Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick

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.

‘Critical’ Offseason Ahead for Fleck & Golden Gophers

Posted on November 26, 2023November 26, 2023 by David Shama

 

The Golden Gophers 2023 football team lacked talent and quality depth at too many positions. The result was a 5-7 overall record and 3-6 mark in the Big Ten that left them in a four-way tie for last place in the West Division.

Now coach P.J. Fleck and his staff face the challenge of upgrading the personnel and depth as the Big Ten transitions in 2024 to 18 football teams with no divisional play.  And in the new world of college football Minnesota and other Power Five programs will try to figure out how to retain players and add players in the transfer portal who can contribute next fall while stockpiling incoming freshmen for development. The portal is open most immediately from December 4 through January 3, 2024.

The Gophers had experienced players at many positions, but they didn’t play consistent football.  When things mattered the most—late in the season—they lost four consecutive games including Saturday’s finale with Wisconsin.  A run of key injuries was problematic all season.

Minnesota could return most of its offensive and defensive starters, and special team regulars in 2024. The most significant losses are defensive tackle Kyler Baugh, center Nathan Boe, receiver Corey Crooms Jr., corner Tre’Von Jones, safety Tyler Nubin and tight end Brevyn-Spann Ford.

The best college teams excel at quarterback and along the line of scrimmage, offensively and defensively.  QB Athan Kaliakmanis started all 12 games and was up and down in performance.  Not only was his passing inconsistent but he made minimal plays with his legs.  The offensive line blocking couldn’t match the performance of three recent seasons when Minnesota won nine games or more.  Defensively, too often Minnesota’s line and linebackers were gashed with big runs, and the old nemesis of a poor pass rush continued.

Typically, Power Five teams lose a dozen or more players to the portal.  Who those players will be on the Minnesota roster will be known over the next 30 days or so.

Where do the Gophers need help in the transfer portal?  “Pick your position,” Ryan Burns said.

Burns, the local recruiting authority from GopherIllustrated, listed quarterback, receiver, running back and offensive and defensive lines as areas of need.  If pressed for his top three he prioritizes corner, tailback and “probably quarterback.”

Burns predicts Fleck and his staff will prioritize Name, Image and Likeness money for players already on the roster. Retaining talents like RB Darius Taylor, offensive tackle Aireontae Ersery and end defensive Jah Joyner will be vital for next year’s team.

Burns said creating competition for Kaliakmanis is desirable but the Gophers are likely to find such a QB from the FCS or Group of Five level.  Why? Because big name Power Five quarterbacks can command $250,000 and more in the portal.

Fleck, who has a 49-34 record at Minnesota and is fifth all-time in wins, starts his eighth season in 2024.  He will have to sort out issues with the program including possible changes needed in coaching philosophy and schemes, and perhaps shaking up the staff.

Burns and others predict this offseason will be different. “Most critical one Fleck’s had, I would say,” Burns said.  “It didn’t go their way this year—the breaks they probably weren’t anticipating, but still should have won two games, Illinois and Northwestern, and sitting at six or seven wins going into the Wisconsin game.

“If that’s the case I don’t know that there is as much fan reaction as there has been this season. …Being able to look short term and long term at the same time is going to be critical for him trying to figure out what the best thing is to adapt going into that 2024 new Big Ten world.”

Worth Noting

I am so sorry to write that my friend Jim Carter, the captain of the 1969 football Gophers, passed away on Thanksgiving evening in Palm Springs, California.  I knew Jim for more than 50 years and he was a fiery competitor in sports, business and life. He was a loyal friend who cared deeply for the University of Minnesota where he also played hockey.

Jim Carter

A great prep football player at South St. Paul High School, Jim could have opted for Notre Dame but instead chose the hometown Gophers. He was a star player and important contributor as the fullback on the 1967 Minnesota Big Ten championship team.  The Green Bay Packers made a linebacker out of him and his NFL career lasted through the 1978 season.

Known to friends as “Hurricane,” Jim was challenged much of his life by emotions and addictions.  He had been in recovery for about 20 years and devoted a lot of his free time to helping others with their addictions.

Jim passed away at age 75 after battling metastatic melanoma.  Longtime friend, confidant and Gopher teammate Jim Brunzell wrote via email how he will miss their lunches, football get togethers and phone calls.

