It’ uncommon for the Gophers football roster to have a player who earned a four-star rating from Rivals.com while in high school. Brendan Beal, was a four-star linebacker in 2008 as a prep in Pennsylvania. Earlier this year he transferred from Florida to Minnesota where after sitting out this fall he will have two seasons of eligibility.
Gophers coach Tim Brewster told Sports Headliners Beal, who is interested in business, was attracted to the Carlson School of Management at Minnesota and also wanted to play in the Big Ten. Beal, whose progress at Florida was slowed by injuries, also knew the Gophers had a need for talent at linebacker.
“The little bit I’ve been around him, he’s shown that he’s got excellent ability,” Brewster said. “He’s an extremely smart player. Big, physical kid (about 6-3, 250). I anticipate him being a really good football player for us.”
Brewster said Beal wasn’t asked by the Gators to leave Florida. “Absolutely no,” Brewster said.
Bob Hughes and other Goal Line Club members deserve praise for hosting a memorable luncheon last Friday to honor the 1960 Gophers national championship team. Coach Murray Warmath’s health didn’t allow him to attend but many former players did including nose guard Tom Brown (the 1960 Big Ten Most Valuable Player) and tackle Bobby Bell who was a two-time All-American in 1961-62. Gopher historian Doug Addison, a close friend of Bell and other players, devoted a lot of time to helping with 1960 reunion activities last week including a breakfast gathering on Thursday at the Minneapolis Club.
Bell will have his jersey No. 78 retired at the Gophers-Northwestern game on Saturday, October 2.
Former Kansas coach Mark Mangino, a friend of Brewster, attended the luncheon. Mangino is living in Naples, Florida and will consider coaching again with the “right” opportunity. Otherwise? “I might become a game show host,” he quipped.
USC used all its allotment of 3,000 visiting team tickets for Saturday’s game at TCF Bank Stadium and would have welcomed more if available, according to Marc Ryan of the Gophers athletic department. He also said USC will be paid $400,000.00 for playing here and Minnesota will receive the same for next year’s game in Los Angeles.
The Trojans have been penalized by the NCAA with reduced scholarships and a bowl ban but USC’s new athletic director Pat Haden isn’t using “turn around” in his vocabulary. Haden told Sports Headliners he expects success in the immediate seasons ahead including possibly eight, nine, 10 win seasons. The Trojans are 3-0 after defeating the Gophers on Saturday.
Al Nuness, the former Gophers basketball player, is retired from his executive position with Jostens and is consulting for the company. His son Jared was recently hired as director of video and operations at Baylor, a fast rising basketball program.
The University of Minnesota is searching for a new president to succeed Bob Bruininks who will leave the position next year. The guess here is that administrators on campus would be thrilled if former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice were interested in the job. Rice is a professor at Stanford and in the past there’s been speculation that because of her football interest she might one day be NFL commissioner. (There’s no word that Rice is interested or a candidate to succeed Bruininks.)
Joe Mauer injured his left knee in yesterday’s loss to Oakland and his return is day-to-day, according to the Twins.