The 141st season of Gophers football kicks off in less than a month, leaving precious little time for nostalgia or sentiment over how much has changed with the Big Ten now that a new era is upon us.
This isn’t even Glen Mason’s Big Ten anymore. That was an eternity ago.
The Big(ger) Ten has 18 members starting this season, and this likely is not the end of expansion before the conference reaches its Big(gest) size. The guess is that 20 is the ideal target.
So what does this sea change mean for the 2024 edition of the Gophers? The only definitive answer here is that life didn’t become easier for them with the arrival of four Pac-12 schools, including blue blood programs USC and Oregon.
As a close follower and chronicler of Gophers football for more than two decades, I can’t recall having less gut feel for a season than the one at hand.
The Gophers have a new quarterback, new defensive coordinator, new special teams coordinator, new transfer portal additions, new opponents in an expanded league and no lifeboat otherwise known as the West Division.
Predicting a final record would be throwing darts at a board because their schedule is littered with what look like toss-up games on paper.
The death of Big Ten divisions has logic behind it, but it puts all but a handful of schools in an uncomfortable spot. The conference could no longer avoid the reality that the East vs. West divisions had as much competitive balance as a young Mike Tyson squaring off against a welterweight.