On Saturday, the American landscape was strewn with dramatic college football.
On the small scale, there was St. John's and St. Thomas renewing hostilities in Collegeville, Minn. On the grand scale, there was Stanford and Oregon putting their top-10 rankings and disparate styles on the line. On the epic scale, there was Alabama and Florida and the two best coaches in the game matching wits if not witticisms.
If you weren't aware of the context -- that Tim Brewster was coaching for his job, and that his Gophers might be headed for a one- or two-victory season -- Northwestern's visit to TCF Bank Stadium would have served as a tasty appetizer for those resolute Minnesotans who have remained college football fans.
The game began at 11 a.m. amid cool air and sharp sunshine in Dinkytown's ambient horseshoe, and for much of the contest, the Gophers looked well-coached.
Their running game wore down the Wildcats, and they took advantage by slipping tight end Eric Lair into the secondary for two touchdowns.
They broke running back Duane Bennett free down the sideline for an uncontested touchdown pass. They forced turnovers and took advantage of Northwestern's mistakes to overcome an early 14-7 deficit and take a 28-20 lead in the fourth quarter.
A victory at home against a non-power such as Northwestern wouldn't alter the outcome of the season, but it would have given Brewster a chance to sneer at those of us who believe this will be his last season in maroon.
Given a chance to show off in the final two minutes, to guide his team to a dramatic victory on a beautiful day for college football, Coach Brew blew it.