U
Coach Bill Miller: ‘Need More Tough Kids’
News and comments on Gophers football:
Offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover
said today that MarQueis Gray is still
the No. 1 quarterback. Limegrover said there is not a clear enough
distinction between the abilities of Gray and freshman Max Shortell
to make a change in the No. 1 status of Gray.
Gray, a junior, has started all four games
this season. He was only 5-of-12 passing for 52 yards and no touchdowns
last Saturday against North Dakota State. Shortell, who has surprised
most everyone with his first season of play, has participated in each
game and against the Bison was 4-of-8 passing for 71 yards and one
touchdown.
As of today head coach Jerry Kill
remains at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester as doctors try to figure out how
to control his seizures. Defensive coordinator Tray Claeys will
be the coaching staff leader if Kill can’t be in Ann Arbor Saturday for
the Michigan game.
“I expect him to be there,” Claeys said.
“I will be shocked if he’s not there.”
The inept and embarrassing performance by
the Gophers Saturday night in their 37-24 loss to FCS power North Dakota
State provoked a blunt assessment by assistant head coach Bill Miller.
Miller, interviewed on WCCO Radio’s Sports
Huddle last Sunday, criticized the collective effort of the team. “Very
simply, North Dakota State took the fight to us. What we’re trying to
change here is the mentality. How you approach the game. …It’s very
disappointing.”
The North Dakota State loss was the second
in five years to the Bison and follows last season’s loss to FCS
South Dakota. The Gophers, who begin the Big Ten season against Michigan, compiled a 1-3 nonconference record
including losses to 3-0 North Dakota State and 1-3 New Mexico State.
“We gotta recruit more tough kids, more
physical kids,” Miller said. “I am not saying our guys here are soft,
but we didn’t play with the mentality that you have to play with. The
bottom line in this game ─ North Dakota State took the fight to us ─ and
that’s got to be our mentality. It isn’t right now. …”
Kill, Miller and the other staff members are in their first season at
Minnesota. Their success will be determined by not only improving the
fight in the Gophers, but also the mental focus to play with minimal
mistakes including penalties and the ability to execute the fundamentals
of blocking and tackling.
The critics among the public are already
being heard including questions about the coaching. That won’t surprise
Kill or anyone else who understands how emotional things can become when
a team is losing most Saturdays, and turns in a performance like the
Gophers did against North Dakota State.
It’s been a difficult beginning for Kill,
trying to regain his health and improve the Gophers. Supportive Gophers
fans will take a deep breath and embrace a two or three year perspective
while trying to envision the sort of success Kill had at other coaching
stops turning around programs.
That assignment in patience has been asked
of Gophers fans way too many times over the decades but in late
September of 2011 it’s reality.