WEST LAFAYETTE, IND. – It's basically as good as gold on an NCAA tournament résumé if you can steal a victory in a hostile environment like Mackey Arena.
That's why Gophers coach Richard Pitino hurt so much for his team after watching players such as Daniel Oturu and Marcus Carr give everything they had only to see a signature victory slip away in Thursday's heartbreaking 83-78 double-overtime loss to Purdue.
"As long as I've been a coach, that's as proud as I've been of an effort," Pitino said. "Marcus was unbelievable at times. Daniel did some good things. We scratched and clawed against a really good team on their home court."
Oturu finished with a career-high 29 points, plus 18 rebounds, and Carr had 27 points, but he wore down late and was responsible for seven of the Gophers' 18 turnovers.
The Gophers (7-6, 1-2 Big Ten), who had won three in a row, had all the momentum in regulation after erasing an eight-point second-half deficit to lead by five with under three minutes to go. They were again so close to tasting victory in the first overtime, leading with under a minute to play. They battled back one last time late in the second overtime to tie the score at 75-75, but too many mistakes caught up to them.
"Didn't come up with the win," Pitino said. "That's certainly devastating, but it's my job to get our guys to understand and keep it in perspective. If we continue to play that hard and with that fight, we're going to win games in this league."
The Boilermakers (9-5, 2-1), who won their 14th consecutive Big Ten game at home, showed why they are so tough to beat in one of the loudest arenas in college basketball.
In just his second game back after being sidelined by a concussion, Purdue's 7-3 center, Matt Haarms, came off the bench to score 26 points, including 10 in the two overtimes. The Boilermakers outscored the Gophers 14-9 in the last period, and it was Sasha Stefanovic's three-pointer — Purdue's 11th of the game — with 1:10 left that was the go-ahead basket.