Malik Smith and DeAndre Mathieu. Roommates. Masters of confidence. "Madden 25" experts extraordinaire. Two basketball players who were told they couldn't play major college ball out of high school.
And two of the most exciting players the Gophers have to offer.
In the last two months, the guards have gone from virtual unknowns to major contributors, helping boost the Gophers to a 10-2 start heading into Saturday's nonconference finale against Texas A&M Corpus Christi. The two made the difference in the Gophers' previous game, a 92-79 victory over Nebraska Omaha last Saturday, combining for 27 of their team's final 31 points. Both finished with the highest scoring totals of their careers here, with Mathieu scoring 27 points and Smith 19.
While the scoring totals were unusual, the method was not. All season long, the two have ignited teammates and fans with their lionhearted approach to the game. Coach Richard Pitino badly wanted Smith to follow him from Florida International, in large part because of the senior's confidence and ability to perform under pressure at a high level. The 5-foot-9 Mathieu, meanwhile, has showed an impressive aptitude for driving "through the trees" to the basket, as he has said, and finishing at the rim.
"Those two guys on this team, they're fearless when they go out there," Pitino said. "Those are the two guys — if you said who had off-the-charts confidence, that they believe they're unbelievable players, it's those two guys."
It's the same trait that keeps the two battling night after night at whatever video game they have latched onto at the moment, the same trait that allows Smith to demand the ball and shoot an NBA-length three-pointer in huge situations, honestly believing — as Pitino has said — that he is the best player on the court. The same trait that has Mathieu slashing through towering defenders that make him look like a high schooler among professionals.
And it's the same trait that brought them to Minnesota, when neither of them were ever supposed to be here.
Winding road
Mathieu started out as a walk-on at Morehead State in Kentucky, and when he didn't get a scholarship the first year, he left for Central Arizona College, from where Pitino plucked the tiny but lightning-fast guard. Now, the junior point guard, who had been told many times that he wouldn't play at the Division I level, repeatedly gushes to the media about just how happy he is to be with the Gophers.