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Murray Project Can Take KOC Closer to Great QB ‘Whisperers’

Posted on March 15, 2026March 15, 2026 by David Shama

 

The work of Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell with quarterback reclamation projects Sam Darnold and Daniel Jones is well documented.  Now comes the opportunity with new arrival Kyler Murray to take another step toward the company of pro football’s all-time elite quarterback “whisperers.”

Both Darnold and Jones had disastrous experiences with other teams before they came under the tutelage of KOC.   Darnold led the Vikings to a 14-3 record in 2024 before bolting in free agency to the Seahawks and playing a huge role in a season and postseason that culminated in a Seattle Super Bowl win over the Patriots last month.

Jones had a shorter time at “KOC U” but like Darnold flourished in Minnesota and joined Sam in leaving in March of 2025.  Jones had a comeback season in 2025 with the Colts after his earlier failure with the Giants and Indianapolis reportedly rewarded him this month with a two-year $88 million deal.

Could Murray be the next summa cum laude grad?  Although the Cardinals gave up on him, his resume and profile instill optimism among those who want to feel it.  In 2019 he was the Pro Football Offensive Rookie of the Year.  Twice in his career he was a Pro Bowler.

The 28-year-old Murray, listed at 5-10 and 207 pounds, has quickness of foot and running ability that can bedevil opponents.  His ability to turn a potential loss of yardage into a big gain certainly wasn’t lost on the Vikings who picked up the free agent last week on a bargain deal that reportedly has them paying out $1.3 million while the Cardinals are on the line for over $35 million.

Murray, who The Athletic rated as only the 40th best free agent available this offseason, has his critics. His career passing rating of 92.2 is in the average range. Four times in his career he has thrown for over 3,500 yards. In 2,941 passing attempts he has totaled 121 TD passes with 60 interceptions over seven seasons.  He has struggled with injuries including an ACL tear and missed most of last season with a foot injury.

Murray’s critics have questioned his study habits.  Beyond his work ethic, concerns have been raised about his short stature and ability to see down field.  He’s even been criticized for not running enough.

So the immediate future for Murray, who is on a one-year deal, will be interesting. He grew up a Vikings fan and at his initial presser last week gushed enthusiasm about his new start including being with KOC.

KOC will scrutinize Murray from top to bottom and will tinker with his offense to make it conducive to the new quarterback’s skillset.  At the same time, J.J. McCarthy will also have to fit into the overall offense.  O’Connell has declared Murray and McCarthy are competing for the starting job.  No one has been named No. 1 yet.

Vikings coach Kevin O'Connell image by David Shama
Kevin O’Connell

As the process develops, O’Connell can take another step toward the elite names among quarterback “whisperers,” especially if the Vikings become a winning team with Murray or McCarthy who will be in his second season as a potential starter.  Toward the top of a list that does not yet include KOC, are names from the present and the past: Andy Reid of the Chiefs and Sean Payton of the Broncos and past icons Bruce Arians and Mike Shanahan.

That would be nice company to join.

Worth Noting

The Vikings could see an old friend wearing dark green, gold and white next fall. The Packers are looking for a backup quarterback with Kirk Cousins a possible candidate.

If the 37-year-old continues his career after being released by the Falcons last week, it presumably won’t be just for the money.  He has reportedly earned over $351 million playing for the Commanders, Vikings and Falcons, and is among the highest paid NFL players of all-time.

The Vikings have provided $600,000 to the development of high school flag football in Minnesota.  That’s from Minneapolis-based attorney and writer Marshall Tanick who reported details via email about a talk given recently by Vikings top marketing executive Martin Nance to a Florida group. Although not yet sanctioned by the Minnesota State High School League, the girls’ sport is growing fast, and women’s flag football will debut as an Olympic sport at the 2028 games in Los Angeles.

Nance told attendees at the Minnesota Breakfast gathering in Naples that about 45 percent of the franchise’s fan base is women.

Nance, who was a wide receiver with the Vikings in 2006-2007, also shared this nugget: the Vikings “SKOL” chant, entering its 10th year, was derived from the Icelandic national soccer team.

Professional football scouts will have a look at these former Gophers at the University of Minnesota’s Pro Day on Wednesday. Confirmed participants are Nate Becker, Drew Biber, Le’Meke Brockington, Brady Denaburg, Deven Eastern, Jameson Geers, Darius Green, Rushawn Lawrence, Derik LeCaptain, Jalen Logan-Redding, Marcellus Marshall, Jai’Onte’ McMillan, Aluma Nkele, Dylan Ray and Devon Williams.

