Their Michigan memories won't soon fade, but the Gophers have had their fill of talking about the Little Brown Jug.
When last seen, Sept. 27, the Gophers were reclaiming that seldom-seen trophy and buckling it into a first-class seat for the flight home. Now, they better buckle up again, to avoid the kind of letdown that permeates college football each week.
Northwestern (3-2, 2-0 Big Ten) is heading to TCF Bank Stadium on Saturday, coming off program-resurrecting victories over Penn State and Wisconsin. The Gophers are favored — by only three points.
A bye last week gave the Gophers (4-1, 1-0) a little extra time to savor the Michigan win, but coach Jerry Kill said the players had their usual focus by last Tuesday's practice.
"You always wonder [how they'll handle a big victory], whether it's a younger team or a veteran team," Kill said. "But I had no inkling of that whatsoever, the way we approached Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday."
History told the Gophers that Northwestern would be tough. The Wildcats were 5-1 in their previous six meetings against Minnesota before limping into last year's game in Evanston, Ill. — a 20-17 Gophers victory.
Northwestern spiraled to a 1-7 Big Ten finish last year and started this season with losses to California and Northern Illinois.
"I think if you look at us, you would say we struggled, too," Kill said of his team's season-opening victories over Eastern Illinois and Middle Tennessee State. "Sometimes early in the year for whatever reason — timing, continuity, injuries — sometimes you get off to a slow start.