The accolades keep pouring in for Gophers acting head coach Tracy Claeys, who has worked from the sideline for two games since Jerry Kill began his medical leave, delivering upset victories over Northwestern and Nebraska.
"I feel uncomfortable about the whole thing," Claeys said. "We haven't changed anything at practice. We've stayed with all of [Kill's] structure."
Kill plans to spend his third consecutive game in the coaching booth Saturday, at Indiana, so Claeys will try to make it 3-for-3, as the Gophers are surprising nine-point underdogs.
In less than one month, the 44-year-old Claeys has gone from a little-known defensive coordinator to the man credited with helping hold Minnesota's program together.
Reporters keep asking Claeys if he's given any thought to becoming a head coach. If someone calls, he'll listen, he said, adding that he's content working as Kill's assistant, as he has for the past 19 years.
"All's I've got to do is call back home because Mom wants nothing to do with me being a head coach," Claeys said. "And that's why I have so much respect for Jerry. People don't understand, [head coaches are] responsible for so many more things every day, that they deserve everything they get."
The Gophers have no timetable for Kill's return to the sideline, but he's been at every practice the past two weeks, he's been calling recruits, and he's been heavily involved in the team's strategy meetings.
Claeys had been handling Kill's media responsibilities, but Kill resumed those this week, saying Claeys needed more time to focus on stopping Indiana's high-powered offense.