Without their coach and without anything resembling an effective offense, the Gophers limped toward the postseason on Saturday, secure in the knowledge that Le'Veon Bell can't hurt them there.
Bell roared into the Big Ten rushing lead with 266 yards, or almost three times as many yards as Minnesota's entire offense produced against a team bent on reaching a bowl game of its own, and Michigan State handed the Gophers a 26-10 loss that raises a host of new questions.
Chief among them: How's Jerry Kill?
The Gophers coach suffered an epileptic seizure in the locker room at halftime, after players had already taken the field, and defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys coached the second half from the press box. Kill is recovering normally from the seizure, athletic director Norwood Teague said afterward, and will not require hospitalization. He's expected back at work on Monday, Teague said.
"I know this will bring up questions about him moving forward, but we have 100 percent confidence in Jerry," Teague said. "We'll evaluate, at the end of the year, his health, and that mainly is for him. ... You don't want to downplay it, but you get to the point where you realize it's something he has to deal with at times. It's easy to deal with in a lot of ways."
Kill, who has endured occasional seizures for two decades, has twice before been stricken with epileptic seizures on a game day. Last year, Kill collapsed on the TCF Bank Stadium sidelines late in the fourth quarter of a 28-21 loss to New Mexico State, and last month, Kill was stricken about an hour after Minnesota's 21-13 loss to Northwestern. In both cases, Kill rejoined the team after short hospital stays.
"His vitals are fine. He's healthy as a horse, as they say," except for the seizures, Teague said. The public perception of his affliction "doesn't really concern me that much," the athletic director added. "I've lived with these guys every day. ... At first blush, yeah, [it's a problem], but once you start really thinking about it, we move forward and we work, he works -- it doesn't bother me at all."
Their coach will be fine, everyone said afterward, but can the same be said about the Gophers offense, which was held to a season-low 96 total yards? Or their rushing defense, which allowed Bell to rush for more than 70 yards in three of the four quarters?