December 02, 2024

Identifying Potential Transfer Priorities for the Gophers (2024-25)

Next Monday, the first transfer window opens, at which point Minnesota and everyone else in college football can start adding college-experienced players to their rosters for next fall. While the system is a mess, the truth is that every team needs to take advantage of the transfer market to fill out its roster. Not every high school recruit works out, and plenty of players find that the schools they chose originally are imperfect fits.

The Gophers will lose players via transfer (history suggests it will be a good few) in addition to their graduations, and the best way to making sure that next season ends in another bowl is to buffet their high school recruiting with transfers of their own. Below are the positions I believe they will (or at least should) target this month and when the window reopens in the spring.

In this post, players are referred to by their class (freshman, sophomore, etc.) entering the 2025 season. This practice may be slightly confusing, but since this covers the 2025 roster, it is better than the alternative.

Quarterback

Potential need: immediate contributor

When it went so well the first time...

Bringing in Max Brosmer worked superbly. The leading passer in FCS in 2023 completely revived and reshaped the Minnesota passing attack in 2024. The only regret from the experience is that Brosmer did not have one more year year to play. Redshirt freshman Drake Lindsey and incoming freshman Jackson Kollock seemingly provide solid potential long-term, but ideally they would get to sit a little longer.

Recently, P.J. Fleck has favored FCS transfers: Jack Gibbens (Abilene Christian), Jack Henderson (Southeastern Louisiana), Tre'Von Jones (Elon), Ethan Robinson (Bucknell), and Brosmer (New Hampshire) have all stepped right into the lineup from the lower subdivision.

This strategy works well for a program of Minnesota's stature. Unlike FBS transfers, players from the FCS usually are not leaving their previous schools because they lost a competition to someone better. They want a step up to improve their NFL Draft stock but do not typically get looks name-brand programs. And one figures that their demands for NIL-related compensation, if they have any, are easier to fit into a collective's budget. I expect Fleck to go this route again, finding a high-level FCS quarterback on his last year of eligibility. He might not replicate the success Brosmer had, but another veteran under center could make sure the bottom does not fall out of the passing game.

November 06, 2024

I Do Not Understand You People

Donald Trump gave us the two most surreally enraging moments of his first presidential term on his way out the door. The first was on June 1, 2020. After Minneapolis police murdered George Floyd to spur nationwide protests over police brutality and structural racism, Trump left the White House on foot for St. John's Episcopal Church. Law enforcement violently charged, gassed, and shot with rubber bullets demonstrators in Lafayette Square so that Trump could peacefully walk to the front of the church. There, he awkwardly foisted a bible in the air with the reverence of a baboon considering its own turd. Then, after hardly uttering a word, he walked back to the White House.

It was a galling yet confounding display of autocratic force and vanity, pettily wielding agents of the state as a cudgel to serve no end except his own image. The image Trump chose for himself, meanwhile, was devoid of symbolic power or popular appeal, contributing to the perception that he was (and is) mentally deteriorating with age.

The second, of course, was on January 6, 2021. The culmination of two months of false claims he had won the 2020 election, the Trump cult descended on the Capitol to disrupt the certification of that election's results. While some were your run-of-the-mill suburban racists on a tour of imagined grievances, many rioters were legitimate extremists from militia groups such as the Proud Boys, carrying zip-ties meant for members of Congress and planting pipe bombs around D.C.

Trump held a rally at noon that day to incite the insurrection and call on Mike Pence to overturn the election. As the attack proceeded, Trump refused to intervene. In the previous days, he in fact had ordered the Department of Defense to protect the rioters.

For his action and willful inaction encouraging a coup, the House of Representatives impeached him, and the Department of Justice indicted Trump. He left office with a 34-percent approval rating, tied with those of George W. Bush and Jimmy Carter, who departed during economic crises (which Trump, presiding over the COVID-19 pandemic, also oversaw), and only trailing corruption-allegation-plagued Harry Truman and post-Watergate Richard Nixon. Though Trump maintained a devout base, the public rejected him.

