IOWA CITY – A month ago, Iowa was in Minneapolis, and the basketball game had once again come down to a last-second play. The Hawkeyes' Jarrod Uthoff charged to the top of the key, grabbed the pass and let a shot fly. Andre Hollins, the Gophers' best defender, was closing in on Uthoff like snow on a windshield, but when he stretched out to contest the shot, his reach fell several inches short.
Hollins stands 6-2. Uthoff, like a growing number of Big Ten wings, is both agile and oversized — at 6-9, his long two-point rainbow with 3.5 seconds left took flight unhindered, making Hollins' attempt to block it appear nearly laughable.
Swish. The final was 77-75, giving Minnesota its fifth consecutive loss.
"If I would have jumped with him, I would have fouled him," Hollins said afterward. "Because I was literally right on him."
In Thursday's rematch, Gophers coach Richard Pitino will be reminded, once again, of the importance of having size in this conference — and that Minnesota doesn't it in its top rotation of players.
"I didn't feel that way last year, playing them twice, that their size killed us," Pitino said of Iowa (15-8, 6-4 Big Ten). "But it did [that] game, there is no question."
The Gophers (15-9, 4-7) are one of the smallest teams in the conference. The team's average height ranks 11th of 14 teams, despite having three players 6-10 or taller. Iowa will line up the nation's fifth-tallest team.
In the frontcourt, Pitino is pleased with the look of his team: three big centers and some options at power forward, although the development of big-bodied freshmen Bakary Konate (6-11) and Gaston Diedhiou (6-9) is coming along slowly. But at point guard, shooting guard and small forward, the Gophers are relatively tiny.