Football coaches can still register for the acclaimed MFCA Clinic. Headquartered at the DoubleTree Hotel in St. Louis Park, the clinic will be held March 26-28 and is a partnership with the football Gophers.  https://www.mnfootballcoaches.com/page/show/2279758-mfca-clinic-information

Presenters will include Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck and selected Gopher assistants, along with St. Thomas head coach Glenn Caruso, St. John’s head coach Gary Fasching and FCS national championship coach Brent Vigen of Montana State.

A hockey aficionado tells Sports Headliners the on-ice vision of defenseman Quinn Hughes is so special it’s the best of any Wild player ever. The authority added Hughes might be the best team leader in franchise history.

The Twin Cities Dunkers scored a coup scheduling Timberwolves and Lynx owner Alex Rodriguez as a speaker later this month.  Wolves and Lynx president & CEO Matt Caldwell is a Dunkers member. The sports focused organization dates back to 1948 when it was the Minneapolis Dunkers.

The field for the 2026 National Invitation Tournament will be announced tonight starting at 8:30 p.m. Minneapolis time on ESPN2. Both the Gophers and St. Thomas men are eligible for consideration, with some fans wishful of a matchup at Williams Arena.

The women Gophers, 22-8, are assured of an NCAA Tournament berth and will host first and second round games at Williams Arena.  The NCAA Tournament bracket, matchups, dates and times will be announced tonight at 7 p.m. on ESPN.

Kevin Kernan, a renowned national baseball authority and guest last week on Dan Barreiro’s KFNX Radio show, was asked how the Pohlad owned Twins are regarded nationally.  He labeled the ownership a “clown show” and said only the Pirate ownership is disdained more.

Comments Welcome

QB Consistency, Longevity for Vikings Far Down the Road

Posted on March 12, 2026March 12, 2026 by David Shama

Because of injuries, failed performance and misjudgment, the Vikings have a revolving door at quarterback.  Eight different players have been starters going back to the 2022 season.

The best of them were Kirk Cousins and Sam Darnold.  The club’s decisionmakers made the right call in not meeting the mega contract demands to retain Cousins.  Ownership, GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah and head coach Kevin O’Connell whiffed on not retaining Sam Darnold with a new deal.

This is a franchise desperately in need of a quality starter who can perform at a high level for many seasons.  In fact, Minnesota hasn’t put together a string of three consecutive playoff appearances since 2000.

It was just in August of 2024 that O’Connell told the public the team had “its franchise quarterback in the building.”  After a struggling 2025 season for  J.J. McCarthy, O’Connell has said he wants a “deep and talented quarterback room.”

The Vikings have seemingly hedged in their full commitment to the 23-year-old McCarthy as their starter.  Martin Nance, the franchise’s executive VP and Chief Marketing Officer, recently told a social group in Florida that regarding McCarthy the club still believes he has an “upside.”

J.J. McCarthy, Vikings QB, image by David Shama
J.J. McCarthy

But at this time McCarthy, the No. 10 overall pick in the first round of the 2024 draft, might be the best bet to emerge as the longtime starter for the team.  True, as of today the Vikings are the wagering favorite to land 28-year-old quarterback Kyler Murray after the Cardinals released him yesterday.  As a free agent he and the Vikings may prefer a one-year deal that could allow the parties to part ways after the 2026 season.

Regarding the 2026 NFL Draft, the Vikings might be savvy to take the best player available, regardless of position. After that draft for specific needs.

The Big Ten, of course, offers players who likely could help the Vikings, including at two high positions of need, center and running back.  Logan Jones from Iowa and Pat Coogan from Indiana are centers who figure to be available after the first round.

Penn State’s running back duo of Kaytron Allen and Nicholas Singleton will be intriguing draft choices.  Singleton, particularly, could be a fit for the Vikings because the club needs an explosive home run threat.

Worth Noting

Mission accomplished: Golden Gophers basketball coach Niko Medved told Sports Headliners last fall his goal for his first season was to have fans “more excited” about the program than when the season started. Interest is on the upswing after an overachieving season that included three home wins over top 25 ranked teams.

With the Wild almost assured of the third seed for the playoffs in the Central Division, it will be interesting to see if coach John Hynes rests his best players including Kirill Kaprizov and Quinn Hughes when the schedule gets closer to ending.