Yet here we are. The societal causes are numerous — and in some cases, even in the wake of Trump's initial defeat, were foreseeable. While people smarter than me are already interrogating that, I am taking this moment to rage at the American electorate itself.

When the problem of Trump was immediate, people appeared to understand its weight. He had not won the popular vote in 2016 or 2020, but in the latter case, he was booted from office. There are no shortage of largely apolitical Americans who loathe Trump for reasons beyond his actual policies and actions in office: his self-centered personality, his criminal record, his background as a celebrity and New York elite. To apparently forget the danger and despicability of Trump is unfathomable.

September 18, 2024

Seven Things I Think I Learned about the Gophers in Their First Three Games

Minnesota has made it to the end of their non-conference schedule in pretty good shape. Setting aside an injury scare at cornerback and a toss-up defeat in the opener, the team has given reason for optimism: competence from transfers, clear steps forward from their young defense, and a few big plays from underclassmen.

September is also the most confusing time to be a college football fan. How much should early results shake us from our priors? Good teams take care of business against bad ones, but can we really expect that to translate when the schedule gets harder? What schematic shifts will we not know about until coaches are in the games that really count? It's the hot take part of the season, where it seems everyone is wildly overconfident in their team or convinced of their doom.

Overreactions are part of the fun to some people, but I try to take a tempered approach to the early season. The season is so short that we cannot say we really know much until at least the midway point, if not later. And the games can turn on such random events that a win or a loss can distract us from the specifics of a game and lead us to false conclusions. At the same time, these first few weeks do not mean nothing. They might tell us the wrong things sometimes, but not without traces of truth.

In the spirit of interrogating we know and do not know, I present some things I think the 2024 Golden Gophers have taught me about who they are. Some of these items are observations rather than prognostications, but even the former can be proven at least partly wrong later. We'll just have to check back in a couple of months to see where I am mistaken.

Max Brosmer has stabilized the quarterback position the way the Gophers hoped, with caveats.

For whatever tweaks different players or coordinators have introduced, the Minnesota offense has never asked a ton out of its quarterback. At its highest-functioning, a capable band of skill players and a strong offensive line can lead the way — as long as a steady hand is at the wheel, that is.

The rushing attack needs space that will not be there if defenses do not fear the pass. A star receiver can only do so much if the ball is over his head or going to the other team. The Gophers cannot plug in just anyone and field a balanced, effective offense. See the examples of Conor Rhoda and Demry Croft, Cole Kramer, and of course Athan Kaliakmanis. Kaliakmanis had some ability but lacked consistency, and in his redshirt sophomore season he averaged just 6.3 yards per attempt.

With Kaliakmanis off to Rutgers, the new quarterback is Max Brosmer. Brosmer's output so far affirms preseason expectationsWhen he is on his game, Brosmer is a rhythmic passer who is on time with his receivers and very willing to find the checkdown if needed. He has a quick release and can apply just the right combination of touch and velocity to hit intermediate throws.

August 27, 2024

2024 Gophers Season Preview

Most coaches don't last this long. A majority don't make it even half this long. For all his game management issues, for as many of his players transfer every year, and for the amount he keeps his name on the market for other jobs (whether as a leverage play or to actually leave), P.J. Fleck has made it to an eighth season as Minnesota's head football coach. Just four men have held this job longer than him; two have their names on buildings, and another has his name on the locker room in the stadium. (The fourth pops up on the Big Ten Network every once in a while.)

Fleck has given the Gophers their best season since Lyndon Johnson was president, ended losing prolonged losing streaks to Wisconsin and Iowa (not that he didn't contribute heavily to the latter), and brought in the program's best recruiting classes of the internet era.

Yet his tenure has been plagued by big questions, posed with varying degrees of fairness: If he took more risks, would the Gophers have won the West before divisions went away and the conference became harder? Can he identify a reliable quarterback? If he has another breakthrough season, how quickly does he head for the exit? How much of his success has been because of Joe Rossi, who is now at Michigan State? Does he have to be this way?

