Maturi Won’t
Evaluate Brewster Just by Wins
Conversations during the off-season about
Gophers football often begin with speculation about the future of coach
Tim Brewster. Fans ask how many games he needs
to win this fall to keep his job.
In three seasons coaching the Gophers,
Brewster has produced two bowl teams and a 8-4 nonconference record.
His overall record including bowl games is 14-24, 6-18 in the Big Ten. The last three years
the Gophers are 0-8 in historic rivalry games against Wisconsin, Iowa
and Michigan.
The three seasons before Brewster
succeeded Glen Mason the Gophers went to three consecutive bowl
games and had a 9-1 nonconference record. Mason, who coached the
Gophers from 1997-2006, was 20-17 overall, 10-14 in the Big Ten his last
three seasons. In rivalry games the Gophers were 2-7.
Those are enough statistics for many fans
to conclude Brewster isn’t the right coach to lead the program, but not
so fast. The program hasn’t produced a Big Ten champion since 1967
and no Gophers team has finished better than fourth in the conference
since 1986 when Minnesota tied for third in the standings. Only
eight times
since 1976 have the Gophers placed fifth or better in the Big Ten.
Making the Gophers title contenders is no
easy job, and what critics seldom acknowledge or realize is that
building a program in football takes a few years because large numbers
of good
players, balanced out by various amounts of experience, are needed. “It
takes a coach about five years to get the 85 scholarships the way he
wants them,” said Gerry DiNardo on the Big Ten Network last
Friday. “You’ve got to have 15 offensive linemen. You’ve got to have 12
defensive linemen and on and on.
“So it takes five recruiting classes to
get that,” said DiNardo, a former college head coach at three BCS
schools. “Until you have five recruiting classes you’re going to see
massive losses on both sides of the ball replaced by young guys. …This
is going to take some time. This is a talented team (Minnesota) that is
going to play a very difficult schedule. They’re going to take their
lumps, but I gotta tell ya, none of this is unexpected.”
That difficult schedule starts Thursday
night in Murfreesboro against Middle Tennessee State. The Blue Raiders,
a Sun Belt Conference preseason favorite, had been the oddsmaker’s
choice in the game until dynamic playmaking quarter Dwight Dasher
was ruled ineligible by the NCAA. The underdog role is one the Gophers
will see a lot of against most opponents on a schedule that includes
traditional powers USC, Ohio State, Penn State, Iowa and Wisconsin, and
games versus teams like Purdue and Illinois who think they can beat
Minnesota.
The sky-is-falling crowd predicts the
Gophers will be 2-10 this season. Those wearing happier faces see
better results, something like a .500 record or a little better.
Gophers radio color man Dave Mona is part of that group,
predicting a 6-6 season.
Analysis of Brewster’s job performance at
season’s end by athletic director Joel Maturi will be about more
than wins and losses, and it should be. The Gophers athletic director
told Sports Headliners he’s “optimistic” about this season and
hopes to see a program going in the right direction by the end of
November.
The right direction means winning games
but evaluation also factors in how the team played. Performance is
assessed by observing not only wins and execution, but also the caliber
of the opposition and whether the Gophers had a healthy group of their
most important players.
The collective GPA’s of the players and
graduation rates have been improving under Brewster. That counts
with Maturi and other school administrators and so does off field
behavior which sometimes finds football players and other Gophers
athletes volunteering to help people in the community.