Chicago Sun-Times

Physical Gophers rough up Wildcats

Northweste­rn loses two fumbles, fails on two 2- point conversion­s

- BY DAVE CAMPBELL

MINNEAPOLI­S — Minnesota’s defense delivered an overpoweri­ng performanc­e. Mitch Leidner provided the finishing touch.

Leidner threw his first touchdown pass in seven weeks, and Blake Cashman and Steven Richardson each had two of Minnesota’s season- high seven sacks, leading the Gophers to a 29- 12 victory Saturday over Northweste­rn.

Playing at home for the last time, Leidner found Drew Wolitarsky from nine yards out with 6: 46 left to give the Gophers ( 8- 3, 5- 3) a 22- 6 lead, then ran in a 12yard score with 2: 31 left. The fifthyear senior, who was intercepte­d once, ended a five- game streak without a touchdown pass.

“It’s been long overdue,” Wolitarsky said, smiling.

Emmit Carpenter made three field goals and Shannon Brooks totaled 110 yards from scrimmage for the Gophers, whose offense sputtered through most of the afternoon after an 80- yard gameopenin­g march into the end zone and before the late Leidner- led push.

“Hey, find a way to win this thing,” coach Tracy Claeys said. “Who cares how anybody has played?”

Clayton Thorson threw for 276 yards and a late touchdown, but the Wildcats ( 5- 6, 4- 4) were denied on fourth- and- one at the Minnesota 16 in the second quarter and on fourth- and- one at the Gophers’ 13 in the third quarter. They lost two fumbles and failed on both twopoint conversion tries.

“We’ve just got to learn how to finish,” wide receiver Andrew Scanlan said.

Carr crash

Austin Carr, the Big Ten’s leading receiver, had five catches for 68 yards for the Wildcats before leaving the field a bit woozy from a helmet- to- helmet hit by Minnesota safety Duke McGhee. The targeting penalty, the seventh time this season a Gopher has received the automatic ejection, including two for McGhee, helped set up Northweste­rn’s first score.

“He knows better than that,” Claeys said.

NU coach Pat Fitzgerald de- clined to discuss Carr’s condition, beyond “he seemed to be doing well” after the game. A four- yard run by Justin Jackson with 2: 17 left in the third quarter finished the drive and cut the lead to 15- 6, but the Gophers weren’t deterred.

“Emotions were pretty high at that point, but we’re a level- headed team, and we didn’t let that affect us,” said linebacker Jack Lynn, who had 1 ½ of Minnesota’s 12 tackles for loss.

Take that

Richardson recalled a recruiting visit that Fitzgerald once made to his high school, Mount Carmel, that left him feeling snubbed. Richardson, listed at 6 feet, 300 pounds, said Fitzgerald was immediatel­y turned off by his lack of height.

“I saw that guy come into my high school coach’s office and just look me up and down and look at me like I’m way too short to play the game,” Richardson said. “It was really nice to play one of these types of games in front of him, just because he doubted you.”

The takeaway

Northweste­rn: With the Thorson- to- Carr connection quiet even before the star pass- catcher departed the game, the Wildcats were uncharacte­ristically unproducti­ve on offense until they entered catch- up mode late and padded their statistics.

Minnesota: Eliminated earlier in the day from Big Ten championsh­ip- game contention, the Gophers can still tie for first place in the West Division by upsetting Wisconsin and having Iowa beat Nebraska. They reached the eightwin mark for the third time in four seasons, a feat not accomplish­ed by the program since 1905.

 ?? | STACY BENGS/ AP ?? Northweste­rn wide receiver Flynn Nagel can’t hold on to the ball after being hit by Minnesota defensive back Duke McGhee on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.
| STACY BENGS/ AP Northweste­rn wide receiver Flynn Nagel can’t hold on to the ball after being hit by Minnesota defensive back Duke McGhee on Saturday in Minneapoli­s.

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