Gophers cornerback Briean Boddy-Calhoun woke up at the team hotel Sept. 27, flipped on the television and heard former Michigan receiver Desmond Howard predict a double-digit win for his alma mater against Minnesota.
Boddy-Calhoun remembers turning to his road roommate, Grayson Levine, and saying, "There's probably 500 people in the entire world that think we're going to win today. And 120 of them are on this team."
The Gophers reclaimed the Little Brown Jug in convincing fashion that day, and came back last week with a 24-17 win over a Northwestern team that had just defeated Penn State and Wisconsin.
Suddenly, the national tone toward the Gophers has changed heading into Saturday's homecoming game against Purdue. There's increasing buzz about Minnesota's chances of winning the Big Ten West.
The Gophers are building confidence, capitalizing on a schedule that is quite favorable through October but gives way to a grueling November stretch against Iowa, Ohio State, Nebraska and Wisconsin.
"I went on TV the first week of the season and picked Minnesota as a dark horse in the Big Ten," ESPN analyst Lou Holtz said.
Holtz is a former Gophers coach, so what else is he going to say? But on the same conference call, his ESPN colleague, Danny Kanell, was even more effusive about the Gophers.
"They've got maybe one of the most underrated coaches in the game with Jerry Kill," Kanell said. "And the job he's done building that program, a consistent identity behind David Cobb running the football. Throw in the fact they're playing in the division that is completely wide open right now — they absolutely have every chance."