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Category: BEN JOHNSON

Coach Ben Johnson’s Job Safe for Now

Posted on February 5, 2023November 5, 2023 by David Shama

Updated November 5, 2023

The Gophers have been playing Big Ten basketball for over 115 years. A last place finish this winter in the Big Ten standings (all but certain) will be the program’s second straight in the basement.

That’s never happened before but the 2023 Gophers are historically bad. They have one conference win after last night’s embarrassing 81-46 loss to Maryland—the largest margin of defeat ever for a Minnesota Big Ten home game.

No Gopher team since World War II has won only one conference game. Minnesota’s record is 7-15 overall, 1-11 in league games and the Gophers are stumbling through a seven game Big Ten losing streak.

There are eight games remaining on the regular season schedule and the Gophers are expected to lose them all.  They might not but Minnesota faces an ambitious challenge trying to match last season’s dismal 4-16 conference record.

The results of head coach Ben Johnson’s first two seasons leading the program are painful and they substantiate concerns of critics about his hire as a former college assistant with no experience leading a program. But let’s be clear: he is going to be the Gopher head coach for the foreseeable future.

How long? If Johnson directs the program into a competitive position where the Gophers are contending annually for upper-level positioning in the standings, he will be a hero and working in Dinkytown indefinitely.  But if the program can’t come out of the abyss by next winter, then athletic director Mark Coyle could be thinking of a change, or one additional trial season for the 42-year-old Minneapolis native.

It’s delusional to think Johnson will be terminated after this season.  Also, Coyle doesn’t do knee-jerk reactions with coaches he hires.  Patience with men’s basketball will be the mantra for a while. This comes in an environment where interest in the program has reached apathy status and program revenues are light years from their potential in an athletic department that counts on basketball to be a cash cow to help the budgets of other sports.

Ben Johnson

Johnson’s supporters argue he has a difficult task with a program rebuild.  Previous coach Richard Pitino was fired after the 2020-2021 season, with his last team producing a 6-14 Big Ten record. Only once in eight seasons did Pitino win more than half of his conference games.

Johnson didn’t want to or couldn’t retain key leftover personnel in center Liam Robbins, and guards Marcus Carr and Gabe Kalscheur. Collectively, their talent surpasses any Johnson and staff have brought to town so far.

In the college sports transfer portal era, there is more potential than ever to successfully remake a roster in a hurry.  Johnson scored with transfers Jamison Battle and Payton Willis in 2021, and with Dawson Garcia last offseason, but overall has come up short in filling needs.

So far players coming in from high school haven’t been difference makers.  The present freshmen class is the first one Johnson and his assistants had a head start in recruiting.  The first-year group is an athletic bunch but on the court they lack cohesiveness, judgment and scoring skills.

Forward-center Pharrel Payne is 6-foot-9, the other three freshmen are 6-4 to 6-7 and are also similar in offensive abilities as shown so far.  Braeden Carrington, Jaden Henley and Joshua Ola-Joseph look athletic driving to the basket but don’t convert consistently and show minimal outside shooting accuracy.

The roster not only lacks talent and experience, but the pieces don’t complement one another. The Gophers don’t excel at any aspect of play.  Offense, defense, rebounding and playmaking are all subpar. Even the free throw shooting is atrocious, with Minnesota making 60.9 percent of attempts and ranking No. 352 in the nation.

It’s dicey to question the effort of players but it’s easier to comment on focus and mental lapses.  In last night’s debacle the Gophers made one of their 16 turnovers when they errored (against no pressure) inbounding the basketball after a made Maryland basket.  In another game, a Gopher player was backdoored three times for scores in less than 10 minutes of playing time.

As limited as the personnel is, the Gophers should be playing better than a team that has consecutive losses twice by 35 points and once by 20.  Questions can be asked about the impact of the coaching regarding ball movement, cuts to the basket, creating open shots, second chance points, offensive and defensive rebounding, minimizing turnovers, forcing turnovers, covering open spaces in the zone defense, defensive switches, lack of defensive intensity and team confidence.

Injuries have sidelined two Gophers, forwards Isaiah Ihnen and Parker Fox, for two consecutive seasons. Difficult to know what difference their presence would have made. Ihnen has averaged 3.1 points in two previous seasons.  Fox has yet to play Division I basketball after a high scoring Division II career.

