A frustrated Ben Johnson stood outside the visitors locker room at Northwestern on Saturday night. The fourth loss in the past five regular-season games stung because it overshadowed how much the Gophers men’s basketball program has improved under his watch.
“I’m so frustrated because I know we’re trending in the right direction,” the third-year coach told the Star Tribune after the team’s most lopsided loss of the season, a 90-66 dud at sold-out Welsh-Ryan Arena.
At 43, Johnson is still the Big Ten’s youngest men’s basketball coach, and he faced major fan criticism after two last-place finishes to start his tenure. Johnson went from a potential hot seat to hearing his name mentioned as a possible conference coach of the year.
He took a Gophers team picked to finish last again to tied for ninth in the Big Ten.
“Total body of work, I thought we did a really good job this year,” Johnson said, adding that he’s far from satisfied.
Entering a Big Ten tournament second-round game against Michigan State on Thursday at Target Center, the Gophers (18-13, 9-11 Big Ten) are the No. 9 seed and tied for their best conference finish since 2018-19.
A nine-win improvement from last year is bittersweet for the Gophers because they were in position to accomplish much more. An NCAA tournament bubble spot and even a top-five Big Ten finish were within their grasp before they lost six of their last nine regular-season games.
Dawson Garcia and Elijah Hawkins had All-Big Ten-caliber seasons. Hawkins led the conference in assists and broke team records. Cam Christie proved worthy of all-league freshman honors.