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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.

No Automatic Increases for Borton

Posted on March 28, 2014March 28, 2014 by David Shama

 

Pam Borton has received guaranteed monetary increases in the past but that ends this year, per her employment agreement with the University of Minnesota. The agreement does state that both her salary and “supplemental and media compensation” will be reviewed by the athletic director, “and shall not be less than the previous year.”

Borton, who has been the Gophers women’s basketball coach since 2002-2003, presently earns $335,000 in salary.  That amount is $10,000 more than in 2012-2013 and is part of a past series of guaranteed annual salary increases described in her employment agreement.  Borton’s supplemental and media compensation has also increased annually in the past and is $150,000 for 2013-2014, or $5,000 more than in 2012-2013.

Not only are Borton’s earnings for 2014-2015 to be determined, but there is also speculation about her job status.  Athletic director Norwood Teague has declined opportunities during the last several days in both the Pioneer Press and Star Tribune to talk about the coach’s future.

The Gophers’ season ended in a third round WNIT game last night in Brookings, South Dakota.  The South Dakota State Jackrabbits defeated the Gophers, 70-62.

The program has faltered since the glory days of 2003, 2004 and 2005 when Minnesota played in the NCAA Tournament’s Sweet 16 twice and Final Four once. Borton’s teams haven’t qualified for the tournament for five years.  The Gophers were 6th in the Big Ten Conference standings this season, an improvement over the previous four years of 11th, 9th and two 8th place finishes.

Interest in the program and home attendance has faltered, too.  The Gophers averaged 3,178 this season before hosting two WNIT games that drew announced Williams Arena crowds of 950 and 587.  Attendance once averaged more than 9,000 per game.

Teague neither hired Borton nor gave her the 2012 contract extension that runs through 2016.  Teague, who has been Minnesota’s athletic director for less than two years, is a knowledgeable basketball administrator and gave men’s coach Tubby Smith only one season before dismissing him last March.

Borton’s employment agreement states she can be let go “without just cause” and the University must pay half her salaries for the remaining years of the agreement.  There are two years remaining at $335,000 per season.  Her agreement with the University runs through April 30, 2016.

…The Gophers men’s team plays Florida State in the semifinals of the NIT in New York on Tuesday night.  Minnesota defeated the Seminoles 71-61 in a nonconference game at Williams Arena in December.

Minnesota players and coaches held a meeting to discuss the NIT prior to the tournament starting.  Some teams may not be focused in the NIT because of disappointment from failing to qualify for the more prestigious NCAA Tournament, but the Gophers thought differently.  “We decided we want to go win this thing, so that’s what we’re going to do,” Gophers junior forward Oto Osenieks told Sports Headliners.

Minnesota has NIT wins over High Point, Saint Mary’s and Southern Mississippi.  A win next Tuesday puts Minnesota into the championship game two nights later.  The 2012 Gophers played in the title game but lost.

Gophers junior guard Andre Hollins said the loss left a “sour taste” with him and his teammates.  “You get that close to a championship and you lose, you don’t forget that,” he said.  “It will stay with me forever.”

Two years ago the Gophers went into overtime before defeating Washington in a semifinal game.  Minnesota players were fatigued for the championship game two nights later.  Stanford defeated the Gophers with ease, 75-51.

The 2014 Gophers believe they have more players who can come off the bench and provide energy if the starters are tired.  “This year we’re definitely deeper and I think it’s going to help us,” said junior center Elliott Eliason.

Without a career high 32 points by Austin Hollins on Tuesday night against Southern Mississippi, the Gophers wouldn’t be preparing for New York and Florida State.  The senior guard, who scored 18 during a first half Minnesota comeback, made his last game in Williams Arena something to remember.

“He went out with a bang,” Andre Hollins said. “That‘s what you dream of.  I am proud of him.”

Although the Gophers hosted three NIT games at Williams Arena, they don’t keep the gate receipts.  The NIT, owned by the NCAA, retains the revenues from games but pays for the expenses of teams.

…Timberwolves fans have reason to watch Iowa State’s Sweet 16 game tonight against Connecticut.  Cyclones coach Fred Hoiberg should be considered if Wolves coach Rick Adelman, 67, decides to retire this spring.

Hoiberg played two seasons for the Wolves and later worked in the team’s front office before accepting the Iowa State job, his first head coaching position.  He has revived Cyclones basketball during the last four seasons while adding to his legend in Ames.  Hoiberg attended high school in Ames and was a star player for the Cyclones where he became known as “The Mayor.”

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor is fond of him.  It’s difficult not to like the personable Hoiberg who was popular in Minneapolis and has proven in Ames he can coach.  Part of his coaching success has come from working successfully with troubled players who seem to have a new outlook after transferring from other schools.