As of late both Carrington and Dawson haven’t played because of injuries.  Dawson’s absence, as the team’s leading scorer and rebounder, is significant but he could play as soon as Tuesday night at Illinois. With Dawson in the lineup the Gophers defeated Ohio State and had three league losses by a combined nine points.

Evans with Gopher fan Arnie Tietz.

For the more optimistic Gophers fans, it’s wait for next year mode. That’s when hyped center Dennis Evans and shooting guard Cameron Christie arrive. Evans, perhaps the best prep center in the country, will help the interior defense a lot and Christie, a prep sharpshooter, is a welcome addition to a team that can’t shoot straight (41.4 percent on field goals, ranking No. 315 nationally).

But like they say on Wall Street, there are no guarantees for the future.  In addition to Evans and Christie, the Gophers need to add more potentially effective players.  They also need to retain the ones they have, including Battle, Garcia and the current freshmen.

It’s been suggested the Gophers can’t win for awhile because the program is too low.  But it only takes a couple of the right players and the right coaching to throw the switch, though. Quick turnarounds happen every year in college basketball.

With Gophers fans wondering if this is the historically worst of Gopher basketball, positive changes can’t come soon enough.

1 comment

PAT Misses May Catch up to Vikings

Posted on November 20, 2022November 20, 2022 by David Shama

 

The 8-1 Vikings have won four of their games by four points or fewer. “Close shaves” are commonplace in the ultra-competitive NFL and there is reason for concern with kicker Greg Joseph.

Joseph missed four extra points last season and already has that many in 2022. His four misses are tops in the NFL, per Lineups.com. He has failed to convert an extra point in almost half the games so far including last Sunday against the Bills when the Vikings needed overtime to win.

A missed extra point can change the strategy of a game, forcing a team to deviate from preferred options and sometimes compounding a bad situation with poor choices. Missed PATs can also change a season or playoff success. How unfortunate for the Vikings if during this so far magical season things went south in the playoffs with a missed conversion that blocked their postseason path.

Joseph has been okay on field goal attempts, making 72.1 percent. He is a perfect 12 of 12 between 20 and 49 yards but just one of six from beyond 50. He has been mediocre on touchbacks, with 55.3 percent of his kicks not being returned.

Meanwhile the Raiders’ Daniel Carlson, the former 2018 Vikings fifth round draft choice who coach Mike Zimmer became impatient with after just two regular games and released, is a perfect 18 of 18 on field goals including five from 50 yards or more. He has missed one extra point.

Joseph, 28, signed with the Vikings as a free agent in the 2021 offseason and has made multiple NFL stops including game appearances with the Browns and Titans. He told Sports Headliners earlier this fall he hopes to keep playing well into his 30s: “Oh, I feel like I’m only gonna get better and better and stronger and stronger, which is exciting. I keep trying to reset my ceiling every year. So yeah, just excited. …”

Long snapper Andrew DePaola said he and Joseph and holder Ryan Wright are good friends. They will go out to dinner together, golf or shoot paint ball guns. Any miscues on the field are felt by all three, DePaola told Sports Headliners. “…It’s tough when things don’t work out the way you want them to,” he said.

DePaola also said Joseph has the following mental approach: “not too high, not too low, just try to stay in the middle and do our jobs the best we can.”

Vikings leader and safety Harrison Smith said teammates are supportive of Joseph, regardless of results. Smith also said, “Kickers, you don’t want to mess with them too much. Let them do their thing but definitely let them know we have their back.”

Worth Noting

Vikings left guard Ezra Cleveland talking about second year left tackle Christian Darrisaw moving toward the NFL elite at his position. “For sure, with the way he works and the way he has been playing. If he is not already there, then he is on his way.”

Cleveland said with the Vikings playing Sunday and then again on Thursday, players will need to start their recovery process sooner than in a normal week. Instead of Monday, body work will start Sunday night after the game at U.S. Bank Stadium against the Cowboys and in preparation for the Thanksgiving evening home game with the Patriots.

Cleveland said growing up his mom prepared corn beef and cabbage for Thanksgiving dinner. Last year he smoked his first turkey and probably will prepare another this week for his girlfriend and dad. “May be out-source the pie…or something. I don’t know how to make pie.”

Tight end T.J. Hockenson played against the Cowboys earlier this season before the Lions traded him to Minnesota. He said that familiarity with scheme and personnel could be helpful. He caught four passes for 48 yards in his team’s 24-6 loss to the Cowboys.

