NCAAM teams
MINN

84

15-1
Final
ILL

67

14-3
RecapBox Score
1 2 T
MINN 34 50 84
ILL 30 37 67
State Farm Center, Champaign
Associated Press 11y

No. 8 Gophers muscle way past No. 12 Illini, now 3-0 in Big Ten

Illinois Fighting Illini, Minnesota Golden Gophers

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- The first half was full of frustration for Minnesota Wednesday night at Illinois.

The second 20 minutes were completely different.

No. 8 Minnesota (15-1, 3-0 Big Ten) had 50 second-half points and got 19 or more points from three different players to topple the No. 12 Illini 84-67 and stay undefeated in the Big Ten.

Joe Coleman finished with a career-high 29 points and Andre Hollins scored 22. Trevor Mbakwe had 19 points and 11 rebounds.

The Gophers hit 53 percent of their shots, including 9 of 15 from 3-point range.

"When you shoot well, any team is different," Gophers coach Tubby Smith said. "And we've been shooting well -- anybody can step up on any day. Like tonight, Joe Coleman stepped up and played outstanding."

Illinois (14-3, 1-2) was close at the half trailing 34-30, but lost just four days after beating Ohio State at home by 19 points.

Illini coach John Groce seemed stunned by his team's lack of execution, but more so by the Gophers' second-half scoring.

"Did I anticipate them going 9 of 15 from 3? No, I didn't," he said. "They made them tonight; they made them. I've got to give them some credit."

The Gophers held off a charge by the Illini midway through the second half.

Joseph Bertrand pulled Illinois within 44-42 on a short jumper with 12:37 left.

But the physical matchup took its toll on the Illini (14-3, 1-2). And as Illinois piled up fouls, Mbakwe connected on a layup with 6:15 to play for a 62-49 lead that Illinois couldn't overcome.

Brandon Paul led Illinois with 21 points. D.J. Richardson and Tracy Abrams each scored 14.

The Gophers' strong second half started with an early 8-2 run that pushed the lead to 42-32.

While the Gophers were mostly plodding through the second half's first five minutes, Illinois struggled even more.

The Illini missed their first seven shots of the half and saw their shooting rate for the game drop briefly below 22 percent. They finished at just 34.5 percent and 12.5 percent from 3-point range.

At one point, with the shot clock ticking low, the Gophers fumbled with the ball and almost lost it near half court. Hollins finally scooped it up and heaved a desperate shot from half court as the shot clock almost expired. The ball gently slid off the glass and in for a 3-pointer that made the score 42-30.

Illinois fought back within 44-42 with 12:37 to play when Bertrand pulled down a big defensive rebound, dribbled the length of the court and connected on a jump shot from inside the paint.

The crowd rose with the shot, sensing a comeback. But just as quickly as Illinois got back into the game, it fell back out.

Less than a minute after his shot and with Illinois down 46-42, Bertrand headed to the bench with his fourth foul.

Hollins made his free throws to put Minnesota back up by six, 48-42 with 11:54 to play.

Ten seconds later he hit a 3-pointer that extended that lead to 51-42.

"There's highs and lows to the game," Illinois center Nnanna Egwu said. "Just the whole stretch, I think, kind of turned things around."

Abrams, Bertrand and Egwu each finished with four fouls, and Abrams and Bertrand both picked up theirs with more than nine minutes left in the game.

The physical tone was set early.

Paul went over Mbakwe just over three minutes into the game for a flying, right-handed dunk that left the Gopher forward on the floor.

Less than a minute later, Paul had to leave the floor, cupping a hand under a bloody nose after a foul by Austin Hollins. The senior guard spent the next five minutes on the bench with an ice pack on his nose and, finally, in the locker room.

The Illini survived that early stretch just fine. Richardson hit a long 3-pointer with 10:46 left in the half for a 16-11 lead just before Paul returned.

The Gophers felt the frustration.

"I thought certainly Illinois had the right game plan," Smith said. "They were physical with us early on. ... We did some things in the second half to try to mix it up."

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