Hoiberg’s skill in dealing with difficult personalities would give him an edge in today’s NBA.  At 41 he can relate to players and has the energy needed for the NBA grind.

No doubt Hoiberg feels loyalty to his alma mater.  Athletic director Jamie Pollard hired him, taking a chance on someone with no head coaching experience.  Still, Hoiberg might feel more comfortable leaving Ames for a pro job rather than another college position.

And coming home to Minnesota—where the family has owned a lake cabin and already knows the Wolves organization—could be an overture Hoiberg probably won’t quickly disregard.

…Saint John’s men’s basketball coach Jim Smith will be 80 in June, but if you think he will announce his retirement soon, think again.

Smith told Sports Headliners he has no plans to quit coaching the Johnnies.  He enjoys his work and the association with his players.  “I am sure I will know when it is time (to retire),” he said.

Smith is energetic and not concerned about the approaching eight-zero.  “I don’t feel it (80),” he said.

He just completed his 50th season in Collegeville.  The Johnnies were 15-11 overall and 13-7 in the MIAC where they tied for fourth place.

The overall win total pushed his career record to 770-546.  Smith is one of 27 men’s college coaches to have 700 career victories.  His better teams include a couple that pressed for national championships.  “If I have any regrets it would be not winning a national title,” he said.

The 2001 team made it to the NCAA Division III Sweet 16.  That’s not so long ago and maybe the coach has another long tournament run to make.

The Johnnies will hold their season ending banquet on April 12.

Comments Welcome

Pitino to Boost Garden Party in New York

Posted on March 26, 2014March 26, 2014 by David Shama

 

Richard Pitino is returning to his “roots” next week.

The Gophers 31-year-old head coach will bring his team to New York City and Madison Square Garden to play in the NIT semifinals on Tuesday night.  Minnesota defeated Southern Mississippi 81-73 last evening at Williams Arena for its third win in the NIT Tournament. The Pitino family connections to New York are part of the anticipation the first year coach is feeling about going to Gotham.

Rick Pitino, the legendary Louisville coach, was born in New York.  When Richard was a grade schooler his dad was head coach for the New York Knicks.  Later when Richard was a teenager his dad’s Celtics teams played against the Knicks in New York.  As his father’s assistant coach at Louisville, Richard and the Cardinals made memories playing in Madison Square Garden as part of the Big East Tournament.

Rick and his wife Joanne still have an apartment in New York, and one of their sons, Ryan, is a financial professional in the city.

Even when Richard’s dad wasn’t employed in New York the city was still part of the Pitino calendar.  “Growing up we always would go to New York for the summers,” Richard said.  “My uncle Bill, who we lost in 9-11, was like a second father to me.  We would spend time together as a family.

“My roots are really there.  I know my mother is excited because she just wants to get back to New York.  Any excuse she can get, she’s going there.

“My brother lives there downtown.  I’ve got aunts.  I’ve got uncles.  So it’s exciting for me.

“I’ve been part of some great teams as an assistant coach in the Garden.  We’re going to play in New York next year (in the Preseason NIT) but there is something about earning a spot to get to the Garden that is pretty special.”

NIT organizers and the New York media have to be pleased with the Gophers earning their way to Manhattan.  Selling tickets to the semifinals and finals is always a challenge.  The NIT made hometown team St. John’s one of the tournament’s four No. 1 seeds but the Red Storm was eliminated in its first game.  The Pitino storyline is a boost for tournament interest including the for sure comparisons that will be made between Richard and his father.

The Garden party will be a little more fun, too, if young Richard coaches against well-travelled Larry Brown in the NIT finals on Thursday night.  Brown’s SMU team, a No. 1 seed like the Gophers, must defeat California this evening to earn a trip to New York.  Brown, 73, is the only coach who has won both an NCAA Tournament title and NBA championship.

Tuesday night (ESPN2) the Gophers will play the winner of this evening’s game between Florida State and Louisiana Tech.  Clemson will meet the winner of tonight’s SMU-Cal game in the other semifinal next Tuesday in New York.

If California and the Gophers meet in Madison Square Garden, Minnesota will see ex-Gopher guard Justin Cobbs who now plays for the Bears. That will stir a bit of interest in Dinkytown but last night Pitino wasn’t talking about Brown or Cobbs.  He said the Gophers want to win the NIT championship as part of building his program, and the opportunity to do that in New York has him excited.

“There’s no better place in all of college basketball than to play in Madison Square Garden,” he said.

Worth Noting 

Gophers redshirt freshman forward Charles Buggs, who probably surprised even himself with 13 points in 19 minutes against Iowa on February 25, has scored a total of nine in seven games since then.  For the season Buggs, who is still learning his court assignments, has scored 27 points in 13 games.

