Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball

Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball
Minnesota Golden Gophers
2011–12 Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team
Minnesota Golden Gophers athletic logo

University University of Minnesota
Conference Big Ten
Location Minneapolis, MN
Head coach Tubby Smith (4th year)
Arena Williams Arena
(Capacity: 14,625)
Nickname Golden Gophers
Student section The Barnyard
Colors Maroon and Gold

             

Uniforms
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Home jersey
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Team colours
Home
Kit body thingoldsides.png
Away jersey
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Team colours
Away
Pre-tournament era champions
1902, 1903, 1919
NCAA Tournament Final Four
1997*
NCAA Tournament Elite Eight
1990, 1997*
NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen
1982, 1989, 1990, 1997*
NCAA Tournament appearances
1972, 1982, 1989, 1990, 1994*, 1995*, 1997*, 1999*, 2005, 2009, 2010
Conference regular season champions
1906, 1907, 1911, 1917, 1919, 1937, 1972, 1982, 1997*
* (Asterisked seasons forfeited due to sanctions)

The Minnesota Golden Gophers men's basketball team represents the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, Minnesota. The Golden Gophers have played in the Big Ten since the conference began sponsoring basketball in 1905. The team plays its home games in Williams Arena and is currently coached by Tubby Smith.

The Gophers had great success in the early years of basketball, but have been largely overshadowed by other programs since the end of World War I. In total, the Gophers have won nine Big Ten championships, but only four since 1919. College basketball research organizations have retroactively awarded Minnesota national championships in 1902, 1903, and 1919.

The team has also had several instances of NCAA sanctions on the program that have affected performance and recruiting. In the 1970s, the Gophers were in a violent brawl with the Ohio State Buckeyes and were barred from post-season appearances for two seasons after an incident involving the illegal resale of tickets. Still more severe was the mid-1990s academic scandal under then-coach Clem Haskins that resulted in the forfeiture of a Final Four appearance.[1]

Contents

Coaches

Initially, the Gophers team formed without any organized coach. L. J. Cooke took over the team in 1897. Cooke was put on the University payroll on a part-time basis in early 1897 and full-time by the fall; this made him one of the earliest professional coaches.[2]

Cooke remained the coach of the Gophers for 28 seasons, and his .649 winning percentage is the second highest in school history.[3] Dave McMillan, who coached the team from 1927 to 1942 and 1945 to 1948, had the second longest tenure as coach at 18 seasons. John Wooden almost succeeded McMillan as Gophers head coach; Wooden claims that a dispute over retaining McMillan as an assistant coach and a delayed phone call led him to accept the job at UCLA instead.[4]

The Gophers have had several NBA coaches grace the sidelines. John Kundla took over as Gophers head coach after the Minneapolis Lakers departed for Los Angeles. Bill Fitch and Bill Musselman both coached the team for a couple seasons before departing for the NBA and ABA respectively, where each had success and coached for many years.[5]

The program has had a fair degree of stability with their coaching staff. Tubby Smith became the 16th head coach in Gopher basketball history when hired in 2007; this total includes interim coaches Jim Molinari and Jimmy Williams. Five coaches led the team for more than 10 seasons: Cooke, McMillan, O. B. Cowles, Jim Dutcher, and Clem Haskins.[3]

Players

The Golden Gophers have had many successful players come through the program throughout its history. In the early years of basketball, when the Gophers had success, they recruited some of the best players in the country. George Tuck was a dominant center, and the first All-America for the Gophers in 1905.[6] Frank Lawler was another early star: he led the Big Ten in scoring in 1911 and was also named to the All-America team, and helped the Gophers to a contested conference title.[7]

Retired basketball jerseys
Number Player Year
14 Lou Hudson 1966
32 Trent Tucker 2009
41 Whitey Skoog 2009
43 Mychal Thompson 1978
44 Kevin McHale 1980
52 Jim Brewer 1973

In 1950, Lawler was named the greatest player in Gopher basketball history, but the subsequent decades of Gopher basketball have largely forgotten his legacy.[8] Hall of Fame coach John Kundla was also a Gophers star and helped lead the team to its 1937 Big Ten Championship.

