Gopher Honors
1ST TEAM ALL-AMERICAN Paul Giel, HB, 1952-1953 Bob McNamara, HB, 1954 Bob Hobert, T, 1956 1ST TEAM ALL-BIG TEN Paul Giel, HB, 1952-1953 Robert Hobert, T, 1956 Bob McNamara, RB, 1952, 1954 Mike Svendsen, C, 1958 Percy Zachary, G, 1952 GOPHER HEAD COACHES Bernie Bierman, 1950 Wes Fesler, 1951-1953 Murray Warmath, 1954-1959
1950's Gopher LinksGopher Scores, 1941-1960:Paul Giel:
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The Bernie Bierman era at Minnesota came to an unceremonious halt following the 1950 season. Many were convinced that the game had passed him by and pointed to the Gophers' 1-7-1 record as proof. To replace Bierman, the Gophers hired former Ohio State star and coach Wes Fesler. Fesler's arrival coincided with the emergence of Paul Giel, a sophomore halfback who could do it all. The Gophers endured another losing season in 1951, but Giel and others were quickly gaining valuable experience. By 1952, the Gophers actually were back in the thick of the Big Ten race. It would be unfair to say that these Gophers were a "one-man team". They had other fine players. But such was the extent of Giel's all-around contribution that at times it seemed that way. On offense, he ran and passed the football. On special teams, he punted and returned kicks. On defense, he was a sure tackler and ballhawk. The Gophers destroyed Michigan in Giel's senior year, 22-0. All Giel did was run for 112 yards, pass for another 169, intercept 2 passes, and return a punt for 41 yards! He finished second in the Heisman Trophy balloting and was named the Big Ten's Most Valuable Player. But as Giel moved on so did Fesler, and the Gophers were once more looking for a new head coach. To the surprise of almost everyone the school hired an unknown, Murray Warmath. Warmath would come north from Mississippi State at about the time a strong anti-football sentiment had taken hold of many in the administration and faculty. He would thus be caught in the middle between them and those who were determined to see the Gophers back on top of the college football world. Warmath's teams were strong both fundamentally and physically. His first team, in 1954, finished 7-2 and ranked #20 in the nation. The Gophers slipped below .500 in 1955, but bounced back nicely in 1956 to go 6-1-2. Many expected a National Championship in 1957, and after a 3-0 start it appeared to be coming to fruition. But a loss at Illinois sent the Gophers into a tailspin from which they could not recover. They would finish 4-5 that year, 1-8 in 1958, and 2-7 in 1959. Although Warmath was developing some nice talent for the future, he had lost the support of many fans and supporters and finished the decade holding onto his job by the slimmest of margins.
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