After seven years, Fleck may for the first time face the threat of losing his job. Making a bowl on a technicality once is a forgivable outcome, just a normal trough in the cycle of a fine but not elite college football program. Two successive sub-.500 finishes would at the very least test the patience of the fan base, and depending on the circumstances, could justify Fleck's dismissal. His buyout drops to $5 million on January 1, which is not insignificant but in the era of super-conference television contracts is not prohibitive either, even while considering the decent chance that athletic director Mark Coyle has to find a new men's basketball coach next spring. Five wins would not guarantee Coyle makes a move, but could one call Fleck definitely safe in that situation?

Fleck has, to his credit, constructed a roster with potential. Maybe this year is just middling, but there are intriguing young players in several areas: a brilliant starting tailback who is still a true sophomore; three blue-chip offensive linemen in their first or second year of college; athletic wide receivers who should play supporting roles in 2024 but will take on more responsibility in future seasons; a couple of a pair of highly touted edge rushers; ascendant linebackers; a safety from just a couple hours up I-35 who looks like a future star. This goes without mentioning the four-star quarterback committed to next year's recruiting class. The pieces are here to build to something greater a year or two down the line.

To do that, however, Fleck must re-establish Minnesota right now as a stable, competitive team that will not throw away games late, serve as chum for the helmet schools, or look like a wreck against a worse team due to an unfavorable matchup. If the prospects are ahead of schedule, he can pull it off and regain the fans base's trust. If they still need time, and the team's veterans cannot pick up the slack, Coyle might be asking another big question about his coach: Can someone do this job better than Fleck?

* * * * * *

From this point on, you will find a more straightforward preview of the Gophers' season. For each area of the team — offense, defense, special teams — I've linked the position previews I published over the last few weeks and offer a predicted depth chart. I also ask 10 big questions facing the 2024 Gophers, divided between the three units.

Offense

Position previews: receivers and tight ends running backs ・ quarterbacksoffensive line

Predicted depth chart:

Click to enlarge any image in this post.

Around better weapons, will Max Brosmer show he has another gear?

Fleck bet on a high-upside quarterback in Athan Kaliakmanis, and it never clicked. Max Brosmer does not have Kaliakmanis' physical abilities, but he has an impressive track record from his days at New Hampshire and should offer a higher floor. If that is all he offers, then the Gophers' offense will be steadier. If Brosmer can be any more than that, he could give them a genuine chance to beat one or two of the tougher teams on their schedule.

August 22, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Special Teams

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. The series ends today with a look at the special teams unit.

Likely Starters

A good number of college kickers hit game-winning field goals. Not all of them do, obviously. But there are game-winners every year, whether they are of the walk-off variety or in the last minute or with a bit longer than that and more work to do. However special each kick is to that player, and however much fun it is for his team and for the fans, it is not a unique moment.

How many kickers get to say they won a game for their team? Not put on the final touch, but won it by scoring every point? In the 21st century, it might not take two hands to count them all at the FBS level. And I doubt any of them got to do what Dragan Kesich did, which is go 4-for-5 in 22-mile-per-hour winds at Kinnick Stadium, breaking an eight-year losing streak to one of his school's most hated rivals. He won back Floyd of Rosedale, and he got to lead the charge to pick up the pig.

The win over Iowa was the high point of Kesich's season, but there was plenty of good besides that. Kesich hit six of seven field goal attempts of 45 yards or longer, and he was 17-for-20 on all other kicks. He converted every extra point he tried last year. On kickoffs, Kesich has been a near-automatic touchback since he joined the team in 2020. His performance made him the Big Ten kicker of the year and a semifinalist for the Lou Groza Award. If he has another strong year, Kesich could win the award outright before heading to the NFL.

August 20, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Secondary

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. A remodeled secondary that could make or break the season is the focus of this post.

Likely Starters

Field cornerback Justin Walley contributed from Day 1 his true freshman year, chasing after Chris Olave and Garrett Wilson as an introduction to college football. If you can believe it, Walley is now a senior, having never missed a game and starting the last 32 in a row. He has never quite become a star, but he is easily Minnesota's most trusty defensive back entering 2024.

