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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.

Here’s an Optimistic Vote on Claeys

Posted on August 31, 2016August 31, 2016 by David Shama

 

Tracy Claeys leads the Gophers on the field tomorrow night as the program’s head coach. The game kicks off his first full season in that role after being named coach last November.

Will Claeys be heading up the football program a couple of years from now?

The three-year contract University of Minnesota president Eric Kaler gave Claeys last fall carries a clear message: This is a trial run for the U and the 47-year-old former defensive coordinator who served Jerry Kill for years and then succeeded him as Minnesota’s coach. The U was willing to give Claeys the job as head coach but not make a major commitment in years or money—at a reported $1.4 million in 2016.

Claeys may turn out to be worthy of the long-term, big money deal that many college football coaches earn. To get there he will have to improve his recruiting because the Gophers need better personnel and more depth to annually compete against the Big Ten’s best teams.

Kill upgraded the talent with the six recruiting classes he directed. The arrows on the progress chart will need to move upward under Claeys’ leadership. He and his staff will certainly continue the Kill model of finding overlooked high school players with potential. The coaches have shown an aptitude for developing players at various positions but the Gophers need to sign-up more quality ready-to-play talent.

Jim Carter
Jim Carter

“I think the recruiting will make all the difference in the world,” former Gophers captain Jim Carter told Sports Headliners. He, too, believes the unknown about Claeys’ legacy is probably recruiting.

Carter is an admirer of Claeys. “Not all coaches are teachers, and there’s nothing wrong with that, but Tracy is,” Carter said. “I’ve watched him for a number of years, since he’s been here with Kill.

“He never yelled much. He always gets people in the classroom after they film all the practices. He teaches technique, and he teaches the kids what to do. That’s unusual. He’s both a coach, but a very good teacher.”

Carter has been close to the Gopher program for years. He’s been impressed with what Claeys has done in a short period as head coach. That includes the bold move Claeys made after last season when he dismissed longtime colleague Matt Limegrover who was the offensive coordinator and line coach. Claeys replaced Limegrover with new offensive coordinator Jay Johnson and line coach Bart Miller.

“As far as hiring Miller and Johnson, the people that I talk to over there—which includes many of the players—are very optimistic about them,” Carter said. “They’re encouraged about the planning with the offense. They’re encouraged about the aggressiveness of Miller with the offensive line. He’s a tough guy and he’s getting toughness to rise up out of some of those offensive linemen. I see it as very, very positive, those moves that Tracy made bringing those two guys in.”

Johnson is expected to direct an unpredictable offense that is more likely to take risks than the play-calling of the Kill-Limegrover era. Claeys directed a defense under Kill that was the backbone of the program’s success, but for the Gophers to have winning records year after year in the Big Ten the offense must get much better. Over 100 teams ranked ahead of Minnesota in scoring offense last season.

Fans are taking a wait-and-see approach with Claeys. There’s not much hype about Gopher football and that is part of the reason there will be a lot of empty seats in TCF Bank Stadium for tomorrow night’s nonconference opener against Oregon State. But program insiders already see a lot they like about Claeys including his devotion to the job. The 47-year-old bachelor is all about football and the people who work and play for him.

There is no pretense with Claeys. He’s straightforward with people inside and outside of his program. He is a high I.Q. guy who has already shown he will take action when he sees problems. He not only made the coaching staff changes referenced above but he brought in two junior college transfers in the offensive line after recognizing the vulnerability in talent and depth with that unit.

The Gophers have a quality person and teacher leading their program. Now all Claeys has to do is go out and win a bunch of games, and keep the arrows on that recruiting chart going “north.”

Gophers Notes

Although he isn’t expected to be coaching, Mike Sherels might be at tomorrow night’s game sitting with other coaches in the press box. Carter heard Sherels could be in the press box all season after recovering from surgeries earlier this summer for an undisclosed medical issue.

Sherels has recently been in the football office, although Keith Jordan is the acting linebackers coach. “The news is fabulous compared to where he was a couple weeks ago where I had real serous concerns about life-threatening problems he went through,” Carter said last weekend.

Drew Wolitarsky
Drew Wolitarsky

Among their offensive starters, the Gophers have only three players in their last season of eligibility—the lowest number in major college football. The three are quarterback Mitch Leidner, offensive tackle Jonah Pirsig and receiver Drew Wolitarsky.

Minnesota has 13 total players on the roster in their last season of eligibility. That’s the third lowest total in the nation after Kentucky with 11, and Baylor and Penn State with 12 each.

The Gophers’ position chart released this week has defensive tackle Andrew Stelter listed as a starter ahead of Steven Richardson who earlier this month talked about his goal of becoming All-Big Ten. Both are juniors.

