The last two NFL drafts have been monumental for the Gophers — in 2020 they had five players selected, their highest total since the draft went to seven rounds in 1994 and their highest total since 1972, when Minnesota had six players drafted over 17 rounds.
Two of those picks, defensive back Antoine Winfield Jr. (second round, No. 45 overall) and wide receiver Tyler Johnson (fifth round, No. 151 overall) went to Tampa Bay and won a Super Bowl in their first season.
Then this year they watched as wide receiver Rashod Bateman was selected No. 27 overall by the Baltimore Ravens in the first round, the first time the Gophers had a first round pick in 15 years (Laurence Maroney, 2006, No. 21 overall to New England).
The Gophers have already had a historic season under P.J. Fleck at the collegiate level, winning 11 games in 2019, but the process of showcasing their talent at the highest level of football is slow moving.
Last year the NCAA reported where every collegiate team stood when it came to number of players on NFL rosters, and the Gophers ranked tied for 60th out of the 128 Division I schools that had a player on an NFL roster.
The Gophers had nine rostered pro players in 2020.
That number ranked tied for 12th out of 14 Big Ten programs, ahead of only Northwestern's seven players.
Last season the conference parity in pro players looked like this, with overall rankings in parentheses: Ohio State 50 (No. 2), Michigan 33 (No. 5), Penn State 32 (tied No. 6), Iowa 28 (tied No. 12), Wisconsin 25 (tied No. 17), Nebraska 18 (tied No. 28), Michigan State 12 (tied No. 44), Maryland 11 (tied No. 50), Illinois, Purdue and Rutgers 10 (tied No. 54), the Gophers and Indiana 9 (tied No. 60), Northwestern 7 (tied No. 72).