When Richard Pitino looked to his bench last season, the Gophers just didn't have many options to give starting point guard Marcus Carr a breather.
So they basically didn't take him off the floor.
Carr led the Big Ten by playing all but two minutes of an entire 40-minute game on average in conference play. Things could be different this season after the Gophers added former four-star recruit Jamal Mashburn Jr., who will play backup point guard and be the U freshman expected to make the biggest impact.
"Doesn't look like a freshman out there at all," Pitino said about Mashburn in practice. "He's going to make me figure out ways to play him. And that's a good thing."
Pitino believes Mashburn, a Miami native, is similar to former Gophers point guard Nate Mason "in a lot of ways." Mason was an underrated recruit out of Florida who ended his Gophers career second in assists (512) and sixth in points (1,731) in school history.
"Just tough, physical and competitive," Pitino said of Mashburn. "Has a really good midrange game, defends."
In 2014-15, Pitino's second season, Mason was a tough and confident freshman who wasn't afraid to challenge the older guards in the program in practice. Mashburn is already in great shape, pushing upperclassmen such as Carr and Gabe Kalscheur, both juniors. Pitino called Mashburn a "fearless competitor" who never gets tired.
Mashburn's arrival at Minnesota, of course, comes with a built-in story line of two family reunions. One of the best college basketball teams from the 1990s featured Rick Pitino coaching Jamal Mashburn to a Final four at Kentucky. Now their sons are together with the Gophers.