‘Everything’ is wrong with the passing game |

ANDY GREDER St. Paul Pioneer Press
Gophers football players often speak after a loss as if they are ready to ride a motorcycle on Sunday.
Before watching a movie at Larson Football Performance Center, they describe closing figured “leather vests” to protect against constructive, albeit biting criticism – the rash, if you will – that arises from the review. of their many mistakes.
After Minnesota’s 14-10 loss to Bowling Green on Saturday, everyone involved in the Minnesota passing game should instead wear head-to-toe hazmat suits. Losing to a struggling opponent chosen to finish last in the Mid-American Conference and making him as a 31-point favorite, the Gophers schedule must clean up a toxic spill. Coaches included.
Minnesota’s passing game sits very close to the bottom of college football in terms of total yards, touchdowns, completion percentage and attempts. Of the 130 FBS programs, they are outside the top 115 in each category, and in some categories, only seemingly unfavorable military academies are worse.
Gopher’s assists lagged in the first three games, but came in handy in the season opener against Ohio State and led the running game as well as the defense against Miami (Ohio) and Colorado for win back-to-back victories.
There was a whiplash from the top of the shutout victory in Boulder at the bottom of the boos heard in the return game against visiting Bowling Green.
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(Meanwhile, a look at the stats shows the Buffaloes are also among the worst pass offenses in the country, so the U shutout last week might not be that strong.)
Head coach PJ Fleck was asked what was wrong with the passing game. “Everything,” he replied before pausing.
“Do you want me to be more specific?” Pass protection, quarterback, tight play, throwing and catching the soccer ball. That sums it all up. “
With the loss of top running back Mo Ibrahim, the strength of Minnesota’s offense was supposed to be the combined 200 or so starts of its linemen. But they couldn’t handle the Bowling Green blitzes and stunts.
Quarterback Tanner Morgan’s hard day was almost over when he was lit by Davon Ferguson in a cornerback blitz in the second quarter. With half time to adjust, Ferguson, a transfer from Kansas, got his second sack on the same blitz across the field in the fourth quarter.
Attacking Gophers leaders – Fleck, Morgan and offensive coordinator Mike Sanford Jr. – have attributed their below-par 2020 season to pandemic interruptions. They don’t have that explanation / excuse now and have to think about solutions with eight Big Ten games remaining this season.
The Gophers came into Saturday’s game running the ball nearly 72 percent of offensive plays, and that number has actually increased. Fleck embraces a philosophy of running the ball and passing it. Second-year offensive coordinator Sanford Jr. calls plays in Fleck’s general guardrails.
On Saturday, the U trailed throughout the second half, but Minnesota called 25 games in total (14 runs, 11 assists). As they trailed, they called 21 games (13 runs, eight assists). This is not a typical script for a team that has to come back from behind to win.
Minnesota’s top target, Chris Autman-Bell, came out in the first set on Saturday. The less experienced position group has lost its alpha, an absence now of almost three full games.
Ahead of Bowling Green, Fleck was asked about finding a better run-pass balance. “We are going to take what the defense gives us,” he said. âIf we have to throw the ball 11 times per game, we’ll throw it 11 times per game. If we have to throw the ball 35 times, we’ll throw it 35 times.
âWe want to be as balanced as possible,â continued Fleck. “Some people think the balance is being 50-50, but that’s doing what you need to do to win the football game.”
Morgan attempted just 13 passes on Saturday, completing five for 59 yards. It wasn’t enough to get back into the game, and plenty of Minnesota high school programs likely aired Friday night.
When the Gophers needed a touchdown in the fourth quarter, they didn’t throw it abundantly or freely. There were five designed runs, a scramble from Morgan with no one open, an incomplete on the low but catchable ball from Morgan to Mike Brown-Stephens and a broken pass from the Falcons defensive lineman on the third down. .
The Gophers then kicked – and the boos fell. The next two shots resulted in interceptions.
âWe’re talking about being the reason (of success) at quarterback and (Saturday) I was the opposite of reason,â Morgan said. “It’s 100% on me, and now I have to respond better than I ever did.”
It looked like someone about to arm themselves with something stronger than a leather vest.