University of Minnesota Athletics
SPRING REVIEW #6-Excitement Abounds Following Gophers First Spring Scrimmage
3/11/2007 12:00:00 AM | Football
According to junior defensive end Willie VanDeSteeg, you don’t have to worry about abiding a speed limit during spring practices at the Gibson-Nagurksi Football Complex, because the players aren’t. At the conclusion of the team’s sixth practice and first scrimmage of the spring season, VanDeSteeg summed up the style Coach Brewster has brought to Gopher Football in the early months of 2007 and the approach the players are taking – life in the fast lane.
“Everything is 100 miles-per-hour right now,” said VanDeSteeg. “Everyone is coming out with the attitude that the coaches don’t know who they are and don’t know how they play, so everyone wants to show them what they’ve got. We are going 100 miles-per-hour whether we are in shorts, shells, shoulder pads and helmets, full pads – it doesn’t matter. We are going 100 miles per hour and everybody is showing the coaching staff what they can do.”
Saturday’s hour-and-a-half long scrimmage gave the Gophers a chance to show what they could do in a live setting and several players took full advantage of the opportunity. The scrimmage also gave onlookers a few things to see that they had previously only heard about. The Gophers warm up period didn’t disappoint as it continued to mix the necessity of pre-scrimmage stretching with the entertaining chant-and-response structure that players and coaches repeatedly use in trying to one-up each other.
Once the horn sounded at 10 a.m., it was strictly business as both the offense and defense brought a little swagger to the scrimmage. With so many new looks created by offensive coordinator Mike Dunbar and defensive coordinator Everett Withers, both the offense and defense had to get a feel not only for what the other side of the ball was doing, but how their own personnel was reacting to and reading the line of scrimmage.
Junior Tony Mortensen and redshirt freshman Adam Weber saw most of the action at quarterback with Mortensen working five series and Weber working four. Mortensen answered some of the questions about his mobility in the spread offense making a few nice runs out of the run-pass option and leading the team on a scoring drive (18-yard Giannini FG). Weber led the offense on three scoring drives – field goals of 23 and 27 yards by Jason Giannini, and a 1-yard touchdown run by Jay Thomas. The duo finished with near similar statistics as Mortensen was 8-for-14 for 91 yards, while Weber completed 7-of-10 passes for 97 yards with an interception. Running backs Amir Pinnix and Jay Thomas both had solid performances as well.
On defense, junior cornerback Dominic Jones didn’t forget directions to the hit parade as he tried to match his infamous hit last fall against Ohio State receiver Ray Small on several occasions. Jones was in on a sack and a tackle-for-loss during the scrimmage. Senior middle linebacker John Shevlin also proved that while both the offense and the defense may still be working on their red zone packages, he could make a crucial tackle on senior fullback Justin Valentine at the goal line to prevent him from scoring.
Overall, Coach Brewster was pleased with the way both sides of the ball competed during the scrimmage and stressed the need for the team to stay focused as the team is now off until Tuesday, March 20 due to spring break.
“I am really excited,” said Brewster. “I think that we have a long way to go obviously, but the kids are competing really well. The attitude and effort is outstanding and we are seeing some really good things. We put a lot on them mentally and they are accepting the challenge. The key now is that they can’t take their mind off football during spring break and expect to come back and retain everything that we have taught them. That is going to be huge for these kids to be able to come back and remember what we were doing.”
WHAT’S NEXT: Check out gophersports.com for more upcoming interviews, features and information on the spring season.
BREWSTER’S THOUGHTS ON SATURDAY SCRIMMAGE (MARCH 10)
How do you feel about how things went today?
TB: Well I am really excited. I think that we have a long way to go obviously, but I think that the kids are competing really well. The attitude and effort is outstanding and we are seeing some really good things. We put a lot on them mentally and they are accepting the challenge and I was really pleased with the flow of the scrimmage today. We incorporated kicking game into the scrimmage. It was organized. I thought the kids competed really hard.
Your running backs really seemed to run hard today?
TB: Absolutely. We have some runners and that is exciting and up front (the line) is doing a great job. I think Phil Meyer is doing a great job with the offensive line and we are just getting involved getting going in the zone schemes. We created some creases today and those backs hit them and really ran strong. I was excited with both of the running backs that we saw out there.
You emphasized that you want guys that make plays. Do you see some of that?
