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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.

Wolves Coach Hire Stirs Big Question

Posted on June 5, 2014June 5, 2014 by David Shama

 

Timberwolves fans are entitled to view with skepticism the official announcement coming tomorrow that Flip Saunders will be the team’s new coach.  Saunders is a proven NBA coach but is this the best decision for the organization?

The Wolves haven’t been to the playoffs since 2004.  The team was 40-42 this past season, certainly an improvement over recent history but also an indictment of the talent.  The roster is problematic from starters to bench players.  There are too many weaknesses on this club including one-dimensional personnel.

The best indication right now is the Wolves are going backward regarding talented players who can turn them into a winner because second team All-NBA forward Kevin Love, according to numerous media reports, wants to be traded.  After six seasons of no advancement to the playoffs, Love apparently wants out of Minneapolis to find the opportunity to play for a winner.

Saunders, as president of basketball operations for about a year, has worked at developing a relationship with Love.  But that relationship isn’t likely to keep Love in a Timberwolves uniform next season when he becomes an unrestricted free agent, and neither is the extra money Minnesota can pay him under NBA rules.

Saunders had a 10-plus seasons run with the Wolves in his previous coaching life here that ended in 2005.  He’s the only coach to ever take the franchise into the playoffs but except for 2004 the Wolves have never made a deep postseason appearance.

That 2004 team, unlike earlier Wolves teams led by Kevin Garnett, had additional star power in guard Sam Cassel and forward Latrell Sprewell.  And that’s the point: To win there has to be talent and just who is it in the newly constructed basketball operation with Saunders coaching and retaining his front office position that is going to find the talent?

Saunders has a high basketball IQ but he can’t do everything.  The Wolves will need productive personnel evaluators to make themselves a playoff club.  They aren’t just Team Saunders and it’s up to Flip to surround himself with a capable staff.

Until the front office shows it can dramatically improve the talent on the floor the long-suffering Wolves fans can wear their skeptics’ hats about an organization that too often disappoints and seems without a plan.  The decision of Saunders to become coach is the latest example of “What’s going on with this franchise?”

Owner Glen Taylor was on record that he wanted Saunders to have one job, not two.  But apparently Saunders, who less than 18 months ago was chasing the Gophers coaching job, couldn’t resist the urge of returning to the bench.  Maybe Saunders and Taylor couldn’t find a big name coach who was a fit but it’s hard to believe there aren’t some good candidates with low national profiles.  That kind of hire might have better allowed Saunders to concentrate on improving the roster.

With his new role as coach, Saunders increases his grip on the franchise.  His power also includes minority ownership in the team.  It’s also believed Saunders wants to acquire a larger ownership stake in the future.  Don’t dismiss the possibility, too, that Saunders could lead a group that one day will acquire the franchise from Taylor.

Last season the Wolves sometimes looked lethargic under 67-year-old coach Rick Adelman who resigned this spring.  They also had trouble closing out games, not much of an endorsement for the coaching.

Saunders, filled with passion and persuasiveness, is likely to fix the energy problem. Maybe the record in close games, too.  But moving toward becoming a top NBA team will require a lot more talent on the roster—and that ultimately will tell the story of Team Saunders.

Worth Noting

Mike Yeo’s new multi-year contract pays him about $1 million annually, a hockey source told Sports Headliners.  The source, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the Wild coach’s new agreement pays him over $500,000 more each year than his old contract.

He said Yeo’s past compensation was “one of the lowest” among NHL head coaches.  The new deal places Yeo among the “lower third in the league.”

The source also said Jacques Lemaire, the Wild’s first coach who left after the 2008-2009 season, was the NHL’s highest paid coach at $1.8 million or more.

Yeo, according to multiple reports, almost lost his job during the past season but rallied his team in the spring including the playoffs where the Wild advanced to the second round for just the second time in franchise history.

The NBA has ditched the annoying 2-3-2 seven game series championship format, replacing it with the more common 2-2-1-1-1 schedule.  The NBA Finals between the Spurs and Heat starts tonight in San Antonio, with the series switching to Miami for games three and four.  If needed, games five and seven will be in San Antonio, with game six in Miami.