With the decline of the stature of the Gophers program, fewer elite players have joined the team. The diminished reputation has not, however, prevented some superior athletes from coming to the Minneapolis campus. Lou Hudson played thirteen years in the NBA and had his number retired. Baseball Hall of Famer Dave Winfield played for the Gophers in the early 1970s, and he played at the same time as star post player Jim Brewer. Mychal Thompson was a Gophers star and was the first overall pick in the 1979 NBA Draft. Among Thompson's teammates were former Minnesota Timberwolves and Detroit Pistons head coach and current Washington Wizards head coach Flip Saunders and basketball hall of fame forward Kevin McHale. Trent Tucker led the 1982 squad to the Big Ten Championship. Voshon Lenard was a key player for the Gophers in the early 1990s and went on to play more than a decade in the NBA. Willie Burton once scored 53 points in an NBA game with the Philadelphia 76ers.[9] Other former Gophers with long NBA careers include Randy Breuer, Mark Olberding, and Ray Williams. Five players from the 1997 Final Four team played in the NBA: Bobby Jackson, Sam Jacobson, Quincy Lewis, John Thomas, and Trevor Winter. Currently several former Gophers play in the NBA, including Joel Przybilla and Kris Humphries. Jamal Abu-Shamala, a Jordanian-American, plays internationally for the Jordan national basketball team.[10]

Current roster

Ralph Sampson III's father, Ralph Lee Sampson, was a three-time Naismith Award winner at the University of Virginia.[11] This roster is current for the 2011–12 men's basketball season.[12]

No. Position Year Player
00 United States G Jr Julian Welch
1 United States G Fr Andre Hollins
10 Latvia F Fr Oto Osenieks
11 United States G Fr Joe Coleman
13 United States G So Maverick Ahanmisi
15 Canada C So Maurice Walker
20 United States G So Austin Hollins
22 United States F So Chris Halvorsen
23 United States G So Chip Armelin
30 United States F Jr Andre Ingram
32 United States F Sr Trevor Mbakwe
33 United States F Jr Rodney Williams
34 United States G Fr Kendal Shell
50 United States C Sr Ralph Sampson III
55 United States C Fr Elliott Eliason


History

Program establishment (1895–1927)

L. J. Cooke was the Gophers coach from 1897–1924.

The precise founding of the Gophers men's basketball program at the University of Minnesota is somewhat nebulous. Unlike many other universities with later foundations, the team did not form as a conscious act of the campus administration. The University's student newspaper at the time, the Ariel, reported on basketball throughout 1895 as the sport was introduced to the campus from a rival school, Minnesota A&M in St. Paul, later incorporated into the larger University of Minnesota Twin Cities.[13] In 1896, a team from the school began to participate in a league with the Agriculture school, YMCA teams, and other local associations. The establishment of the Armory on-campus gave the team a new place to play. In February 1897, L. J. Cooke, a director of the Minneapolis YMCA, was hired on a part-time basis to coach the basketball program, and became the full-time coach and director of physical education by the fall of that year.[14] Cooke was one of the first full-time professional coaches in all of college basketball and would remain at the program for 28 seasons.

Cooke began to improve the team significantly and was responsible for shifts in the Gophers' scheduling that foreshadowed other changes to come. The team never played a YMCA team after the 1903–04 season, and beginning in 1900, began to schedule large neighboring universities that would join Minnesota in Big Ten competition.[14] This shift to playing similar competition helped the Gophers to become one of the premier programs in the nation. From the 1899–00 to 1903–04 seasons, the Gophers had a 59–6 record. The 1901–02 squad has been retroactively named the national champions by both the Helms and Premo Polls; the Premo Poll also names the 1902–03 Gophers as national champs. When the Big Ten established basketball in 1905, the Gophers won the first two conference titles.[15]

After 1907, Cooke's dominance of the national basketball scene was greatly reduced. He led the team to two more conference titles (1916–17, 1918–19), and one consensus retroactive national championship for the 1918–19 season, but the team was never the consistent winner that it was in the first decade under Cooke. He retired after the 1923–1924 season. His successor, Harold Taylor, was Cooke's assistant coach in his final season and had previously a successful high school coach; however, he had little success with the Gophers and was fired after never finishing higher than sixth in the conference in three forgettable seasons.[16]

Dave McMillan and beyond (1927–1959)

Following the firing of Harold Taylor as coach, the program underwent a national search for a successor. Many of the candidates for the job were high profile coaches of other conference foes.[17] The team opted, however, to hire Dave McMillan, who had been coaching the University of Idaho for the previous seven seasons and had previously played for the Original Celtics during the 1910s.[18] McMillan would dominate the program for the next thirty years, coaching the team from 1927 to 1942 and again from 1945 to 1948.