Myforecast.com projects a high of 59 and thunderstorms on March 26 when the Twins open the regular season in Baltimore against the Orioles.  The weather site projects 40 and partly cloudy in Minneapolis for the Twins home opener April 3.

It’s a small sample size but Twins fans have fingers crossed key hitter Royce Lewis, who had disappointing seasons in 2024 and 2025, will do better than his now spring training average of .176 (three hits in 17 at bats). Two of those hits came on February 27 against the Red Sox. With a history of injuries including right side tightness currently, the Twins are cautious about his playing time in Florida.

Financial industry and community leader Dan Stoltz, the Blaze Credit Union President & CEO whose identity is seen in local TV commercials with legends from Minnesota sports, is a proud graduate of Northwestern University—St. Paul.  He and his wife Robin, along with their three children (and spouses), are graduates of the school.  He and Robin recently provided a generous gift to the University, and the School of Business is now known as the Stolz School of Business.

Well wishes to 1966-1967 Golden Gophers basketball captain Paul Presthus on his 81st birthday Tuesday.  An All-American player in small town Rugby, he is one of the most storied players in North Dakota basketball history.  While in high school, he was on the cover of a national magazine with Lew Alcindor (later Kareem Abdul-Jabbar).

Condolences to family and friends of Dave Wicker, the longtime coach (Patrick Henry) and administrator for the Minneapolis schools who recently passed away.  He was revered for how he related to and worked with others.

Comments Welcome

’26 Gophers ‘Iron Five’ Preceded by 1986 & 1972 ‘Iron’ Teams

Posted on March 8, 2026March 8, 2026 by David Shama

 

The Golden Gophers basketball team closed its regular season last night with a 67-66 win over Northwestern. The Gophers compiled a 15-16 overall record, and 8-12  in Big Ten games. Minnesota’s resting spot in the final Big Ten standings was ahead of six other teams in the 18-team league

The Gophers won’t qualify for the NCAA Tournament unless they beat the longest of odds by winning all of their games in this week’s Big Ten Tournament in Chicago.  Don’t hold your breath, but get this: the hoops outfit had a better year than the vaunted University of Minnesota men’s hockey program that went 7-15-2 in Big Ten games and 11-21-3.

Forget the losing record by the basketballers.  Niko Medved’s first season as head coach has been an indisputable success with results that include surprising home wins over three top 25 ranked teams.  He’s extracted the max out of the talent he’s working with.

And that talent wasn’t overwhelming when the season began and was considerably lessened by injured starters unable to play. Starting point guard Chansey Willis Jr. and center Robert Vaihola played in seven and five games respectively, none in the Big Ten.  Starting forward-center Jaylen Crocker-Johnson was lost from the lineup after 24 games.

Medved turned to an “Iron Five” of Isaac Asuma, Bobby Durkin, Grayson Grove, Langston Reynolds and Cade Tyson.   Off the bench to provide occasional rest for starters was Kai Shinholster.  The “Iron Five” workaholics regularly saw their minutes in the 30s and sometimes a Gopher like leading scorer Tyson played all 40 minutes.

When Medved agreed to the Gopher job last winter he faced a massive rebuild.  As it turned out, only Asuma and Grove returned among scholarship players from coach Ben Johnson’s final team.  Faced with a late recruiting start and limited NIL budget, Medved and his staff pieced together the best roster they could.

The bluebloods of college basketball weren’t fighting Minnesota for the transfers that came to Dinkytown.  The guys who became Gophers though, were high character players willing to be coached and play team basketball.

Gophers hoops player Cade Tyson, image by David Shama
Cade Tyson

With willing students, Medved and his staff were able to maximize player development.  The improvement of Asuma, for example, as the team’s point guard has been noticeable. So, too, has the defensive improvement of three point shooting specialist Durkin at the forward position.  And Tyson, who averaged 2.6 points last season playing for North Carolina, regained his confidence and averaged 19.5 points, seventh best overall in the Big Ten.  He’s deserving of all-Big Ten honors.

Medved has consistently shown his coaching chops.  Among his best moves has been implementing a zone defense to keep his “Iron Five” out of foul trouble.  The result has often been textbook zone with his players properly positioned and giving maximum effort.

Medved, the former Gopher student manager under head coach Clem Haskins in the 1990s and native Minnesotan, is deserving of Big Ten Coach of the Year consideration.  He won’t win that honor because of Minnesota’s losing record.  Coach of the Year recipients almost always are title winners or top contenders in all sports.  That policy, however, doesn’t acknowledge the fact sometimes teams with .500 records or less achieved what they did because of the best coaching in the league.