Clash of the Classes boys and girls basketball games are tomorrow night starting at 5:30 p.m. at Concordia, St. Paul.  Three games involve 2017 versus 2018 boys, and 2015 versus 2016 boys and girls.  More at Northstarhoopsreport.com/clash-of-the-classes.

The 25th annual Bruce Smith Golf Classic and dinner at Faribault Golf Club will be Monday, June 16.  Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague and former Gophers Randy Breuer, Mark Dusbabek and Darrell Thompson are among scheduled celebrities.  Auction items will include a Gophers helmet autographed by coach Jerry Kill, tickets for a Gophers basketball game in a Williams Arena suite, a Kent Hrbek autographed bat, and a cap autographed by Jack Nicklaus and Johnny Miller. The event benefits three Faribault schools and is named after former Faribault native and Gophers Heisman Trophy winner Bruce Smith. Golf information is available to the public by e-mailing Bruce Krinke, contact@fctv10.org.

Comments Welcome

U, Not Iowa, Right Choice for Nuness

Posted on June 4, 2014June 4, 2014 by David Shama

 

When Al Nuness gave the commencement address this spring at Iowa Central Community College in Fort Dodge, Iowa he recalled how his decision to attend the University of Minnesota changed his life.

Nuness was pursued by Illinois and Purdue while playing high school basketball in suburban Chicago but his grades kept him from being admitted to either one of those Big Ten universities.  Nuness enrolled at Fort Dodge Junior College (now Iowa Central) in 1965.  By the time he departed in 1967, he was a junior college All-American who averaged 28.3 points per game.

Nuness planned to attend the University of Iowa.  “I had my choice of schools and I chose Iowa,” Nuness told the commencement audience at Iowa Central last month.  “That choice started a learning curve that would forever change my life.”

The announcement to be a Hawkeye was to come at a Monday night dinner in Iowa. But Nuness went home the weekend before, and it was then he met Minneapolis businessman and Minnesota alum Harvey Mackay who happened to be in Chicago.

Mackay, who has become a best selling business author, talked with Nuness and his parents.  Mackay had a strategy for his conversation with Nuness who is African-American.

“He asked me why I chose the University of Iowa,” Nuness said at the commencement.  “I told him it was based on basketball.

“He replied, ‘So, if you don’t play pro basketball, what do you plan on doing?’

“Before I could answer that question he said, ‘Will you be able to live and raise your family in Iowa City?’

“Hey, folks, this was 1967.  I don’t think Iowa City was ready for the Nuness family.

“He pulled out a copy of Life Magazine.  It listed all the Fortune 500 companies in Minneapolis.  He also showed me where Minneapolis was number one in the country for job opportunities for African-Americans.  It was also number two in the country for quality of life for African-Americans.  That got my parents’ attention.”

Mackay also talked about summer employment in Minneapolis, and said if Nuness became a student-athlete at Minnesota he would become his mentor.  He now had the attention of Nuness and his parents.

“Then he wanted to know what time the ‘I’ Club dinner was on Monday night,” Nuness recalled in his commencement talk.  “My mom said, ‘Al’s not going to the dinner.’

“And the rest is history!”

Nuness, an outstanding shooter, played two seasons for Minnesota, 1967-68 and 1968-69.  His senior year he captained the Gophers, averaging 16.4 points per game and he made second team All-Big Ten guard.

But if the story ended there Nuness would only be in the Iowa Central athletics hall of fame.  He is also a member of Iowa Central’s distinguished alumni hall of fame.

His decision to attend school in Minneapolis created opportunities after college.  First he became head basketball coach at Minneapolis Central High School and then a Gophers assistant coach.  The name he made at Minnesota helped him gain a position at Pillsbury and later as an executive with the Timberwolves.  But in the business community his name is most closely associated with Jostens.

Nuness, now retired from full-time work, spent 18 years with the Minnesota-based school products company.  He was a vice president for 15 years with assignments that included heading up Jostens’ championship rings sales for the Super Bowl, World Series and Bowl Championship Series.

Nuness’ father had been a poor farmer and his son certainly couldn’t have been sure of his future when deciding on a college.  Mackay showed Nuness how important college decisions are, and started him on a pathway to a productive career and life that has also included volunteer work in the Minneapolis area.

