketball, but I think this team will be ready for it, and I know they're excited to get going.

Q. Coach, can you just talk a little bit about the Timberwolves and the influence they had over you? I know you stopped by Tom Thibodeau's practice a couple times this year and picked up some defensive drills?
RICHARD PITINO: Yeah, I went to their first practice because I've known Coach Thibodeau for a little while from back in Boston. You know people sometimes think the NBA guys don't teach the fundamentals or whatever, and that's not accurate. And I was blown away by just how good of a practice he runs. Defensively obviously great, but also offensively. It was such a good practice, I asked him can I come back again tomorrow, and he said yes.

So it's always nice having that partnership with them and to have somebody to bounce some ideas often is something that I don't take for granted.

I know he'll do an awesome job with him. They've got a really good young core. I know they're excited, the fans are excited. I'm looking forward to watching them and seeing how they grow, because they've got a lot of really good young talent, and I know Thibs will do an awesome job with them.

Q. I'm curious if the player problems you had last year, you're a young coach, did you learn any over-arcing lessons from what happened, what you could have done, how you handled them or was it just random chaos?
RICHARD PITINO: Well, I hope it wasn't random chaos, but, yeah, you learn. I think every season you take and you reflect on how you handle everything. Are you educating them? When a guy gets in trouble, certainly you've got to educate, but also you've got to look and say what are we doing? Are we doing everything we possibly can do from a culture standpoint? We looked ourselves in the mirror, I looked myself in the mirror and said, okay, we've got to get better. I think we had a great summer. I think our guys understand all that goes into being a college athlete, and I think they know that we're all connected together, and I think they all grew from it from it, and I think I grew from it as well. As tough as last year was, I think I'm a better coach from it. I think our staff learned a lot, and I think it's going to be a valuable lesson for everybody.

Q. Can you talk about Jordan Murphy and his emergence last year? I know he's the first sophomore to represent the Gophers here in a while. What are the expectations for him this year?
RICHARD PITINO: I think he's got a chance to be one of the better forwards in the conference. I mean, he was just a freshman last year and there were times he was one of the better players on the court. He is playing extremely confidently. He was very, very productive last year as a freshman. Normally you don't see freshmen do that. I think he's now starting to understand where to get his points. He's become very difficult to guard on the low block. Obviously he's rebounded at a very, very high rate. I think he was second in the conference in double-doubles. So somebody like that is somebody you can really, really build around. He wants to win, loves the game, lives in the gym. So I think he's going to be a load. I think he'll be one of the better forwards in our conference, and he's obviously just a sophomore. So that's exciting for me.

Q. Coach, what impact will the injury to Davonte Fitzgerald have? Just talk about the impact of the injury from a permanent standpoint for him, too, and what he's gone through?
RICHARD PITINO: Yeah, injuries are always tough, but that one was especially tough because he had a really good freshman year at Texas A&M, and he tore his ACL, I believe, toward the end of the year. He really fought hard to come back. Wasn't quite himself that sophomore year at Texas A&M, and transfers to us, sits out, lives in the gym. I mean, probably the biggest gym rat on the team. Then in practice he goes down, and as a coach, you try to calm your players down when there is an injury, and he just looked up at me and said, I've had two of these. I know it's another one. That was a bit demoralizing. I called him that night, and he didn't answer. He texted me back and the first thing he said was, and this was weird for young people, he said, Coach, I want to thank you so much for letting me be a part of this, and I'll come back stronger than ever. So he's not felt sorry for himself. I've almost felt more sorry for myself than he has. He's almost encouraged me at times. So I think it shows you what type of person he is. And from a basketball standpoint, he was going to be a big part. There were lineups I was excited about playing, a point guard who may have been 6'2", 6'3"; a two guard, 6'7"; Davonte, 6'8"; forward, 6'8"; and a center, 6'10". So that's a big lineup. So he provided a lot of versatility, a lot of flexibility for me. He can play the three and the four. So it's a little bit of a hit for us from a basketball standpoint, but hopefully if we stay healthy, I think we'll be okay with that. But more than anything, I feel sorry for the kid, because he does everything right, he just works his butt off, and hopefully he'll be back next year and be stronger than ever.