Among the 22 starters on offense and defense, five are from Texas, and four each from Georgia and Minnesota. The Minnesota products are Leidner, Pirsig, Stelter and safety Adekunle Ayinde.

True freshmen and Minneapolis natives Phillip Howard and Tyler Johnson are listed as wide receivers on the No. 2 offense. Redshirt junior Conor Rhoda from Eagan is Leidner’s backup.

The Gophers will have two more nonconference games after tomorrow night before starting their Big Ten schedule October 1 at Penn State. Big Ten teams will play a nine-game conference schedule for the first time since 1984. Big Ten players will have the opportunity to compete against all the other teams in the conference at least once during a four-year period.

Teams from the East Division will host five conference home games during even-numbered years, while teams from the West Division will have five home games during odd-numbered years. The Gophers, part of the West Division, play four home league games and five on the road in 2016.

Texas Lutheran University has hired Mike Wacker as men’s basketball coach. He is the son of former Gophers football coach Jim Wacker who also coached football at TLU.

Congratulations to longtime Gophers donor Lee Sundet and his wife Louise who had their 65th wedding anniversary last Friday.

1 comment

New Vikings Stadium Deserves the Hype

Posted on August 29, 2016August 29, 2016 by David Shama

 

Sportswriters are allowed to be homers—and infrequently amateur comedians. Yesterday was a rare opportunity to take a swing at both.

Experiencing U.S. Bank Stadium for the first time was a crash course in civic pride. The new home of the Vikings is an extraordinary structure of glass and steel that’s going to be drawing regional and national attention to Minneapolis for years. Even grade schoolers know the outcomes of NFL exhibition games are meaningless, but yesterday’s Vikings-Chargers preseason event made history. The Vikings played their first ever game in a space-age facility that makes their previous homes look primitive.

Teddy Bridgewater (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings).
Teddy Bridgewater (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings).

Let’s start at the beginning of my day Sunday. It was a 25-minute cruise from Eden Prairie to downtown. All went well except for the driver on 35W who signaled left for about a minute, then turned right. Fooled me. It was kind of like Teddy Bridgewater “breaking ankles” on the Chargers when he made that long first half run.

My parking plan went haywire when I discovered the lot I used three years ago for games at the Metrodome no longer existed. I didn’t investigate but the guess is the property is dedicated to new housing on the east side of downtown.

At 10:30 a.m. there was a lot of street parking within eight blocks or so of the stadium. I pulled into a spot, but then changed my mind. A wine-and-cheese foursome standing near their car sneered at me when I asked about the cost for meter parking.

“Twenty-five dollars,” said a lady who was too important to make eye contact with me.

I drove to a surface parking lot on Ninth Street and Third Avenue. This location turned out to be a “nice bonus” for my physical conditioning. Instead of the expected 14-block round trip walk I planned before leaving home, I logged out at closer to 22 blocks by day’s end. I paid a $15 parking fee for the privilege.

On my walk to the stadium I didn’t encounter any of the reported $50 and $75 parking charges but that wouldn’t be a surprise. I did talk with a man on the street selling game tickets who was asking the face value of $180 each for the lower level seats. There was that kind of demand for exhibition game tickets yesterday—with the Vikings attracting a record crowd for a home preseason game.

As I walked to the new stadium I remembered attending the first Vikings regular season game ever at five-year-old Metropolitan Stadium. The 1961 NFL expansion franchise Vikings were a curiosity back then. They were hardly part of the city and state’s DNA as documented by the 32,236 fans who attended the game and saw the Vikings upset the legendary Chicago Bears 37-13. Vikings fans don’t take that crowd count with too much shame. The next week the Purple travelled to Dallas where the announced attendance was 12,992.

Metropolitan Stadium was a baseball facility that out of necessity doubled as a football venue. Even the best football seats were so far from the field that binoculars were an option. The Bloomington stadium did have its charm, though, including early days when customers parking east of the building walked through corn fields to arrive at the gates.

The Metrodome was a football facility that doubled as the baseball home of the Twins. When the Metrodome first opened, everyone knew it was a low-budget facility but there was excitement about it being one of the few domed stadiums in the country. The Metrodome infused the Twins and Vikings with new revenues, and maybe saved one or both franchises from relocating. Its Teflon-coated fiberglass roof guaranteed fans that games would be played regardless of the weather, and the noise inside provided a rousing home-field advantage in the World Series for the Twins and in big games for the Gophers and Vikings. With its air-supported roof, the dome even produced cheap thrills for patrons when wind gusts shot them through the exit doors and out toward the street.

