
The Gophers have had high-octane offenses who feasted on weak nonconference opponents in past years. The Vikings had a team in 1998 that set an NFL record for points in a season at the time, and they've had several other turbo-charged offensive teams in other years.
But in a combined history spanning more than half a century, the Gophers and Vikings had never done what they did this past weekend, when a scuffling first-year head coach of one team and a defensive-minded head coach of another led their teams to a combined 92 points against Nebraska and Washington.
That's the most these two teams have ever combined to score in one weekend.
Yes, this is a weird sort of "record" only discovered because I was strangely curious about it and looked it up this afternoon, painstakingly comparing season-by-season results for each team dating back to the Vikings' first year (1961).
They have combined to reach the 80s a few times and had some near-misses when big outputs missed each other by a weekend. But if you like points from the Division I college football team and the NFL team in Minnesota, this past weekend was as good as it has ever been.
The Gophers started things off with a 54-21 rout of Nebraska on Saturday. It was their biggest output of the season, and perhaps a surprising one at that even considering the Huskers' struggles. Minnesota, after all, had combined to score just 44 points in its previous three games combined.
The Vikings kept it going with 38 points at Washington — their highest total of the season as well.
The Gophers had scored at least 50 points 15 other times — and had tallied at least 60 points in five of those games — since the Vikings came into existence. But each time, the Vikings either didn't play or didn't score enough to push the total higher than 92.