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Author: David Shama

David Shama is a former sports editor and columnist with local publications. His writing and reporting experiences include covering the Minnesota Vikings, Minnesota Twins, Minnesota Timberwolves and Minnesota Gophers. Shama’s career experiences also include sports marketing. He is the former Marketing Director of the Minnesota North Stars of the NHL. He is also the former Marketing Director of the United States Tennis Association’s Northern Section. A native of Minneapolis, Shama has been part of the community his entire life. He is a graduate of the University of Minnesota where he majored in journalism. He also has a Master’s degree in education from the University of St. Thomas. He was a member of the Governor’s NBA’s Task Force to help create interest in bringing pro basketball to town in the 1980s.

Fidel Castro Part of Local Baseball Lore

Posted on July 5, 2022July 5, 2022 by David Shama

 

Minor Treasures is a new book from Nodin Press in Minneapolis that will provide any Minnesotan interested in Millers and Saints history a detailed account of Twin Cities minor league baseball history. Authors Stew Thornley, Taylor Simons and Dave Kaplan write about the Minneapolis Millers and St. Paul Saints from their origins, offering an array of interesting names and tales with a background of vintage photos and illustrations.

Now is a nostalgic time to peruse the soft-cover book because for decades an annual ritual of summer was watching the Saints and Millers play a double header on the Fourth of July. It was known as a street car series, with fans attending games in each city on Independence Day. For more than six decades there was a cross-river rivalry between the two franchises, with much of it focused on the street car matchups of doubleheaders played on Memorial Day, July 4th and Labor Day.

Legendary players wore the uniforms of the Millers and Saints including many who are honored in baseball’s shrine at Cooperstown, New York. Willie Mays, arguably the game’s greatest player ever, played in Minneapolis for part of a season in 1951. Minor Treasures profiles the “Say Hey Kid” and includes a photo of the home on Fourth Avenue that Mays rented and still stands near the Hosmer Library.

For many readers a surprising name on the book’s pages will be Fidel Castro, the Cuban dictator who seized power in the late 1950s. Castro was a baseball player in his youth and to say he took an interest in Havana’s Junior World Series against the Millers is an understatement.

The Junior World Series was a Triple-A showdown between teams from the American Association and International League. In the postseason playoffs of 1959 the AA Millers and IL Havana Sugar Canes advanced to the Junior World Series. Castro attended all the games in Havana and so did his henchmen. Minor Treasures described the atmosphere: “Nearly 3,000 soldiers were present, many lining the field, while others stationed themselves in the dugouts, their rifles and bayonets clearly evident.”

The book makes clear that this was a series about more than competition on the field. Politically motivated intimidation was a dark presence as described in Minor Treasures:  “As Millers centerfielder Tom Umphlett entered the dugout after making a catch to end an inning, a soldier made a slicing motion across his throat. Umphlett and the other players clearly understood the message.”

The Millers forced a series deciding game seven in Havana. Minor Treasures writes that Castro walked by the Minneapolis bullpen before the game, patted a large revolver on his hip and declared: “Tonight, we win.” And that’s what the Sugar Canes did, scoring the final run in the bottom of the ninth inning to win 3-2.

Minneapolis manager Gene Mauch offered the postmortem with this quote in the book: “Our players were truly fearful of what might happen if we won. But we still tried our hardest, figuring we’d take our chances if we did win.”

Worth Noting

Twins front office boss Derek Falvey and manager Rocco Baldelli are in communication before and after each game. Falvey told Sports Headliners the conversations are part of their routine “because that’s the way our partnership works here.”

Falvey said he thinks outside perceptions about those conversations might be of “some secret vault meeting,” or involve lineup meddling by him. “…I will say this to the end of my career. I’ve never written a lineup in my life and I don’t really want to, and I don’t plan to,” he said.

Pregame meetings (10 or 15 minutes) between Falvey and Baldelli include medical updates about players. Falvey said Baldelli likes to “bounce ideas off” him and others in the clubhouse about personnel but the manager makes the final call on details like “where he is going to hit guys” in the lineup. The pregame chats, Falvey, added, don’t even merit “formal meeting” status and may include non-baseball subjects like European football, a Baldelli favorite interest.

Post game is a short meeting and can focus on the bullpen and whether there is a need for a call up. Injuries, illness or tired arms can prompt roster changes including help from the Triple-A St. Paul Saints. “We usually check in for a short five-10 minutes postgame just to make sure we didn’t miss anything on the roster,” Falvey said. “We rarely break down (for example) what happened in the seventh inning unless it’s something meaningful and he wants to talk about it. …

“It’s truly a partnership (with Baldelli, including their meetings). He makes the decisions on the team. Who plays, where they play, what pitching moves they make. That’s all the manager. It’s always been that way for me and everywhere I’ve been in my career. My job is to try and help support him and thinking through those things. …”

Assistant coach Dave Thorson told Sports Headliners his background with head coach Ben Johnson gives him a special understanding about his younger boss. Thorson, going into his second season as a Johnson assistant coach on the Gophers men’s basketball team, has known Johnson since he was in sixth grade.

