The Gophers beat Penn State 81-63 at Williams Arena on Sunday in a game they had to win to have any chance to get a spot in the NCAA basketball tournament.
But if you ask me, I think Penn State coach Patrick Chambers was thinking more about his team's third encounter with the Gophers that will come Thursday in the first round of the Big Ten tournament. He might have thought that winning a meaningless game Sunday was less important while thinking that the odds are against a team winning three games against the same opponent in the same season.
This is something Chambers completely denied at the end of the game, but he seemed to coach in that fashion.
Despite their up-and-down season (15-16, 6-11 Big Ten), the Nittany Lions did beat Ohio State twice — once at Columbus — beat Nebraska at home and won road games at Indiana and Northwestern.
Even Gophers coach Richard Pitino talked about the difficulty of beating a team three times in a season, especially on a neutral court in a game his team has to win if it has any chance to get an NCAA tournament invitation.
"When I was at [Florida International] last year, we played Middle Tennessee and they got an automatic berth out of the Sun Belt, which is hard to do at that conference, and Middle was the cream-of-the-crop team," he recalled. "They beat us at their place, it was 18 or something, we were up 20 at our place, we lost at the buzzer. We played them in the semifinals, we were not losing. We were not losing the game. We were not losing, and they were a great team. We have to understand Penn State is going to have that same mentality. It's really, really hard to beat a team three teams. He's a great coach, they have some very good players, prideful kids. We understand that's going to be their role, we have to get [our players] ready to go."
Pitino said it was difficult for the Gophers to have seven days off between games, especially with their NCAA tournament future hanging in the balance.
"Obviously a good win for us, it was tough just having seven days off this time of year," he said. "The guys were so eager to get on the court with all these other games going on and everyone is talking, 'in, out.' The best thing you have to do is you have to play. That was difficult for us. I thought mentally, more than anything, our guys handled business because it was a long week. They were sick of seeing me and I was probably sick of seeing them, too.