“Jimmy was a man’s man and called his life accordingly,” Brunzell wrote.  “…May he rest in peace, ‘till we hug again.”

Former Gophers head football coach Tim Brewster has resigned as Colorado’s tight ends coach, per internet reports today.

Mike Conley, 36, is the poised point guard whose leadership is indispensable to the fast-starting Timberwolves.  He has been in the NBA since the 2007-2008 season and an indication of his self-control is never receiving a technical foul.

Chet Holmgren, the 7-1 Minneapolis native in his first NBA season, is averaging 18 points and eight rebounds per game for the Thunder who play the Wolves at Target Center Tuesday night.

Tom Reid, the former NHL player and radio analyst for the Wild since the franchise’s inception in 2000, is the latest guest on “Behind the Game” with longtime host Patrick Klinger. Topics include how the recent death of Minnesotan Adam Johnson may influence safety new safety measures in the game. The show is available on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PPvNXskdASI&si=uLHbbftPajzUeD8W

Golfweek’s 2023 rankings of the best private courses in the state starts with Interlachen at No. 1 followed by Spring Hill, Minikahda and White Bear Yacht Club (tied at No. 3) and Hazeltine National.  The next five are Windsong Farm, Somerset, Northland, Minneapolis and Golden Valley.

1 comment

Talking Turkey for Laughs and Wisdom

Posted on November 21, 2023 by David Shama

 

Everything I ever wanted to tell you about Thanksgiving.

(Ha! But maybe only a little bit.)

Suggestion for Strib columnist Patrick Reusse regarding the selection process for his annual “Turkey of the Year.” Choose a media person. Hint: It’s “low hanging fruit.”

My most memorable Thanksgiving Day sports event was the 1963 Golden Gophers football game at Memorial Stadium when Minnesota defeated Wisconsin 14-0 while earning some payback from a controversially officiated defeat in Madison the year before.  The game on Thanksgiving Day, November 28, had been moved from the previous Saturday because President John Kennedy was assassinated November 22, and the nation was in turmoil and mourning.

Bobby Bell

Gopher 1962 All-American tackle Bobby Bell recalled meeting President Kennedy in the Murray Warmath book, The Autumn Warrior. The president knew of Minnesota’s frustrating fourth quarter 14-9 loss to the Badgers in 1962 and said to him later in the fall: “Bobby Bell! You’re the one who got that really bad roughing call against you a couple of weeks ago in that big game against Wisconsin, right?”

Warmath, the Gophers coach who probably would have won his second Big Ten title in three years if not for the 1962 officiating in Madison, had an eye for talent and a sense of humor: “No mule ever won the Kentucky Derby,” Warmath liked to say.

BTW I am starting a new tradition in advance of Saturday’s Minnesota-Wisconsin game in Minneapolis. Gopher fans are asked to wear lumberjack shirts (no red) this week to ensure good fortune that Paul Bunyan’s Axe remains in Dinkytown for a third consecutive year.

While the Gophers are practically strangers to Thanksgiving football, the Vikings are not, having played nine times on the holiday.  Last year the Vikings defeated the Patriots 33-26 in their only home Thanksgiving Day game ever when Kene Nwangwu worked up an appetite with a 97-yard kickoff return for a touchdown.

All-time on turkey day the Vikes are 3-2 against the Lions, 3-0 against the Cowboys and 1-0 with the Patriots for a 7-2 record.  A favorite is the 1998 game in Texas when rookie wide receiver Randy Moss took revenge on the Cowboys who bypassed him in the NFL Draft after reportedly first indicating they would select him.  Moss caught three passes in the game for 163 yards and all the receptions resulted in touchdowns during Minnesota’s 46-26 win.

No matter when you eat on Thanksgiving the NFL will be right there with you.  The lineup Thursday: Packers at Lions, 11:30 a.m., Commanders at Cowboys; 2:30 p.m., 49ers at Seahawks, 8:20 p.m.

Football and food? The facts are these: it takes something like 15 hours to prepare the Thanksgiving feast and about 15 minutes (the length of halftime) to consume much of it.

And woe to those who don’t show appreciation and lend a hand to the preparers of the extravaganza.  Without gratitude and willingness to help, there might be no TV football for you and dirty looks at the table could bring on a bad case of indigestion.

My worst and unexpected Thanksgiving drama?  Being part of a pro rasslin’ promotion to raise funds for charity and hearing a cascade of boos rein down from the rafters of the old St. Paul Auditorium.  Go figure.