McMillan's teams in 1928 began to play in the University of Minnesota Field House, a new on-campus arena. Basketball had been off-campus for several seasons when the team moved downtown. McMillan's teams had middling success. His 1930–31 and 1931–32 teams competed near the top of the Big Ten, but his teams dropped off again until 1936. John Kundla joined the team for the 1936–1937 season and helped the team to the Big Ten Championship, which was ended up being its last until 1972. McMillan's squad also competed in a tournament in 1936 to represent the United States in the 1936 Summer Olympics in Berlin; the team advanced several rounds before being ousted by DePaul.[19] Many Gophers players in this era were recruited from Minneapolis public high schools, and in some seasons this even constituted a majority of the roster.[20] McMillan resigned in 1942, but returned in 1945 after three poor seasons for the Gophers in the interim. When he resigned for the second time in 1948, he was replaced by O. B. Cowles.

Cowles was known for playing slower tempo basketball like was most common in the 1920s and 1930s and was known as a defensive-minded coach, especially early in his career.[21] His squads were led by two-time All-American Jim McIntyre and three-time NBA Champion Whitey Skoog for the early years of his career and Big Ten MVP Chuck Mencel for the middle ones. Another notable Gophers star from the era was Pro Football Hall of Fame coach Bud Grant.[22] Cowles squads were consistent winners, and he had a .612 winning percentage at the school. The Gophers were unable to win a Big Ten title, however, despite a solid nucleus in Cowles' early seasons. The team finished fourth or better in the conference seven times in Cowles' eleven seasons as Gophers head coach.

Kundla and Fitch (1959–1971)

The Golden Gophers have played home games in Williams Arena since 1928.

In 1959, John Kundla stayed behind in Minneapolis as the Lakers prepared to leave town and succeeded O. B. Cowles as head coach of the Golden Gophers. Kundla remained head coach until 1968. In 1963, he broke the color barrier in the Minnesota program and recruited three African-American players to come to the school. One of these first three players was Lou Hudson, who played in the NBA and is one of only four Gophers to have his number retired by the school.[23] The other two players recruited by Kundla, Archie Clark and Don Yates, also were both drafted by NBA teams. That trio helped the Gophers to a third place Big Ten finish in 1963–64 and a second place finish in 1964–65, but those were the high points for Kundla's collegiate career. Kundla's personal assessment of his Gophers career was that his personal weaknesses in recruiting were marring the team by the end of his tenure.[24]

Kundla was succeeded by Bowling Green head coach Bill Fitch. Fitch remained with the Gophers for two seasons before being hired by the Cleveland Cavaliers as their first head coach in 1970 to make the leap to the NBA, where he later won an NBA title as coach of the Boston Celtics.[25] Fitch did recruit Jim Brewer before he left, laying the first seed for the 1972 Big Ten title.[25] George Hanson, a longtime assistant coach at the school, was hired as his replacement, but resigned after only one season.[26]

Musselman and NCAA sanctions (1971-1975)

The Gophers under Athletics Director Marsh Ryman hired Cal Luther away from Murray State to coach the team in 1971, but he changed his mind and turned the team down after accepting the position.[27] Instead, Bill Musselman took over the program. Musselman was a defensive minded coach and designed his team around Brewer, recruiting several junior college players and University of Minnesota baseball star Dave Winfield to support him.[28] The starters on the 1971–72 squad became known as the "Iron Five." Musselman's strategy succeeded, and the team took the Big Ten title, the first since 1937. This was achieved despite an ugly brawl against Ohio State on January 25, 1972, in which several Gophers players attacked Ohio State center Luke Witte after a game of physical play and an especially hard foul against Gophers point guard Bob Nix. The brawl was publicized in Sports Illustrated, and some[which?] Ohio State players alleged that the Gophers players were going after white Buckeyes.[29]

