Extra Innings
The Gopher football team that takes the
field against Kansas Wednesday night for the Insight Bowl is likely to
be highly motivated. The season ending 55-0 loss to Iowa was
humiliating and is a five star stimulus to prepare for the bowl game.
The consensus of the college football world, though, is that Kansas will
win and the Jayhawks are favored by about 10 points.
Kansas is led by Mark Mangino who some will
argue is the best coach in school history. He’s created attention for
his success like last year’s 12-1 season (7-5 this season) at a school
long known for basketball championships and a suffering football
program. Mangino is also the fattest major college coach in memory,
probably weighing north of 350 pounds and for years the subject of jokes
(“our coach beat anorexia”).
The Jayhawks’ star receiver is Kerry
Meier who 18 months ago was competing for the starting quarterback
job, according to a story last week on LJworld.com. The Lawrence,
Kansas newspaper Web site told the success story of Meier who has become
a Sports Illustrated cover boy and one of the Big 12’s best
receivers. Meier, from the small town of Pittsburgh, Kansas, has older
brothers who played for Kansas State.
Jason LaFrenz,
Gophers’ assistant athletics director for marketing and ticketing sales,
reported via e-mail on Saturday that he's expecting more than 10,000 Minnesota
fans at the Insight Bowl. He also reported that about 1,000 tickets
remain for Wednesday’s Minnesota-Michigan State basketball game at
Williams Arena.
Former Bloomington Jefferson center
Cole Aldrich is leading the Kansas basketball team in rebounds, 9.9
per game, and
is second in scoring at 13.6 points. The 6-11 sophomore, along
with former Minneapolis North guard Khalid El-Amin, who led
Connecticut to a national championship, could be remembered as one of the
two best Minnesotans ever to leave the state and play elsewhere.
The Giants scored 12 of their 19 points
against the Vikings yesterday on field goals by 44 year old John
Carney. The team’s punter is 42 year old Jeff
Feagles.
Third year linebacker Chad Greenway hasn’t
received
a lot of publicity but his improvement has been noticed by many
observers including teammate and fellow linebacker Ben Leber. Greenway
said he believes his performance has been consistent during the season.
Vikings’ defensive end
Ray Edwards finished the regular season yesterday with five
total sacks in 15 games. That’s a long way from the goal he set before the season of
breaking Michael Strahan’s NFL single season record of 22.5.
Earlier this month Sports Headliners asked Edwards if he had
regrets about going public with his goal. “Who me? Nah. I don’t have
no regrets at all. I mean I set goals high for myself. Sometimes you
fall short of your goals but you keep on moving. You don’t let that
stop you.”
Edwards, in his third season
as a pro, had to adjust to playing on the left side after being a right
defensive end. I missed a lot of sacks I should have had,” he said.
“Once I get there I gotta cash the check, as they say.”
Vikings’ rookie offensive lineman John
Sullivan might be the successor to center Matt
Birk but this season was a time for learning. “I can just ask Matt
about anything…(for example) why he used a certain technique in certain
situations,” he told Sports Headliners earlier this month. “He’s
always eager to share that information with me and try to help me to
become a better player.”
As a reserve, Sullivan prepared to play
either center or guard if needed but had no game starts.