MINNEAPOLIS — Niko Medved bounced into the Minnesota locker room after his team's overdue victory, pumping his arms and initiating a celebratory scream. He paused upon realizing the players were still sitting stone-faced in their chairs.
The Gophers only stuck with the ruse for a second, too excited to take the gotcha moment any further as they formed a joyous circle around their coach and doused him with water to salute their upset of 10th-ranked Michigan State.
Following seven straight losses, most of them in crushing fashion after late-game falters, the Gophers got to savor their progress again.
''We've got unbelievably high character guys. I just keep telling them, ‘You can't get tired of doing the right thing. You can't get tired of getting better,''' Medved said. ''There's proof that the process works. It's up to them. They buy in.''
The Gophers (11-12, 4-8) have beaten three ranked Big Ten teams in Medved's first season, prompting a court swarm by the modest Williams Arena crowd after each one, Indiana on Dec. 3, Iowa on Jan. 6, and on Wednesday, Michigan State.
''It kind of reassures us that what we're doing is good, it's right,'' leading scorer Cade Tyson said. ''We've just got to stay consistent and not get too high or too low no matter what the circumstance is.''
The Gophers were overdue for a breakthrough, with three losses by three points or less during the skid. They were tied or leading in the final minute of regulation in five of them, losing to Wisconsin and Penn State on buzzer-beaters.
''It's been a crazy season so far being in these close games, but we all agree: Moral victories, we can't stand for it no more,'' forward Jaylen Crocker-Johnson said after Minnesota's first win over a top-10 team in the AP poll in more than five years.