The Columbus Dispatch

Minnesota receiver puts on show against Auburn

-

With the clock winding down on a dominating performanc­e in the Outback Bowl in Tampa, Florida, Minnesota fans broke into a chant of “Row The Boat, Row The Boat, Row The Boat.”

The never-give-up mantra coach P.J. Fleck used to help change the culture of Golden Gophers football continues to inspire a program determined to recapture its glory days.

“We challenged everyone of our players, you want to be a blue blood you’ve got to beat the blue bloods,” Fleck said Wednesday after No. 16 Minnesota beat No. 9 Auburn 31-24 in a game that wasn’t as close as the final score.

“We used to be a blue blood back in the 30’s, 40’s, 50’s and 60’s,” Fleck added. “We’ve talked about the word of the year is restore. We want to restore that tradition.”

Tyler Johnson had 12 receptions for 204 yards and two touchdowns to become the Gophers’ career receiving leader and Minnesota outrushed the Tigers 215 yards to 56 while dominating time of possession to limit Auburn’s ability to keep pace.

“We didn’t overlook them. I think our guys were ready to play. I think our guys played hard but they made the plays, we didn’t.,”

Auburn coach Gus Malzahn said.

“The second half, it was really a dog fight. Back and forth,” Malzahn added. “The bottom line is they made plays. They made the plays to win the game when the game was on the line.”

Johnson broke Eric Decker’s school record for receiving yards on his second catch of the day and became Minnesota’s all-time leader for scoring receptions on a one-handed, 2-yard TD catch that put the Gophers (11-2) up 24-17 at halftime.

The senior’s 73-yard catch-and-run put his team ahead for good early in the fourth quarter.

“Coach Fleck says all the time, that this program is going up, and as you see today it’s definitely going in the right direction,” Johnson said. “Just having the right guys in the locker room is very important and everyone buying in.”

Minnesota, which began the season with nine straight victories before losing two of its last three to Big Ten rivals Iowa and Wisconsin, finished with more than 10 wins for the first time since 1904. Auburn (9-4) concluded a season in which all four of its losses came against opponents ranked in the Top 25.

“I feel like we could’ve played harder and better than what we did. It’s just disappoint­ing, especially going out like that in your last game,” Auburn senior defensive end Marlon Davidson said. “Even though we had a chance to win, we weren’t on our ‘A’ game. I’m just disappoint­ed.”

Tanner Morgan completed 19 of 29 passes for 278 yards, one intercepti­on and both of the TDS to Johnson, who finished with 3,305 receiving yards and 33 TD catches in his career. Receiver Seth Green tossed a 1-yard touchdown pass to Bryce Witham on fourth-and-inches midway through the second quarter.

Notre Dame’s Jones declares for NFL

Running back Tony Jones Jr. became the second player for No. 14 Notre Dame to forego his final year of eligibilit­y to enter the NFL draft.

Jones made the announceme­nt Tuesday on Twitter. On Monday, senior safety Alohi Gilman declared for the draft, which is April 23-25.

The 5-foot-11, 224pound Jones finished with a team-leading 857 yards rushing with six touchdowns in 12 games. He finished his Notre Dame career with 1,481 yards rushing and 12 touchdowns, along with 27 receptions for 273 yards and two scores.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States