There are hints of life in the Gophers yet.
With the door to their once-promising season threatening to slam shut, the Gophers stuck their foot in the threshold Thursday night and kept the hope for a turnaround alive.
In front of an announced crowd of 14,625 at Williams Arena on Valentine's Day, they shook off a lethargic start to overcome No. 20 Wisconsin 58-53 -- shaking off a two-game losing streak in a gritty and much-needed overtime victory.
"The sky was falling around here," Gophers coach Tubby Smith said. "So sometimes, when the sky is falling and you're laying under the ceiling, you think it's going to cave in on you. So they [Wisconsin] wanted it, but we had to have it."
Climaxing an improbable finish to regulation, sophomore guard Joe Coleman (six points, seven rebounds) sank two free throws to send the game to overtime. Sophomore guard Andre Hollins (21 points, five rebounds, three assists, no turnovers) scored seven points in the extra session and the Gophers (18-7, 6-6 Big Ten) kept the Badgers (17-8, 8-4) from sweeping the season series.
But the drama didn't start there.
Wisconsin led by six at 49-43 with 5:08 left in regulation, but the Gophers pulled within 49-47 on a Rodney Williams dunk with 1:53 remaining. The Badgers flubbed their next two possessions, giving the Gophers a chance to respond, but Austin Hollins was called for a charge with 22.6 seconds left, handing the ball back to Wisconsin.
Implausibly, senior forward Mike Bruesewitz -- who drew the charge on Hollins -- then moved his feet while inbounding the ball, which gave the Gophers another possession and ultimately allowed Coleman to score the equalizers.