In his first start, redshirt freshman Mitch Leidner rushed for 151 yards, scored four touchdowns and led the Gopher football team to its most significant victory of the box-of-chocolates portion of the college football season.
Last year, Kansas State's Collin Klein became known as Prairie Tebow.
Leidner has a chance to become Tundra Tebow.
Tim Tebow — now hosting a late-night infomercial on how not to last in the NFL — popularized the notion of quarterback-as-fullback while leading Florida to a national title. Klein performed a fair impersonation.
Leidner probably isn't quite ready for a glorifying nickname after one nonconference victory, 43-24 on Saturday over San Jose State, but he borrowed liberally from Tebow's resume.
He ran over tacklers, pushed crowds of bodies into the end zone, and threw just enough to confirm that the forward pass remains perfectly legal in college football.
The victory, against a tremendous quarterback in San Jose State's David Fales, established what the Gophers are: A strong and varied running team that has improved on defense and special teams in Jerry Kill's third season.
If there is any downside to a quarterback running for twice as many yards as he gains passing, it is this: As the Gophers enter the Big Ten schedule, they're not sure who their starting quarterback is, or whether any of their quarterbacks can throw the ball effectively against quality competition.