Jeff Horton likes to say that he's from Nevada, so he's a gambler. He proved it again during Saturday's 27-24 victory over No. 24 Iowa.
The Gophers took the first possession of the game 58 yards before being stopped at the Iowa 10, and settled for a 26-yard field goal by Eric Ellestad that gave them a 3-0 lead. It was the first time all season they had scored first against a Big Ten opponent, so it was already a breakthrough.
But Horton, the Gophers' laid-back interim coach, had decided ahead of time to utilize the element of surprise. As Ellestad approached the ball on the ensuing kickoff, he waited until Iowa players had turned to run downfield, then suddenly stutter-stepped and tapped the ball lightly. The senior kicker ran right behind the onside kick as it rolled and pounced on the ball once it crossed the 40-yard line, the requisite 10 yards from where he kicked it.
"Every single day we practiced that," quarterback Adam Weber said. "Eric worked on it after practice every day. It's something you have to have 100 percent confidence in."
Horton was so confident that the play would work against Iowa's coverage, "if they'd have taken the ball, we'd have started [the game] with an onside kick," he said. "They deferred [after winning the coin flip], so we said after our first points, we're going to try it."
The onside kick caught Iowa completely unprepared.
The Gophers turned the surprise into a touchdown, moving another 58 yards before scoring on MarQueis Gray's 14-yard scramble to take a 10-0 lead. It marked the first time this season that the Gophers had scored on their first two possessions of a game, and their first successful onside kick since Sept. 30, 2006, against Michigan.
Final thrill for Weber Minnesota's 15 seniors were honored for their careers, some of which spanned three head coaches and two stadiums. Weber, who holds most of the school's passing records, was introduced last, to respectful ovation from the crowd.