MADISON, WIS. -- At some point in any slump, things to say run dry.
Everything sounds like monotony or anger. Reasoning becomes weary, explanations irrelevant.
And after the No. 12 Gophers' last-second, 45-44 loss to unranked Wisconsin brought the losing streak to four and left Minnesota's once-promising basketball season hanging by a thread, coach Tubby Smith seemed to have run out of ways to explain that this team is different than last year's. That this team has talent and fight and leadership. That they're just not showing it right now.
Because in the absence of those traits, things are looking pretty familiar.
And what better example of those deficits than senior leader Rodney Williams clanking a last-second free throw that would have tied the game?
"It is a different group, a different team," Smith said. "But it's taken on the same scenario, the M.O."
The Gophers (15-5, 3-4 in the Big Ten) nearly snuck out with a victory after hanging with the Badgers through an ugly day of shooting by both teams, even with a 20-point bounce-back performance from Andre Hollins. But given the chance to seize their first victory since Jan. 9, the Gophers responded instead with silly mistakes, poor decision-making and a failure to execute.
With two seconds on the clock and the scored tied at 43, Traevon Jackson threw up a long two-pointer that bounced on the rim and went in, giving the Badgers (14-6, 5-2) a two-point lead as a Kohl Center announced crowd of 17,249 exploded.