With 16 seconds on the clock Sunday, Drew Crawford went in for a layup, hoping to give Northwestern a boost they were struggling to find.
But with the Gophers closing in the paint, the Wildcats' leading scorer clanked the shot. It was Crawford's 15th attempt of the night, and his 14th miss.
Whether Minnesota can make moments like that a trend could be the difference between an NCAA tournament berth and settling for the NIT.
To call this year's Gophers defense rough around the edges would be kind. Minnesota has struggled throughout the conference schedule to defend perimeter shots, to block out on the defensive end, and with fouling.
But after Sunday's game at Northwestern — an ugly game in which the Gophers had 17 turnovers but rode their defense to a victory — a new pattern appears to be emerging.
On the strength of solid performances in its past two wins — over Indiana and at Northwestern — Minnesota has pulled itself out of the Big Ten defensive basement. After spending most of the league schedule at No. 12 in defensive efficiency, according to kenpom.com, the Gophers have risen to No. 10 in the rankings, which essentially measure points allowed per possession.
"We've played much better defense," Gophers coach Richard Pitino said. "The numbers may not indicate it as much, but … [on Sunday] that was the most fundamentally sound we've been all year."
Part of the change has come in simply making smarter decisions on defense, and staying out of foul trouble.