This was not to be the only scandal of Musselman's tenure as coach. In 1973, former player Greg Olson accused Musselman of having attempted to strike him in a practice.[30] It was also revealed that Olson had sold complimentary season tickets to a booster named Harvey Mackay, which prompted NCAA investigations.[30] Musselman's coaching style also brought about significant transfers away from the Minnesota program to other schools.[30][31] In 1975, Musselman resigned and was named the head coach of the San Diego Sails of the ABA. After his resignation, Musselman admitted to giving money to players for rent and transportation.[31] These charges, coupled with the earlier ticket selling scandal and other transgressions regarding payments and aid revolving around Harvey Mackay, resulted in a list from the NCAA of more than 100 rule violations in Musselman's four seasons at the school.[31] The extent of the consequences would not be known until early in Jim Dutcher's eleven season tenure as Gophers head coach.

Success, and scandal, under Haskins (1986–1999)

The court of Williams Arena

Clem Haskins was hired as the Gopher basketball coach in 1986, expected to clean up and rebuild the Gopher program which had been torn apart by the Madison sexual assault allegations (of which the players were later acquitted) during the final year of coach Jim Dutcher.[32] Though wins did not come easily in the first couple years of Haskins regime, by the 1988–89 season he had the Gophers in the NCAA tournament as a #11 seed, and directed a Cinderella run into the Sweet 16. In the 1989–90 season Haskins led the Gophers to the Elite Eight, and the team came within a basket of reaching their first ever Final Four. Though Haskins led the Gophers to post-season success in his first three seasons, the 1990 Elite Eight appearance would be the last time under Haskins the Gophers would "officially" appear in the NCAA tournament.[33]

On March 10, 1999, the day before the #7 seed Gophers were to open the NCAA tournament against #10 Gonzaga, the St. Paul Pioneer Press ran a story detailing allegations of massive academic fraud in the men's basketball program.[34] Former basketball office manager Jan Gangelhoff had gone to the newspaper claiming she had written over 400 papers for at least 20 Gopher men's basketball players over a period of several years, ending in 1998. When the Gophers played Gonzaga on March 11, the University suspended players Antoine Broxie, Kevin Clark, Jason Stanford, and Miles Tarver since they allegedly had papers written for them by Ganglehoff in previous seasons.[35] With their roster depleted, the Gophers lost to Gonzaga, the season came to an end, and an internal investigation at the University began.

By June 1999 and in the midst of their investigation, the university had negotiated a buyout of the remainder of Haskins contract, worth $1.5 million dollars over three years.[36] In the summer of 2000, Haskins came forward and admitted that he had paid Gangelhoff $3,000 for her services; this revelation came to light after Haskins turned his financial records over to the NCAA.[37] In addition, more details were emerging in which Haskins was also accused of mail fraud in an incident regarding a recruit's transcript, giving players cash, dismissing sexual harassment concerns against his players, as well as his staff trying to persuade professors to give his players inflated grades they had not earned.[38][39][40]

Stripped banners and records[40]
Season Banner/Record
1993–94 NCAA Tournament 2nd round
1994–95 NCAA Tournament 1st round
1995–96 NIT 2nd round
1996–97 NCAA Final Four
1996–97 Big Ten MVP Bobby Jackson
1996–97 Big Ten Defensive POY: Bobby Jackson
1997–98 NIT Champions
1998–99 NCAA Tournament 1st round

After the details of Haskins' ever-growing involvement became more clear, the University initiated legal action to recover the buyout money.[41][42] A judge ultimately ruled that Haskins must return just over half of the original $1.5 million buyout.[43]

During this time an NCAA investigation was also underway. Ultimately, it emerged that massive fraud had occurred under Haskins' watch. The NCAA stripped the Gophers of all postseason awards, titles, personal records, and statistics dating back to the 1993–94 season citing a "lack of institutional control." Haskins was also slapped with a seven-year "show cause" order, which effectively banned him from coaching at any level in the NCAA until 2007. Besides lying about the $3,000 payment, he had also told several of his players to lie to the NCAA.[44] Later, the Big Ten forced the Gophers to vacate their 1997 conference title, as well as all regular season games dating to 1993–94. As a result, Minnesota's official record from 1993–94 to 1998–99 is 0–0.

In addition, the basketball program was hit with massive sanctions, including a loss of five scholarships over the following three seasons, recruiting limitations, and department-wide probation lasting four years.[45] There was no post-season ban instituted by the NCAA, but the Gophers withdrew from postseason consideration for the 1999–2000 season.

