Gophers football notes:
Minnesota started spring practice yesterday and will have 15 total sessions including the April 11 spring game at TCF Bank Stadium. The game and most practices (all at Gibson-Nagurski Football Complex) are open to the public. The first of the practices fans can attend is this Saturday starting at 9:50 a.m.
The coaching staff will evaluate candidates to replace David Cobb, last season’s senior running back who rushed for 2,893 career yards, seventh best in program history. Gophers authority Darrell Thompson believes Cobb, who was a 100 yard rusher in all 13 games as a senior, may not be replaced by one individual next fall, but instead the coaches will use a “committee approach.”
There are several candidates for playing time including senior Rodrick Williams, redshirt sophomore Berkley Edwards, and redshirt freshmen Jeff Jones and Rodney Smith. Then the crowd of hopefuls grows larger in a few months with the arrival of freshmen running backs Shannon Brooks, Jonathan Femi-Cole and James Johannesson.
The candidate group offers power, speed, quickness and athleticism. Some players like Williams (bull rushing power) and Edwards (sprinter speed) possess more defined attributes while others appear to have more of a skills mix. Thompson, the Gophers’ all-time leading career rusher and now an analyst on the team’s radio broadcasts, can foresee using multiple runners with different styles each game. “Quite honestly, that’s what you want,” he said.
Thompson anticipates seeing even two of the running backs in the game together, along with junior quarterback Mitch Leidner who is a physical rusher. Such a setup could, for example, have Leidner running a quarterback keeper, or Edwards on a jet sweep or Williams busting up the middle. “I would like the defense to be thinking about all three of those things, versus they’re just going to hand the ball off to someone on the inside,” Thompson said.
He predicted Cobb could be selected between the second and fifth rounds in this spring’s NFL Draft. As a senior Cobb set school single season records with 314 rushing attempts and 1,626 yards.
Cobb combines speed and power but perhaps his best attribute is his ability to anticipate and see openings to run. “I think he’s certainly an NFL back,” Thompson said. “He’s got the poise, he’s got the strength, he’s got the size (and) he’s got the speed. He (also) has the patience.”
Cobb and tight end Maxx Williams, a redshirt sophomore last fall who has opted for the 2015 NFL Draft, were the big play producers on offense in 2014. There will be a number of candidates to replace Williams including former Blaine High School player Duke Anyanwu who has yet to catch a pass for Minnesota in a game.
Anyanwu, a redshirt sophomore, missed last season because of a knee injury. Gophers coach Jerry Kill said on WCCO Radio’s Sports Huddle program Sunday that before Anyanwu was injured the plan was to have him on the field at times with Williams.
“You’re going to see Duke has his confidence back,” Williams said. “Duke is moving around great. I ran routes with him a few times. Duke looks great, probably the best he’s been here. He worked hard to get back.”
Nice guy Barry Mayer has former teammates with the Gophers rooting for the success of his son Adam Mayer. Adam will be a preferred walk-on for the Gophers this year after a prep career at De La Salle High School in Concord, California. The younger Mayer caught 27 passes for 486 yards and two touchdowns as a senior. Barry was a star running back for the Gophers from 1968-1970.
The Goal Line Club is having a membership drive and encourages Gophers football fans to learn more about club benefits at Goallineclub.com. Membership for one year costs $100 and runs from May 1, 2015-April 30, 2016.
Basketball Notes
Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor said in the months ahead Flip Saunders, the coach and president of basketball operations, will work to improve the roster’s defensive personnel. “…I think we can see some offensive skills but if he’s going to get deep into the playoffs he’s just got to have guys that can play defense.”
Targeted for defensive improvement will be the power forward position. Last month the Wolves added 20-year NBA vet Kevin Garnett and rookie Adreian Payne to the roster in hopes of strengthening that spot. Garnett, 38, is one of the NBA’s all-time defensive greats but his body is wearing out, while Payne, 24, only played three games with the Hawks, his former team, and is learning the pro game.
Taylor said Saunders considered using a lottery pick to acquire Payne in last June’s NBA Draft. Instead, Saunders just couldn’t pass up drafting ultra athletic guard Zach LaVine at No. 13, while the Hawks chose Payne two picks later. Taylor said Payne’s potential is apparent including his ability to defend and rebound. At 6-10, 245, with long arms, Payne’s body resembles Garnett’s, 6-11, 253.
“He’s just beginning to play and the season is half over, and all the other guys have played…but he’s got the potential,” Taylor said. “You can just see that.”
Taylor said the Timberwolves aren’t for sale, although in the future he might allow limited partners to buy into the franchise he has controlled since 2005. “…We’re working on that (new) practice facility. We’re working on the (renovation of) Target Center. I want to get those projects done and see how it works. I am excited about our team’s future.”
Awhile ago he talked with Dr. Bill McGuire about Timberwolves ownership. Now the two men have had conversations about McGuire bringing an MLS franchise to Minneapolis. Taylor, however, hasn’t committed money yet to the franchise McGuire is hoping to acquire if the league expands into Minneapolis.
Taylor’s WNBA franchise, the Lynx, starts its regular season June 5. He said “the area of concern” is adding more height to the roster. Mercury star center Brittney Griner is 6-8 and she helped Phoenix to the WNBA title while averaging 15.5 points and six blocks per game in the finals. Her presence has WNBA teams on the lookout for tall players. Taylor said the Wolves need help for 6-2 starting center Janel McCarville.
One possibility could be Amber Harris, 6-5, who was a reserve with the Lynx in 2013. She didn’t play for the Lynx last season but Taylor indicated her return is a possibility.
A year ago no one foresaw the major developments ahead for the Gophers women’s basketball program. Coach Pam Borton was fired in late March and replaced by Marlene Stollings, the former VCU women’s coach. Then in December guard Rachel Banham, the preseason choice for Big Ten Player of the Year, tore an ACL and was lost for the season. But Minnesota still had a successful season led by Stollings, sophomore center Amanda Zahui B., senior forward Shae Kelley and freshman guard Carlie Wagner.
It was Zahui B. who won the media’s Big Ten Women’s Basketball Player of the Year award this week. She finished the regular season with averages of 18.5 points, 12.7 rebounds and 4 blocks per game, with a .553 (214-387) field goal percentage.
Her numbers are impressive, too, against teams ranked in the top 25—averaging 25.8 points, 16.8 rebounds, 4.3 blocks and 2 steals per game with a .548 field goal percentage.
Kelley wasn’t even on the roster a year ago. A transfer from Old Dominion, she was named first team All-Big Ten by the media after almost averaging a double-double with 17.1 points and 9.3 rebounds. Minnesota was 10-3 overall and 7-2 in Big Ten games when Kelley led the team in scoring.
Wagner, from New Richland, Minnesota, made the coaches’ Big Ten All-Freshman Team after averaging 11.9 points, 3.6 rebounds and 2.4 assists per game. She scored 10 or more points 21 times, including 11 straight games from January 18-February 21. She ranks second on the team in three-point field goals with 55.
The Gophers, 11-7 in conference games this year, play their Big Ten Tournament opening game tomorrow night in suburban Chicago against the winner of tonight’s Wisconsin-Purdue game. Minnesota is the No. 6 tournament seed.