Nobody on TV had more fun with football and Thanksgiving than the late John Madden, the Austin, Minnesota native.  See what kind of look you get from a butcher if you ask for a Madden favorite, the six-legged turkey! I know we won’t have to count turkey legs beyond two on our bird.

At our house we spend considerable time talking about where to buy, what size and how to cook the turkey.  How many pounds will feed how many people for how many days? Do we cover the bird with tin foil to enhance moisture?  Maybe we’re influenced this year by a TV talking head who boasted about finding a Butterball at 99 cents per pound.

Temptation has crept into the process this year. We’ve seen wild turkeys in the yard lately, and I’ve pondered securing one for the Thanksgiving table.  I am adept at throwing golf clubs and thought that might be a quiet way to knock off a gobbler. Restraint won out when I thought of cleaning the fowl.

Turkey is not for everyone, though.  Vikings offensive guard Dalton Risner grew up on a ranch in Colorado and the family was a fan of another bird.  “The fried chicken was just more crunchy, more juicy, just better,” he told Sports Headliners.

One year, Risner and his sibs were each tasked with making various parts of the holiday meal. “Yeah, of course we bombed out.  I think mom and dad said it was all good, but you know we did something wrong.”

Risner’s mom made her version of Mississippi Mud Pie for dessert—brownies, layered with marshmallow cream and covered in chocolate frosting.  A visitor suggested last week that sounded mouth-watering. “I got a sweet tooth, too, man,” Risner said. “Pumpkin bars, pecan pie.  It’s going to be a good week, next week.”

Talk Thanksgiving with Viking defensive back Cam Bynum, and along with the importance of spending time with family comes a memory from Black Friday.  He recalls his “sneaker head days” in California when he used to collect shoes.  “In high school I’d go camp out (at a store with family) and wait in line for shoes, standing there for 12-plus hours, and that was a lot of fun for me.”

At our table we’ll have family from out of town and nearby.  We’ll eat until everyone is high on sugar and then play games.  I like the ones for ages 4 to 10.

Part of the emphasis in the Gophers football program is serving and giving to the community.  Not just Thanksgiving week but other parts of the year, too. So, I asked Gophers’ football coach P.J. Fleck about gratitude yesterday.

He made the point that there are people who only want to be grateful for the good things in their lives. “A lot of things that you’re grateful for are the hardest things you’ve been through in your life because they teach you the biggest lessons—some of the most tragic, some of the hardest things you get through,” he said.  “You do as you get older…find the gratitude in that and find out what it teaches you.”

Thank you for reading this space today and throughout the year!

4 comments

U Men’s & Women’s Hoops Ticket Sales Trend Differently

Posted on November 19, 2023November 19, 2023 by David Shama

 

Ticket sales for men’s and women’s basketball at the University of Minnesota are in contrast with one another.  After consecutive last place finishes in the Big Ten, the men’s program has declined in non-student season tickets sold, while the women’s team has increased interest and sales because of new coach Dawn Plitzuweit.

Sports Headliners requested ticket totals from the University through the discovery process. As of early last week, the U had sold 4,780 men’s non-student season tickets, representing 1,534 accounts.  This contrasted with totals of 5,704 and 1,887 for the 2022-2023 season.

The U cited three reasons for decline in sales and accounts. “Changes in life circumstances (including relocating, home/city), general disinterest and poor team performance.”

Ben Johnson

Ben Johnson was hired as men’s coach in March of 2021 and his first two seasons have been rocky.  His overall record is 25-40 and the consecutive last place conference finishes are the first in program history dating back to 1898. Minnesota is a popular media choice to finish at the bottom in 2024 after having a 2-17 league record last season.

Pricing of non-student season tickets is unchanged from 2022-2023, so presumably that wasn’t a deterrent for most past buyers.  Fan dissatisfaction is evident, though, and there was preseason fan interest in the amount of the coach’s buyout after the coming season.   Sports Headliners has confirmed with the U that if notice was given March 15, 2024 the buyout amount is $6,519,340.

The public can also purchase mini-plans or partial season tickets.  That total as of last week was 289 versus 574 for 2022-2023.  Mini-plan sales are expected to increase (as they normally do) in the early weeks of the season that began November 6 with a win over Bethune-Cookman.

