The most experienced player on the Gophers had a big day Saturday, due in part, he said, to his least-experienced teammates.
"I'd say the new guys have come together as a unit, and that's important for us as an offense," said tailback Duane Bennett, who in his 48th career game enjoyed the second-highest rushing total of his career. "They're young, but you can see them improving."
Nothing could be more important for a program trying to resurrect itself under a new coach, and nothing could be more heartening than seeing concrete evidence of that progress. When Jerry Kill accepted this reclamation project, he declared his intention to build a team that can run the ball first and foremost, but it hasn't happened quickly. Entering Saturday's game at Northwestern, the Gophers ranked 11th in the Big Ten in rushing, averaging only 140 yards per game and a subpar 3.8 yards per carry.
But the Gophers stuck to a ground game against the Wildcats, and made it work. Bennett picked up 127 yards, eclipsing the 2,000-yard career mark in the process, while MarQueis Gray mixed planned rushes with impromptu ones, gaining 147 yards along the way.
As a team, the Gophers picked up 269 yards with their running game, the highest total since they gained 281 yards against Middle Tennessee State in the 2010 season opener. Not so coincidentally, Bennett set his career high in that game with 187 yards.
Here's the difference, though: That Gophers team started an offensive line of four upperclassmen and freshman Ed Olson. On Saturday, the Gophers started three freshmen against a Northwestern defensive front of two seniors, a junior and a sophomore.
"They're doing a great job," Gray said of his young line. "They gave me time" to throw.
And room to run, too.