For a moment, Reid Travis seemed to feel the weight of his decision.
Standing at a podium, Travis, the 23rd-ranked boys' basketball player in the nation according to ESPN, shook his head, acknowledging the end of the long journey of his recruitment.
The 6-8 forward had been pursued by the Gophers — first by Tubby Smith and more recently by new coach Richard Pitino's staff — since the Minneapolis native entered high school. For the last two years, Travis had been a top prospect on the national scene. Travis grew and improved, season after season, dominating headlines.
Then, for Gophers fans, the five-star flirtation was over in an abrupt instant.
With Gophers loyalists scattered around DeLaSalle High School for the Friday announcement and many more across the state watching on live streams, Travis declared his long-awaited choice:
He would go to Stanford.
His father, Nate Travis, trying to contain his tears of joy, slid his son a Stanford hat, one with a distinctly different shade of maroon from the one Gophers fans were hoping to see grace the prospect's head.
"It just kind of came down to the feeling," said Reid Travis, who averaged 26.1 points and 9.0 rebounds per game last season for Class 3A champion DeLaSalle. "I went out to Stanford and immediately it just felt like home and it was comfortable there … [Cardinal coach] Johnny Dawkins did a great job of building a relationship with me since sophomore year. It got to the point this last year where it wasn't even like he was recruiting me anymore, it was like I was talking to a family member — he was just checking in on me."