He might have been conducting some intentional coaching subterfuge. Or he might have been telling the truth. The answer will come Thursday and beyond.
P.J. Fleck stated firmly last week that he's not changing his stripes, thus dumping a bucket of cold water over those of us who have begged the Gophers football coach to blowtorch his old-school offensive playbook and come out slinging the ball with new strong-armed starting quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis.
"We still have our same philosophical beliefs," Fleck said, "and that will never change."
He sounded convincing, but we shall see Thursday night when the season kicks off against Nebraska.
Fleck insists he's adapting as a coach, not changing, but the landscape that surrounds him has shifted dramatically as he begins his seventh season in Minnesota.
When he took the job, Fleck still had hair, the transfer portal and NIL (name, imagine and likeness) did not exist and the Big Ten wasn't planning an expansion to 18 teams.
In a nod to the "time flies" principle, Fleck is now tied for fourth on the Big Ten coaching seniority list, trailing only Iowa's Kirk Ferentz, Penn State's James Franklin and Michigan's Jim Harbaugh. He outlasted Scott Frost at Nebraska and stayed put longer than Jeff Brohm at Purdue.
In many ways, Year 7 feels like a new beginning for Fleck, or at least a clearly defined new chapter. He has a new quarterback, new co-offensive coordinators and a newish roster that no longer features players who became synonymous with Fleck's tenure: Morgan, Ibrahim, Sori-Marin, Schmitz, et al.