MADISON, WIS. — This was a team that had played so lousy on its home turf a week earlier that it went from a 7 1/2-point favorite against Michigan to a 13 1/2-point underdog against Wisconsin.
This was a team that shocked the 80,000-plus inside Camp Randall Stadium by taking a 14-point halftime lead, then saw it disappear during a mistake-filled second half.
This was a defense that had every reason to fade as it fought against short fields after a pair of safeties. This was an offense that had committed so many blunders it had to be tempting to get out of the snow and cold and into a warm bus as quickly as possible.
And yet the Gophers defense refused to crack after those safeties allowed Wisconsin to start at its 40 and then 48, and the Gophers offense managed to marshal a 60-yard drive that included a conversion on fourth-and-18, and somehow, some way, the visitors still had a chance for a victory that would've turned a season of improvement into an actual turnaround season.
"We had a great effort from the defense all day," quarterback Adam Weber said. "We had some big drives, including that one in the fourth quarter. But at the end, when we had a chance to get a victory, there were a couple of plays I didn't make ... that we weren't able to make.
"We have the right coaches in place. They are bringing in outstanding talent. But losing this game today shows that we aren't yet complete."
Weber is a sophomore. He suffered through the 1-11 embarrassment of 2007, enjoyed the 3-1 start in the Big Ten (and 7-1 overall), but for all the energy the Gophers brought to Wisconsin's wonderful venue on Saturday, the bottom line was harsh:
Wisconsin 35, Minnesota 32, and now the Gophers take a three-game losing streak into Saturday night's Big Ten finale against Iowa.