Interestingly, Medved’s “Iron Five” had predecessors at Minnesota.  The 1986 team and  1972 teams both gained a place in Gopher history with that description.

Suspensions, not injuries, forced the circumstances of those teams.

In 1986 starters Mitch Lee and Kevin Smith, and reserve George Williams Jr. were accused of rape in Madison after the Wisconsin game.  Emotions were intense surrounding the allegations including at the U where the administration decided the Gophers should forfeit their next game.

The three players were suspended by the University for the remainder of the season and never played again for Minnesota after that January 23 Wisconsin game.  Yet a Dane County jury found the players innocent on all charges in July of that year.

Coach Jim Dutcher didn’t like the decision to forfeit the Northwester game on January 26. He resigned and assistant coach Jimmy Williams, playing with an “Iron Five,” led the Gophers to an upset win over Ohio State on January 30.

The five players forced to play nearly most of the minutes each game were: Tim Hanson, Ray Gaffney, John Shasky, Kelvin Smith, and Marc Wilson.  In 11 games, they won twice, also defeating Iowa at home.

The 1972 story had an ugly side mixed with the glory of a Big Ten championship.  Minnesota coach Bill Musselman was working toward his first season in the summer of 1971 when the 30-year-old told the fanbase the Gophers would win the Big Ten title. It was a lot to promise considering the team’s record the season prior was 11-13 overall and 5-9 in Big Ten games. And Minnesota had last won the conference championship in 1937.

Musselman, though, was no ordinary coach.  He was a fiery competitor who left observers with the impression he might believe defeat was worth than death.  Before his team began practice in October of 1971, he spoke fervently to his players about beating Big Ten favorite Ohio State.

When Ohio State came to Minneapolis on January 25, 1972 it was clear the Buckeyes and the Gophers, with a core of key new players and a talented returnee in center Jim Brewer, were competing for a title.  A frenzied capacity crowd screamed their support for the Gophers in a physical and emotional game that turned into a brawl on the court involving players and fans.

The Gophers were frustrated late in the game.  Ohio State’s star center Luke Witte was knocked to the floor on a hard foul by both starter Clyde Turner and reserve Corky Taylor.  What happened next was a matter of who you believe.  Taylor reached down to help Witte to his feet, and per Taylor, Witte spit at him.  Then Taylor put a knee in Witte’s groin.  Witte denied spitting at Taylor.

The hard foul and resulting chaos included lots of punches being thrown and Buckeye players needing to be hospitalized including Witte whose head was stomped on by star Gopher forward Ron Behagen.  The riot prompted officials to end the game with 36 seconds left, resulting in Ohio State winning 50-44.

While historians generally judge the Gophers as the villains in the infamous and bloody game, Witte had thrown an elbow at Minnesota guard Bobby Nix as the teams left the court at halftime.  The elbow missed Nix and the referees didn’t see it but the incident fueled emotions on the Gopher side.

Taylor and Behagen were suspended for the rest of the season.  The Gophers played with a “Iron Five of Brewer, Nix, Turner, Dave Winfield, and Keith Young. Winfield, who would go on to superstardom in MLB, had been an offseason find in intramural basketball.  The rabid Musselman didn’t like to play many players even before the suspensions and Winfield was initially an afterthought for playing time early in the season, but he and his four teammates had more than a heavy work load after the riot.

Although Taylor never achieved stardom with the Gophers, he was a valued reserved and at 6-9 fit in with Musselman’s penchant for long players who could cover space in his nationally known matchup zone defense.  Behagen, also 6-9, was uber talented and later became a first round NBA draft choice.

With the “Iron Five” Musselman slowed tempo and emphasized ball control and defense even more than before the brawl. He had talent including the super athletic and high jumping Winfield.  Brewer was a swat blocking defensive gem and rebounder who was the second player taken in the 1973 NBA Draft.  Turner was known as “Clyde from the side” for his deadly corner jumper shot and led the team in scoring.  Nix and Young were steady and Big Ten caliber guards.

Musselman made good on his championship promise.  The Gophers, 11-3 in the Big Ten and 18-7 overall, won the conference title finishing a win better than 10-4 Ohio State.  “The Iron Five” won its opening NCAA Tournament game but lost to a great Marquette team that ended their for the ages year.

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