No matter what do-gooders attempt to tell you, the Minnesota Gophers were decisive winners of the Big Ten men's basketball title in 1997. Clem Haskins' lads went 16-2 to finish four victories clear of the competition.
One year later, the Big Ten joined the circus of conference tournaments. I'm not sure if that's the reason we no longer talk about winning regular-season titles around here, or if it's the fact the Gophers have not been a factor in the 15 seasons since that wonderful ride through the Big Ten and to the Final Four.
Clem was 14-18 and finished eighth and sixth in his final two seasons, before being invited by the administration to return to his farm in Campbellsville, Ky.
Dan Monson was on the sideline for seven Big Ten seasons. Vincent Grier led the Gophers to a 10-6 conference record and a tie for fourth in 2005.
The rest of the Monson stay here did not go well. He was 44-68 overall in conference play, and was fired after seven November games in 2006. Jim Molinari was stuck with guiding that overmatched bunch to a 3-13 conference record for 2007.
Tubby Smith has been through five Big Ten seasons, with a record of 38-52. His teams have finished sixth, tied for seventh, sixth, ninth and tied for ninth.
So, yeah, when you have gone through 15 winters with a tie for fourth as the zenith, it's probably not the conference tournament but the condition of the program that has caused the lack of conversation about the race for the Big Ten titles.
Whatever the sad history, first for the end of Clem, then for Monson and Molinari, and now for Tubby, it's time for the Williams Arena loyalists to change the target: