Two games into the Big Ten schedule, this batch of Gophers looked as if it had regressed from Jerry Kill's second group in 2012. The Gophers were pathetic for 60 minutes in a home game against Iowa, and then futile in the second half of what became a blowout loss at Michigan.
They were 4-2 at the time, but those four nonconference victories didn't really count for anything, and the abysmal efforts vs. Iowa and Michigan made you wonder where the 2013 Gophers might get the two Big Ten victories they had landed at for three consecutive seasons.
We now have the answer: last weekend at Northwestern as 12½-point underdogs and Saturday against Nebraska, as 10-point underdogs in the on-campus stadium.
Northwestern could say that it was missing its best quarterback and running back. Nebraska had nothing to offer in the excuse department.
The current Cornhuskers, the representatives of a half-century of national football importance, came in and were absolutely mauled. The Gophers took apart Nebraska's defense with a lethal combination of creativity and muscle, and they handled all the Nebraska offense had to offer other than the magnificent running back Ameer Abdullah.
The final was 34-23, and it is being billed as the Gophers' first victory over Nebraska since 1960. That might deserve an asterisk, since it's the first victory over Nebraska in the post-Devaney Era, and Cornhuskers football before and after Bob Devaney are two very different grades of seed corn.
The Gophers were 29-6-2 in their frequent meetings with Nebraska from 1900 through 1960. Devaney was hired out of Wyoming in 1962, the series resumed in 1963, and the Gophers were 0-16 in matches since then.
A couple more numbers: In the 12 games played from 1969 through 2012, Nebraska scored 568 points and the Gophers scored 86.