With Philip Nelson recovering from a right hamstring injury, Mitch Leidner appears poised to make his first Big Ten start Saturday when the Gophers play Iowa at TCF Bank Stadium.
Coach Jerry Kill has yet to say Leidner will start, but at last report, Nelson's hamstring was about 80 percent healed.
"We're not going to change our style and what we do offensively," Kill said Tuesday, referring to an attack that has relied heavily on quarterback runs. "So [Nelson's] going to need to be 100 percent for us to give him the green light, and we certainly will if he's ready to go."
Leidner and Nelson have each rushed for more than 120 yards in a game this season, but they've combined to lead one of the worst passing attacks in the nation.
The Gophers rank 118th out of 123 FBS teams with an average of 105.3 passing yards per game. Through four contests, they have 16 rushing touchdowns and only one passing TD. They rank last in the Big Ten with 33 completions; the next-lowest Big Ten teams, Michigan and Wisconsin, have 62 apiece.
"The only thing that matters to me is if we get the 'W'," Leidner said. "I could care less about stats."
The Gophers are 4-0 and have won each game — against UNLV, New Mexico State, Western Illinois and San Jose State — by at least 17 points. Minnesota ranks third in the Big Ten in rushing offense, averaging 282.2 yards per game.
But the question is, will the Gophers be ready to pass if and when Big Ten teams start shutting down their running game?