In addition to Haskins, Athletic Director Mark Dienhart, Vice President for Athletics, Student Development McKinley Boston, Associate Athletics Director Jeff Schemmel and academic counselor Alonzo Newby also resigned.[46] The University also agreed to return 90% (approximately $350,000) of the profits earned by the basketball program during their appearances in the NCAA tournament, including the 1997 Final Four run.[41]

Recovery and revival (1999–present)

Current Gophers coach Tubby Smith

Following Haskins' departure, the University hired Gonzaga's Dan Monson to be their next head coach, who coincidentally had just beaten the Gophers in the NCAA Tournament the previous March.[47] Monson was the coach for part of eight seasons, but made the NCAA Tournament only one time, that being in 2004-05.[48] Monson almost left the Minnesota program for the University of Washington following the 2001–02 season, but was thought of highly by the athletics department under Tom Moe and was persuaded to stay despite limited success.[49] These trends did not reverse after he remained at the program. During his final full season the Gophers were 5–11 in Big Ten play, and after a 2–5 start to open the 2006–07 season, Monson and Athletics Director Joel Maturi announced Monson's resignation on November 30, 2006.[50] Despite Monson's inability to field a consistent winner, he was lauded by University officials for bringing integrity and cleanliness back to the program.[51] Assistant coach Jim Molinari was named head coach on an interim basis and, after a 3–13 Big Ten record to finish the season, was not retained as head coach. Maturi began an extensive search for a new permanent head coach at season's end.

On March 23, 2007, Maturi made a move that surprised many when he hired Tubby Smith after he resigned from the University of Kentucky to be the next head Gopher basketball coach.[52] Smith's name recognition and winning reputation has given the program a new optimism, something it badly needed to counter its dwindling fan interest.[53]

Smith's coaching has had an immediate impact on the previously unsuccessful Gophers squad. The team went from 8–22 in 2006–07 to 20–13 in 2007–08. Smith also lead the Golden Gophers to the Big Ten Tournament semi-finals after defeating 2nd seeded Indiana. Coach Smith also harvested a top 25 recruiting class, the best in years for the program.[54][55] Smith returned Minnesota to the NCAA tournament for the first time since 2005 in the 2008-09 season. Smith's team struggled throughout the 2009-10 season with off court issues, but advanced to the championship game in the Big Ten Tournament for the first time in school history (losing to regular season co-champion Ohio State) and made the NCAA tournament for the second consecutive season.[56]

Awards

Big Ten MVP[57]

Big Ten Coach of the Year[57]

Henry Iba Award (National Coach of the Year)

  • Clem Haskins – 1997

Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year[57]

  • Bobby Jackson – 1997 (later revoked due the academic fraud scandal)
  • Travarus Bennett – 2002

Big Ten Freshman of the Year[57]

Consensus All-Americans[57]

  • Jim McIntyre – 1948
  • Dick Garmaker – 1955
  • Mychal Thompson – 1978

Academic All-American[59]

Post-season

The Gophers enjoyed fairly regular post season appearances under former coach Clem Haskins, making the post season in 10 of his 13 seasons as coach (6 NCAA tournament, 4 NIT), including all of his last 8 seasons. The team advanced to one Final 4, one Elite 8, one Sweet 16, one second round appearance, and suffered two first round losses. However after the academic fraud scandal in 1999, the last 6 years of post season records were wiped out. So officially, the Gophers made 2 NCAA Tournament and 2 NIT appearances in the 13 years Haskins was coach. They advanced to the Elite 8 in 1990, the Sweet 16 in 1989, and were NIT champions in 1993.

The Gophers saw some moderate success in the early 1980s, appearing in the 1980, 1981, and 1983 NITs and the 1982 NCAA Tournament, where they advanced to the Sweet 16.[60]

Multiple problems plagued the Gophers during the 1976–1977 season, Jim Dutcher's 2nd as head coach. Heading into the season the team knew they would not be eligible for the post season because of sanctions from the Bill Musselman era. Even so, this turned out to be one of the best teams in Gopher history, with the team finishing at 24–3. But if not being post-season eligible was not punishment enough, it was later found out that Mychal Thompson had sold two complimentary tickets to Gopher home games.[61] When it was discovered, the profits were donated to University of Minnesota scholarship funds.[61] The school and several prominent supporters, including Senator Wendell Anderson attempted to back Thompson and the team.[62] Nevertheless, when the NCAA discovered Thompson's act, Minnesota's record for the season was forfeited and the accomplishments of that season are considered unofficial and not included in NCAA records.[62]

Facilities

University of Minnesota Armory, home of the Gophers from 1896–1925, as it looks today.

