Amir Coffey turned to the Williams Arena crowd after a late momentum-changing three-pointer in Wednesday's upset of Nebraska and let out a big scream.
It was the rare instance Coffey showed that much emotion. The junior guard's career night — 32 points, six assists, six rebounds — led to a big victory for the Gophers, and especially for senior teammate Dupree McBrayer, playing only days after the death of his mother.
"It felt good," said Coffey, who hadn't taken over a game like that since a 30-point outburst vs. St. John's two years earlier, when as a freshman he was a key piece to an NCAA tournament team.
So why don't we see more boiling-hot versions of that Coffey?
Last season's right shoulder injury is part of that answer. Having to learn on the fly a new role as the de facto point guard this year is part of it, too. That transition has hindered Coffey's consistency as a big-time playmaker.
Wednesday, the 6-8 former Hopkins standout sparked the Gophers (7-2) when they need it most: down 13 points in the second half.
"Minnesota is as good as Coffey is," said Big Ten Network analyst Stephen Bardo, who covered the 83-76 Gophers victory over the No. 24 Corhuskers at Williams Arena. "As long as Amir plays well, he takes a lot of pressure off other guys, because he can do so many things."
Going into Saturday's game against Arkansas State, Coffey leads the Gophers in scoring (16.2), minutes played (32.1), free-throw percentage (72.1) and steals (8.0), while tied for the team lead in assists (3.0).