For confirmation of just how precarious sports outcomes can be – and the butterfly effect that ensues from one moment – go ahead and watch one more time, if you can stomach it, Darryl Morsell's game-winning three-pointer for Maryland against the Gophers with 1.9 seconds left Wednesday.
The deep shot, from a couple steps behind the three-point line, rattled on enough parts of the rim that if it was just an inch to the left or an inch longer, it probably would have bounced out.
The Gophers would have preserved a 73-71 win, and even though everything else about the Gophers' collapse in that game would have been true – the missed free throws, the bad execution – those things would have dissolved into a subplot or more likely a footnote as we instead assessed how a win over a top-10 team put Minnesota back into the NCAA tournament conversation.
But maybe it's just as well that we're having the harder conversations now about what went wrong in the final 20 minutes, what went wrong particularly in the final two minutes – and how it is all connected to the things that have gone wrong in the last year, the last three years and the last seven years under head coach Richard Pitino.
I don't want that to be confused with an idea that everything has gone wrong, since this program has made it to the NCAA tournament in two of the last three years and was in good shape to compete for a bid this year as recently as four games ago.
But here are some of the main contributing factors to the micro and macro problem:
LACK OF DEPTH
Here you find a combination of bad luck, natural college basketball attrition and insufficient player development.