The Purple Palace that opened to Viking fans yesterday is on the burial site of the Metrodome. It is not your grandfather’s Met, or mother’s Mall of America Field. The facility is imposing on the outside—looking like a giant Norseman’s ship navigating its way to the new world. Inside what fans will care about most is how well they can see the action on the field and what their total stadium experience will be.

U.S. Bank Stadium
U.S. Bank Stadium

Looking west from the press box the view is a knockout. The press box is located on the stadium’s third level with views of the glass-enclosed west end and downtown. That glass and the plastic covering much of the roof made sunglasses welcome yesterday and delivered on the promise of an outdoor feel in an indoor stadium.

How impressive is that to be in a temperature-controlled covered stadium looking at a sun-splashed field?

The west and east ends of the stadium have King Kong size video screens providing vivid looks at what’s happening on the field. With over 66,000 seats not every customer can be on top of the action, but U.S. Bank Stadium seats are pitched high to provide proximity to the field. Some of the seats are 41 feet from the front row to the turf. By contrast, you might do a little vertigo with $59 nosebleed seats, but that’s to be expected in a large venue.

Fans will meander around the inside and outside of the stadium. They can walk the concourses, see views of the field and choose from an imaginative and varied number of food and beverage options. A must-stop for many customers is the Vikings Voyage located in the northwest corner of the stadium. The free admission area offers experiences like catching passes while wearing a virtual reality Vikings helmet and hitting a tackling sled measuring impact force.

Fans can use the new Vikings app on their smartphones to enhance the stadium experience with all kinds of information. There are 1,300 Wi-Fi access points, 2,000 HD TV’s and 30,000 square feet of video displays inside and outside of the stadium. More than $60 million was spent on technology throughout the stadium.

The building has seven levels and includes 430 concession points of sale, 37 escalators, 11 elevators, 979 restrooms, 350 pieces of commissioned art, 250 photographs—and the list of amenities, things, goes on and on.

Yesterday fans roared their approval of the new stadium and the Vikings…kind of like a bunch of excited kids set to make their first blow on the Gjallarhorn. There were purple-clad fans everywhere and at kickoff the team and building were greeted with a standing ovation. Decibel levels were attention getting, and this was just an exhibition game. Wait until the Packers come west to Minneapolis and visit the Wilf palace for the first regular season game September 18!

I’m sure there were some grouchy and even disappointed fans yesterday–always are. Maybe they thought it took too long to move through security into the building. Some customers had come expecting the five massive pivoting doors to be open but they were closed on a sultry day to maintain a 72 degree inside temperature. Reportedly lines were long at some concession stands, and I won’t try to tackle the subject of whether there were any bathroom issues.

But dang, the Vikings won, the place was packed, and the Vikings have a magnificent home that can work its way through a lot of opening day snags. What ruled yesterday were smiles galore and thumbs up from fans.

Even the often cynical media is mostly positive about the stadium. From Forbes to Sports Headliners, the reviews have been glowing.

Perhaps the best line of the day was from the fan who held up this sign: “You should be here.”

Comments Welcome

Does U Need to End Thursday Games?

Posted on August 26, 2016August 26, 2016 by David Shama

 

The opinion here is the Gophers need to fix their problem of opening their home football schedule on Thursday nights.

U.S. Bank Stadium
U.S. Bank Stadium

Next Thursday evening the Gophers play Oregon State at TCF Bank Stadium while less than two miles away the Vikings host the Rams in the second football game ever in the $1.1 billion U.S. Bank Stadium. While it’s only an NFL exhibition game, your average Minnesota elementary school sports fan knows the Vikings are much more popular than the Gophers.

And it’s not just the Vikings the Gophers will compete against for attention next Thursday evening. The Twins will play the White Sox downtown that night—just a long walk from U.S. Bank Stadium. The St. Paul Saints also have a home game, and Canterbury Park hosts its usual Thursday night racing. High school football teams also begin their seasons. The topper among attractions next Thursday is the eighth day of the Minnesota State Fair. Attendance for the day and evening combined might be a number approaching half the population of St. Paul.

“Nobody will be at home that night,” a friend and Gophers football season ticket holder said to me this week.

My friend will be at the Gophers game but others who might normally attend or watch on TV won’t. U athletic department officials will likely announce a crowd of 40,000 to 45,000 in 50,800 seat TCF Bank Stadium. Could it be a record low attendance in the stadium that opened in 2009? The smallest announced crowd to watch a game at the Bank is 41,062 for the Purdue game in 2012.

The last three years the Gophers have also opened their seasons at home on Thursday evenings. The last two years the Vikings played on those dates but their games were on the road—providing TV competition but not entertaining football fans a couple of miles from the U campus.

