After Thursday's gut-wrenching, double-overtime loss in front of an enthusiastic crowd at Purdue, Richard Pitino's Gophers could be emotionally drained heading into Sunday's home game against Northwestern.
At times like this, college basketball teams rely on their fans to provide a spark and help prevent a lingering letdown. It's the home-court advantage. But even with the Gophers coming off a second-round NCAA tournament appearance last season, attendance has been stagnant this season.
The biggest victory in Pitino's seven seasons in Minnesota — last month over then-No. 3 Ohio State — featured a student-led court-storming. But the announced attendance for that game was 9,854.
Overall attendance numbers at the Barn are down slightly, mirroring a national trend. The average home crowd for Gophers games has been 9,560, compared with 10,063 through seven home dates a year ago.
But after a slow start, the Gophers have been playing their best basketball of late. Pitino hopes the fans step up, too. He's urging them to "bring it" during the heart of Big Ten play.
"It's been challenging, but I want the Barn to be packed," Pitino said. "It's a fun environment to be in when it gets going."
The season following Pitino's first NCAA tournament appearance in 2017, the average home attendance in the first two months was 11,800, including announced sellouts of 14,625 against Miami and Harvard.
Division I college hoops in general has seen average attendance drop to record lows the past few years. It fell to 4,593 last season, the lowest since the NCAA first collected attendance data in 1971.