When Gophers coach Jerry Kill suffered his latest seizure, shortly before Saturday's second half, he was back in the locker room, while his players gathered by the tunnel leading to the field at TCF Bank Stadium.
"Actually, I had no idea he wasn't on the sideline for the longest [time], until one of the players pointed it out," senior MarQueis Gray said. "I had no idea what happened to him."
Gray said he "put two and two together" when Jay Sawvel, who coaches defensive backs and special teams, gathered the team for a quick pep talk.
The players hardly panicked. They had been through this before with Kill. And for the seniors, not having the head coach on the sideline for the second half of their final home game was just another twist in a corkscrew of a college career.
This is a group that has been through Tim Brewster's firing, the death of linebacker Gary Tinsley and receiver A.J. Barker's very public departure from the program last week.
"We all love each other," senior cornerback Michael Carter said. "I love Coach Kill, and I know he has love for me. So of course we worry, but at the same time, we know what he wants, and he wants a win.
"We just tried to go out there and give him a win."
It didn't work. With Kill recovering in the coaches' room, the Gophers continued sputtering on offense and let Le'Veon Bell reach 266 yards rushing. Leading 13-7 at halftime, the Spartans pulled away for a 26-10 victory.