Tracy Claeys
Tracy Claeys

With a promising Gophers team and playing a potential national championship team, Minnesota drew a TCF Bank Stadium record crowd of 54,147 for its opener last year against TCU. This year the Gophers are down a reported 10 to 20 percent in non-student season ticket sales. There is a public wait-and-see attitude about new coach Tracy Claeys and the team. It’s a similar situation to 2013 when the Gophers were coming off a 2-6 season and drew an announced attendance of 44,217 for a game against UNLV. The Vikings played that same night in the Metrodome.

The Gophers are scheduled to play future Thursday night games at home in late August of 2017, 2018 and 2019. The Vikings will also be playing on all of those Thursday evenings.

How do we know?

The NFL mandates all teams must play their fourth games of the exhibition season on a Thursday, 10 days prior to the beginning of the regular season. Those Thursdays usually come in late August, or this year September 1. The league schedules each franchise’s first three preseason games. Teams are told who they will play and where for the first three games. The fourth game and opponent are determined by each franchise. Teams play two home preseason games and two on the road. If the Vikings have been told by the NFL that two of their first three games are on the road, they will schedule the fourth game at home—up against the Gophers.

The Vikings aren’t changing their scheduling. The Twins, with 81 home dates each year, may also be playing at Target Field on future Thursday nights. The Saints, Canterbury Park and high school football are lesser entertainment rivals for the Gophers at the box office and provide no TV competition.

The Gophers and State Fair authorities made an agreement before TCF Bank Stadium opened, which resulted in all these Thursday night games. The agreement runs through June 30, 2022, and it states that any Gophers home game prior to Labor Day will be played on a Thursday evening. A U spokesman said he isn’t aware of any discussion to change the agreement.

The reason for the agreement is that during the State Fair drivers can park their cars for free on the University’s Minneapolis campus and ride free buses to the fairgrounds in nearby Falcon Heights. The Gophers usually play their home schedule on Saturdays but because of larger fair-going crowds on the weekends, U officials agreed to switch their games to Thursday evenings to better accommodate fair customers.

The existing agreement inconveniences fewer fair-goers but it’s not a winning policy for the Gophers. Fans have to fight rush-hour traffic to attend Thursday night games. Next Thursday those who choose light-rail will likely find cars jammed to the max with everyday commuters, plus Gophers, Vikings, Twins and Saints fans. Fans at home have to make viewing choices between the Vikings and Twins games that start about 7 p.m. and the Gophers game at 8 p.m. Then, too, fans and companies with season tickets and suites for both the Vikings and Gophers face an obvious conflict with the two teams playing at the same time.

There’s no doubt the Gophers could maximize revenues from ticket sales, concessions, parking and perhaps other sources if they were playing Oregon State on Friday night or Saturday afternoon next week.

It’s highly unusual for the NCAA to allow teams to start their seasons before the primary kickoff to college football which begins on Thursdays and continues into the weekend—so the Gophers probably can’t look at Wednesdays in the years ahead. Switching to a Friday night goes up against high school football but out of scheduling necessity the Gophers did that with success at the Metrodome.

Friday night or Saturday openers for the Gophers at TCF Bank Stadium in future years make sense. If U officials tell fair officials they need relief from the competition of Thursday nights it would be a smart move. Fair-goers can find their way to Falcon Heights without free parking on the U campus—even on a Saturday. It’s a safe bet the fair would survive and continue to set record annual attendance.

It should be documented, too, that Gophers fans park free at the State Fair and ride free buses to U football games after Labor Day.  That’s been beneficial for fans and the U athletic department.

Worth Noting

When entering TCF Bank Stadium next Thursday fans will be screened with a hand-held metal detector. This is a new security procedure for Gophers games and a best practice at other venues drawing large crowds. The hand-held device was used for Vikings games at TCF Bank Stadium the past two seasons.

Fans can ask new athletic director Mark Coyle about scheduling and other topics at the State Fair. He will be at the fair’s University of Minnesota Building at 3:30 p.m. next Tuesday. The building is located at the corner of Dan Patch and Underwood.

The Lynx, with the WNBA’s second-best record at 21-4, resume play tonight after the long Olympics break. The Lynx had four players on the gold medal winning U.S. team, and those additional minutes of travel, practices and games in Brazil are a concern. Lynx owner Glen Taylor said coach Cheryl Reeve has monitored WNBA game minutes for Seimone Augustus, Sylvia Fowles, Maya Moore, and Lindsay Whalen.

Time management for the Lynx’s four Olympians this season has been a priority. “She (Reeve) has come down like eight minutes a game (per player),” Taylor said.

Taylor, who also owns the Timberwolves, has spoken this summer to 40-year-old future Hall of Famer Kevin Garnett. Will Garnett retire or return for another season with the Wolves? “I have no new news,” Taylor said. “He hasn’t indicated to me if he’s made a decision or not.”

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