Gophers Beat Up in Trenches; Young Star Steals Late Victory

Koi Perich, Minnesota Gophers
Credit: Matt Krohn-Imagn Images

The Minnesota Gophers welcomed Purdue to Huntington Bank Stadium as 7.5 point favorites on homecoming. It was a game under the lights with national champions of yesteryear on hand. For some reason though, P.J. Fleck’s team didn’t get the message to show up.

The Boilermakers aren’t the doormat that Northwestern State was, but this is a bad Big Ten team, and one the Gophers should have handled. After being trounced by Ohio State last week, a rebound was necessary.

Until a star needing his own standout performance showed up, the Gophers identity was hard to find.

Koi Perich saves the Minnesota Gophers

Make no mistake, this has not been a good season for Koi Perich. He was abysmal against the Cal Golden Bears in an unexpected road loss, and he’s hardly had the impact he did as a true freshman last season.

After leading the Big Ten with five interceptions in 2024, and looking like a special talent, the intention was to expand his workload as a wide receiver. Whether that change of focus impacted his concentration, or the spotlight got too bright, the experiment ended quickly (and it needed to).

Short of flattening former Gophers quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis, he hadn’t made a signature stamp on a game. That changed on Saturday against Purdue.

Just after the Gophers had tied the game at 20, Boilermakers quarterback Ryan Browne dropped back and slung a pass over the middle. Perich hopped off the turf, picked it, and scampered in for six.

The play gave Minnesota their first lead of the game. Despite the contest looking like a slog for the Gophers, Perich provided a moment for fans to get behind and showed up in a way he can use to boost the rest of his season.

Domination up front is new for Minnesota

The Gophers have often been a program known for strong running games and defense that can carry a grind-it-out offense. That couldn’t have been further from the case on Saturday night.

Purdue generated nearly 200 more yards and the difference was the running game and the impact of the trenches. Darius Taylor, the Gophers star tailback, turned 14 carries into just 32 yards. The 2.3 yards per carry average was reflective of a line that couldn’t get push all night. Unfortunately that’s been a trend at times this season as well.

On the flip side, and reflective of another unfortunate trend, was the inability to stop the run. Sure, Browne can scramble and did so eight times for 61 yards. However, Devin Mockobee ran 21 times for 98 yards. Malachi Singleton, who did add in a 40 yard run to get there, had 73 yards on just five carries.

Minnesota was never going to beat the Buckeyes, and they’ll likely struggle with the Oregon Ducks as well. If they want to win the rest of their schedule though, stopping the run can’t continue to be an issue.

Purdue let the Gophers hang around far too long, and ultimately it bit them. Nebraska is a much better team, and Minnesota has a short week to get it together. Friday night on national television is coming soon.

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