Student season tickets have declined from 2,699 to 2,033.  There’s been no pricing change since last season.

Excluding season tickets and mini-plan tickets, the U reported 7,305 single game tickets sold for the 21-game home schedule.  The most interest is in the January 23 Wisconsin game.  Projected attendance is 7,054 for the Big Ten home opener December 6 against Nebraska. Williams Arena seating capacity is 14,625.

Attendance generally has been in decline for years. The Gophers averaged 9,451 fans per game last season.  That was the lowest since 1970-1971 (8,395).  Fewer fans mean less revenue for the self-supporting athletic department that has only three money making sports—football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey.

Johnson has several key returnees from last season’s team who, along with a few newcomers, could lead to an improved season.  Junior forward Dawson Garcia was named Big Ten Player of the Week for the week of November 5 when he averaged 22.5 points per game in two games.  Freshman guard Cam Christie, a four-star recruit from Illinois, scored 18 points in his college debut game against UTSA on November 10.  He was entrusted to take the last shot to tie up or win Thursday night’s home game against Missouri but was unsuccessful as the Gophers lost 70-68 after blowing a 20-point second half lead.

The Gophers are 3-1 after yesterday’s 67-53 win over USC Update.

Athletic director Mark Coyle hired Plitzuweit last March to replace Minnesota basketball legend Lindsay Whalen as Gopher women’s head coach. The move drew criticism from those who thought Whalen should have been given one more season to turn around her struggling program but the reception to Plitzuweit has mostly been positive from the public and fans.

Plitzuweit has 28 years of coaching experience, with 16 as a head coach. She has been the head coach of winning teams at (most recently) West Virginia, South Dakota, Northern Kentucky and Grand Valley State. As a head coach she has 15 winning seasons including nine 20-win seasons and two 30-win years.

The 3-0 Gophers play national title contender Connecticut at 4 p.m. today in Williams Arena. The blue-blood Huskies feature Minnesota legend Paige Bueckers, who won national player of the year honors in 2021, and the expected attendance of over 9,000 could be the largest home crowd of the season.

As of last week, 2,469 non-student season tickets, with 899 accounts, had been sold. This contrasted with totals of 1,876 and 704 last season.  The U reported “no significant” pricing changes to season tickets from last season.

The mini-plans or partial season tickets total was 244 versus 157 for 2022-2023. There are no student season ticket sales, with students admitted free.

The single game tickets total (excludes season and mini-plan sales) for all 18 home games was 14,902.

Reasons for increased ticket sales include optimism regarding the new coach, excitement about women’s college basketball, an attractive home schedule and a roster that features local talent “playing well.”  There are eight Minnesota natives and two Wisconsinites on the roster.

Sophomore guard Mara Braun, from Wayzata, was the Big Ten Player of the Week for the week of Nov. 5.  She averaged 25 points, 5 assists and 3.5 steals in opening season wins over LIU and Chicago State.

The closest win for the Gophers was a 22-point victory over North Dakota State.

Average home attendance last season was 3,353.  Fans will turn out when given an exciting and winning team as evidenced about 20 years ago with consecutive seasons averaging more than 9,000 in attendance.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 55
  • 56
  • 57
  • 58
  • 59
  • 60
  • 61
  • …
  • 1,176
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Most Pressure to Win in This Town? It’s not the WNBA Lynx
  • Vikings & Rodgers Meet Sunday After Off-Season Flirtation
  • J.J. McCarthy Start Prompts Recollection of Bud Grant Wisdom
  • Reactionary Vikings Fans Turn on Team at Home Opener
  • Gophers Football Season Ticket Sales Down Slightly from 2024
  • Vikings Grind But Show They’re Who We Thought They Were
  • U Record Setter Morgan Gushes about New QB Drake Lindsey
  • McCarthy’s Missed Season May Pay Dividends for him in 2025
  • Changing Football Landscape Gives the Gophers a New Spark
  • Wild Contract Sit Down with Kaprizov Coming in September

Newsmakers

  • KEVIN O’CONNELL
  • BYRON BUXTON
  • P.J. FLECK
  • KIRILL KAPRIZOV
  • ANTHONY EDWARDS
  • CHERYL REEVE
  • NIKO MEDVED

Archives

Read More…

  • STADIUMS
  • MEDIA
  • NCAA
  • RECRUITING
  • SPORTS DRAFTS

Get in Touch

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme