As the floor shook inside Maturi Pavilion on Saturday night, the Gophers had No. 1 Nebraska rattled.
The Cornhuskers were on match point and couldn't get a ball down against a furious Gophers defense. Melani Shaffmaster and Arica Davis steadied for a block. Julia Hanson dove to keep a ball alive. Zeynep Palabiyik controlled a soaring attack attempt from Nebraska's Harper Murray. Finally, Taylor Landfair crushed a spike — point U. The Gophers were one point away from tying the fourth set.
That they couldn't get that next point, with Shaffmaster and Landfair just missing on an attack that was turned away by Nebraska's defense, is what keeps Keegan Cook searching.
"We're not close to what we think is possible," the Gophers coach said as he drove home from practice Tuesday night. "That is one thing everyone in this program shares in common, just this belief in the potential of this group. Until we reach it."
They still have time. Minnesota opens the NCAA tournament on Friday as unseeded underdogs against Utah State in Omaha. The Aggies were the regular-season champs in the Mountain West, a team with a fantastic service approach and seven seniors on the roster. Creighton, the host school, looms as a potential second-round opponent.
That the Gophers are unseeded is a reminder that for a large swath of the season they failed to play to their ability. That they won 10 of their last 14 matches and pushed top-seeded Nebraska to the limit is a reminder they can play with anyone.
Minnesota is nearly a year removed from Cook taking over for Hugh McCutcheon, and the team has finally found a rotation that feels settled and players have a solid understanding of what is expected of them.
What does it mean that it took this long to figure out?