Technology

Men’s basketball: Gophers upset No. 22 Indiana 73-64 in Big Ten opener

2025-12-04 02:45
616 views

Gophers men’s basketball coach Niko Medved wanted to see the character of his shorthanded team in the Big Ten opener against No. 22 Indiana on Wednesday. Already amid a three-game nonconference losing...

Men’s basketball: Gophers upset No. 22 Indiana 73-64 in Big Ten openerStory byPioneer Press, St. Paul, Minn.Andy Greder, Pioneer PressThu, December 4, 2025 at 2:45 AM UTC·3 min read

Gophers men’s basketball coach Niko Medved wanted to see the character of his shorthanded team in the Big Ten opener against No. 22 Indiana on Wednesday.

Already amid a three-game nonconference losing streak, what were the U players made of after the blow that starting point guard Chansey Willis is out for the season with a broken foot?

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

A heck of a lot as the Gophers upset the Hoosiers 73-64 at at Williams Arena.

Minnesota (5-4, 1-0 Big Ten) was eight-point underdogs against the previously undefeated Hoosiers (7-1, 0-1). Indiana was 19th in the country, according to the KenPom analytics site, while Minnesota had fallen way down the list to 116.

The stunning win came in Niko Medved’s first conference game at his alma mater.

“I try not to get emotional,” Medved said. “I’m just so proud. It’s why you coach. You do what you do to try to help young people respond and to see the way that they did is awesome. From a personal level, it’s just feels unbelievable to have the crowd into it and the students. That is what I grew yup with here, that way. This is a day that I’ll remember. … We got to enjoy this. You don’t get to do this every day.”

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

The Gophers took a 65-55 lead with Bobby Dunkin’s 3-pointer with four minutes left, but the Hoosiers went on a 7-0 run to put pressure on Minnesota.

Minnesota had eight scholarship players since they were also without starting center Robert Vaihola (knee), BJ Omot (leg) and Chance Stephens (illness).

Then three Minnesota big men — Jaylen Crocker-Johnson, Grayson Grove and Nehemiah Turner — battled foul trouble in the second half.

Crocker-Johnson scored five straight points with five minutes left, but then picked up his fourth foul and had to take another seat.

The Hoosiers were a stronger 3-point shooting teams in the country this season, making 38% to rank 51st in the nation.

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

The Gophers held Indiana without a field goal for the final four minutes of the first half, taking a 27-19 deficit to a 33-33 tie at the break.

That surge had the biggest crowd at The Barn so far this season on its feet as the Gophers went into he locker room.

Grayson Grove made impressive hustle plays in the middle of the first half. After a bad pass from Langston Reynolds looked it it would be an easy dunk for Tucker DeVries, Grove blocked it at the rim. Then Grove ran the floor, was fed the ball in the paint and drew a foul.

DeVries was listed to six points in the first half on 2-of-8 shooting. Reynolds and Asuma contributed to him missing his first three treys.

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

In the first half, Reynolds and Cade Tyson each had nine points for Minnesota.

The Hoosiers made their opening five shots, but Minnesota got more disruptive and forced them to miss four of their next five as the U started to work its way back into the game.

Related Articles

  • Men’s basketball: With Chansey Willis Jr. out for season, what does Gophers rotation look like now?

  • Men’s basketball: Big Ten slate looks more daunting with Gophers struggling in nonconference play

  • Men’s basketball: Gophers fall to Stanford

  • Brothers in elbows: Gophers’ Cade Tyson and Nuggets’ Hunter Tyson

  • Men’s basketball: Gophers’ free-throw struggles prove costly in loss to San Francisco

AdvertisementAdvertisement