Chuck Fletcher has hired three head coaches for the Wild including interim boss John Torchetti who took over earlier this month for the fired Mike Yeo. A hockey source knowledgeable about the NHL told Sports Headliners that Fletcher, the Wild’s general manager, could be dismissed if the club doesn’t make the playoffs this spring.
The source, who asked that his name not be used, believes Fletcher is under scrutiny by owner Craig Leipold. Fletcher, who was named the team’s general manager in 2009, hired Todd Richards as his first coach shortly after coming to Minnesota. Richards was let go and replaced by Yeo in 2011. Like any general manager, Fletcher will be evaluated for his coaching hires, personnel decisions and overall performance by the team.

The Wild has been unable to make a deep playoff run during the Fletcher era and twice didn’t qualify for the postseason. This year’s team has underachieved and it’s debatable whether Minnesota will qualify for the playoffs. Under Yeo the Wild struggled this winter with goal scoring, and players seemed uptight on the ice.
The Wild impressed winning its first four games under Torchetti who was promoted from Minnesota’s Iowa farm team. The Wild’s roster is talented enough to make the playoffs but the club’s spotty play—including eight consecutive home losses prior to Yeo’s dismissal—has agitated fans.
The source said the Wild may want to raise ticket prices for next season, but a non-playoff spring wouldn’t effectively position a price hike with customers. The club’s winning streak ended in last night’s 4-1 loss to the Islanders. More will be learned about Torchetti and the team after road games Thursday and Friday against the Flyers and Capitals. The interim coach’s fate could be determined by whether Minnesota qualifies for the playoffs.
The Wild are coming off a high from last Sunday’s 6-1 Stadium Series win against the Blackhawks at TCF Bank Stadium. Although the franchise has long promoted itself as representing the “State of Hockey,” Sunday’s game was the first time the NHL allowed the Wild to host an outdoor contest. The reason? The club’s lackluster won-lost records and image season after season.
The Wild, no doubt, would like to some day host a January 1 NHL Winter Classic, an even more prestigious outdoor game than the Stadium Series. The impressive way the organization handled Sunday’s game will help the cause but there might be a problem. That game didn’t sell out, and Leipold said in the February 21 Star Tribune a reason was because the NHL sent 4,000 tickets to his club on late notice. The Sports Headliners source said the NHL office didn’t like the publicity, and he added that last minute tickets were available for half the face value price.
Worth Noting
The Wild’s next home game is Sunday against the Panthers, the only franchise never to win a regular season game at Xcel Energy Center. All-time Minnesota is 6-0-2 at home against Florida.
The University of Minnesota received $800,000 in rent for last Sunday’s Wild-Blackhawks Stadium Series game.
It was 36 years ago today that the U.S. Olympic Hockey team won its gold medal game against Finland. The “Miracle on Ice” roster included Minnesota players and was led by legendary ex-Gophers coach Herb Brooks. The trainer was Gary Smith who is now working with Eden Prairie High School teams.
Ex-Gophers head football coach Jerry Kill spoke at an NFL seminar in Tampa last Saturday. Speakers included former Gophers quarterback and Vikings assistant coach Tony Dungy who will be inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame this summer. Kill told Sports Headliners he will be in Fort Worth next week to help his friend Gary Patterson, the TCU head coach, evaluate the Horned Frogs.
Gophers football coach Tracy Claeys speaks to the CORES luncheon group on Thursday, March 10 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington, 1114 American Blvd. CORES is an acronym for coaches, officials, reporters, educators and sports fans. Reservations and more information are available by contacting Jim Dotseth, dotsethj@comcast.net.
Minnesota’s first spring football practice is next Tuesday. The annual spring game starts at 12:45 p.m. on April 9 at TCF Bank Stadium.
Gophers’ freshman forward Jordan Murphy earned his eighth double-double of the season last night in Minnesota’s 83-61 win over Rutgers at Williams Arena. He had 19 points and 14 rebounds. That performance followed up on last week’s 17 points and game-high 11 rebounds in Minnesota’s upset win over top-10 nationally ranked Maryland.

Big Ten career scoring leader Rachel Banham plays her last regular season home game tonight for the Gophers against Ohio State. She and fellow seniors Mikayla Bailey and Shayne Mullaney will be recognized in front of an appreciative crowd. Draftsite.com has projected Banham as the first pick in the second round of the 2016 WNBA Draft.
Yesterday would have been the 61st birthday of former Timberwolves coach and executive Flip Saunders who died last fall.
Former AWA tag team champions Jim Brunzell and Greg Gagne will sign autographs Saturday as part of the Triple Crown Sports Show at Southtown Center in Bloomington. The “High Flyers” will be available from noon to 2 p.m. Show hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday.
Reader Bob Klas, Jr. noted that among the more obscure Minnesota pro sports franchises not mentioned in Monday’s Sports Headliners column was a short-lived professional bowling team—the Twin Cities Skippers who were part of the National Bowling League and competed at a Bloomington facility that later became the Carlton Celebrity Room. “San Antonio had the good sense not to spend a dime on a facility for their team, as they played every match on the road,” Klas wrote in an e-mail.
David –
I didn’t know that there once was a professional bowling league, but I have heard that the sport had been promoted by some for consideration as an Olympic sport. What I would like to know, if that were to happen, would competitions include a beer frame?
-Tom