One game before, Gophers guard DeAndre Mathieu had been sitting on the bench, unwittingly watching a clinic.
Louisville's Chris Jones and Terry Rozier — a pair of undersized, speedy guards that drove the Cardinals' intensity — were running the Gophers out of the game with their defensive pressure.
Later, both Gophers coach Richard Pitino and his dad, Louisville coach Rick Pitino, pulled aside Mathieu, who was on the bench for much of the first half because of foul trouble.
That could be him, they told him. He had their ability.
"You need to be a 5-foot-9 gnat," the younger Pitino said. The way to get noticed was through steals. Deflections. Pressure.
Tuesday, against a team expected to be the Gophers' fourth-best nonconference opponent, it appeared the senior point guard had taken that message to heart. Mathieu, in his best all-around game since arriving at Minnesota last year, set the tone early in a notable 76-54 bounce-back win over Western Kentucky.
Behind Mathieu's stat-stuffing performance — the senior finished with 11 points, six assists, five rebounds and five steals with just one turnover — the Gophers forced 25 turnovers by the Hilltoppers while committing just 11 themselves, including only three in the first half.
"This is the way we want to play," a satisfied Pitino said afterward. "That was probably our best defensive performance since I've been here."