Smith said the feeling around this year’s team is unique to what he’s experienced before in his 11 years with the Vikings. “We feel good about what it takes to win when the time comes. It doesn’t mean we can’t play better, different spots here and there. …”

Smith on 32-year-old cornerback Patrick Peterson who had two interceptions and three solo tackles against the Bills: “He is running around like he’s a young kid. Looks explosive and springy and just ready for action.”

Former Vikings linebacker Ben Leber on Twitter writing about his old team: “One very noticeable trait to this Vikings team is no matter what happens, there is no flinch… especially on defense. It’s all about lining up and playing the next play no matter what. Incredible.”

Golfweek.com reports Kirk Cousins and his wife have purchased a golf course in western Michigan near Holland. He and Julie have a home in the area, are familiar with the course and know the previous owners, per a November 10 online story in the Holland Sentinel.

Glenn Caruso (photo courtesy of University of St. Thomas)

Congratulations to St. Thomas for winning the Pioneer League football championship with a 8-0 conference record. The Tommies won a league championship in just their second year as an FCS program with about two-thirds of their 22 starters being Minnesota natives.

Tommies coach Glenn Caruso, who has led a remarkable transition from Division III to Division I, wowed a CORES lunch crowd earlier this month with his authenticity and commitment to his players. He wants his student-athletes to have different experiences and that’s why the Tommies will play a home-and-home against Harvard starting next year in Boston, with a return date in 2029 in St. Paul.

Caruso said wife Rachel has been cancer free now for five years.

Condolences to the family and many friends of legendary University of St. Thomas and Cretin Derham-Hall baseball coach Dennis Denning, 76, who passed away last week. St. Thomas men’s basketball coach John Tauer wrote this on Facebook: “Six state titles and two national titles pale in comparison to the indelible impact he had on all of us. He taught us to ‘Dare to be Great’ and it remains one of our program mantras.”

“The Amazing Hondo”, the popular magician and former St. Paul athlete, is among the many mourning the loss of Dennis. He emailed to share the news his former Winona State basketball coach Les Wothke and Dennis both passed away last Wednesday. Wothke, 83, took Winona to the NAIA finals in 1973 and 1975 and later was head coach at Army. “Losing two legendary coaches on the same day is something I shall never forget,” Hondo wrote.

Early season home results: Tauer’s Tommies defeated (on November 11) St. Francis of Brooklyn, 84-48, two days after the Gophers beat them, 72-54. Down the road a game between the two Minnesota Division I programs seems likely.

Don’t hold your breath, though, for a renewal of the St. Thomas and St. John’s football rivalry. FCS teams can’t play Division III opponents.

As of Friday, Ben Johnson’s Gophers had made .543 percent of their free throws in four games, ranking No. 339 in the country.

Tip of the cap to the Twins new uniforms with clean looks and various offerings. Just in time for holiday shopping.

The Athletics latest NHL power rankings have the Devils No. 1, the second-season Kraken No. 12 and the Wild No. 17 among 32 teams.

Dick Jonckowski emcees the Minnesota Old Timers Hockey Luncheon at Mancini’s Char House tomorrow (Monday, November 21). Former North Star and media hockey authority Tom Reid will be the main speaker.

Wild goalie Marc-Andre Fleury turns 38 November 28, while Golden Gophers football coach P.J. Fleck has his 42nd birthday November 29.

Comments Welcome

Vikings Take a Liking to London

Posted on October 2, 2022October 2, 2022 by David Shama

 

Jolly good, Vikings.

The Purple beat the Saints today, 28-25, in London.  At least for Vikings fans who travelled to the game, kicker Greg Joseph is now more popular in England than fish and chips.

Joseph booted five field goals including the game winner from 47-yards in the closing minutes.  Playing where soccer is known as football, the Vikings and Saints did their part in showing off the foot in the American game. Saints’ kicker Wil Lutz missed a 61-yard field goal attempt as time ran out, attempting to send the game into overtime at 28-28.

Minnesota, now 3-1 in 2022, won for the third time during the regular season in London.  Playing in the 100th NFL international game (preseason and regular season games), the Vikings have a liking for London.

On the first quarter opening drive, running back Alexander Mattison ran 15 yards on a pass reception for a touchdown to put the Vikings ahead 7-0.  It looked like he celebrated by simulating a sip of tea from an imaginary cup.