Brooks vs. Smith

CSU
RUSHING
No. Gain Loss Net TD Lg Avg.
Smith, Rodney 17 101 2 99 2 31 5.8
Brooks, Shann 13 90 5 85 1 35 6.5

PSU
Smith, Rodney 23 107 3 104 0 14 4.5
Brooks, Shannon 14 103 3 100 1 37 7.1

Iowa
Brooks, Shannon 10 55 0 55 1 11 5.5
Smith, Rodney 11 44 0 44 0 9 4.0

This topic has been brought up over the last couple weeks, but is it time to make Brooks the feature back moving forward with Smith being used as a 3rd down guy? Stats aside, just watching the games it appears that Brooks is on another level talent-wise and should be seeing the workload.

Still confused by how much the o-line was thrown under the bus Saturday. 4.7yds per carry by the RB's, only two sacks given up where the QB didn't help much, and the best lineman was out.

IMO, all of our recent offensive struggles can be boiled down to 2 issues:

1) Jay Johnson's play calling against Iowa was abysmal. As many other posters have noted, rather than attack our strength vs. IA's weakness, we attacked their strength with our weakness. We are a running team: That means the core of our offense needs to be based around our identity.

--A diversified run game which attacks both inside, outside, and through the read option.

--play action passes

2) We NEED Brandon Lingen. He is the straw that stirs the drink. Our WRs just aren't very good. Eric Decker is not walking through that door. Hell, we don't even have a KJ Maye or AJ Barker walking through that door, as depressing as that sounds.

Brandon Lingen is a matchup problem for defenses. They can't cover him with one guy, and if they double team him it opens things up for our receivers. Also, he allows us to be more multiple formation wise.

We need Brandon Lingen back, and we need Jay Johnson to remember what our identity is. A run first team that throws a lot of play action passes.

Coach rankings

http://athlonsports.com/college-football/ranking-all-128-college-football-head-coaches-2016

According to this poll by Athlon sports we have the 101st ranked out of 128 head coach in the country. The only BIG coach rated lower is the Purdue coach.
If you want to play with the big dogs you have to pay what the big dogs pay. Or just settle for what we've been doing for the last 50+ years. And if this is alright with the leaders at the U, I don't see where we need to spend150+ on a new athletic village.
You get some non fan saying you can't pay a FB coach 5 million a year because the math professor doesn't get paid that, and he's just as important. Maybe. But does he have the availability to bring in another 10+ million by going on National TV and going to Bowl games? NO! So pay the coach.
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Iowa Game Film Review

After re-watching the Iowa game on Saturday I was able to come up with several positives shown by the Gophers, but there was no doubt a fair share of negatives as well. The loss of course drops Minnesota to 3-2 overall and 0-2 in the Big Ten. This week's game against Maryland is most likely a must win game to stay somewhat relevant in the conference this season.

Positives:
-The defense really did play a nice game overall. The return of Kiante Hardin and Ray Buford really provided a ton of positives for this team. Hardin was one on one down the field with Iowa wideout Germanic Smith in the first half and was able to make a terrific play to tip the pass to himself for the interception and returned it 31 yards the other way. Big time play by the sophomore.
-Steven Richardson was his dominant self once again. He is so quick off the ball and his leverage allows him to explode into the backfield to cause havoc. On Iowa's first possession he shot off the ball on a 2nd down and long play and was able to hit LeShun Daniels in the backfield for a loss. He could definitely be on his way to All-Big Ten honors this fall if he keeps up his strong play.
-True freshman linebacker Kamal Martin showed his athleticism with a drive stopping interception in the 4th quarter when Iowa QB C.J. Beathard tried to hit his running back out of the backfield on a crucial third down. Martin turned his head to locate the ball and made a leaping grab to gain possession back for the maroon and gold.
-Jonathon Celestin had perhaps his best game as a Gopher Saturday. He had 13 total tackles and a pass breakup on the afternoon. He also ran down the Iowa running back in the first quarter and tripped him up at the nine yard line when there was nothing but green in front of him. This play saved a sure touchdown and Iowa settled for a field goal.
-Shannon Brooks ran extremely hard once again. Only 10 carries on the game for the stud sophomore back, which went for 55 yards and a touchdown. Completely puzzling why he didn't get more carries in this game as he was having significant success. He needs at least 20 carries against Maryland this weekend, especially without Leidner at quarterback.
-Backup Left Tackle and Junior College transfer Donnell Greene saw his first extensive action of the season after Jonah Pirsig went down with an injury, and I thought he played pretty well. He allowed one quarterback hurry but other than that he is a big dude who can certainly be a factor pass blocking.
-Pass defense overall was significantly improved with Hardin and Buford back and playing together in the nickel and Winfield and Travis at safety. Ayinde did not see the field this week as Jacob Huff took his minutes at Strong Safety. Also two interceptions on the day doubled the number they had for the first four games.
-Myrick, Travis, and Buford each made excellent plays and adjustments to break up passes against the Iowa receiving core. Buford certainly has a bright future as he is only a redshirt freshman.
-Winston DeLattiboudere earned his first collegiate sack in the third quarter. He had a nice speed rush along the edge on third down and he was able to bring down Beathard as he tried to spin away. His performance has earned him his first career start next weekend against Maryland, his hometown team.
-Thomas Barber got some nice playing time Saturday and has moved up the depth chart to 2nd string linebacker. This 2016 class continues to impress and show they have a bright future. Barber also stripped Jim Thorpe Award winner Desmond King on a 2nd half kick return but the ball took a couple weird hops and landed safely out of bounds. Had Minnesota recovered they would have had the ball at the Iowa 28.

