The University of Minnesota football players' boycott likely will force the school on Saturday to back out of its Holiday Bowl commitment.
A late-night summit on the U campus involving school President Eric Kaler, other school leaders and most Gophers football players failed to produce an agreement, putting the players' boycott in position to wipe out their trip to San Diego for the bowl game.
Sources familiar with the discussions told the Star Tribune the players refused to back down from their demand that 10 teammates suspended from the team this week due to a sexual assault allegation be reinstated immediately.
Barring a surprise compromise by Kaler and the players, a replacement team will play Washington State on Dec. 27 in the Holiday Bowl. The U needs to decide by noon Saturday, according to sources, and as of late Friday, players were preparing to make a morning statement, forgoing the bowl.
Any movement from Kaler this weekend would be a departure from his position Friday, when he released a statement that said the University of Minnesota will not change its values "for the sake of a bowl game."
Kaler's statement, which seemingly intensified the standoff between U leaders and football players, emphasized campus safety and respect. Those principles, he wrote, are "far more important than any football game and … more important than any single athletic team."
As snow fell outside the Gophers football complex around 9 p.m., players emerged from several hours of meetings mostly stoic and silent.
"It's been a long day," senior safety Damarius Travis said, declining to elaborate. Rodney Smith and Blake Cashman both declined to comment.