Ben Johnson's return to the Gophers immediately addresses one problem while he prepares to tackle another.
Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle, before Monday, ran a department without a single person of color in a top decisionmaking role, unacceptable in these times and remarkable for a Power Five conference school. Johnson, a Black man, coming home allows Coyle to take that humongous "0" off the U's scoreboard.
Coyle announced his search would include "a very diverse pool" of candidates, and his deeds matched his words. Quality candidates come from all sorts of backgrounds, and Johnson gets to prove himself for a school he played for from 2003 to '05 and then was an assistant coach for from 2013 to '18 under Richard Pitino, whom he's replacing.
Johnson's challenge, however, is no different from that of his predecessors, whether they were Clem Haskins or Tubby Smith, Pitino or Dan Monson — to make Gophers basketball relevant again.
The fact that Coyle is reaching for a young assistant coach with local ties and not an impact name is a reflection of the state of Gophers men's hoops. Minnesota is not a destination program that is going to be flooded with applicants with extensive résumés. The Gophers went to the NCAA tournament twice in eight seasons under Pitino, a drop from three trips in six seasons under Smith.
The other possibility is worse: that the athletic department is cash-strapped after dealing with the economic fallout brought on by the pandemic and went for a hire — a promising one with local connections, no doubt — who wouldn't demand a big-timer's salary.
It's a lot to ask of a young, new head coach: Cut your teeth in a premier conference like the Big Ten.
Coyle is looking locally for a revival. Coyle worked for the Gophers as an administrator from 2001 to '05 before gaining experience at three other universities and then returning as U AD in 2016. Since then he has hired Bob Motzko, a former Gophers assistant, to lead the men's hockey program. He has hired Lindsay Whalen, a former Gophers star, to lead women's basketball. Coyle apparently sees value in hiring coaches with ties to the school. Johnson, 40, now returns to campus, and he won't be too expensive to land.