Negatives:
-268 total yards is just not going to get the job done. Iowa has really struggled against the run this year and yet Minnesota came out and threw 33 times (13 completions) and ran for a season low 102 yards. With backs like Smith and Brooks and a respectable offensive line, that just can not happen.
-Mitch Leidner played his worst game of the year. It's understandable to not have a good game once in awhile, but he just couldn't seem to get it right. Minnesota had every chance in the world to keep drives going and win the game, but the red-shirt senior couldn't get it done. Twice in the fourth quarter Leidner had Wolitarsky wide open on the same in and out route for a first down, and twice Leidner threw passes that Wolitarsky couldn't even get a hand on. Throws like these and keeping drives alive are the difference between winning and losing close games, and Mitch missed them on third downs and the offense was forced to punt.
-Penalties continued to be a back breaker for the Minnesota offense. They had eight penalties for 58 yards, including several illegal procedure penalties that sent them back and extra five yards and severely hampered play calling the rest of the drive. 2nd and 10 to 2nd and 15, 2nd and 12 to 2nd and 17. The Gophers are 13th in the Big Ten in penalty yardage per game at 72.2 yards. That comes down to discipline, and that is something that this team lacks at times.
-Dropped passes were an issue. Especially when Leidner is struggling, the receivers needed to help him out. Brian Smith drops a hitch on the first drive of the game, Rashad still drops a hitch on a crucial drive in the fourth quarter. That's the difference between 2nd and four or five and having the whole playbook open to 2nd and 10 (or 15 with a false start) and the offense being limited from there. It's when the little things are executed that makes the difference in winning and losing in close games like this one.
-Injuries to Mitch Leidner and Jonah Pirsig leave Minnesota without two of their best players in a critical road game at Maryland this weekend. Pirsig could be out several weeks after spraining an ankle. Ankle/Foot injuries and big guys like him can really be trouble. Hopefully he is back by November.
-It's hard to blame the defense for anything really on Saturday as they were just on the field so long (34:55), but on the big touchdown run in the fourth quarter by Akrum Wadley, linebacker Jack Lynn was unblocked and had a chance to bring him down after a three or four yard gain but fanned on him and the Iowa back was off to the races.

Overall/Going Forward:
-Minnesota could just as easily be 5-0, but instead they are 3-2 with two heartbreaking losses to opponents that were very beatable.
-The next four games for the Gophers are extremely winnable with road games at Maryland and Illinois and home games against Rutgers and Purdue. If the Gophers can go 4-0 they will have a chance going into the last three games against Nebraska, Northwestern, and Wisconsin to be playing for everything that they could hope for at the end of the season. The margin for error after these two losses to open Big Ten play becomes extremely thin now.
-Finding a way to build off of this defensive performance against Iowa will be a major key for Minnesota. They are mostly healthy on that side of the ball now, they just need to continue to find the right pieces and put together consistent efforts from here on out.
-Will the Gophers go back to their bread and butter (the run game)? Brooks and Smith were fantastic against Penn State. Brooks has the potential to be a 100 yard rusher every game, and I would be surprised if he doesn't get at least 15-17 carries a game for the rest of the season.
-Lingen is back next week and Still returned last week, so all the playmakers for the Gophers are healthy and ready to go. Lingen returning could be huge, especially on third downs and in the red zone.
-More discipline and finishing games, they both go hand and hand. With fewer pre-snap penalties and better execution late, Minnesota will have the opportunity to somewhat right the ship in these next few weeks in four winnable games before traveling to Nebraska in early November.
-Will the losing skid end next week? Redshirt-Junior Minnesota native Conor Rhoda will have to be the guy to lead the Gophers with Mitch Leidner going through concussion protocol.
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