Marlene Stollings' debut season as Gophers women's basketball coach actually feels as if it should be categorized as three separate seasons.
The first one featured Rachel Banham, one of the best players in women's college basketball. That team looked formidable.
The second one captured the team's response to Banham's season-ending knee injury, an inspired stretch of performances buoyed by a "Buckets for Banham" campaign. That team showed grit.
The third one felt like air rushing out of a balloon, a string of flat performances that brought the feel-good narrative to a screeching halt. That team looked defeated.
Not often does a team overachieve and underachieve in a span of a few weeks, but the Gophers found a way to touch both extremes. Once seemingly a lock for the NCAA tournament, now firmly on the bubble.
The one constant has been Stollings' message — tournament or bust.
She still believes that.
"We never stopped talking about going to the NCAA tournament, even when [Banham] went down," Stollings said Sunday after an 86-79 victory against Michigan State. "It's been a goal since my arrival, and we're going to keep it a goal. We're full speed ahead to get there. Nonnegotiable."