TAMPA, FLA. – Carter Coughlin thinks it all through, but he sticks to his word:
When he committed to the Gophers as an Eden Prairie junior and stayed despite coach Jerry Kill resigning a couple of months later.
When the school fired coach Tracy Claeys after his freshman season and brought in the unfamiliar P.J. Fleck.
When he told Fleck this summer that no matter what bowl game the team ended up in, he would play in it.
Coughlin might have reconsidered all those decisions, weighed the pros and the cons. Yet he never changed his mind.
The senior defensive end has no choices left to make now, though. He will end his four-year Gophers career in Wednesday's Outback Bowl with a chance at a statement victory over Auburn. But win or lose, he will go out as one of the great Gophers leaders.
"That's just the way Carter's wired," said his father, Bob Coughlin. "He's got incredible leadership, and that's something that he's always had. He's always been the guy to lead that way and to understand that's what 'all in' really means. That's the only way he saw it."
Fleck called Coughlin an "alpha" that people listen to and respect. That started before Coughlin even officially joined the team. He was the four-star, in-state gem coming from a long line of Gophers, including his father and grandfather. He even dubbed himself "Mr. Recruiter," joking he nearly put former Gophers recruiting director Billy Glasscock out of a job.