Mighty Minnesota: Gophers row past Penn State, improve to 9-0
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Updated: 5:52 p.m.
The progress made by Minnesota in coach P.J. Fleck's third season had been met by natural skepticism outside the long-languishing program, with even the most ardent fans in full prove-it mode for Saturday's game of unbeaten teams against Penn State.
From start to finish, the Gophers matched the moment. They took down the Nittany Lions with a narrative-altering performance.
Jordan Howden picked off Sean Clifford's pass in the end zone with 1:01 left, the third interception thrown by Penn State's quarterback, and 13th-ranked Minnesota held on for a 31-26 victory for its first win over a top-five team in 20 years.
"I'm just so proud to be a Gopher, and I speak for our whole team when I say that," said Fleck, who declared the game ball he handed afterward to the school president to be for the entire state.
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Tanner Morgan passed for 339 yards and three touchdowns in a dismantling of fifth-ranked Penn State's staunch defense, as Minnesota (9-0, 6-0, No. 17 CFP) stayed on track for its first trip to the Big Ten championship game. For a program has not won the conference since a shared title in 1967, this is a whole new world.
"As an athlete and just in life," Morgan said, "you should want pressure because that means your life is significant."
The first sellout crowd for the Gophers at home in four years swarmed the field after the clock ran out, reveling in the first win at home over a top-five team since a shutout of No. 1 Michigan in 1977. The Gophers scrambled the College Football Playoff picture a bit, too, after Penn State (8-1, 5-1, No. 4 CFP) emerged with a top-four spot in the first edition of the rankings.
"We knew they were a good football team," Nittany Lions coach James Franklin said. "It's hard to be undefeated."
Rashod Bateman got the Gophers going with a 66-yard score on their first possession that covered 95 yards. He finished with seven catches for 203 yards, the second-most in program history. Tyler Johnson had seven receptions for 104 yards and a touchdown, too, as Morgan found opening after opening in the Penn State zone to produce enough early gains the Gophers could bank for the inevitable late rally by the Nittany Lions. Morgan went 18 for 20, his second game of the season with a 90 percent or better completion rate.
"He was reading us very well. He kind of knew what we were in and what they could to do expose us there," linebacker Jan Johnson said. "They hit their plays. He made their throws."
Journey Brown's second rushing touchdown of the game with 3:49 to go cut the lead to five points, and the Gophers promptly went three and out. K.J. Hamler muffed the punt when a teammate backed into him, and though the Nittany Lions recovered, they were pushed back to their 28-yard line.
Clifford, who went 23 for 43 for 340 yards and one score, connected with Jahan Dotson for 49 yards to get Penn State to the 11. Two plays later, however, came the drive killer. Daniel George was called for offensive pass interference during an over-the-middle catch by Brown that reached the 2. Clifford, who was off target for most of the day, overthrew George on the next play before the game-sealing pick by Howden. Clifford, who came into the game leading the Big Ten in total offense, had only three interceptions over the first eight games.
"Everyone's obviously upset. We didn't want to lose that game," left guard Steven Gonzalez said. "They played well. We played our hearts out."
Antoine Winfield Jr. had the first two picks in the first half, matching the FBS lead and setting a Minnesota record with seven on the season. Both were inside the 10-yard line.
"It shows the culture. It shows the character. It shows their charisma. It shows their ability to overcome, and it shows what they've learned," Fleck said.
He said it's time to move beyond the struggles of past seasons.
"We've got to let go of... I'm sure there were some people on the final drive who said, 'Oh, here we go again.' We've got to let go of all that. Fifty years ago, 40 years ago, 30 years ago, 20 years ago, 10 years ago - we've got to change at some point. I think this team has proven that as we continue to go into the future, we don't have to keep saying things like that," Fleck said after the game.
"Does that mean you're going to win them all? No, it doesn't mean that. But they're doing a lot of special things that you can keep building on to make your culture stronger and your program stronger and make it more of a national brand."
Minnesota fans were jubilant as they left the stadium Saturday afternoon. Steve Schmidt of St. Paul said the victory was a long time coming.
"This is great. This is huge. Big moment for Minnesota football, the state of Minnesota, all the fans," he said. "We've deserved this for a long time. God Bless the Gophers!"
There were a few Penn State fans in the crowd and many looked understandably glum. But Jeff Rowland, who flew in Saturday morning from Pennsylvania, said it had was a great experience.
"It was one heck of a game," he said. "A little disappointed on the outcome, but happy that Minnesota... I'm loving the fans here, and loving the spirit that they had."
Minnesota ended a 13-game losing streak to ranked opponents and beat a top-five team for the first time since a win at No. 2 Penn State in 1999. The Gophers have a two-game lead in the Big Ten West Division with three to go, with their first Rose Bowl bid since 1961 well within reach.
Minnesota plays at Iowa next Saturday. The Gophers have lost four straight games against the Hawkeyes.