TB: We are looking for playmakers. That is the thing that we have to have. We have got to have playmakers, guys that can impact the game both on offense and on defense and I am excited about the way these guys are stepping up.
Talk about your personality type and the fire you bring to the table from getting the guys going with chant and response calls in pre-game warm-ups to bringing intensity to the actual practice:
TB: To me football is about passion and you have to play with passion. You have to love the game of football, and I love the game of football. I want players around me that love the game of football and that are passionate. Our personalities are going to rub off on them and I want guys that are excited to play the game and I like to see guys high-fiving and chest-bumping and getting excited because that is going to take us a long way.
Did you see more progress today?
TB: I like where we are. The big thing now is retention. How much are they going to retain coming off a week for spring break. They have to study while they are gone and they have to take care of themselves because when we get back we are going to amp this thing up even more. We are going to take another step and we are going to add even more to what we are doing and so the retention is going to be critical to their success the second half of spring.
Jay Thomas said this is sort of like a midterm of sorts. Are you going to judge them off of this?
TB: Sure. We are going to look at this tape this afternoon for about three hours and we are going to study it and see under the lights who performed today and I think a lot of guys did. I was really excited about the way the defense flew around and those guys made some plays and they have to understand that third down on offense and defense is the most critical down in football. We have to be able to convert third downs and we have to be able to stop them on third downs and get off the field. That is a tremendous emphasis for us.
Quarterbacks look more comfortable today than they did earlier in the week. Is that just part of this process?
TB: Exactly. Those guys are really adjusting well to everything that we are putting on them and I am really, really pleased with the progress that they are making and I think that Mike Dunbar has done a great job with them. Again, you can see that they are starting to react instead of think. They are playing instinctively, the ball is coming out of their hands, they are more decisive in how they make their reads and get rid of the ball and those are all things that we have to have.
The public is starting to see more and more of you each day. How are you reacting to that and the pressures that come with being in the spotlight?
TB: I love it. This is what I have lived for for 21 years as an assistant coach and it is a tremendous opportunity. I am excited about it and I know exactly what I have to get done. I have a plan in place and I am excited about how organizationally this thing has come together. My coaches have done a great, great job of it and it is tremendously exciting for me to be the head football coach at the ‘U’.
With spring break coming up is that a test for them?
TB: Absolutely. They have to go away and study and think about football. They can’t take their mind off football and expect to come back and retain everything that we have taught them and that is going to be huge for these kids to be able to come back and remember what the heck we were doing.
Looks like you have some playmakers on defense:
TB: Absolutely. We have some guys that are stepping up nicely and I can’t wait to look at the tape and really see. Obviously some guys have (shown) flash – but I am not looking for flash, per se – what I am looking for is consistency in their effort and how they line up each and every time. You know we had guys not line up right on offense and that is inexcusable. If you are on the ball, you’re on the ball, if you are off the ball, get your butt off the ball. Those are the things that will really bother me as the head coach – those kind of errors - and we have to eliminate those and we will.
The offense made two big plays in the beginning and then the defense seemed to respond:
TB: It is about how you respond and that is what we are doing. We are challenging the defense to make plays. We are going to give up plays, everybody does, but it is how you respond on the next play. One thing that I can hear in my mind is Marty Schottenheimer saying, ‘One play at a time.’ Give it your best shot and then line it up and doing it again. And that is what you have to do.
Coach, when is Mike Shanahan coming in here?
TB: Soon. I can’t let all my secrets out (laughter from media).
What is the talent level on your roster as opposed to your preconceived notion coming in?
TB: I think it is very good, but what we need is more playmakers and we need more receivers. We don’t have enough receivers for what we want to do offensively, so we have to add some receivers to this deal and we are bringing some freshmen in that are going to have to help us and we are going to have to get the receivers that we have already – we have to get them to step up.
You sort of challenged Ernie (Wheelwright) yesterday:
TB: I challenged Ernie before the start of practice today. I need for Ernie to be a big-time player. He has to step his game up and be a guy that we can consistently rely on. He has to consistently catch the ball, which up to this point in spring practice, he wasn’t consistently catching the ball like we wanted, but I thought he made some plays today. He made some strides and to me it is all about confidence, and these guys are getting more and more confident in what they are doing and what we are asking of them.
PLAYER REACTION TO THE SCRIMMAGE
RB JAY THOMAS
How did you think the scrimmage went?
