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.

Lurtsema: No Weakness on Vikings

Posted on September 3, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

Bob Lurtsema played for the Vikings from 1971-1976 and remains a close observer of the team, attending practices and games.  He told Sports Headliners “you never heard me this excited before.”

Lurtsema all but gushed when asked about his optimism concerning the Vikings after watching them acquire quarterback Brett Favre and prepare for their season opener on September 13 at Cleveland with the Browns.  How does he calibrate his level of optimism?

“All I can say is wow! I am so excited.  I mean the highest rating possible for enthusiasm, I have that for Brett Favre.  The puzzle is put together.”

Describing the defense as “unbelievable,” Lurtsema said the arrival of Favre is a dramatic upgrade for the team’s offense.  No longer will defenses be able to crowd the line of scrimmage with a majority of its players, intent on stopping running back Adrian Peterson.

Lurtsema said Favre can read defenses and call plays so expertly he will be a mega difference maker for Peterson and the offense.  Lurtsema believes the boost to the passing game with Favre will result in Peterson gaining 2,000 or more yards this season.  He led the NFL in yards rushing last year with 1,760.

Favre will help, too, with his leadership including his passion to play football.  “He really wants to win and that attitude is contagious,” Lurtsema said.

Lurtsema respects NFC North title contenders Green Bay and Chicago, but believes in the Vikings.  “I think we’ll win it,” he said.  “It’s not going to be easy, but we have the stronger team.”

What will the season record be?  “The Vikings will win at least 12 games,” Lurtsema answered.  “I am very confident of that because there’s not a weakness on that team.”

Comments Welcome

Guess What School Provides U Football Model?

Posted on September 3, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

The Gopher football program begins its 126th season on Saturday at Syracuse.  The program that produced six national championships hasn’t won any since 1960 and during the last 40 years or so has struggled to be anything other than a Big Ten cupcake.

So who can the Gophers emulate to improve their results? Yes, the Hawkeyes and Badgers are easy guesses.  Our neighboring states of Iowa and Wisconsin are similar to Minnesota in various ways including so-so high school football talent.  In the last 20 years the programs at Iowa and Wisconsin have each won three Big Ten titles.  But there’s probably even a better model to stir the hope of long patient Gopher fans.  Northwestern, for decades a sorry excuse for a football program, is no longer the “Mildcats,” and may even provide any anti-sports folks at the U something to think about.

At Minnesota the leadership wants to emphasize academics, and also honesty in recruiting.  Winning, they will tell you, is important, too.  To all of that Northwestern says: check, check and check.

Since 1995 the Wildcats have won three Big Ten championships.  Only Ohio State and Penn State have won more titles during that time.  The Gophers’ last championship was in 1967.  Northwestern went to the Rose Bowl in 2006.  Minnesota was there in 1962, the longest absence of any conference school.  Since 1993 when Penn State joined the Big Ten and made the conference an 11 team league the Gophers have the 10th worst winning percentage in Big Ten games, with only Indiana doing worse, according to https://www.cleveland.com/datacentral/index.ssf/2008/10/alltime_big_ten_standings_and.html

Northwestern, the Big Ten’s only private school, overcame an embarrassing football reputation with smart coaching and recruiting.  First Gary Barnett, then Randy Walker and now 34-year-old Pat Fitzgerald have shown that winning can be accomplished almost any place.

Educational mission?  Apparently NU is still on track there.  Northwestern was the top ranked school from a BCS conference in America, according to a 2008 Forbes listing of colleges.  The criterion included impact of a school’s degree on a career, how much student debt is incurred, quality of the professors, and also national and international reputation of the institution.  Northwestern ranked No. 11 among all schools in the listing and Minnesota was the lowest among Big Ten schools at 554.

Last season Northwestern finished 9-4 overall, 5-3 in the Big Ten (last time the Gophers did that was 2003, 10-3, 5-3) and went to the Alamo Bowl.  What have the Wildcats done since?  Well, at the top of Fitzgerald’s list of talking points at a Big Ten media gathering this summer was academics.  Collectively, his players had a 3.0 grade point average for spring semester.