Wide receiver Adam Thielen, who had eight receptions for 72 yards, had Ted Lasso’s name on his shoes.  The cast from the award-winning comedy show (Ted is an American football coach hired to lead a British soccer club) attended the game.

Justin Jefferson image courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

Thielen’s running mate at WR, Justin Jefferson, had his best game since the opener against the Packers.  In London he had a big fourth quarter catch and then a run from scrimmage that gave the Vikings a 28-25 lead (Joseph missed the extra point).  He had 10 receptions for 147 yards.

The Saints, playing without three of their best offensive players, hung around in the game despite costly errors and penalties.  Two Saints fumbles led to Joseph field goals, and New Orleans was penalized 10 times for 102 yards.

The Vikings, who led after every quarter, found themselves in a 25-25 tie after Lutz kicked a 60-yard field goal with 1:51 to play. “This team always just wants the next opt (opportunity),” Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell said on KFAN Radio after the game.

Joseph delivered it and tonight Vikings fans can eat fish and chips, and guzzle warm beer.

Worth Noting

O’Connell said on the radio rookie safety Lewis Cine has a badly fractured left ankle and will remain in London for medical care while the team flies home.

What was learned from the Gophers’ 20-10 loss to Purdue Saturday? When the offense doesn’t execute and is without All-American tailback Mo Ibrahim, points are scarce because this team isn’t deep in talented playmakers.

Minnesota is 0-30 in its last 30 games when behind by 10 points or more, per ESPN.  The Gophers trailed Purdue 10-0 after the first quarter before going on to lose their first game of the season.

Big Ten home teams keep all the ticket revenues for their home football games so Saturday’s near sellout for the Gophers was a big payday.  Contrary to rumor, the Athletic Department had no plans to offer special last minute ticket discounts to the public.

Gophers’ basketball coach Ben Johnson and his staff are facing high expectations to gain a commitment from highly recruited 7-1 center Dennis Evans from Riverside, California.  The Gophers are considered a favorite to land Evans. He visited Minnesota over the weekend and the skilled shot blocker is not only a top 40 recruit but shows NBA potential.  Before Saturday’s football game Evans, accompanied by assistant coach Dave Thorson, walked on the stadium field and heard cheers from the student section.

Conversation started awhile ago that freshman forward Pharrel Payne from Cottage Grove will have pro scouts following him.  At 6-9, 230, Payne is already a strong, physical player.

The Gopher basketball program, criticized in the past for not recruiting the state of Minnesota, has nine Minnesotans on the roster including sure starters Jamison Battle from Robbinsdale and Dawson Garcia from Savage.  Both forwards are proven scorers with Battle and Garcia candidates for All-Big Ten honors.

Johnson said Luke Loewe, a senior starting combo guard on the team last season from Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, is pursuing a pro bass fishing career. He also said Payton Willis, the starting point guard on last season’s team, is playing professionally in Israel.

Minnesota AD Mark Coyle told Sports Headliners volleyball looks on track to become a revenue program, joining a small number of other U programs that help to fund the 21-sports Athletic Department.  Minnesota, averaging 4,709 fans at home, ranks fourth in the country behind Wisconsin, Nebraska and Hawaii.

New baseball hall of famer Tony Oliva speaks to the Capital Club October 11 at Mendakota Country Club.  He will be interviewed by the radio voice of the Twins, Cory Provus. More information is available from Patrick Klinger, patrick@agilemarketingco.com

Twins president Dave St. Peter and friends annually attend a popular out of state college football game.  The trip this fall will be to Auburn and a matchup against the Tigers and Texas A&M on November 12.  Last year’s trip was to Seattle and the majestic setting of Husky Stadium on Lake Washington.

Target Field has been the site of college football in the past and St. Peter is “optimistic over time we will play football again here” but nothing is scheduled for the foreseeable future.

Target Field will have new video displays next season including replacement of the main board in left field. The new video board will be among the largest in MLB.

Tom Swain, the 101-year-old whose successful career included being the Gophers ticket manager, is now an Honorary Lifetime Member of the Twin Cities Dunkers.  The Lilydale resident has been a member of Dunkers since 1960.

Nostalgia note: it was 67 years ago last week (September 28) that the Minneapolis Millers played the final game ever at Nicollet Park, located on Nicollet Ave. near Lake Street.  The Millers, who defeated the Rochester Red Wings to win the Junior World Series, would play the next year, 1956, in the new Metropolitan Stadium in Bloomington.

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