When preparing for an opponent, the Gophers men's basketball team often splits into two groups in practice. One group, coached by whichever assistant handled the scouting report, will mimic the upcoming challenger's offensive attack. The other has simple instructions: get a stop.
Sometimes, Richard Pitino will have that defensive squad huddle up on its own, and the coach will just sit back and listen.
Most of the time, it's sophomore guard Nate Mason's voice that he hears, going over strategies and talking assignments. Pitino hopes that trend will only grow.
"He needs to be that guy for us," Pitino said. "My goal is, I kind of want him to run the show on the court."
Mason, the Gophers' leading scorer with 13.7 points a game, is getting there. After scoring 19 points or more in four of the past six games and averaging six assists in that span, he is playing the best basketball of his young career. More and more, Mason is the one to chirp up in huddles, yell at teammates on the court and ensure that everyone knows the instructions in practice.
But ask Mason if he's starting to feel like it's "his" team, and he hesitates.
"I'm not shy of being the guy," he said. "But I really haven't earned that yet. … We haven't won any games that I can say I helped win. So until I can say that, I feel like it's not my team yet."
Mason has a point.