Coach Tim Brewster made it clear to his football team that the Gophers were being treated with sizable disrespect by being designated as Illinois' Homecoming opponent Oct. 12.
The Gophers then went to Champaign-Urbana and came home with a 27-20 upset. Defensive end Willie VanDeSteeg was the difference maker in that game, to the point he was selected as national defensive player of the week.
The success of Brewster's selling job on the indignity of being a Homecoming opponent came through a few days later.
VanDeSteeg was overheard being interviewed during a hometown broadcast for his high school team, the Glencoe-Silver Lake Panthers. One reason Willie offered for the fervor with which he played was that it wasn't very respectful for the Illini to designate the Gophers as a Homecoming opponent.
That was the case again Saturday, when the Gophers played at Purdue. Again, Brewster saw a lack of respect in this, and the Gophers responded with a 17-6 victory that vaulted them to 3-1 in the Big Ten, 7-1 when you include the nonconference cupcakes, and to the No. 20 rating in Sunday's national polls and 17 in the BCS.
The Gophers return to the Metrodome this Saturday to face Northwestern, and if any football program should feel disrespected by being designated as Homecoming opponents it should be the Wildcats.
If Illinois and Purdue went into deep analysis before deciding the Gophers were to suffer the disdain of being the 2008 Homecoming opponents, then we can assume there were consultations between Brewster and athletic director Joel Maturi in making the Gophers' Homecoming choice.
This was a program coming off the worst losing season in school history at 1-11, so there had to be angst in answering the question: