This time, Richard Pitino didn't wait to see if his team would stir from its slumber.
At halftime of a one-point game against Western Carolina, the Gophers men's basketball coach marched his players down to the locker room and had some words. This team had started a trend of slugging through one half or another, and it looked like more of the same at the break on Friday.
"I yelled at them," Pitino said. "Very, very loudly."
The emphatic pep talk seemed to work, at least eventually.
In the second half, the Gophers turned up the pressure, clamped down on the control and pushed past the pesky Catamounts 84-64, overcoming another anemic showing on the boards.
After struggling to pull away from a Western Carolina team that arrived at Williams Arena as a 20-point underdog, the Gophers (6-2) held the Catamounts (3-6) to 38.5 shooting from the field and forced 14 turnovers in the second half, and then used a 9-3 run — capped by a three-point play by DeAndre Mathieu — with 10:33 left to build the elusive double-digit lead at 59-49.
"We weren't imposing our will, we weren't forcing turnovers, [in the first half]," Mathieu said. "So once we got into that it really showed us that when we're playing hard, it gets the game going."
Offensively, the Gophers played well, drilling four three-pointers in the final 12 minutes and shooting 57.4 percent from the floor overall. Five players finished in double digits, with Mathieu and Carlos Morris leading the way with 16 apiece.