Minnesota senior guard Malik Smith, who made eight of 12 three pointers against Nebraska in January and four of seven versus Wisconsin in February, has converted two of 28 since February 16.

The Gophers men’s and women’s basketball teams have been participating in the NIT and WNIT tournaments.  Although the names are similar, the National Invitation Tournament is owned by the NCAA while the Women’s National Invitation Tournament is produced by Triple Crown Sports.  NIT games are televised but there is no live TV coverage of the WNIT.

Former Gophers basketball coach Jim Dutcher, who still lives in Minnesota, will attend tomorrow night’s San Diego State-Arizona NCAA Sweet 16 game in Anaheim.  Dutcher’s son, Brian Dutcher, is San Diego State’s top assistant and will succeed Steve Fisher as head coach when Fisher retires.

Brian Dutcher and Fisher have been coaching at San Diego State for 15 seasons. Last fall the Aztecs signed four players who probably comprise the best recruiting class in school history and they will be eligible next fall.

ESPN.com reported last Saturday there were no perfect NCAA men’s basketball brackets from the more than 11 million submitted by fans for the ESPN Tournament Challenge.  Last Saturday and Sunday was the first of three tournament weekends.

The Gophers recruited Seymour, Wisconsin shooting guard Sandy Cohen before he committed to Marquette.  With Buzz Williams leaving the Golden Eagles to coach at Virginia Tech, could the high school senior now have interest in the Gophers?

A name to follow during the May NFL Draft is Eastern Illinois quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo.  What if the Vikings chose outside linebacker Khalil Mack from Buffalo, or Michigan offensive tackle Taylor Lewan with their No. 8 pick in the first round?  In the second round they might select Garoppolo who threw 53 touchdown passes and averaged 360.7 yards per game passing last season.

The Vikings may not find a 2014 quarterback-ready prospect in the draft even if Louisville’s Teddy Bridgewater is available.  The re-signing of veteran Matt Cassel gives the Vikings some time to develop a Garoppolo, Bridgewater—or (gasp) Christian Ponder.

It’s okay to have modest expectations about the Vikings owning a top 10 draft pick.  Gil Brandt’s 2013 All-Rookie team had just three players who were top 10 draft choices, Ziggy Ansah, Eric Fisher and Barkevious Mingo. The All-Rookie quarterback was Mike Glennon, a third round selection by the Falcons.

The Wild are selling season tickets for 2014-2015 including half season and 11-game packages.  Purchasers who make a deposit by April 13 receive playoff ticket priority for this spring.

Gophers coach Jerry Kill, 53, said he’s been attending football coaching clinics since he was 21.  The opportunity to learn, network and build relationships has contributed to his success that includes head coaching stops at Emporia State, Northern Illinois, Saginaw Valley State and Southern Illinois.

Kill will speak at the MFCA’s Minnesota Clinic on Friday night at the DoubleTree Hotel in St. Louis Park.  The Gophers sponsor the clinic with the MFCA.  Kill praised the work of MFCA organizers and how they continue to improve the clinic.  “Our clinic is tremendous,” he said.

Condolences to family and friends of former Gopher football player Wally Pribyl who died on Monday.  Wally, originally from Heron Lake, Minnesota, lettered for the Gophers in 1968 and 1969, and for many years owned a business in South Dakota.

Twins president Dave St. Peter said starting pitcher Phil Hughes, who signed with Minnesota during the offseason, has been as “advertised” during spring training.  Hughes has struck out 10 batters in 13.2 innings with a 3.95 ERA.

Dave Mona, WCCO Radio Sports Huddle co-host, will speak on Friday to the Minnesota Men’s Breakfast group in Naples, Florida.  Speakers earlier this year have included Matt Birk, Kill and St. Peter.

Mancini’s Sports Hall of Fame will honor the following new members on May 12: Brian Brunette, Ken Mauer, Jr., Barry Persby, Stacy Robinson, Jeff Sauer, Bob and Tim Tschida.  Those enshrined have their names displayed on a hall of fame plaque at the St. Paul restaurant.

Comments Welcome

The Big Chill: Twins Early Schedule

Posted on March 24, 2014March 24, 2014 by David Shama

 

The Twins are scheduled to open their 2014 schedule a week from today in Chicago against the White Sox, and in news reports the weather could share headline space with the baseball as the teams work their way through a three-game series.

The frost line was being measured in feet—not inches—last week at the White Sox’s home field.  Projected Chicago temperatures for this week are mostly in the 30s and 40s, according to Myforecast.com.  Next Monday the forecast is for a high of 63 degrees under cloudy skies.

The Twins and White Sox aren’t scheduled a week from tomorrow but on April 2 they have a night game when the temperatures will likely be in the mid-40s to low-50s.  Then the series concludes with a day game and the forecasted high is 45 degrees.