Walley is less a game-changing, impact player than an well-rounded, reliable one. He stays on top of his man and has quick enough hips and feet to turn and track a receiver going vertical. While he has at times had issues with comeback routes — possibly a crack in the scheme — or underthrows, Walley has developed into a sure tackler like Coney Durr and Terell Smith before him.

As long as Walley is available, he gives the Gophers one spot on the field about which they do not have to worry. If he can take another step before departing, he will be one of the better cornerbacks in the conference and improve his NFL stock.

August 15, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Linebackers

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. This post concerns a linebacker corps coming off a rocky year but possessing ample potential.

Likely Starters

Middle linebacker was a disaster zone for Minnesota in 2023. The starter was injured until almost Halloween. The most seasoned backup missed the whole year. Two more veterans transferred out (and had fairly productive seasons at their new schools).

This left the job to Maverick Baranowski. Barnowski frequently almost did the right thing. It's a common story for a young player: He lets the other team bait him, he overruns a gap, he gets his hand up but can't bat down the pass, he gets pushed back by a more experienced blocker, he misses tackles, and so on. While Baranowski cut down on those errors throughout the year and made some thunderous tackles — at least until an injury shut him down in November — the truth is that he was just not ready.

I believe in Baranowski's talent and that his 2024 can at least be fine. He would not be the first Gopher linebacker that was unprepared for his first real action but turned into a legitimate player.

August 11, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Defensive Line

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. We move to the defense, starting with its most promising area: the line.

Likely Starters

Jah Joyner's game has advanced. He always looked like a potential stud, with all his length and power and explosiveness. It just took him awhile for everything to click.

He generated plenty of pressure in his first season of meaningful action but only 1.5 sacks. Last year, the production matched the process. He finished with 7.5 sacks, tops on the team and tied for 3rd in the conference. Opposing tackles frequently could not keep up with Joyner after he fired off the ball, and if they got a hand on him, he had the bend and fight to make a play anyway.

If Joyner had not missed a few tackles (see the Purdue game for examples), he could have done even more damage with the opportunities he made for himself. And if he had more trust from the coaches against the run, where he has improved but still has plenty of room to grow, he would have played more snaps and gotten even more chances.

His physical traits mean someone in the NFL will take a chance on him, but this is Joyner's last chance to put it all together as a college player. He could be the top sack-getter in the Big Ten, something no Gopher has been since at least 2004. (It is shockingly hard to get a find a more exact year.) He could make All-Big Ten teams. He could ascend into one of the stars of the conference.

July 30, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Offensive Line

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. This is the fourth and final post covering the offense, which will look at Minnesota's experienced offensive line.

Likely Starters

Aireontae Ersery should be the Gophers' next Day 2 pick in the NFL Draft next April. He enters the season in high regard, having made the media's all-conference first team a year ago and earning the fourth-highest rating among offensive linemen in EA Sports' College Football video game. Ersery, Darius Taylor, and Dragan Kesich are the three Gophers outside observers agree are among the best in the Big Ten at their position — if not the best.

The key for Ersery is how well he moves his 330-pound frame. Run blocking and pass protection start from the ground up. That means having both a strong base to move people off the ball or fend off bull rushers, and quick feet. Ersery has both. Whether on the back side or the play side, he is a superb reach blocker, stepping across the face of a defensive lineman to cut off the path to the ballcarrier:

And Ersery can keep in front of speed rushers trying to break past him, maintaining a pocket into which his quarterback can step.

That combination of size and athleticism, combined with the smarts to pick up late rushers and pass off a defender to a teammate, is what makes Ersery a pro prospect.

July 25, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Quarterbacks

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. The third post in this annual series covers a nearly totally remade quarterback group.

