P.J. Fleck's first collegiate coaching job was serving as a graduate assistant at Ohio State under coach Jim Tressel in 2006, working for a Buckeyes team that reached the BCS Championship Game.
So it should come as no surprise that Fleck's coaching philosophy has roots in what's known as "Tressel-ball," the run-heavy, conservative approach that his mentor rode to three national title game appearances, one championship, and 229 wins in his Hall of Fame career.
With the Gophers, Fleck's approach of such complementary football — with the offense, defense and special teams feeding off each other — has helped deliver seasons of 11-2 and 9-4 (twice), all since 2019.
But this has been a rough season for Fleck's cautious philosophy. Upset losses to Northwestern and Illinois have infuriated some fans, who have grumbled and booed some of Fleck's choices.
"Game management is always going to be under criticism," said Gerry DiNardo, a Big Ten Network analyst and former coach at Indiana, LSU and Vanderbilt. "… P.J. has proven himself as a really good game manager. Does that mean he's been 100%? Probably not, but who is?"
Minnesota enters Saturday's game at Purdue with a 5-4 record, still needing one more win to achieve bowl eligibility.
The Gophers haven't been consistently sharp in any facet — offense, defense, special teams or coaching.
"Having the harmony between offense, defense and special teams really is the key,'' Tressel said by phone Friday. "... That harmony is what a team is all about."