The 2020 nonconference season would have been gone before it started if Big Ten basketball programs followed the path of their football counterparts.
Instead of opening with grueling Big Ten games, Richard Pitino and many of his coaching peers got their teams going in November and December safely, which was a victory in itself with daily COVID-19 testing.
"Enjoyed the fact that we've been able to play seven nonconference games in the middle of a pandemic," Pitino said after Sunday's 90-82 win against St. Louis. "Not sure I would have bet on that."
The Gophers (7-1) went undefeated in nonconference play this year, with their lone loss this season coming in an early season Big Ten game at Illinois (a 92-65 loss on Dec. 15). There were some challenges in those seven victories, including against Loyola Marymount (67-64 on Marcus Carr's last-second three-pointer), Boston College (85-80 in overtime) and St. Louis on Sunday.
"Proud of where we're at," Pitino added, "but still know we have a long way to go."
Here are four takeaways from nonconference play:
Free-throw frequency
There seems to be no stopping the Gophers from getting to the free-throw line this season. They're attacking the basket, drawing contact, and making it count at the line at an astonishing rate. Pitino's team currently ranks No. 1 nationally in free throws made per game (23.4) this year, which includes twice hitting 34 free throws in a game, third most in Division I this season. The Gophers were 34-for-41 in Sunday's win against St. Louis, including 27-for-33 in the second half — much of that Carr's doing on 14-for-18 shooting in the second half.