Likely Starter

Last year's version of this post looked a lot different. Athan Kaliakmanis was entering his first full year as the Gophers' No. 1, and the big question was when he could put together his physical tools for more than a few plays a game, and become a genuine power-conference starter. The answer, if we ever get one, will not come while Kaliakmanis wears a Minnesota uniform: After a difficult season and a semi-public dispute over his reasons for leaving, Kaliakmanis transferred to Rutgers to rejoin his former coordinator, Kirk Ciarrocca. Backup Cole Kramer started his post-football life, and third-stringer Drew Viotto left for Eastern Michigan.

Filling the void is Max Brosmer, a New Hampshire graduate in his last year of eligibility. As every broadcast is sure to mention between Week 1 and at least the end of October, Brosmer took a group of teammates on a part-work, part-bonding retreat in his native Georgia after spring practices. He clearly does not want to spend the whole season as The New Guy.

By the stats, Brosmer (with a long "O," like "throw") is intriguing but not exciting. He was 2nd in the FCS in passing attempts and passing yards while throwing just five interceptions, but his per-attempt (7.5 yards) and per-completion (11.8) numbers were fairly middling. Over half of his attempts last season, according to Pro Football Focus, were within 9 yards of the line of scrimmage or behind it.

At first glance, the Gophers found a quarterback who has shown he can take care of the ball in the short and intermediate game.

The question is whether Brosmer can reliably threaten FBS secondaries deep. Over his career, per PFF, he has averaged 14.1 yards per attempt on his passes of 20 yards or more. That is not outstanding but better than average, hinting that he could at least be serviceable throwing the long ball.

July 23, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Running Backs

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. Today, we move to the running backs.

Likely Starter

The most publicized Gopher this preseason will surely be Darius Taylor. In Taylor's first three full games as a college player, he ran for 529 yards. In the opportunity he had, which was reduced by injury but still almost a full season's worth of carries, he looked like one of the best backs in the Big Ten.

Taylor is an ideal Minnesota running back. Like Mohamed Ibrahim — but 4 inches taller — he runs with extraordinary balance and bounces off hits. (This toughness is Taylor's best attribute and the one he shows off most.)

Like Rodney Smith, he is intelligent, changing speeds to navigate tight spaces, find his hole, and cut through it.

And like Shannon Brooks, he can explode into the third level after one missed tackle.

With a new quarterback and unanswered questions in the receiving corps, Taylor will be the centerpiece of Minnesota's offense. While I will always advocate for them to throw the ball more, it would be wrong to not give a talent like this the ball.

July 18, 2024

2024 Gophers Position Previews: Receivers and Tight Ends

September's coming soon, so it is once again time to start thinking about football. Ski-U-Blog will analyze every position group on the Gophers' roster: starters, depth, and potential future contributors. We begin with a look at the pass-catchers.

Likely Starters

For much of Daniel Jackson's career, he has worn different hats to complement the players around him. When the Gophers just needed to get Rashod Bateman the ball wherever and as much as possible, Jackson was an outside receiver giving the offense an option over the top. When Chris Autman-Bell, a jump-ball master, ascended to Minnesota's No. 1 option, Jackson became a slot receiver, picking up catches underneath and scurrying ahead for yardage. As a junior, he was the second-favorite target to Brevyn Spann-Ford. He took jobs wherever needed, and he did them all well.

In 2023, Jackson finally had the chance to put it all together. He became the team's most dangerous receiver, and no one on the team received even half his 117 targets.


Jackson is not as fast as some of his teammates, but he runs crisp routes to fool defenders and find open space. He can win contested catches and shows superb body control. He can pick up yards after the catch. He can play inside or outside. With such a complete toolbox, it is no wonder Jackson was the first-choice target at every level of the field.

Having debuted during the pandemic season, Jackson had an extra year of eligibility and came back to school rather than leave for the NFL. Barring injury, he has a real chance to finish the year on the All-Big Ten first team and pass program greats like Tutu Atwell and Ernie Wheelwright in the record book.

June 19, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 263

We draft musical artists whose next albums we want to produce.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

May 30, 2024

On Mental Health Awareness Efforts in Sports

A warning: This post addresses in detail depression and thoughts of self-harm.

