In the flurry of buckets, his production was nearly lost.
The Gophers pushed the score to 109-57 by the time the barrage was over, and senior center Mo Walker was on the lower tier of eight players who scored at least eight points in the victory over Division II Franklin Pierce.
He wasn't swarmed in the locker room. He didn't play a minute after the first half — with coach Richard Pitino choosing to exercise the bench instead with the biggest blowout in nearly a decade in play Thursday night. After the game, the starting center ranked fourth in both scoring and rebounding on the team's stat sheet.
None of that fully explains the 6-10 Canadian's worth: Through three games this season, Walker has been the Gophers' most efficient player in three major categories: scoring, rebounding and grabbing steals.
"He's such a veteran presence," fellow center Elliott Eliason said of the player he has platooned with the past two seasons. "He's got that low-post scoring, and I think he's improved his rebounding so much this year. I mean, we need him."
So far, the Gophers haven't witnessed what Walker could be capable of for a full game. The big man found foul trouble in the season-opening loss to Louisville, and he sat for long stretches in favor of reserve-heavy lineups in each of the past two games, both won by more than 20 points.
When Walker has been on the court, he's been nearly unstoppable. The fifth-year senior and sports management major is averaging 26.1 points, 9.8 rebounds and 4.9 steals per 40 minutes — all team highs.
"I definitely want to establish myself as one of the best post players in the league," Walker said. "I'm just trying to do whatever I can for this team."