An April snowstorm left the Gophers baseball team in a pickle. A home series against Penn State wasn't possible so coach John Anderson scrambled to find an alternative site.
A group of his players visited his office as he made contingency plans. We'll take a bus anywhere to play, they said.
Purdue agreed to loan its ballpark. The Gophers accepted the offer and swept Penn State that weekend. On the nine-hour drive home, the battery on their bus went kaput, forcing the Gophers to switch to a new bus somewhere in Wisconsin.
"Just another travel story for the book someday," Anderson joked.
The irony of that situation feels especially illuminating today. The weather this spring was historically dreadful but the Gophers baseball team has produced one of its best seasons ever in spite of it.
The Gophers are one of 16 teams still alive in the NCAA tournament after winning their regional championship by clobbering UCLA on Sunday night. That very sentence sounds preposterous when placed in the context of the north vs. south imbalance in college baseball.
Minnesota outclassed UCLA in baseball? This has been a fairy tale run, regardless of how it ends.
"Sometimes the kids feel like they don't get the respect they deserve because of where we're located," Anderson said.