Stripped of Mohamed Ibrahim, one the best running backs in the country, because of a season-ending injury less than three quarters into the 2021 opener, the Gophers must navigate the next 11 contests without the weapon that accounted for 41% of their yardage last season.
They must forge ahead without a player that coach P.J. Fleck calls irreplaceable, a workhorse who averaged a nation-high 28.7 carries per game in 2020.
They must soldier on without a back who ripped through Ohio State's vaunted defense for 160 yards — and might have surpassed 225 — before suffering what is believed to be a torn left Achilles' tendon.
So, what now?
Well, if you listen to Mike Sanford Jr., the Gophers offensive coordinator, Minnesota will move forward with tweaks, diversification and a lot of playing to its strengths. But he's not about to channel Barry Switzer and run the Oklahoma wishbone of the 1970s.
"We're not going to wholesale change and become a triple-option team because Mo Ibrahim's not a part of it,'' Sanford said. "We're still gonna run the football, still gonna take what the defense gives us out on the perimeter.''
The retooling starts Saturday when the Gophers are host to Miami (Ohio). They'll face a team that's expected to contend for the Mid-American Conference title, but the Gophers will have more pressing matters on their mind — making sure they remain who they are without one of the pieces that made them.
"We need to play with an identity,'' said Sanford, pointing to the lessons learned in the 45-31 loss to the Buckeyes. "We need to do that for four full quarters. We did that in fits and starts. We played with an identity of being a physical football team, being a physical offense, taking care of the football.''