The Twins then head to Cleveland for a three-game weekend series including a Friday night game.  The weekend forecast predicts the teams will be playing in temps mostly in the 40s, again according to Myforecast.com.

The Twins’ home opener is during the day on Monday, April 7 and the club will play outdoors at Target Field through Thursday, April 12.  During that period the Twins have three night games scheduled.

Admittedly, this is an extremely cold spring in many northern U.S. cities, but it’s difficult to understand why teams like the Twins have to play the opening weeks of the season in cold locations including their own stadiums.  There are four American League cities that typically have warm weather during the first weeks of April—Dallas, Houston, Los Angeles and Oakland.  Two other AL cities, Toronto and St. Petersburg, have stadiums with roofs.  Four others—Baltimore, Kansas City, New York and Seattle—are more likely to have warmer temps in early April than Boston, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Minneapolis.

That makes 10 AL cities—a clear majority—with more favorable spring weather than five others including Minneapolis.

Twins president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners he expects Major League Baseball will look at future scheduling but also said, “Reality is teams have been playing northern outdoor baseball for 100 years.”  The Twins have opened their schedules on the road in four of the last five years.  “I think the Twins have been treated fairly,” he said.

St. Peter said probably all of baseball’s 30 teams would prefer to open their schedules on the road.  By doing so a franchise has extra time to promote and sell tickets for the season opening home series. 

Worth Noting 

As the Twins finish their final days in spring training, St. Peter is hopeful for an improved roster including better starting pitching.  After three consecutive 90-plus losing seasons, expectations are clear.  “I fully expect us to be better in terms of wins,” he said.

The Twins announced this morning they have optioned right-handed pitchers Ryan Pressly and Michael Tonkin along with catcher Chris Herrmann to Triple-A Rochester.  The Twins have also given right-handed pitcher Matt Guerrier his unconditional release.  He is now a free agent.

The club has 29 players in camp: 13 pitchers, 3 catchers (one non-roster), 7 infielders (one non-roster) and 6 outfielders (one non-roster).

Former Twins pitcher Jim Kaat—one of baseball’s best broadcast analysts ever—is 75 but will work games again this year for the MLB Network.

The Gopher baseball team’s home opener is scheduled for Wednesday afternoon against Saint John’s from the MIAC, according to Gophersports.com.

The initial Final Four predictions of CBS TV analysts Seth Davis, Doug Gottlieb and Clark Kellogg are holding up but not perfect after last weekend’s opening rounds of the NCAA Tournament.  All their teams advanced expect Wichita State.  Davis and Kellogg both picked Florida, Michigan State, Wichita State and Wisconsin for the Final Four.  Gottlieb’s choices were Arizona, Florida, Louisville and Michigan State.

The Gophers women’s basketball team defeated SMU in a second round WNIT game last night at Williams Arena.  Minnesota plays next on Thursday night at South Dakota State, a program the Gophers are 1-4 against historically.

The Gophers men’s team, winners in their second round NIT game against Saint Mary’s yesterday, will play Southern Mississippi tomorrow night at Williams Arena.  The Golden Eagles, who defeated Missouri on the road last night, have won eight of their last nine games.  The team is 29-6 this season and excels defensively holding opponents to 62.8 points per game.  The winner of Wednesday night’s game advances to the semifinals of the NIT in New York on April 1.

Former Gopher guard Chip Armelin plays 13.7 minutes per game for the Golden Eagles and averages 4.9 points per game.  He is making 50 percent of his free throws.

Sophomore forward Joey King scored a career high 18 points to lead Minnesota yesterday.  King had scored 14 points each of his two previous games—the first time in his career as a Gopher having three consecutive double figures games.

Former Gopher forward Joe Coleman transferred to Saint Mary’s last summer and will be eligible next season to play for the Gaels.

New York University is offering an April 4-6 course on how to negotiate in business that will be taught by former Timberwolves executive David Kahn.  Kahn is a 1993 NYU law school graduate.

The Bolder Options youth mentoring organization, headed by former Gophers running back Darrell Thompson, will hold a 20th anniversary celebration event in the DQ Room at TFC Bank Stadium on May 15.  The keynote speaker will be Gophers football coach Jerry Kill.  More at Trainingforlifedinner.com.

The Vikings Adrian Peterson turned 29 last week.  If Peterson can play another six seasons averaging about 1,000 yards per season he will threaten Walter Payton’s place as the NFL’s No. 2 all-time leading rusher.  Payton rushed for 16,726 yards and Peterson now has 10,115.  Emmitt Smith is No. 1 at 18,355 yards.

I didn’t find my name today when I read the Star Tribune’s page A2 list of famous birthdays.  (I am disappointed but not too surprised).

Cheers.

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