Team without Stars Shines in Tourney
The Gophers willingness to share the
basketball in wins against Penn State, Michigan State and Purdue was
refreshing. It helped open up the offense including a new found
inside-outside game that featured an unlikely hero in reserve center
Colton Iverson and also the team’s long
distance shooters, mainly Westbrook, Hoffarber and Devoe Joseph.
Iverson was in doubles figures in the first three games (scoring 35 points on 15 of
20 shots) and came up with a lot of hustle plays.
Joseph, the mid-season replacement for
Al Nolen at point guard, was a new found hero, too, and a major
reason the Gophers earned the NCAA invite. His ball handling, team
direction and outside shooting have become better and more consistent in
recent weeks. In the overtime win against Michigan State he had 17
points after halftime.
Give credit to Smith and his coaches for
staying with his players and coaxing contributions out of starters and
subs. The Gophers are a team with the sum greater than the parts. In
the tournament center Ralph Sampson III was both a “spectator”
and participant, but Iverson made up for Sampson’s sometimes uninspired
play. Sampson had his moments, though, including a team high
13 points in the blowout 69-42 win over Purdue on Saturday.
Forward Paul Carter, like Iverson, came off the bench to make key
shots and boost the rebounding when Johnson was in foul trouble or
needed a rest.
The Gophers had been flirting with their
best basketball even before arriving in Indianapolis. Minnesota won
four of its last six regular season conference games including an 88-53
win over Iowa.
In the tournament Minnesota, the No. 6
seed, defeated No. 11 Penn State, No. 3 Michigan State, No. 2 Purdue and
lost to No. 1 Ohio State in the Gophers' first ever Big Ten Tournament
title game. Penn State’s Battle played on an injured
ankle, Michigan State’s Chris Allen, one of the team’s leading
scorers, was suspended and didn’t play against the Gophers, and Purdue
was without All-Big Ten forward Robbie Hummel
who is out for the season after injuring his knee in the Gophers’ game
in Minneapolis on February 24.
The Gophers were fortunate not having to
face three teams at their best, but that’s sports. And in the 72-67 win
against Michigan State the Spartans gifted the Gophers by missing 16
free throws.
Luck? Yup, and that’s not a word often
associated with Gophers basketball in recent years. Better enjoy the
good fortune while it lasts. The Gophers play their opening NCAA
tournament game in Milwaukee on Friday morning against Xavier. The tourney is
lose one and be done. We'll know soon if Cinderella made the trip.