The Gophers squandered a lead with a slow second half Sunday afternoon, falling 75-63 to No. 22 Purdue at Williams Arena.
Leading 40-36 at the half, Minnesota shot 29.4 percent in the final 20 minutes. Down by just four points with two minutes left, the Gophers gave themselves a chance to win, but a lack of stops, rebounds and some ill-timed turnovers allowed the visitors to leave with a victory.
"I thought we had good looks and good shots in the paint," head coach Pam Borton said. "We just didn't finish."
Rachel Banham scored 21 points to lead the team, but 17 of them came in the first half. That prompted Purdue to change its game plan. Coach Sharon Versyp wanted to force other Gophers to beat her team, so they tightened up by constantly double-teaming the sophomore in the second half.
It worked. Banham shot only 2-for-12 to finish the game.
"I wasn't able to hit shots, and that forced other people to step up," said Banham, who also had a team-high six assists and moved into 14th-place on Minnesota's all-time scoring list. "It was definitely much harder in the second half."
Micaella Riche, Sari Noga and Kionna Kellogg each scored in double figures for the Gophers. Riche ended with 13 points and nine rebounds. Noga finished 4-for-6 from three-point range. Kellogg was 4-for-5 from the floor. The Gophers got only four points from the reserves.
"We didn't get a lot from our bench tonight, which is really what you need in a game like this," Borton said.