In the aftermath of the worst loss of the season, the Gophers locker room echoed.
Many individual cubbies sat undisturbed, and the crowded showers' pattering drowned out anything else. Charles Buggs' usual raucous singing was absent; the few players that remained wore the last-second miss on their faces. Mo Walker, having fallen short on the Gophers' final opportunity, was inconsolable, quietly weeping with his face buried in his jersey — emerging only to shower, then quickly returning to the same position when he was done.
Andre Hollins' perpetually uplifting smile was perhaps missed as much in that moment as his play had been on the court, with the Gophers' second consecutive loss, a 55-54 heartbreaker Saturday to a scrappy Northwestern team, hitting like a freight train.
"Certainly it's good when they care," coach Richard Pitino said. "We've got guys crying in the locker room … so they care about winning. That's the first step towards building a winning program."
But the Gophers showed they have a long way to go on Saturday, when a slow start kept them neck-and-neck with the Wildcats, and poor execution down the stretch ultimately dooming them before an announced 12,744 at Williams Arena.
Tre Demps' three-pointer gave the Wildcats a 55-52 lead with 54 seconds to go. DeAndre Mathieu's layup pulled the Gophers (15-7, 4-5 Big Ten) within one, and a Demps miss set up their final opportunity with 11 seconds left. Mathieu came up short and Walker missed the follow before the horn sounded.
The result ruined another big stretch by Walker (14 points, four rebounds) in the first half, and a slew of momentous plays from Austin Hollins (13 points, six rebounds) in the second.
Northwestern (12-11, 5-5) — which fed Drew Crawford for a 17-point performance — took down the Gophers one game after stunning No. 14 Wisconsin in Madison.