JT: The last couple of days I think we really started to get things together and I thought today we came out and did a pretty good job for just six practices.
How do you feel in the overall evaluation after six practices?
JT: I don’t think we really touched the tip of the iceberg like Coach Dunbar said. We haven’t really put in much of the offense. There are still a lot of things we have to do and a lot checks that we have to put in, and goal line offense, but I think that we are getting the stuff that we have been given down, so hopefully we can build off that and be ready to go when we get back from spring break.
Is this a good time for a break?
JT: Yes. Real good because we are all pretty tired from winter workouts and then coming in here and doing six practices. We have been going really hard so I think we are all ready for a break.
QB ADAM WEBER
How did it go?
AW: Not bad. There were a lot of mistakes, but for our first scrimmage I don’t think you can expect anything more. Especially when we got down to the red zone because we don’t have a lot of packages put in. We only have so many plays that we can run. I think as it gets going - our next scrimmage will look a lot better.
Are you getting comfortable with this offense?
AW: Oh definitely. Our heads aren’t spinning as much anymore. It is coming along. There are still some little things that we need to work on and with time – I think this break will be nice – to get away and look at the book a little bit more. When we come back that first practice will be a good test to see where we are at.
Coaches are emphasizing big plays. It seems like you guys made a couple out there:
AW: Definitely. (The coaches) are big on playmakers have to make plays. Players have to make plays and this scrimmage they wanted to see who are playmakers are going to be this year. I know that Ernie (Wheelwright) had a big catch, Jay (Thomas) had a couple nice runs and that’s what they want. They want (to know) when it gets to be 4th-&-1, who is going to make the plays and step up. They are really big on that.
Is it hard to process all the stuff they are throwing at you?
AW: They are expecting a lot out of us and they should. With this scrimmage they were able to relax a little bit and they understand that there is a lot being thrown at us. I think this scrimmage they called plays that allowed us to relax a little bit and just play football. It is going to take some time, but it is coming along.
On three of your four drives you put points on the board:
AW: As a quarterback and as an offense that is what you want. We would like to have touchdowns, but those will come and as long as you can get in that red zone, you have to be happy with that.
How is the timing with the receivers?
AW: There are so many conversions right now that it is hard to get the timing down, but it is coming along and every practice you get better and better. We are so much better today than we were yesterday, and we were so much better yesterday than we were the day before. That is the way it has been and by the time spring ball is done we will be at that level that we need to be at.
DE WILLIE VANDESTEEG
Was it physical out there today?
WV: Yeah, it felt good actually. It was a lot different. (With a new system) we made some stupid mistakes and it kind of feels like we are freshman again. We are learning the program and what we have to do, but we flew around and made plays, made some mess-ups but that is going to happen in your first scrimmage.
How do you feel about your first six practices?
WV: Really good. Everyone is coming out with the attitude that the coaches don’t know who they are and don’t know how they play so everyone wants to show them what they’ve got. Everything is 100 miles-per-hour whether it shorts, shells, shoulder pads and helmets, full pads – we are going 100 miles per hour. Everybody is showing the coaching staff what they can do.
How much different is this defense with you guys pressing, attacking, etc?
WV: We attack the line a lot more and do a lot of moving. We haven’t really installed a whole lot because it has only been six practices, but it feels great to get a little more speed behind you. We have (Steve) Davis back there (at linebacker) and he is a little quicker, we have Jamal (Harris) back there and we have moved some linebackers to defensive line to give us more speed. It has just been awesome the way our defense has been going and we have the perfect attitude and everything is wide open.
QB TONY MORTENSEN
How would you rate the scrimmage?
TM: You know you are going to have your good and bad, but I think there were a lot of positive things to come from this scrimmage and we will evaluate it and learn from it.
How would you sum up the first week?
TM: The first week went really good. We are moving fast and I think we are all understanding what we have to do individually and as a team to win.
Is this offense starting to make more sense?
TM: Yeah, and as soon as you can grasp the offense more you can start learning defense again. You always learn defense but you can concentrate on that more once you know what your guys are doing.
Is it hard right now to have timing with your receivers?
TM: Sometimes we go four wide and we have some new guys in there learning it, and we are all new in learning it, so timing is the key thing and I have to get rid of the ball in this offense. I think it is going good and we are gelling, but it is going to take time.
Can you feel the competitiveness between all the quarterbacks?
