Gophers football coach Jerry Kill thought it was a good sign last Saturday when several players returned to the team's football complex to study video of that afternoon's 23-7 loss to Iowa instead of venturing out on homecoming night.
The loss might have drained enthusiasm from campus, but the Gophers didn't have time to wallow in self-pity. Not with a schedule that could leave them as big underdogs in six of their seven remaining games.
It resumes Saturday at Michigan Stadium, where the Gophers lost 58-0 two years ago on their last visit. The battle for the Little Brown Jug has been awfully one-sided, with Minnesota's lone victory in the past 22 meetings coming in 2005.
"Everywhere I've been, when we've turned programs around, there's been a defining moment," Kill said this week. "And usually that defining moment's winning a game that maybe you're not supposed to."
In his third year with the Gophers, Kill is still looking for a signature win with the program. Now the Gophers (4-1) will need at least one perceived upset this season to reach the six-victory mark required for a repeat bowl appearance.
After No. 19 Michigan, the next two games are at No. 16 Northwestern and at home against Nebraska. A victory against any of those would be an upset for the Gophers.
Then comes the trip to Indiana on Nov. 2. Entering the season, Indiana and Iowa were the two Big Ten games most Gophers fans expected to win. But the season concludes with three tough ones — Penn State and Wisconsin at home before the regular-season finale at Michigan State.
"You can't worry about what it says on the side of the helmet all the time," Kill said. "Sometimes you go, 'Oh, you're going to play Michigan, and they've done this for the last 10 years.' And then all of a sudden, you're beat before you get started."