Temperatures outside the Gophers' indoor practice facility hovered in the 30s and 40s this week, but listening to running back Donnell Kirkwood, it seemed like mid-August.
After the team's first spring practice Tuesday, Kirkwood marveled at how advanced the whole operation seemed.
"We're definitely ahead of where we were last spring, and where we were in summer camp," he said. "This kind of feels like the middle of summer camp almost, with how we're running things. And I like it. The team has improved."
The proof won't come until the real games begin in five months, of course, but players and coaches exuded a certain confidence that they were picking up exactly where they hoped after their bowl game loss to Texas Tech.
Coach Jerry Kill entered camp raving about the progress his players had made in the team's offseason conditioning program. He seemed genuinely pleased with the first three practices, too.
"We didn't have to start from scratch, so to speak," Kill said. "I mean we've got plenty of work to do, we know that, but we didn't have anybody standing around."
This is Kill's third spring at the Gophers' helm, and his staff noticed a pronounced difference in practices from Year 1 to Year 2, as the team's record improved from 3-9 to 6-7.
Kill has a track record of delivering even greater improvement in Year 3. After going 5-18 in his first two seasons at Southern Illinois, the Salukis went 10-2 in 2003. And after going 13-13 in his first two seasons at Northern Illinois, the Huskies went 10-3 in 2010.