History said the Gophers were cooked. They were 0-22 under Jerry Kill in games they had trailed at halftime. His offense had sputtered. His defense looked completely overmatched.
Purdue entered TCF Bank Stadium as a 13½-point underdog Saturday and steamrolled its way to an 11-point halftime lead. But Kill didn't lay into his players with a blistering tirade.
Later, he recalled saying, "'Hey men, this is going to define who you are. Can you fight back from adversity? You're going to do it your whole life. And we're going to find out what kind of team we are.' "
The next 30 minutes brought more adversity, more failure and more pain, but it also brought triumph, as the Gophers pulled out a 39-38 victory before a frenzied homecoming crowd of 51,241.
Freshman Ryan Santoso drilled a 52-yard field goal with 4 minutes, 59 seconds remaining, and senior Cedric Thompson bounced back from a scary fourth-quarter injury to seal the game with an interception.
The victory left the Gophers (6-1, 3-0) alone atop the Big Ten West. And it was all the sweeter for the Gophers because seemingly everyone who made a big play — from Santoso to Thompson to Mitch Leidner to David Cobb — overcame something to do it.
Cobb had 35 carries for 194 yards, but he also had a second-quarter fumble that halted the Gophers' momentum after they took a 20-14 lead. Purdue kept making breakaway plays, and the Gophers trailed 31-20 at halftime.
"The biggest thing was not to panic and stay relaxed," Cobb said.