Even after a 10-1 start to his Gophers coaching tenure two years ago, Ben Johnson didn't expect to orchestrate a program turnaround overnight.
The Big Ten's youngest head coach had no experience and basically no returning players while trying to compete in one of college basketball's toughest conferences.
A ton of patience was necessary — until now.
Last season, the Gophers fell to their lowest point in years. After the program's first back-to-back seasons finishing last in the Big Ten, there's a sense of urgency for progress — from fans, from players and from Johnson himself.
The climate surrounding Gophers men's basketball changed. After finishing 4-16 in Big Ten play in Johnson's first season, the Gophers went 2-17 in conference play last season.
"You don't get that urgency unless you went through the bad," said Johnson, who finished 9-22 overall last season.
Bad on the court meant losing 14 of 16 games, including consecutive 30-point losses for the first time ever.
Bad in recruiting meant five-star, 7-foot senior Dennis Evans signing a letter of intent with the Gophers and then asking out to join Louisville.