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 @AmeliaRaynoAt one point in the second half of tonight’s 83-75 Gophers loss to No. 5 Michigan, I had the following thought:
It may be time to make some concessions about this Minnesota team.
The problem with saying that is this: they keep changing up what they’re giving you. They hand you two different sets of data (in the last two games, anyway)– one from a team that looks bound for a run in the NCAA tournament; another from a team that looks lost, lethargic, uninspired and unworthy of winning the last two games.
Here it is:
When the Gophers play with the defensive intensity that has personified them this season, they can play with any team. When they don’t, they can’t.
Fans that will blame tonight on poor officiating and bad calls are seeing this team through a false lens – one that doesn’t take into account the ways they’ve shot themselves in the foot over the last two contests, the poor stretches of play, made worse by the fact that they’ve shown good and well they can play much better. It’s hard to blame bad calls when a team turns the ball over 15 times, 10 in the first half. It’s hard to blame calls when a team misses seven of its final 16 free throws. It’s hard to blame calls when a defensive-minded team misses switches, doesn’t communicate and allows an offense to shoot 54.9 percent. It’s hard to blame calls unless a team is darned-near perfect.
And in the last two games, the Gophers have been far from it.
They’ve played hard in stretches. They’ve played with impressive intensity. Other times, they disappear.
I knew that tonight’s postgame would be sullen, and the locker room was every bit of that. But the thing that surprised me the most was coach Tubby Smith’s comment afterward about the team’s lackluster practice a day earlier. He seemed not just concerned, but confused, because after all – he has lauded this team as hard-working and possessing of the tangibles from the start of the season.
“I was disappointed in our practice yesterday, to be honest with you in the defensive effort, especially in our starting group, and it showed today -- It raised its ugly head,” Smith said. “There’s no reason to panic, but I’m just really disappointed in two games, with the way we’ve played in the first half. And trying to make a comeback, that’s just a – well, I really don’t know what to call it. It’s just disappointing.”
Is it possible that the Gophers focused a bit too much on their early success? It doesn’t seem like this team, but then again, neither does these long, lethargic stretches where it’s only natural to question the apparent effort.
Too much shouldn’t be made of these two losses – after all, Michigan and Indiana are two of the best teams in the country. But the focus, instead, should fall within, on changing a sprouting trend that could prove dangerous if it continues.
Other notes from tonight’s game:
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