“I am living proof that the American dream is indeed alive,” Nuness told his audience at Iowa Central.  “Hard work, preparation, and perseverance all help to make it possible for even the son of a share cropper to pursue his dreams.”

Worth Noting 

Vinny Del Negro, who reportedly has interviewed with the Timberwolves regarding the team’s coaching vacancy, was featured in Mackay’s 2010 book Use Your Head to Get Your Foot in the Door: Job Search Secrets No One Else Will Tell You.  The two are friends and although Del Negro had no NBA, college or high school coaching experience he became head coach of the Bulls in 2010.  He later became head coach of the Clippers before being let go after the 2012-2013 season despite having a 56-26 and winning the Pacific Division championship.

Henry Ellenson, the power forward from Rice Lake, Wisconsin who will be a senior next winter, is now rated the No. 5 player in the national class of 2015 by Espn.com.  Ellenson’s brother Wally left the Gophers program during the past season.

Grand Rapids power forward Alex Illikainen is ranked No. 90.  A good guess is Illikainen will become a Gopher while Ellenson will be a Badger.

Kevin Love turns 26 in September and the next few years of his NBA career are potentially his best.  The Timberwolves have a massive sales challenge trying to convince Love to remain with a franchise that has missed the playoffs each of his six seasons in Minneapolis.  Don’t look, though, for Love to be dazzled by the Lakers and Hollywood or the Knicks and Broadway.  His next move is likely to be a lot more about winning games than geography.

New WCHA commissioner Bill Robertson is relocating the league offices from Denver and Madison to Minnesota.  He is temporarily working in Bloomington but soon plans to have permanent offices in Saint Paul or the Minneapolis suburbs.  Robertson said WCHA representatives will have business meetings in Saint Paul next week for future planning.

It seems likely Adam Weber has suggested to Mitch Leidner that the Gophers sophomore quarterback try for an invite to the prestigious Manning Passing Academy held each summer in Louisiana.  Weber, who has been working out with Leidner, twice attended the academy as a counselor when he played for the Gophers.  The academy is for campers entering grades 8-12 in the fall.

The Twins swept the Brewers in four games last year but that won’t happen this season.  The two teams split two games in Milwaukee earlier this week.  Tonight they start a two-game series at Target Field.  Lynx point guard Lindsay Whalen will throw out the ceremonial first pitch.

Brewers center fielder Carlos Gomez is tied for seventh with 11 home runs among National League players and is eighth in batting average at .310.  If the Twins hadn’t traded him away to the Brewers in 2009 they could feel almost cocky about the deal they made to originally bring him to the organization.  Gomez was one of four prospects the Twins acquired from the Mets in the 2008 trade sending former Cy Young award winner Johan Santana to New York. But Gomez didn’t produce at a high level here and the Twins haven’t realized much value from the trade.

The Tapemark Charity Pro-Am the men’s tournament at Southview Country Club in West St. Paul is Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  The women’s event is Thursday and Sunday, also at Southview.  Spectators are welcome and will see some of the area’s best golfers.

The Tapemark, now in its 43rd year, benefits people with developmental disabilities.  More at Tapemarkgolf.org.

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June 14 Wedding Set for Vikings Center

Posted on June 2, 2014June 2, 2014 by David Shama

 

It is no ordinary June for Vikings starting center John Sullivan who this week is at Winter Park practicing with teammates.  He will be married on June 14 in Long Island, New York.  He dclined to give his fiancée’s name but did say the couple will enjoy an Alaskan honeymoon cruise in late June.

Sullivan was drafted by the Vikings out of Notre Dame in 2008.  Since 2009, when Sullivan became the starting center, he has missed only three of 77 games.  A calf injury, knee surgery and concussion have been challenges.  After the Vikings went through one of their recent Organized Team Activities he was asked about his health.

“I don’t know if you’re ever 100 percent as a professional football player but I am as close as I’ve been in a long time,” he told Sports Headliners.

Any lingering injuries?  “Nothing.  We always call it total body soreness. That just means you got a lot of games under your belt.”