TM: Yeah, it is wide open right now and Coop (Bryan Cupito) left us a good experience and we know what we have to do to compete and competition makes us better.
“Everything is 100 miles-per-hour right now,” said VanDeSteeg. “Everyone is coming out with the attitude that the coaches don’t know who they are and don’t know how they play, so everyone wants to show them what they’ve got. We are going 100 miles-per-hour whether we are in shorts, shells, shoulder pads and helmets, full pads – it doesn’t matter. We are going 100 miles per hour and everybody is showing the coaching staff what they can do.”
Saturday’s hour-and-a-half long scrimmage gave the Gophers a chance to show what they could do in a live setting and several players took full advantage of the opportunity. The scrimmage also gave onlookers a few things to see that they had previously only heard about. The Gophers warm up period didn’t disappoint as it continued to mix the necessity of pre-scrimmage stretching with the entertaining chant-and-response structure that players and coaches repeatedly use in trying to one-up each other.
Once the horn sounded at 10 a.m., it was strictly business as both the offense and defense brought a little swagger to the scrimmage. With so many new looks created by offensive coordinator Mike Dunbar and defensive coordinator Everett Withers, both the offense and defense had to get a feel not only for what the other side of the ball was doing, but how their own personnel was reacting to and reading the line of scrimmage.
Junior Tony Mortensen and redshirt freshman Adam Weber saw most of the action at quarterback with Mortensen working five series and Weber working four. Mortensen answered some of the questions about his mobility in the spread offense making a few nice runs out of the run-pass option and leading the team on a scoring drive (18-yard Giannini FG). Weber led the offense on three scoring drives – field goals of 23 and 27 yards by Jason Giannini, and a 1-yard touchdown run by Jay Thomas. The duo finished with near similar statistics as Mortensen was 8-for-14 for 91 yards, while Weber completed 7-of-10 passes for 97 yards with an interception. Running backs Amir Pinnix and Jay Thomas both had solid performances as well.
On defense, junior cornerback Dominic Jones didn’t forget directions to the hit parade as he tried to match his infamous hit last fall against Ohio State receiver Ray Small on several occasions. Jones was in on a sack and a tackle-for-loss during the scrimmage. Senior middle linebacker John Shevlin also proved that while both the offense and the defense may still be working on their red zone packages, he could make a crucial tackle on senior fullback Justin Valentine at the goal line to prevent him from scoring.
Overall, Coach Brewster was pleased with the way both sides of the ball competed during the scrimmage and stressed the need for the team to stay focused as the team is now off until Tuesday, March 20 due to spring break.
“I am really excited,” said Brewster. “I think that we have a long way to go obviously, but the kids are competing really well. The attitude and effort is outstanding and we are seeing some really good things. We put a lot on them mentally and they are accepting the challenge. The key now is that they can’t take their mind off football during spring break and expect to come back and retain everything that we have taught them. That is going to be huge for these kids to be able to come back and remember what we were doing.”
WHAT’S NEXT: Check out gophersports.com for more upcoming interviews, features and information on the spring season.
BREWSTER’S THOUGHTS ON SATURDAY SCRIMMAGE (MARCH 10)
How do you feel about how things went today?
TB: Well I am really excited. I think that we have a long way to go obviously, but I think that the kids are competing really well. The attitude and effort is outstanding and we are seeing some really good things. We put a lot on them mentally and they are accepting the challenge and I was really pleased with the flow of the scrimmage today. We incorporated kicking game into the scrimmage. It was organized. I thought the kids competed really hard.
Your running backs really seemed to run hard today?
TB: Absolutely. We have some runners and that is exciting and up front (the line) is doing a great job. I think Phil Meyer is doing a great job with the offensive line and we are just getting involved getting going in the zone schemes. We created some creases today and those backs hit them and really ran strong. I was excited with both of the running backs that we saw out there.
You emphasized that you want guys that make plays. Do you see some of that?
TB: We are looking for playmakers. That is the thing that we have to have. We have got to have playmakers, guys that can impact the game both on offense and on defense and I am excited about the way these guys are stepping up.
Talk about your personality type and the fire you bring to the table from getting the guys going with chant and response calls in pre-game warm-ups to bringing intensity to the actual practice:
TB: To me football is about passion and you have to play with passion. You have to love the game of football, and I love the game of football. I want players around me that love the game of football and that are passionate. Our personalities are going to rub off on them and I want guys that are excited to play the game and I like to see guys high-fiving and chest-bumping and getting excited because that is going to take us a long way.
