A video of Tubby Smith shaking his booty went viral Friday morning. That's a sentence one doesn't type very often.
A Gophers staff member captured the wild scene in the locker room after Smith's team survived a bricklaying contest against Wisconsin, 58-53 in overtime, in what felt like one of those pivotal moments in a season. Afterward, Smith gathered his team, Ke$ha came over the speakers and Tubby lost himself in the moment like a guy in the middle of a dance club, minus the lower lip bite.
He pumped his fist in the air and shimmied side to side. At one point, senior Trevor Mbakwe grabbed Smith, threw him over his shoulder in a fireman's carry and bobbed up and down. Their celebration looked like a basketball bachelor party, an opportunity for the Gophers to relax, cut loose and just enjoy themselves.
It also proved again that winning serves as a powerful antidote to frustration and general malaise that fester in bad times.
We'll soon find out whether what happened inside the Barn on Thursday sparks a revival that halts their free fall, or if it's just a one-game relief against a cockeyed-shooting Wisconsin team that committed a brain-cramp turnover in the final 30 seconds of regulation.
The most encouraging development for the Gophers, though, was the re-emergence of sophomore point guard Andre Hollins as their leader, a guy who will take and make clutch shots and not turn the ball over.
Hollins finished with a game-high 21 points, five rebounds and three assists. He also played 43 minutes without committing a turnover.
Hollins remains the key to this team's ability to fulfill its promise because the Gophers follow his lead. He is their most important player and 'X' factor, not Mbakwe or Rodney Williams or Austin Hollins.