When Tubby Smith was fired after the Gophers' second-round loss to Florida in the NCAA tournament, one of the major complaints among fans and administration was that in his six years at Minnesota, the legendary coach was never able to take the program to the next level.
Now, in his first season at Texas Tech, the 62-year-old coach appears on the verge of doing just that.
After wins over TCU, Oklahoma State and Oklahoma to start the month (I guess it's not Smith to blame for the Gophers' perennial February dives), the Red Raiders are 5-8 in the Big 12 — perhaps the best conference in college basketball right now.
Texas Tech also threatened to pull off huge upsets in its past two games.
None of this would be so stunning — Tech is still just tied for seventh in the 10-team conference, after all — if it wasn't for the fact that the Red Raiders have been SO bad in recent years. Tech hasn't won more than five conference games since 2008 and has managed a total of just four wins in the previous two seasons. With five more games left on the regular-season schedule, the Raiders even have a shot to dance for the first time since 2007.
And no such spark was expected this season. The Raiders returned some experience but were expected by most to finish near the Big 12 basement.
Suddenly Smith — who coached Kentucky to a national championship in 1998 but won just one NCAA tournament game during his tenure in Minneapolis — is looking like a great hire for a team unworthy even of the term "rebuilding."
And the sense of hope seems to be palpable. Tech sold out the normally echo-filled United Spirit Arena for its game against Oklahoma State, only the 11th sellout in the 15-year-old building's history, last occurring in 2007.