Did you see more progress today?
TB: I like where we are. The big thing now is retention. How much are they going to retain coming off a week for spring break. They have to study while they are gone and they have to take care of themselves because when we get back we are going to amp this thing up even more. We are going to take another step and we are going to add even more to what we are doing and so the retention is going to be critical to their success the second half of spring.
Jay Thomas said this is sort of like a midterm of sorts. Are you going to judge them off of this?
TB: Sure. We are going to look at this tape this afternoon for about three hours and we are going to study it and see under the lights who performed today and I think a lot of guys did. I was really excited about the way the defense flew around and those guys made some plays and they have to understand that third down on offense and defense is the most critical down in football. We have to be able to convert third downs and we have to be able to stop them on third downs and get off the field. That is a tremendous emphasis for us.
Quarterbacks look more comfortable today than they did earlier in the week. Is that just part of this process?
TB: Exactly. Those guys are really adjusting well to everything that we are putting on them and I am really, really pleased with the progress that they are making and I think that Mike Dunbar has done a great job with them. Again, you can see that they are starting to react instead of think. They are playing instinctively, the ball is coming out of their hands, they are more decisive in how they make their reads and get rid of the ball and those are all things that we have to have.
The public is starting to see more and more of you each day. How are you reacting to that and the pressures that come with being in the spotlight?
TB: I love it. This is what I have lived for for 21 years as an assistant coach and it is a tremendous opportunity. I am excited about it and I know exactly what I have to get done. I have a plan in place and I am excited about how organizationally this thing has come together. My coaches have done a great, great job of it and it is tremendously exciting for me to be the head football coach at the ‘U’.
With spring break coming up is that a test for them?
TB: Absolutely. They have to go away and study and think about football. They can’t take their mind off football and expect to come back and retain everything that we have taught them and that is going to be huge for these kids to be able to come back and remember what the heck we were doing.
Looks like you have some playmakers on defense:
TB: Absolutely. We have some guys that are stepping up nicely and I can’t wait to look at the tape and really see. Obviously some guys have (shown) flash – but I am not looking for flash, per se – what I am looking for is consistency in their effort and how they line up each and every time. You know we had guys not line up right on offense and that is inexcusable. If you are on the ball, you’re on the ball, if you are off the ball, get your butt off the ball. Those are the things that will really bother me as the head coach – those kind of errors - and we have to eliminate those and we will.
The offense made two big plays in the beginning and then the defense seemed to respond:
TB: It is about how you respond and that is what we are doing. We are challenging the defense to make plays. We are going to give up plays, everybody does, but it is how you respond on the next play. One thing that I can hear in my mind is Marty Schottenheimer saying, ‘One play at a time.’ Give it your best shot and then line it up and doing it again. And that is what you have to do.
Coach, when is Mike Shanahan coming in here?
TB: Soon. I can’t let all my secrets out (laughter from media).
What is the talent level on your roster as opposed to your preconceived notion coming in?
TB: I think it is very good, but what we need is more playmakers and we need more receivers. We don’t have enough receivers for what we want to do offensively, so we have to add some receivers to this deal and we are bringing some freshmen in that are going to have to help us and we are going to have to get the receivers that we have already – we have to get them to step up.
You sort of challenged Ernie (Wheelwright) yesterday:
TB: I challenged Ernie before the start of practice today. I need for Ernie to be a big-time player. He has to step his game up and be a guy that we can consistently rely on. He has to consistently catch the ball, which up to this point in spring practice, he wasn’t consistently catching the ball like we wanted, but I thought he made some plays today. He made some strides and to me it is all about confidence, and these guys are getting more and more confident in what they are doing and what we are asking of them.
PLAYER REACTION TO THE SCRIMMAGE
RB JAY THOMAS
How did you think the scrimmage went?
JT: The last couple of days I think we really started to get things together and I thought today we came out and did a pretty good job for just six practices.
How do you feel in the overall evaluation after six practices?
JT: I don’t think we really touched the tip of the iceberg like Coach Dunbar said. We haven’t really put in much of the offense. There are still a lot of things we have to do and a lot checks that we have to put in, and goal line offense, but I think that we are getting the stuff that we have been given down, so hopefully we can build off that and be ready to go when we get back from spring break.