When the Gophers first organized, they played games in the on campus YMCA. In 1896, the team moved into the campus Armory, a large building with gymnasium space for the team to use, even if basketball was not its primary purpose.[14] They remained in the Armory for almost thirty years. Halfway through the 1924–25 season, coach Harold Taylor moved the team from the University Armory to the Kenwood Armory in downtown Minneapolis.[17] This significantly increased the attendance; capacity at the University Armory was 2,000, and it was 6,500 at Kenwood. The team only played at Kenwood for a few seasons, however, as the University of Minnesota Field House — later known as Williams Arena — opened partway through the 1927–1928 season. The team moved in on January 31, 1928.[17]

The Field House increased attendance capacity further, to 9,500. It was named after Henry L. Williams, the former Minnesota Golden Gophers football coach in 1950, and was named after him when it was remodeled and expanded in 1950, bringing the arena to a capacity of 18,025, which was the largest in the country for twenty years and significantly larger than the capacity of Williams Arena today.[63] Gophers fans refer to Williams Arena as the Barn. Consequently, the student section is known as The Barnyard. Williams Arena was remodeled in 1993 again, to create a new facility for the women's team to use.[64] The team continues to play there to this day, making it one of the longest used arenas of any college basketball team and the oldest arena in the Big 10.[65] Williams Arena is also one of the few remaining arenas with a raised court, in which players have to go up stairs to reach the playing surface.[66]

Rivals

A map of all Division I college basketball teams in the United States

In the early years of the program, the Gophers had several rivalries that have not extended into the modern era. Among them was a rivalry with Hamline University, now a Division III school in St. Paul. Hamline had one of the earliest college basketball programs in the country and it was several years before Minnesota competed on equal footing with them; they played as late as 1935.[67] The greatest rival of the early years of the program was the Minnesota Aggies, representing the Minnesota School of Agriculture and Mining, which has since been incorporated into the University of Minnesota Twin Cities as the St. Paul campus.[68] Minnesota A&M dominated the Gophers, winning ten consecutive games; Minnesota did not get its first win against the Aggies until 1899.[14] This rivalry expired especially early, and the two teams did not meet after 1901. The University of Minnesota is currently the only Division I basketball school in the state of Minnesota, so there are no intense intra-border rivalries as there are in most states.

The Gophers were also an active participant in the early rivalry between Eastern schools and Midwestern schools for basketball preeminence. Minnesota broke up a stretch of Ivy League dominance from 1901 to 1906 with their successful 1902 season. The Eastern teams - Yale, Columbia, and Dartmouth were early powers - played with a more physical approach, while Midwestern teams used a different method. Wisconsin coach Walter Meanwell used the motion offense and "stress[ed] finesse."[69] W.C. Hyatt, who played for Yale, claimed that "The Minnesota and Wisconsin men played in the style prevalent among most of the girl colleges in the East, that is, the 'no contact' game."[70]

In the modern era of the program, as is the case with most Big Ten sports, Minnesota's primary rivals are the Iowa Hawkeyes and Wisconsin Badgers. In recent years, the rivalry with Wisconsin has become more intense than that with Iowa, primarily due to Wisconsin's recent successes on the court.[71] Minnesota and Wisconsin's games together count towards the Border Battle, an annual trophy given to the points winner of several sports played between the two school throughout the year.[72]

The Gophers also have a less heralded rivalry with Ohio State. The two teams have very little history together, outside of the 1972 brawl between the teams at Williams Arena. That incident still lingers in the hearts of many long-time Buckeye fans.[73]

