Jerry Kill appeared tired and a little impatient on Tuesday, understandable given how he spent the weekend. He didn't want to talk about his postgame epileptic seizure or his night in the hospital, the university warned before his weekly press conference, and all he would say on the Big Ten's conference call was, "back to work. Going full speed."
If only his team could say the same.
The Gophers are dealing with a plague of injuries as they prepare for Saturday's annual Battle for the Axe in Madison, as if taking on a rival that has dominated the series for the past eight games wasn't challenge enough. The offense, which has not scored more than 17 points in more than a month, has been hit particularly hard.
Starting quarterback MarQueis Gray was wearing a boot on his left leg once more on Tuesday, Kill said, and "he's about like where he was in the off week." Back when he was still too injured to play, in other words.
"He jogged a little bit this morning, and struggled with it," the coach said.
He's not the only one wearing a boot, either; left tackle Ed Olson, the veteran leader of the offensive line, was wearing one on his right foot, the result of a sprain suffered during the third quarter of the Gophers' 21-13 loss to Northwestern on Saturday. The junior "is very questionable and probably won't play," Kill said, meaning sophomore Mark Lenkiewicz would move into the lineup.
Then there's safety Derrick Wells, one of the most important players on the defense, responsible for calling signals to get his teammates in the right place. He is dealing with a laceration on his knee and wore a limited-contact jersey Tuesday, though the Gophers believe he can return Saturday.
And at receiver, the Gophers are worried about three players: Devin Crawford-Tufts, Isaac Fruechte and Marcus Jones, all of whom have varying degrees of leg injuries. Kill called them questionable, though offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover was more optimistic.