Is this a good time for a break?
JT: Yes. Real good because we are all pretty tired from winter workouts and then coming in here and doing six practices. We have been going really hard so I think we are all ready for a break.
QB ADAM WEBER
How did it go?
AW: Not bad. There were a lot of mistakes, but for our first scrimmage I don’t think you can expect anything more. Especially when we got down to the red zone because we don’t have a lot of packages put in. We only have so many plays that we can run. I think as it gets going - our next scrimmage will look a lot better.
Are you getting comfortable with this offense?
AW: Oh definitely. Our heads aren’t spinning as much anymore. It is coming along. There are still some little things that we need to work on and with time – I think this break will be nice – to get away and look at the book a little bit more. When we come back that first practice will be a good test to see where we are at.
Coaches are emphasizing big plays. It seems like you guys made a couple out there:
AW: Definitely. (The coaches) are big on playmakers have to make plays. Players have to make plays and this scrimmage they wanted to see who are playmakers are going to be this year. I know that Ernie (Wheelwright) had a big catch, Jay (Thomas) had a couple nice runs and that’s what they want. They want (to know) when it gets to be 4th-&-1, who is going to make the plays and step up. They are really big on that.
Is it hard to process all the stuff they are throwing at you?
AW: They are expecting a lot out of us and they should. With this scrimmage they were able to relax a little bit and they understand that there is a lot being thrown at us. I think this scrimmage they called plays that allowed us to relax a little bit and just play football. It is going to take some time, but it is coming along.
On three of your four drives you put points on the board:
AW: As a quarterback and as an offense that is what you want. We would like to have touchdowns, but those will come and as long as you can get in that red zone, you have to be happy with that.
How is the timing with the receivers?
AW: There are so many conversions right now that it is hard to get the timing down, but it is coming along and every practice you get better and better. We are so much better today than we were yesterday, and we were so much better yesterday than we were the day before. That is the way it has been and by the time spring ball is done we will be at that level that we need to be at.
DE WILLIE VANDESTEEG
Was it physical out there today?
WV: Yeah, it felt good actually. It was a lot different. (With a new system) we made some stupid mistakes and it kind of feels like we are freshman again. We are learning the program and what we have to do, but we flew around and made plays, made some mess-ups but that is going to happen in your first scrimmage.
How do you feel about your first six practices?
WV: Really good. Everyone is coming out with the attitude that the coaches don’t know who they are and don’t know how they play so everyone wants to show them what they’ve got. Everything is 100 miles-per-hour whether it shorts, shells, shoulder pads and helmets, full pads – we are going 100 miles per hour. Everybody is showing the coaching staff what they can do.
How much different is this defense with you guys pressing, attacking, etc?
WV: We attack the line a lot more and do a lot of moving. We haven’t really installed a whole lot because it has only been six practices, but it feels great to get a little more speed behind you. We have (Steve) Davis back there (at linebacker) and he is a little quicker, we have Jamal (Harris) back there and we have moved some linebackers to defensive line to give us more speed. It has just been awesome the way our defense has been going and we have the perfect attitude and everything is wide open.
QB TONY MORTENSEN
How would you rate the scrimmage?
TM: You know you are going to have your good and bad, but I think there were a lot of positive things to come from this scrimmage and we will evaluate it and learn from it.
How would you sum up the first week?
TM: The first week went really good. We are moving fast and I think we are all understanding what we have to do individually and as a team to win.
Is this offense starting to make more sense?
TM: Yeah, and as soon as you can grasp the offense more you can start learning defense again. You always learn defense but you can concentrate on that more once you know what your guys are doing.
Is it hard right now to have timing with your receivers?
TM: Sometimes we go four wide and we have some new guys in there learning it, and we are all new in learning it, so timing is the key thing and I have to get rid of the ball in this offense. I think it is going good and we are gelling, but it is going to take time.
Can you feel the competitiveness between all the quarterbacks?
TM: Yeah, it is wide open right now and Coop (Bryan Cupito) left us a good experience and we know what we have to do to compete and competition makes us better.
Players Mentioned
Winter Agility Testing
Wednesday, March 04
Gopher Football at the Barn
Wednesday, February 18
Speed is Strength | Winter Workouts
Tuesday, February 17
Winter Workouts Week Two
Monday, February 09

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