Results by season

  • Records unofficial due to academic scandal

See also

References

  1. ^ Drape, Joe (October 25, 2000). "Minnesota Penalized by N.C.A.A.". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9905E0D71531F936A15753C1A9669C8B63&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=all. Retrieved 2008-07-13. 
  2. ^ Hugunin, Marc; Stew Thornley (2006) (PDF). Minnesota Hoops: Basketball in the North Star State. St. Paul: Minnesota Historical Society Press. pp. 6. ISBN 0873515749. 
  3. ^ a b Men's Basketball Media Guide. University of Minnesota. 2006-07. pp. 171. 
  4. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 78
  5. ^ "Fitch to NBA". Charleston Daily Mail. March 19, 1970. 
  6. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 9
  7. ^ Perlstein, pp. 12
  8. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 30
  9. ^ Associated Press (December 14, 1994). "Burton's 53 Points Bury His Ex-Team". New York Times. http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9C0CEEDB1638F937A25751C1A962958260. Retrieved 2008-07-14. 
  10. ^ "Abu-Shamala Helps Jordan National Team Win William Jones Cup". GopherSports. 2008-07-18. http://www.gophersports.com/ViewArticle.dbml?DB_OEM_ID=8400&ATCLID=1514645. Retrieved 2008-09-05. 
  11. ^ "Smith making himself home at Minnesota". Sporting News. 2008-01-26. http://www.sportingnews.com/yourturn/viewtopic.php?t=343071. Retrieved 2008-09-05. 
  12. ^ "M Basketball - 2010-11 Roster". GopherSports. http://www.gophersports.com/SportSelect.dbml?SPSID=38664&SPID=3302&DB_LANG=C&DB_OEM_ID=8400&SORT_ORDER=1&Q_SEASON=2010&PRINTABLE_PAGE=. Retrieved 2010-11-02. 
  13. ^ Perlstein, Steve (1995). Gopher Glory: 100 Years of University of Minnesota Basketball. Layers Publishing. pp. 4. ISBN 0964691892. 
  14. ^ a b c d Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 6
  15. ^ "Big Ten Men's Basketball History". Big Ten Conference. http://bigten.cstv.com/sports/m-baskbl/spec-rel/big10-hoops-history.html. Retrieved 2008-07-13. 
  16. ^ Perlstein pp. 50
  17. ^ a b c Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 50
  18. ^ Perlstein, pp. 18
  19. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 52
  20. ^ Hugnin and Thornley, pp. 56
  21. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 79
  22. ^ "Minnesota sports stars". Minneapolis Star-Tribune. May 9, 2008. http://www.startribune.com/local/18703269.html. Retrieved 2008-08-07. 
  23. ^ Perlstein, pp. 55
  24. ^ Perlstein, pp. 61
  25. ^ a b Perlstein, pp. 64
  26. ^ Walker, Herb (April 6, 1971). "Ashland cage coach to take Gophers' post". The Bryan Times. 
  27. ^ Hartman, Sid; Joel Rippel (2006). Sid Hartman's Great Minnesota Sports Moments. Voyageur Press. pp. 31. ISBN 0760326568. 
  28. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 128
  29. ^ Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 126
  30. ^ a b c Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 130
  31. ^ a b c Hugunin and Thornley, pp. 131
  32. ^ Wilcoxen, William (March 19, 1999). "A Look Back at the U Basketball Program". Minnesota Public Radio. http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/199903/19_wilcoxenw_haskins/. Retrieved 2007-05-13. 
  33. ^ Thrall, Eric. "GOLDEN GOPHER BASKETBALL". http://www.ericthrall.com/gophers/basketball/. Retrieved 2007-05-13. 
  34. ^ Dohrmann, George (March 10, 1999). "U basketball program accused of academic fraud". St. Paul Pioneer Press. http://www.concernedjournalists.org/node/426. Retrieved 2007-05-13. 
  35. ^ Smith, Maureen (March 17). "Allegations of academic fraud". University of Minnesota - brief XXIX (11). http://www1.umn.edu/urelate/brief/1999-03-17.html. 
  36. ^ Pugmire, Tim (June 29, 1999). "Yudof Gets Passing Grade for Haskins' Exit". Minnesota Public Radio. http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/199906/29_pugmiret_yudof/index.shtml. Retrieved 2007-05-13. 
  37. ^ Williams, Brandt (August 2, 2000). "Haskins Admits to $3,000 Payoff". Minnesota Public Radio. http://news.minnesota.publicradio.org/features/200008/02_williamsb_haskins/. Retrieved 2007-05-13. 
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