Sullivan, who turns 29 on August 8, was named All-Pro by Pro Football Weekly in 2012.  With his age and experience, he could be positioned to have his best season in 2014.

“That’s always the goal,” Sullivan said.  “Every year your goal is to play the best you can as an individual, because that’s how you help the team win, and that’s what it comes down to.”

The Vikings’ record was 5-10-1 last season.  A prediction late last month by the Las Vegas Hilton wagering authorities said the team will win only six games this season, but that doesn’t mean anything to Sullivan.

“I hadn’t heard that,” Sullivan said.  “Frankly, we don’t care what Vegas says.  We don’t care what anybody says.  The people that have control over that situation are the ones that are here now, on this practice field and this building going to work everyday.  We’re going to put the work into it to win as many games as we possibly can.”

The number of wins, of course, will have much to do with quarterback production.  In practices Sullivan is impressed with veterans Matt Cassel and Christian Ponder, and rookie Teddy Bridgewater.

“Teddy looks great so far,” Sullivan said.  “He’s a confident young guy.  He’s made some incredible throws, and obviously we know who Matt and Christian are.  They’re both guys that have led teams to playoffs in the past.  We feel like we have three guys who can go out and get the job done.”

Sullivan is pleased new head coach Mike Zimmer retained offensive line coach Jeff Davidson who was with the Vikings for three prior seasons.  Davidson’s reputation as an instructor and technician is well established at Winter Park.

Sullivan is impressed, too, with his new head coach after watching Zimmer lead the team in spring activities.  “There’s no nonsense out here.  No BS.  Coach Zimmer is concerned with holding everybody accountable and winning football games. That’s all it comes down to.”

Sullivan is a leader who over the years has been involved with community activities including the drive to build the new stadium opening in 2016.  Then in 2018 the stadium will host the Super Bowl.  Wouldn’t it be special if the Vikings were playing in that Minneapolis game?

“It would be amazing just to be in a Super Bowl,” Sullivan said.  “We don’t care where it is.  You could play in a parking lot in Missouri.  We don’t care.

“Yeah, would it be nice to play in a Super Bowl, here?  Of course.”

Worth Noting 

The Vikings continue their Organized Team Activity sessions this week at Winter Park.  Players and coaches, as part of the franchise’s community work, will help build a playground on Wednesday at Lucy Craft Laney School in Minneapolis.

Pedro Florimon, who hit .108 in 65 at bats with the Twins this spring, is batting .237 in 59 plate appearances since being demoted to Triple-A Rochester.  Former Twins starter Scott Diamond, also with Rochester, is 2-6 with a 7.51 ERA.  Teammate and hot starting pitching prospect Alex Meyer is 3-1 with a 3.31 ERA and impressive 62 strikeouts in 51.2 innings.

Joe Schmit’s book, Sudden Impact, is now in its second printing.  The KSTP TV sportscaster said the first press run was 5,000 and now another 5,000 have been printed.

Schmit’s hometown is Seymour, Wisconsin.  That’s also the hometown of prep shooting guard Sandy Cohen who reportedly was recruited by the Gophers but will attend Marquette.

The Minute Men, the volunteer organization supporting Minnesota sports for more than 50 years, will honor outstanding high school lacrosse players at a noon banquet June 15 at the Crowne Plaza St. Paul-Riverfront Hotel.  The finalists for Mr. Lacrosse are Max Elsenheimer (Eagan), Michael Lamb (Benilde-St. Margaret), J.R. Riley (St. Thomas Academy), Sam Turner (Academy of Holy Angels), Charlie Venable (Eden Prairie), Carter Yepson (Rosemount) and Conner Yepson (Rosemount).  Finalists for Ms. Lacrosse are Sophie Buelow (Chanhassen), Sheila Hirsch, (Edina), Anna Johnson (Eden Prairie), Katie Larson (Apple Valley), Ali Ridge (Minnetonka), Anne Slusser (Blake) and Lydia Sutton (Blake).

Finalists for Mr. Goalie are Max Fehey (Eden Prairie) and Aaron Wiederhoeft (Prior Lake), while finalists for Ms. Goalie are Oralee Hespenheide (Bloomington Jefferson), and Maddie Kohlbeck (Farmington).

 

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