Fitzgerald, who played on the teams that started the Northwestern renaissance in the mid 1990s, has a 10 player leadership council to help make everyone accountable.  That and a whole lot of other things seem to be working at Northwestern.

Northwestern won the first of its recent three conference titles in 1995, ending a title drought dating back to 1936. The nine wins last year happened for only the fifth time in school history.  “I think we’re just scratching the surface,” Fitzgerald said.

As the Gophers begin a season that has them opening a magnificent new stadium with a third year leader in coach Tim Brewster, scratching the surface and looking to Northwestern for inspiration seems like good advice.

Comments Welcome

Worth Noting

Posted on September 3, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

Gopher fans might have thought they had seen the last of dome stadiums when Minnesota played its final game in the Metrodome but not so.  The Gophers open their schedule on Saturday in Syracuse’s Carrier Dome, named for the air conditioning company.  Interestingly, the Carrier Dome isn’t air conditioned.

Tony Dungy, the former Gopher quarterback and assistant coach who won the 2007 Super Bowl as head coach of Indianapolis, has taped a message to be shown on the video board for the opening game at TCF Bank Stadium on September 12.

Sports Illustrated pro football writer Peter King is picking the Bears, not the Vikings, to win the NFC North.

Former Vikings assistant coach Dean Dalton will host Tim Brewster’s weekly TV show that is starting this week on Fox Sports North and the Big Ten Network.  Dalton and Brewster are friends.

Last week Dalton was inducted into the Burlington High School Athletic Hall of Fame in Burlington, Wisconsin.  Dalton said he won nine letters in high school including football where he made all-state before attending the Air Force Academy.  His father Don was the athletic director and football coach at Burlington.  The two are the only father-son combo in the school’s hall of fame, Dalton said.  He also said Cowboys quarterback Tony Romo attended the high school and was inducted into the hall of fame last year.

An NHL source told Sports Headliners Marian Gaborik will have three major adjustments going from the Wild to the New York Rangers.  The high profile Gaborik must deal with the abundant and aggressive New York media.  The source rates the star forward a 3.5 on a scale of five for his media relations.  Second, the Madison Square Garden ice sheet is far from the NHL’s best because of the arena’s busy schedule. Third, the Rangers’ practice facility is about an hour from Manhattan, not exactly like zipping from Gaborik’s downtown Minneapolis residence to Parade Ice Gardens.

Wild single-game tickets go on sale beginning at 9 a.m. on Saturday, September 12 at the Xcel Energy Center box office and 10 a.m. at all other Ticketmaster locations. The Wild have sold out every regular season and Stanley Cup home game in club history – 341 consecutive games over nine years.

In two years the Timberwolves roster could include Spanish guard Ricky Rubio and Cole Aldrich, the Bloomington Jefferson grad now at Kansas.  The Wolves need a center and might be positioned in next year’s draft to take Aldrich who is likely to skip his senior year.  Rubio, a 20-year-old in two years, will probably be ready to leave home in 2011.

Here’s more evidence of how the Twins have struggled to piece together a starting rotation this season.  On Tuesday night Jeff Manship became the fourth Twins pitcher to make his first career start in 2009, joining Anthony Swarzak, Brian Duensing and Armando Gabino.

Duensing, who gave up no runs during seven innings in yesterday’s 4-2 Twins loss to Chicago, has an ERA of 1.42 in his last three starts.

The Twins Justin Morneau has four hits in his last 34 at-bats and has slipped to third for most RBI’s in the American League.

Thank you to our new advertisers, Washburn-McReavy (see below) and TCF Bank (top of page).

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 823
  • 824
  • 825
  • 826
  • 827
  • 828
  • 829
  • …
  • 1,177
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Win or Lose, U Can Make Positive Impression at No. 1 OSU
  • At 24 Anthony Edwards Can Build Off Superstar Status
  • Twins Surprise by Firing Veteran Manager Rocco Baldelli
  • 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

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