Mike Hohensee was the quarterback for the Gophers in 1982 as they ushered in a new era under the Teflon-coated ceiling of the Metrodome. He can still vividly recall the sights and sounds of that historic season.
The buzz in the community. The near-sellout crowds that showed up for Big Ten games. The speed of the turf. The incredible noise of game days.
"I can still remember the way the sound echoed," Hohensee said. "That's one thing that still comes back to me. Sometimes it was so loud that it would echo in your helmet."
It was, Hohensee said, a great college football environment. He is not alone in that view.
"A great building," said Rickey Foggie, Hohensee's successor as starting quarterback.
The Gophers will play their final game in the Metrodome on Saturday, ending 27 years of what now seem to be mostly bad memories. The Dome has been denigrated in recent seasons both as a place lacking in atmosphere and for its inability to produce revenue required of a major college program. Getting the chance to leave the Dome might have been the best argument for building the new on-campus stadium that will open next fall.
But is the Dome really to blame for the Gophers' woes of almost three decades?
Most who have more than a passing knowledge of the football program say no. The blame lies not with the building, according to numerous past university administrators, coaches and players, but with a combination of factors that included coaching, cultural changes and a lack of commitment from top university officials.