The magician revealed his secret on Saturday. Jerry Kill has transformed four previous football programs into winners, and after watching Minnesota, his most difficult assignment yet, score on seven consecutive possessions and pile up 44 consecutive points, the coach gave away his methods.
"When you're building programs," Kill said as he savored the Gophers' stunning 44-28 rout of Purdue, "a lot of it has to do with quarterbacks."
So now we know what was up his sleeve: Philip Nelson.
The true freshman quarterback put on a magic show of his own in his TCF Bank Stadium debut Saturday, showing a deft touch on the ball and an amazing ability to read the defense. With the 19-year-old Mankato West grad confidently directing four touchdown drives in the first 20 minutes alone, the Gophers -- who hadn't scored more than 13 points in three previous Big Ten games -- ended their three-game losing streak and moved within one victory of their first bowl berth since 2009.
"When we recruited Philip, we knew what we were getting," Kill said. "Am I surprised? No."
The Boilermakers certainly were. Like the Gophers, they were 0-3 in the conference entering the game, but an overtime loss to Ohio State last week made them believe they were better than their record. They game-planned for the Gophers' teenage freshman, trying to put pressure on his protection while allowing their cornerbacks to play tight and try to pick off his throws.
Bad idea. Really bad idea.
"We noticed that their corners would bite on some short-game stuff" in hopes of coming up with interceptions, Nelson said. "So we put in some double routes. We caught them jumping [routes] early, and [they] kept jumping, so we kept going to it."