One thing that Jerry Kill brings to the Gophers football program is that he can not only coach but can develop players into professionals. When NFL training camp opened, 14 players Kill had coached at Northern Illinois were wearing NFL uniforms.
On the other hand, the Gophers had seven players, coached and recruited by three different head coaches, on NFL rosters.
The list of Northern Illinois players who worked with Kill and their NFL teams: Pat Schiller and Martel Moore in Atlanta, Rashaan Melvin with Tampa Bay, Perez Ashford with Seattle, Tracy Wilson with the Titans, Sean Progar and Chad Spann with the Jets, Chandler Harnish and Nathan Palmer with Indianapolis, Alan Baxter with Pittsburgh, Doug Free with Dallas, Scott Wedige with Arizona, Larry English with the Chargers and Jason Schepler, who will be facing the Vikings this weekend, with the 49ers.
Now if you compare that list to what the Gophers have produced in NFL-ready talent you start to see why the Gophers think Kill is the man to turn things around. The Gophers have seven players in pro camps this year, with a nearly even split between players recruited by Glen Mason and players recruited by Tim Brewster.
That's the big key: The Gophers had to use three coaches — including Kill working with MarQueis Gray — to get just seven players into pro camps, while Kill worked with or recruited 14 in three years.
From the Gophers there's Dominic Alford, who is vying for an offensive line spot with the Browns and was recruited by Mason before playing under Brewster. Eric Decker has become a star with the Broncos and was recruited by Mason and played under him and Brewster. Brewster star recruit Gray is playing for the 49ers but at tight end after Kill converted him to wide receiver last season. Mason recruit Jon Hoese is trying to catch on at fullback with the Raiders. Marcus Sherels, another Brewster recruit, is aiming to keep his job as a Vikings punt returner and special teams standout. Mason recruit Matt Spaeth is injured but signed with the Pittsburgh Steelers. And Mason recruit Adam Weber is trying to stick as a backup quarterback for the Buccaneers.
If you want a reason to believe that Kill is the right man for the job, look no further than his track record of producing players for the NFL at Northern Illinois.
Peterson needs work
Vikings offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave was asked what kind of benefit will come from having Adrian Peterson play some preseason snaps against San Francisco on Sunday night.