Gophers basketball rolls past Chicago State 70-52

MINNEAPOLIS -- After losing three straight games, Minnesota coach Richard Pitino focused on his players' attitudes to change his team's fortunes. It paid off Wednesday night

Jordan Murphy scored 12 points and grabbed 18 rebounds and Minnesota beat Chicago State 70-52.

Carlos Morris and Charles Buggs each scored 14 points for the Gophers (6-5), who avoided their first four-game nonconference losing streak in nine years.

"I just wanted our guys to not feel sorry for themselves, to understand that this is all a process when you've got a young team," Pitino said. "I think the guys responded to that."

Over an eight-day stretch the Gophers lost consecutive home games to South Dakota and South Dakota State, then were nipped by Oklahoma State in a neutral-site game. Pitino was curious how his players would respond.

"You can't hide when you lose, so I wanted to see how the energy would be," he said. "I thought it was pretty good."

Chicago State (3-9) got 12 points from sophomore guard Clemmye Owens, a transfer from Bethune-Cookman who was making his debut for the Cougars after sitting out the fall semester. The Cougars were held to just 32.8 percent from the floor as they lost their eighth straight.

"We saw what (Minnesota) was going through, those three losses," Chicago State coach Tracy Dildy said. "We just said, aw man, this is the wrong time to be going in there. They took care of business."

The Cougars led by as many as seven points in the first half as Minnesota struggled to get its offense going. Then Murphy hit four free throws and had a tip-in and a putback dunk to put the Gophers on top 24-22. Buggs then made two 3-pointers as Minnesota closed out a 17-2 run over the final 7:44 of the first half, taking a 32-24 lead at the break.

Chicago State pulled back to within two points early in the second half, but Minnesota went on another extended run to pull away. The Gophers outscored the Cougars 25-5 over an 11-minute span to ice their first victory since they beat Clemson on Nov. 30.

After holding Oklahoma State to 62 points on Saturday, the Gophers' gave another strong defensive effort. But senior Joey King said it'll take more than that to establish a pattern.

"I'm never going to judge it just on two games because it can change at any time," King said. "What it comes down to is we just have to keep practicing hard.'

Murphy, a 6-foot-6 freshman, has emerged as Minnesota's most important player in the nonconference schedule. He's posted double-doubles in four of the Gophers' last five games and set a career high on the boards on Wednesday.

"I think he's just scratching the surface, to be honest," Pitino said. "He's got the wingspan. He's got really long arms and he goes and snatches it. But he can still get a lot better."