It's been 43 years since the Gophers won a Big Ten football championship. They shared the 1967 title with Indiana and Purdue, and because the Gophers and Boilermakers had been in the Rose Bowl more recently, the Hoosiers went to Pasadena.
From 1967 to 2006, the Gophers have had seven head football coaches -- Murray Warmath, Cal Stoll, Joe Salem, Lou Holtz, John Gutekunst, Jim Wacker and Glen Mason.
Every one of these coaches had done a good job at his previous school. I happen to know each of them was sought by other schools, and each apparently made a mistake when he took the Gophers job.
Yes, and every one of them except for Holtz, who left Minnesota to go to Notre Dame, was fired because he didn't consistently field winning teams.
Now you hear some fans yelling "Fire Brewster!" at last Saturday's game with Northern Illinois.
No doubt, Gophers athletic director Joel Maturi and university President Robert Bruininks have fans chanting for a coaching change because Tim Brewster is 1-3 after the Gophers suffered two embarrassing losses to Northern Illinois and South Dakota.
But continuity is important, and if you look back at the early records of two great football coaches in neighboring states -- former Wisconsin coach Barry Alvarez and Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz -- you will learn their bosses had patience and it paid off.
Like Brewster, who is in his fourth year, they didn't start very well.