The most embarrassing moment this season for Gophers men's basketball coach Richard Pitino and his players came Wednesday, down 37 points at Michigan, their largest deficit in any game in four years.
"Honestly, we just weren't ready to play," sophomore Isaiah Ihnen said after the 82-57 loss in Ann Arbor. "We don't have any fans. No one really has an advantage, home court or on the road. The team that just plays with the most energy all the time ends up winning."
Whether lacking toughness or energy is the problem or not, the No. 16 Gophers travel to play Sunday at No. 5 Iowa, still missing what nine of 14 Big Ten teams already have on their résumé: a conference road win.
Road wins are always hard to come by in the Big Ten, even during the pandemic with thousands of empty seats in every arena. The Big Ten's home winning percentage is 84% (84-16), similar to what it was at this time last season (86.5%) and second among power conferences this season behind the SEC (85%).
The Big Ten's top title contenders — Michigan, Illinois and Iowa (10-2, 4-1) — have all won twice away from home. Wisconsin, Rutgers, Michigan State and Northwestern all won a league road game. Even Purdue and Maryland have a road win.
The Gophers (10-3, 3-3) are not only winless on the road, they're also the only Big Ten team that has two league road losses by over 20 points.
"I've got to do a better job of having them prepared," Pitino said. "Instead of getting in there and attacking their physicality, we were playing on our heels."
All three Gophers losses came in blowout fashion on the road — at Illinois (by 27 points), Wisconsin (12) and Michigan (25).