Last Monday, Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald sat down with the Chicago media and offered his assessment of Jerry Kill's Gophers.
"I start every game in my prep with a special teams evaluation — that's where I judge the character of our opponents," Fitzgerald said. "And with Minnesota, that's what jumps off the tape at you. … They're very well-coached, they're fast, they're physical."
The casual fan might tune out when Fitzgerald, Kill, Urban Meyer and other coaches prattle on about the importance of special teams. Then they'll see a game like Saturday's, when the Gophers used that underrated phase to secure a 24-17 victory over Northwestern.
Kill had said the game would come down to turnovers and field position. Well, the turnover battle was even, at 1-1. Northwestern had 28 first downs compared with 14 for the Gophers.
But Gophers junior Peter Mortell averaged 44.8 yards per punt, compared with 33.3 yards for Northwestern's Chris Gradone.
Gophers freshman Ryan Santoso was getting under his kickoffs, booting them higher into the air than normal. But with Dominic Schultz, Daletavious McGhee and others making big, open-field tackles, those kicks still were effective. Northwestern started five drives inside its own 20-yard line, compared with only one for the Gophers.
And when the Wildcats marched 97 yards to tie the score 17-17 with 7:32 remaining, the Gophers reached back for something special. Their kickoff return unit executed the perfect blocking scheme, opening a massive hole for Jalen Myrick, whose blinding 100-yard runback sent TCF Bank Stadium into delirium.
That changed everything. An exhausted Gophers defense quickly bounced back from the 97-yard drive, forcing Northwestern to go three-and-out on its next possession, and then the Wildcats ran out of time.