Then, of course, Thorson coached Johnson at DeLaSalle High School. “I think the neat thing for me is because I understand him, I can help him in a way that may be different than anybody else.” Thorson said.

With a remade roster assembled on the fly, the Gophers struggled last season with a 4-16 Big Ten record, but Thorson describes Johnson as a “star in the making.” More observers could feel that way if Minnesota, with better talent now, improves significantly next season and earns its way into the NCAA Tournament.

The latest issue of Sports Illustrated includes a feature on Chet Holmgren whose 7-foot versatile skills are earning him the “Unicorn” nickname and a nation-wide following after the Oklahoma City Thunder made him the No. 2 selection in last month’s NBA Draft. The former Minnehaha Academy prep All-American was coached by Larry Suggs in AAU basketball. “I wanted to make Chet the best American-born white basketball player since Larry Bird,” Suggs told Sports Illustrated.

Comments Welcome

Luis Arraez: Strike Zone Specialist

Posted on June 28, 2022 by David Shama

 

The Derek Falvey era can’t take credit for discovering Luis Arraez but that doesn’t make the Twins’ baseball boss hesitate in appreciating the American League’s leading hitter.

Minnesota signed the then 16-year-old Venezuela native as an undrafted free agent in November of 2013. Whether in the minors or the bigs, Arraez has hit over .300 every year except last when his average was still an impressive .294. “He’s never not hit,” said Falvey who joined the Twins in the fall of 2016.

Arraez is second among all MLB hitters behind Paul Goldschmidt’s .347 average. Arraez also leads the AL in on-base-percentage at .427. He is a career .320 hitter during four seasons with the Twins. His rookie average of .334 in 2019 is the best in club history for a first-year player. Rod Carew, the Twins’ legend and Cooperstown Hall of Famer, had a career mark of .328 over 19 seasons, including 12 in Minnesota.

Derek Falvey

“I am not that surprised at how well he hits,” Falvey told Sports Headliners while talking about Arraez. “When I first got to see him, when I first got to this organization, he had just recovered from a knee injury and he was in A-Ball. …I watched him hit in BP (batting practice), and then I watched him in a game. He knew the strike zone better than most big league hitters then. He just had a really good feel for what was a ball, what was a strike, and how to kind of get the bat to the ball. …”

Part of the success in 2022 is fueled by his performance during May when his .376 average was the highest in a month for a Twin since Joe Mauer’s .380 in August of 2010. In his last 30 games his average is .336 and it’s .298 in the prior 15.

The left-handed 25-year-old is hitting .383 against right-handed pitching. His average versus lefties is .212 . In the past that discrepancy sometimes caused manager Rocco Baldelli to bench Arraez against left handers.

Arraez has played in 65 of the Twins’ 75 games and has 232 at-bats. For awhile this spring there was concern he could finish the season with the American League’s best batting average but without the necessary 502 at-bats to be awarded the title. But Baldelli has made Arraez pretty much an everyday player since early May.

Falvey believes Arraez can win a batting championship, if not this season then down the road. “I certainly hope so. You keep your fingers crossed you get your players on the field as much as possible from a health standpoint.

“As long as he continues to play the way he is playing there is no doubt (he is going to be on the field). We viewed Luie as an everyday player right from the outset of the season, even if the position wasn’t locked in as much.”

A second baseman when he joined the Twins, Arraez has unexpectedly returned to that position this month with Jorge Polanco unable to play for awhile because of lower back tightness. Arraez has played 29 games at first, 24 at second and five at third base.

Arraez has infrequently been the team’s DH this season and in the past the Twins have also played him in left field. With regular first baseman Miguel Sano out for most of the season so far with a knee injury, Arraez may have locked up that position for this year and beyond.

Falvey believes Arraez is most comfortable in the infield. Arraez’s versatility in the field fits in with the trend in baseball to have players who can play multiple positions. “I think the more flexible your roster is the better off you are,” Falvey said.

Unlike most of his peers, Arraez isn’t focused on hitting home runs. He has 10 in his career including a first grand slam this spring. His 20 whiffs at the plate in 2022 are impressive and his ability to make contact with the ball can especially be a welcome contribution on nights the Twins are struggling for base runners.

Carew, a native of Panama, was a left-handed hitter with superb bat control and difficult to strike out. He won seven American League batting titles. Don’t bet against Arraez winning a few also.

