Ben Johnson never really established a team identity in his first two seasons as the Gophers men's basketball coach, but one stat stood out heavily in his favor.
The Gophers were 19-1 when they led with five minutes left in the game, including 11-0 in Johnson's first season in 2021-22.
In Thursday's demoralizing 70-68 loss against Missouri, Johnson's team led all the way until 9.9 seconds remained. The Gophers impressively built a 20-point second-half lead, but the same new fast-paced style that got them there helped fuel the comeback of their stingy SEC opponent.
Johnson's Gophers (2-1) like playing fast, but they might be dealing with an identity crisis while trying to bounce back Saturday against South Carolina-Upstate. The Gophers want to play up-tempo but have to wonder if that can hold up against better competition.
"I think we can do it," sophomore Braeden Carrington said. "We definitely have shown we can do it in stretches. We just have to learn when we go from slow to fast to take care of the ball. That's really what killed us at the end of the day."
In close games where the margin of error is slim, a team's mistakes are amplified.
The Gophers appeared to back off Johnson's downhill attacking style late Thursday. They finished with 16 turnovers, but they also went scoreless from the field in the last six minutes. Can they score without playing fast for 40 minutes?
"As a staff we have to look at the film and see what I can do better to help these guys out," Johnson said. "What did we do to kind of let it snowball? Was it something we ran or didn't run?"