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Pretty in Pig

No. 23 Iowa hands No. 7 Minnesota its first loss, 23-19, keeps Floyd of Rosedale

AP PHOTO - Iowa senior offensive lineman Levi Paulsen carries the Floyd of Rosedale Trophy off the field while surrounded by fans after the Hawkeyes defeated Minnesota in a Big Ten Conference football game Saturday at Kinnick Stadium in Iowa City.

IOWA CITY — Minnesota’s undefeated season came to an end in a place where the Gophers have struggled for a while.

Nate Stanley threw two touchdown passes and Tyler Goodson ran for a score to help No. 23 Iowa beat No. 7 Minnesota 23-19 on Saturday, handing the Gophers their first loss while hurting their playoff prospects.

The Gophers (9-1, 6-1, No. 8 CFP) haven’t won at Kinnick Stadium since 1999, losing nine straight on the road in the series. The loss will hurt them in the rankings, but they stay in control of their own fate in the Big Ten West Division race.

That, coach P.J. Fleck said, is something his team needs to remember.

“This is one game,” Fleck said. “Everything else is sitting right in front of us. If we can play a game that poorly, we can come back from it.

“This is not the end of the world. It hurts. It should hurt — it’s a rivalry game. This is what college football is all about. … This is one game. That’s all that means.”

The Hawkeyes (7-3, 4-3) struck quickly, scoring touchdowns on their first three possessions, then held off Minnesota’s charge in the second half for their first victory over a ranked opponent this season.

“We did a great job of controlling the first half,” Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz said. “We knew we were going to have to score some points today. It’s no mirage how many points they’ve scored, the yards that they’ve had.”

“We had to open it up,” said wide receiver Nico Ragaini, who scored Iowa’s first touchdown on a 21-yard pass from Stanley.

“Defensively, we started too slow,” Minnesota linebacker Thomas Barber said. “You can’t do that in a Big Ten game.”

Minnesota got to 23-19 with 3:27 to play when Rodney Smith scored on a 1-yard dive. But Brock Walker’s extra-point attempt missed. Iowa’s Nate Wieting then recovered the onside kick.

The Gophers had a final chance. But quarterback Tanner Morgan was sacked by Joe Evans and A.J. Epenesa on back-to-back plays, then backup Cole Kramer’s pass was intercepted by Riley Moss on fourth down.

Stanley threw for 173 yards. Goodson rushed for 94 yards.

Morgan threw for 368 yards. Tyler Johnson had nine catches for 170 yards. The Gophers had 431 yards of offense.

“The biggest accomplishment there is we kept them out of the end zone,” Ferentz said.

THE TAKEAWAY

Minnesota: The Gophers’ chance at making it to the CFP took a hit with the defeat. But they’re still in command of the West Division race with two games remaining. Minnesota plays at Northwestern next week and closes the season at home against Wisconsin, the second-place team in the division. The Badgers are one game behind the Gophers.

Iowa: This was the Hawkeyes’ fifth home win on Oct. 30 or late over a team with serious national title aspirations since 2008. The Hawkeyes talked all week about not having any pressure with their division hopes.

“It’s November in Kinnick,” safety Geno Stone said.

POLL IMPLICATIONS

Minnesota rose 12 spots after beating Penn State a week ago. The Gophers will tumble, but it likely won’t be as dramatic as last week’s surge. As for Iowa, it should expect to move up at least three or four spots.

MORGAN’S INJURY

Morgan was injured on the sack by Epenesa on the final drive. Fleck said he was “wobbly” when he left the field.

FLECK FLAGGED

Fleck was called for an unsportsmanlike conduct penalty in the fourth quarter after a fourth-down incompletion.

Johnson dropped a pass inside the Iowa 10-yard line for an incompletion. As Johnson came up from the turf, he was knocked down by Iowa’s Dane Belton, who was flagged for unsportsmanlike conduct.

But Fleck was given the same penalty because he ran out on the field. Fleck said he was concerned about Johnson, who was down on the field after the hit from Belton.

“I was told I ran onto the field too fast,” Fleck said. “I get that. But I didn’t know there was a red light or a green light for when we could go onto the field.”

UP NEXT

Minnesota: At Northwestern on Nov. 23

Iowa: Hosts Illinois in its home finale Nov. 23

No. 23 Iowa 23, No. 7 Minnesota 19

At Iowa City

Minnesota 0 6 7 6 — 19

Iowa 13 7 0 3 — 23

First Quarter

IOW–Ragaini 21 pass from Stanley (pass failed), 11:26

IOW–Goodson 10 run (Duncan kick), :18

Second Quarter

MIN–FG Walker 24, 9:47

IOW–Smith-Marsette 5 pass from Stanley (Duncan kick), 6:20

MIN–FG Walker 20, :00

Third Quarter

MIN–T.Johnson 28 pass from Morgan (Walker kick), 11:35

Fourth Quarter

IOW–FG Duncan 27, 7:13

MIN–R.Smith 1 run (kick failed), 3:27

A–67,518.

TEAM STATISTICS

MIN IOW

First downs 23 17

Rushes-yards 30-63 31-117

Passing 368 173

Comp-Att-Int 25-39-1 14-23-0

Return Yards 67 25

Punts-Avg. 2-31.5 4-34.0

Fumbles-Lost 1-0 0-0

Penalties-Yards 5-52 3-16

Time of Possession 32:20 27:40

INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS

RUSHING–Minnesota, R.Smith 14-46, S.Brooks 4-23, Ibrahim 3-9, Green 2-8, Morgan 7-(minus 23). Iowa, Goodson 13-94, Sargent 6-18, Tracy 1-11, Stanley 8-1, Smith-Marsette 1-(minus 1), (Team) 2-(minus 6).

PASSING–Minnesota, Morgan 25-36-0-368, Kramer 0-2-1-0, (Team) 0-1-0-0. Iowa, Stanley 14-23-0-173.

RECEIVING–Minnesota, T.Johnson 9-170, Bateman 6-98, Douglas 4-60, Autman-Bell 3-21, Ibrahim 1-15, R.Smith 1-4, Wiley 1-0. Iowa, Tracy 6-77, Smith-Marsette 4-43, Ragaini 2-30, LaPorta 1-12, Wieting 1-11.

MISSED FIELD GOALS–Minnesota, Walker 50.

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