Arraez’s batting stance and style of hitting, including line drives to all fields, is reminiscent of Carew who started his MLB career as a second baseman and transitioned to first base. The legendary Carew was selected 18 times for the All-Star game. Arraez should receive his first All-Star invite next month.

The two Latin American natives have multiple similarities but Arraez doesn’t have to be the next Carew. His plate production and versatility in the field make him plenty valuable just being who he is.

Comments Welcome

Kevin Fiala Future Likely TBD at NHL Draft

Posted on June 26, 2022June 26, 2022 by David Shama

 

When do the Minnesota Wild determine whether restricted free agent Kevin Fiala will be with the team next season?

Wild owner Craig Leipold told Sports Headliners “it’s likely we’ll come to some conclusion at the NHL Draft.” The event is July 7-8 this year in Montreal.

Why then? Leipold said: “We love him. He’s a good kid. It’s going to be really difficult to re-sign him. We likely will need to trade him for draft picks which will help our future, and hope that we can find a win-win for a good place for him and a good place for us.”

The Wild’s 25-year-old forward is one of the team’s best point producers but the franchise faces salary cap restrictions. Leipold said GM Bill Guerin, his management team and scouts work on the Fiala dilemma every day. “It’s their big project trying to find a way to keep him. He was a huge part of our success last year. We hope it will work but if it doesn’t we’ve gotta keep our options open.”

The Wild had a disappointing first round loss to the St. Louis Blues this spring. The outcome stung the team, the fans and the owner who stayed away from his St. Paul office for about a month following the series.

Craig Leipold

“Oh, yeah, that thing,” said Leipold who also lives in Racine, Wisconsin. “It was a hard loss. Probably the most difficult loss that I had to go through in sports as an owner in 24 years. We think we’re a better team than we played. We didn’t do our best, but we’ll make the changes that are necessary. We have one goal in mind and we’re going to get a Stanley Cup. We know what we need to do to do that, and we’ll make sure that we fix it.”

Liepold didn’t detail those changes but he did talk about pending superstar Kirill Kaprizov. In just two seasons the young Russian has convinced at least some Wild historians he is the most gifted and exciting player in franchise history.

“I mean he has no weakness,” Leipold said. “He is the total package. We’re glad we have him signed for four more years and hopefully when those are getting close to ending we’ll sign him for eight more.”

Karprivov set a team record last season scoring 108 points. He also came up big in the 4-2 playoff series loss to the Blues, producing seven goals and one assist.

Leipold described the 25-year-old forward as not only a “bundle of excitement and energy and passion,” but remarkably humble. “His English is probably better than he might let on but players love him. He’s great in the locker room.”

Fans feel anxiety about Kaprizov returning to his homeland in the offseason, with Russia involved in war with Ukraine. But Leipold doesn’t seem overly concerned and pointed out many Russian hockey players have been able to get in and out of the country.

The Wild played before raucous sellout crowds at home this year, much different than the pandemic restrictions that in the past forced NHL teams to compete in empty arenas. With success in 2022 and an economy rocked by inflation, the Wild is implementing about a five percent increase in ticket prices. “We hate to do it but we gotta stay competitive,” Leipold said.

Single game tickets aren’t on sale yet but Leipold said season sales are close to 13,000 because of increased interest in the team. The total for 2022-2023 will likely be capped at 13,000 or 13,500, so that inventory for several more thousand seats is left for single game and group tickets.

“We’re an exciting team,” Leipold said. “We think we’re going to get a lot of fans that will come in and buy season tickets. …”

Worth Noting

The best of birthday wishes to former University of Minnesota athletics trainer Jim Marshall who turns 92 on July 3. He served Gophers athletes and coaches for 42 years before retiring.

Defending champion Juli Inkster is returning to play in the second annual Land O’Lakes Legends Classic presented by The Meadows at Mystic Lake, an official tournament on the Legends of the LPGA schedule. She is a 31-time LPGA Tour champion with seven major championship titles on her resume.

The August 12-14 event will be a 36-hole tournament and feature a field of 40 Legends of the LPGA—ages 45+. There is no cut in the tournament. Four top senior women amateurs from the region will play alongside the Legends and fill out the field of 44. https://www.legendsclassicmn.com

Karl Gregor

Wayzata High School alum Karl Gregor is the Wilson Intercollegiate Tennis Association Division III National Coach of the Year after his Tufts men’s team made the NCAA “Final Four” this spring for the first time in program history.

Caleb Truax, the former IBF super middleweight champion from Osseo, is the latest guest on the “Behind the Game” TV show with hosts Patrick Klinger and Bill Robertson. Truax, 38, wants to continue boxing for awhile before retiring. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WnrdQAA70H8

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