National signing day had passed, but Jerry Kill wasn't finished with his first Gophers recruiting class.
In February 2011, two months after Kill was hired, longtime assistant Pat Poore received a tip about an under-recruited running back from Killeen, Texas. Another top assistant, Jay Sawvel, found an intriguing defensive back in the middle of a southern California desert.
Those discoveries led to David Cobb and Cedric Thompson. Now, Cobb is threatening Laurence Maroney's single-season rushing record, and Thompson, a hard-hitting safety, has become the heart of Minnesota's defense.
Together, along with the other seniors on the roster, they have helped reshape the program. They were wide-eyed freshman in the team's 58-0 loss at Michigan that fall. And they were cool-and-collected veterans last week in that 51-14 rout of Iowa.
On Saturday, they'll play their final game at TCF Bank Stadium, and this has a chance to be the ultimate send-off. The Gophers, who haven't gone undefeated at home since 1967, are 6-0 at The Bank this year, and here comes No. 8 Ohio State, a team riding a 21-game Big Ten regular-season winning streak.
"After the Iowa game, I remember going home, and I was sitting there thinking, I couldn't believe we were 3-9 in 2011," Thompson said. "I couldn't believe how far we've come, and that gives me more motivation to go out there and dominate this [Ohio State] team."
The Gophers (7-2, 4-1 Big Ten) are tied atop the West Division standings with Nebraska and Wisconsin, but they enter this game as 12-point underdogs.
Ohio State (8-1, 5-0) won the de-facto East Division title game last week 49-37 over Michigan State and might be the Big Ten's last hope to make the College Football Playoff.