INDIANAPOLIS – At game's end Friday, the Gophers ducked their heads in the locker room. Players sat quietly at their cubbies. The sound of Austin Hollins ripping the taped bags of ice off his knees cut the silence.
But there were no tears; no outpouring of emotions.
Among the players' long faces after the 83-57 loss to Wisconsin in the second round of the Big Ten basketball tournament, there was a pervasive tone of disappointment but a version tempered by the feeling that their season was ultimately still a success.
Now, the NCAA tournament committee will make its own judgment Sunday on the Gophers' future.
"We definitely had a very good season," guard Andre Hollins said. "We definitely had some highs and some lows. Some things weren't under our control — we can't control everything, but I liked the way we fought and we grew as a team. Coach [Richard] Pitino is building a great program here."
Ultimate success in high-major programs, however, is measured in large part by the postseason. That, for the Gophers (20-13), is still up in the air.
Both CBS Sports bracketologist Jerry Palm and ESPN's Joe Lunardi had Minnesota on the outside of the bubble looking in after the Gophers' first-round victory over Penn State. That status seems unlikely to change barring a perfect storm involving other teams sitting on the fence.
The Gophers have the benefit of a strong strength of schedule (ranked sixth) and a couple of good victories over Wisconsin and Ohio State but are hurt by a handful of bad losses, a conference record below .500 and the apparent inability to win meaningful games away from home.