The Gophers and Ohio State were tied 26-26 and had played 90 seconds of the second half. The 21 1/2 minutes that had been contested to that point were as dreadful to watch as anything the Big Ten can offer, including games that involve Northwestern.
Lawrence McKenzie had taken four shots in the first half and missed them all. For good measure, McKenzie also contributed four turnovers.
This made him only slightly below average among the shooters and the ballhandlers who were violating the sacred hardwood of Williams Arena.
The Gophers shot 30.4 percent with 11 turnovers in the first half. Yet, the visiting Buckeyes were so shabby in all areas -- particularly on the defensive board -- that the Gophers were able to hold a 24-23 lead.
Much later, Gophers coach Tubby Smith was talking about how well his team had played in its final Big Ten home game. This caused a reporter to say:
"It was awfully ugly in the first half. Weren't you upset?"
Smith shook his head and said: "No, we were leading. I thought we just needed to make some shots. We had played very good defense in the first half."
Coaches see stumbling and bumbling from two major college teams and say, "Very good defense." Neutral parties see what the Gophers and the Buckeyes had to offer in the first half and say, "I know how the NCAA Selection Committee can solve its Ohio State or Minnesota quandary. Don't take either of 'em."