This is Amelia Rayno's second season on the Gophers' basketball beat. She learned college basketball in North Carolina (Go Tar Heels!), where fanhood is not an option. In 2010, she joined the Star Tribune after graduating from Boston's Emerson College, which sadly had no exciting D-I college hoops to latch onto. Amelia has also worked on the sports desk at the Boston Globe and interned at the Detroit News.
 Follow Rayno on Twitter @AmeliaRayno
Andre Hollins and Rodney Williams -- a pair the team lives by, dies by.
Here is the mark that shows how far the Gophers have come: as they were getting trampled by Stanford, it was simply hard to believe. How could a team that had been playing so well lose so badly, so completely?
A few weeks ago, perhaps, a loss like this wouldn't have been that unexpected. Tonight, it felt unreal -- unlike the Gophers team we've gotten to know throughout this tournament.
It seemed that way for the Gophers, too. When Rodney Williams fouled out, he threw a towel at the bench and sat there -- arms slumped over knee -- for several minutes before he pulled his face out from underneath his jersey. He and Andre Hollins both had watery, red eyes afterward.
“After I fouled out, it finally hit me that it’s over for the season and we didn’t come out on top,” Williams said.
It was a tough game to watch, a tough one to write about and a tough lingering impression for the players to leave. But it doesn't change the fact that this team has grown astronomically in the past several weeks. The improvement, the tenacity, the passion and the journey -- all of that is real, and means something.
Notes from the 75-51 Stanford win and what I learned from this postseason:
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