Gophers acting head coach Tracy Claeys deftly avoided questions about the officiating in last week's victory over Northwestern, reminding everyone that he's still making an assistant coach's salary and can't afford a fine.
When a pass interference penalty on receiver Drew Wolitarsky negated a 30-yard, third-quarter touchdown pass from Philip Nelson to Isaac Fruechte, ESPN2 analyst Joey Galloway called it "a terrible call," and it was a setback for a struggling offense.
Moments later, Minnesota scored anyway, when senior linebacker James Manuel returned an interception 24 yards for the go-ahead touchdown. The 20-17 victory did wonders for the Gophers' psyche, but it didn't quell concerns about their offense.
The next two games — Saturday against Nebraska and next week at Indiana — will be big tests for offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover. There should be opportunities to score, and the Gophers must take advantage because the Cornhuskers and Hoosiers are two of the highest-scoring teams in the Big Ten.
Is the offense up to the challenge?
"I'll let you know Saturday about 3 [p.m.]," Limegrover said. "I think the kids are feeling good. We're doing some things a little unorthodox, a little bit different than what we're showing on film, so I think the kids like that. They're working their tail ends off, and that's all you can ask. We'll let the results speak for themselves."
The Gophers have scored 26 touchdowns in seven games this year but only 20 touchdowns on offense; six have come from their defense or special teams. By comparison, Indiana has scored 39 offensive touchdowns in seven games, and Nebraska has scored 31 offensive touchdowns in six games.
The Cornhuskers are coming off their second bye week of the season, and the extra time has helped quarterback Taylor Martinez heal from his turf toe injury. Coach Bo Pelini said Thursday that he expected Martinez to play but wasn't sure the senior would start.