Wisconsin athletic director Barry Alvarez, who as head coach from 1990-2005 turned around the Badgers football program when it might have been in worse shape than the Gophers', said he believes Jerry Kill will do the same thing at Minnesota.
"Our entire athletic department was bankrupt when we came into Madison," said Alvarez, who was in the Twin Cities on Saturday when the Badgers won their eighth consecutive game over the Gophers.
Alvarez, who said he wasn't completely familiar with the Gophers roster, said it was tough rebuilding at Wisconsin.
"We probably had four legitimate Division I players on our team," Alvarez said. "We basically had to start from scratch. We were fortunate that we were able to, in a very short time, put together an outstanding recruiting class in about three weeks that ended up leading us to the first Rose Bowl.
"They understood what we wanted. They were guys that liked football, they were physical kids and tough kids and they bought into what we were selling. It takes time. It takes patience. It takes a solid plan. You have to have a solid and a sound plan to execute and you can't compromise and you can't drift from it and everybody has to buy into it."
Alvarez and I have been friends for a long time, dating to his time as an assistant coach at Iowa and Notre Dame, and I advised him not to take the job when he asked me while I was in Miami to cover the Notre Dame-Colorado Orange Bowl game. Alvarez was there as defensive coordinator for the Irish.
It turned out I was wrong. But checking the records of the Wisconsin coaches previous to Alvarez, it's easy to see it was a tough rebuilding situation. The Badgers went 6-27 under Don Morton, who was coach from 1987-1989.
With Alvarez as coach, the Badgers were 1-10 in 1990, then 5-6 in both '91 and '92 before Wisconsin went 10-1-1 in his fourth year and beat UCLA 21-16 in the Rose Bowl. Before that season, the Badgers had not won a Big Ten title since 1962. The Gophers have not won a title since sharing the 1967 crown.