MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesota has had a frustrating and uneven start to this season, losing all three games against power conference teams in painful ways.
For all the setbacks and struggles, the Gophers have been at their best while defending the pass — as in best-in-the-nation best. They're the only team in the FBS that has allowed less than 100 passing yards per game, which is precisely the type of trait a group would want going into a matchup with Southern California on Saturday night.
The Trojans, who are ranked 11th in the latest Associated Press poll, have picked up with quarterback Miller Moss right where they left off with predecessor Caleb Williams, who was the first pick in the NFL draft this year by the Chicago Bears and the 2022 Heisman Trophy winner at USC. Moss is 11th in the FBS with an average of nearly 300 passing yards per game to lead USC's new conference, the Big Ten.
''It's one thing to be a gunslinger, but it's another thing to be a gunslinger that's accurate,'' Gophers coach P.J. Fleck said.
Last week against Wisconsin, Moss passed for 308 yards to nine different receivers with three touchdowns to lead a second-half surge from a flat first half by the Trojans (3-1, 1-1 Big Ten) on the way to a 38-21 victory. Ja'Kobi Lane had 10 catches for 105 yards, both career highs, with two scores.
''They have explosive athletes all over the field. That's pretty obvious,'' Gophers safety Coleman Bryson said. ''Their passing game is dynamic. Their running game is dynamic. But I think we're just worried about doing our best job to our best ability.''
In their third season under head coach Lincoln Riley, the Trojans have been busy keeping up with the program's proud heritage of skill position players.
''One thing Lincoln's really done a great job of as he's gone through his career is he's running the ball more effectively than he ever has, and he's not running it just to break the throwing streaks. He's running it with effectiveness to run the football,'' Fleck said. ''I've studied him for a lot of years and from just watching what he's done in Oklahoma and USC, I think he's part of that generation that's kind of reinvented the game.''