Worth Noting
A lot of fans and media, including
Sports Headliners, doubted the Twins and Joe Nathan
could reach a contract agreement to keep him with the team beyond
this season. The Twins, to their credit, came up with an agreement
acceptable to Nathan who wanted to stay here. He has talked in the past
about how he likes the city and values how the Twins have managed his
career.
Nathan, 33, agreed to a $47 million contract extension earlier this week
that keeps him with the Twins through 2011 with a club option for 2012.
Nathan’s 160 saves over the last four seasons are tied with Mariano
Rivera of the Yankees for the most in the American League. In
addition, he became the first pitcher in club history to record
36-or-more saves in four consecutive seasons.
Fargo native Chris Coste has a new book about his 11 year
struggle to make the major leagues, “The
33-Year-Old Rookie.” Coste, a catcher, made his major
league debut with Philadelphia in May of 2006 and hit .328 for the
season. Last spring he was injured and played in the minors before
joining the Phillies in May, hitting .279 for the season. Better news
this year as Coste, now 35, will head north from spring training to play
for the Phillies from the start of the season.
Gene
Sperling, the former Gopher tennis player and captain under coach Jerry
Noyce, is written about in the latest issue of Time
magazine. A short article reports on Sperling’s economic advisory
work for Bill and Hillary Clinton.
Noyce will be inducted into the
Intercollegiate Tennis Association’s Collegiate Tennis Hall of Fame on
May 21 in Tulsa. He coached the Gophers for 15 seasons, winning three
Big Ten Conference championships and in 1986 was the ITA’s National
Coach of the Year. Congratulations to one of Minnesota’s great coaches.
R&B star J. Holiday will perform in a concert following the
Timberwolves-Memphis game at Target Center on Sunday, April 6. Holiday,
who established himself on the national music scene last year, will also
sing the Star Spangled Banner prior to the game. Last year Holiday’s
hit single, "Bed," reached No. 5 on the Billboard Hot 100 charts. His
debut album, "Back of My Lac," has gone Gold in U.S. sales in excess of
500,000 copies and his follow-up single, "Suffocate," has climbed to No.
18 on the Billboard Hot 100. Holiday has performed on the Tonight
Show with Jay Leno. The concert is free to fans in attendance
for the game.
The Vikings announced the signings yesterday of restricted free agent
linebacker Heath Farwell, 26, and free agent
cornerback Benny Sapp, 27, who played the past four seasons for
the Kansas City Chiefs. Farwell led the Vikings with a career-high 32
special teams tackles in 2007, which ties for third in franchise
single-season history. He set a team record with seven special teams
tackles against the New York Giants last season and has 70 special teams
tackles in 39 career games.
Sapp played in 56 games with six starts during his four years with the
Chiefs and had 30 tackles, an interception, a fumble recovery, and a
forced fumble in 2007. He recorded a career-high 45 tackles and 2.5 sacks
for Kansas City in 2005.
Concordia senior forward Melanie
Hageman and Gustavus senior guard Jess Vadnais have been
named to the 2008 State Farm coaches' honorable mention All-America
basketball team for NCAA Division III. The team is voted upon by Women's
Basketball Coaches Association (WBCA) member coaches. Hageman was named
to the MIAC all-conference first team for the third straight season
after averaging 16.9 points and 7.4 rebounds per game. She has
earned D3hoops.com All-West Region second team honors the past two
seasons and this year was named to the ESPN The Magazine Academic
All-American team.
Vadnais is a three-time All-MIAC selection and a 2007 Kodak/WBCA
All-American pick. She led the league in scoring for the second
consecutive season (19.1 points per game), and was third in the league
in steals (61) and free-throw percentage (122-142; 85.9 percent).
Vadnais is one of 10 finalists for the Jostens Division III Player of
the Year award given to the player that best exemplifies the Division
III philosophy of basketball skill, academics, and community service.