At the start of May, the Minnesota Twins hosted their Mental Health Night during a game against the Seattle Mariners. The board showed a video of Twins players saying whatever they could about taking care of oneself and others.

A couple of times between innings, the stadium emcee led a breathing exercise for whoever wanted to partake. The team warmed up in T-shirts featuring slogans promoting self-care. 

As an attendee, I felt conflicted. I cannot deny that the proliferation of efforts such as this are a positive step in society, particularly in such a stereotypically masculine space as sports. Encouraging people to look after themselves is good. The more people who see the suicide & crisis lifeline, which was posted throughout the game, the more likely it is people remember it and call when they are in a dark place. (That number is 988.)

I still could not help but view the presentation with a skeptical eye. By the standards of sports, the Twins did a fine job. The standard, however, could be higher.

May 24, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 262

The Timberwolves-Mavericks series and Aaron's interview with Don Was.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

May 10, 2024

Christian Vázquez and a Philosophical Question

Christian Vázquez is a bad hitter. You know this.  Rocco Baldelli knows this. Derek Falvey and Thad Levine knew this when they signed him going into the 2023 season. Christian Vázquez surely knows this.

But for completeness' sake, let's put his badness at the plate in context. This century, exactly 100 players have taken at least 300 plate appearances in a Twins uniform. Using wRC+, FanGraphs' measure of overall offense where anything above 100 is above average, only six of those players have been worse hitters than Vázquez.

Vázquez has had such a long career, however, because he has not been an awful hitter for his position. Since his debut in 2014, the league-average catcher's OPS sits a bit below .700 — the worst of any position. Vázquez's career OPS is .678, more or less in line with what one should expect.

Catcher is the hardest, most physically draining defensive position, so defensive value is a better measuring stick. In this regard, Vázquez is stellar: Among active catchers, he has been the 3rd-most valuable framer and saved the 5th-most stolen base runs. To this day, he is an elite catcher. This is before taking into account the harder-to-quantify aspects of his value that he possesses at least by reputation: handling pitchers, calling games, contributing to overall team chemistry. Vázquez's glove and veteran presence mean he is still worthy of a major-league roster spot.

Should that be somewhere else, however? If the Twins were still getting a previous version of Vázquez, his place would be unquestionable. The problem is that his hitting has gone from underwhelming to abysmal.

To start 2024, Vázquez has posted a .200/.216/.243 line. That is not far off from what Jake Arrieta, a pitcher, batted in his career. By wRC+, his hitting is 77 percent worse than the major-league average.

There is not one explanation for the drop-off. We will start by looking at his Baseball Savant chart from this year. The ends of each bar are his percentile ranks for 2024. Over that I have laid in blue text Vázquez's percentile ranks from last season, which provides a comparison.

Click to enlarge. Stats through May 9.

You can see that when Vázquez has made contact, he has actually hit the ball harder than a year ago. Based on that, according to xBA, his average "should" be close to 40 points higher. However, batted-ball stats take longer to stabilize, and I do not think that a 33-year-old has finally found his physical peak. That trend will probably not hold.

May 04, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold 261

 

Aaron's trip to the New Orleans Jazz & Heritage Festival and checking in on the Timberwolves.

(We recorded this before Game 1, but the Internet Archive, where the episodes are hosted, was not cooperating Saturday morning.)

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

April 03, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 260

Previewing the men's Final Four and catching up with Gopher basketball.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

March 20, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 259

The 2024 NCAA Division I men's basketball tournament.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

March 07, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 258

 

Aaron and Chandler select their "dream" Beatles setlists. You can view the final products as Spotify playlists on the episode page.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

January 30, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 256

How the Twins look after trading Jorge Polanco for pitching and prospect depth and some of the interviews Aaron's been doing, including with jazz drummer Kendrick Scott.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

January 18, 2024

We Are Maroon and Gold Episode 255

The demise of Pitchfork as we have known it and cleaning up at the end of the Gopher football season.

Subscribe to the podcast on iTunes here.

January 09, 2024