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

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

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

Category: Gophers Basketball

Could Adrian Peterson Land with Pack?

Posted on January 10, 2017January 10, 2017 by David Shama

 

At 31 years of age Adrian Peterson is coming off a torn meniscus rehab that sidelined him for most of last season, yet he wants to play deep into his 30s. It seems unlikely, though, that he will find a lot of offers in 2017 or beyond.

Destined to make the Pro football Hall of Fame one day and the greatest running back in Vikings history, Peterson faces obstacles that even he may struggle to overcome. The Vikings have written checks in the past making him one of the NFL’s best paid players but if the club is interested in bringing him back in 2017 his compensation will be greatly reduced. His present nonguaranteed deal with the club reportedly will count $18 million against the team’s salary cap.

Peterson voiced his desire recently to remain a Viking and hinted he might be willing to accept a pay cut, per media reports. A new nonguaranteed contract at perhaps a few million dollars, plus loaded with incentives based on number of games played and yards gained, might be what awaits Peterson wherever he lands in 2017. It’s believed Peterson has lost a step in his explosive running and at his age even teams in need of running backs are likely to look elsewhere.

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

To some observers Peterson comes with baggage including his infamous 2014 incident in disciplining one of his out of wedlock children. It wouldn’t be surprising if there are those in the Vikings front office who prefer to part with Peterson for more than football reasons, although head coach Mike Zimmer recently described his veteran as still “a really good back” and said he was hopeful about having him on the 2017 roster.

It would certainly be intriguing if Peterson ended up playing for the Packers next season. The team’s main ball carrier in recent years has been Eddie Lacy and he is an unrestricted free agent in 2017. The Packers have had an on again, off again relationship with the talented 26-year-old Lacy.

The Packers have been using converted wide receiver Ty Montgomery at running back. He’s shown promise and among his skills are catching the ball, something that has never been a Peterson strength. If the Packers stick with the Montgomery experiment, perhaps they like the idea of alternating him with a power runner in Peterson.

An opportunity to play with the great Aaron Rodgers and a team that is consistently in the playoffs certainly might appeal to Peterson who in 10 previous seasons has never played in a Super Bowl. It could be like payback time for Packers fans if Peterson had a couple of successful seasons in Green Bay after that franchise’s Brett Favre ended his career with the Vikings, nearly taking Minnesota to the 2010 Super Bowl.

Another team usually in preseason Super Bowl speculation is the Seahawks who might need a veteran running back in 2017, too. Coach Pete Carroll is a risk-taker and known for his willingness to deal with players having strong personalities. Minnesota fans saw that when Carroll was willing to acquire troubled but talented Vikings wide receiver Percy Harvin in 2013. Seattle’s leading regular season rusher in 2016, Thomas Rawls, gained 349 yards. Quarterback Russell Wilson was second with 259 yards.

A couple of years ago it seemed that Peterson, a Texas native, might end up in Dallas. But that opportunity is all but gone with the Cowboys having a breakthrough season led by multiple players including rookie running back Ezekiel Elliott who rushed for a league leading 1,631 yards.

It’s a good guess the Vikings will try to find their Ezekiel in the draft. Although Elliott was taken in the first round, it’s not unusual to find quality runners in the second rounds and beyond. The NFL’s second leading rusher this season was rookie Jordan Howard, a fifth round pick by the Bears in 2016. Drafting a running back in 2017 seems likely to be on the Vikings to-do list, or perhaps even pursue a free agent. Both those directions seem more probable than a Peterson return.

Worth Noting

Paul Wiggin evaluates offensive and defensive linemen on other teams for the Vikings. He also watched this past season when Minnesota’s offensive line was devastated by injuries. Even when available the team’s linemen have been criticized for their performances, but Wiggin told Sports Headliners, “I think our problem is not necessarily” to acquire a new line. Instead, it’s to get players healthy, he said.

Left tackle Matt Kalil, a No. 1 draft choice in 2012, missed 14 games because of his knee injury. He has frequently been the target of frustrated fans in the past but as an unrestricted free agent this offseason teams considering him are likely to include the Vikings.

“I think they will try to work something out with Kalil,” Wiggin said. “Kalil is a pretty good football player. (But) I can’t speak for the organization. I don’t know. That’s not my job. I am not the front office, from that standpoint.”

Guard Alex Boone has played left tackle at Ohio State and with the 49ers. Could the Vikings switch him to the left tackle spot where T.J. Clemmings struggled so much in 2016? “I am not on the inside on that kind of thing, but my opinion is I think Boone is more of a guard,” Wiggin said.

Wiggin, whose title with the Vikings is personnel consultant, played defensive end in the NFL in the 1950s and 1960s. His football experiences include being head coach of the Kansas City Chiefs and at Stanford, his college alma mater.

Stanford junior running back Christian McCaffrey, who is declaring early for the NFL Draft, decided to skip the Cardinal’s bowl game and prepare for his pro career. That’s not something Wiggin liked. “I am offended by what he did to Stanford but I do think he’s going to be a great player (in the pros).”

The men’s basketball Gophers, 15-2 overall and 3-1 in the Big Ten, have their first top 25 national ranking since February of 2013. In this week’s A.P. and USA Today Coaches polls Minnesota is No. 24, joining Purdue and Wisconsin as the only Big Ten teams in the rankings.

Richard Pitino & Jordan Murphy
Richard Pitino & Jordan Murphy

“Rankings mean absolutely1,000 percent nothing to me,” Minnesota coach Richard Pitino said after his team defeated Ohio State on Sunday. “RPI means something to me. Strength of schedule means something to me. …Rankings are for the fans.”

The Gophers have the fifth best RPI in the country and rank seventh in strength of schedule, according to espn.com. Minnesota is tops in the Big Ten in RPI and second in strength of schedule to Nebraska.

Ohio State coach Thad Matta talking about the Gophers: “They’re a very, very good basketball team. No question.”

With fall semester over, word is the Gophers are solidly academically and all players will be eligible this winter.

Minnesota freshman forward Amir Coffey is averaging 12.8 points per game, second best on the team. He was named Monday as Big Ten Freshman of the Week after leading the team in scoring in wins over Northwestern and Ohio State.

His sister, Nia Coffey, was supposed to lead the 13-4 and 2-2 Northwestern team against the Gophers (10-7 and 1-3) tomorrow night at Williams Arena but the game has been postponed following the unexpected death of the Wildcats’ Jordan Hankins. Nia leads the Wildcats in scoring at 20.8 points per game and is third among Big Ten players. The 6-1, senior forward from Hopkins High School also leads the Wildcats and the league in rebounding at 11.2 and her blocked shots average of 1.9 is tied for second best in the Big Ten.

Coach John Anderson said last week that ticket prices will be announced soon for the Gophers debut baseball games in U.S. Bank Stadium February 17-19 against UC Irvine. Seating will be general admission only.

Anderson’s nine player recruiting class announced last month will enroll in school this summer. Some college baseball programs enroll players in January but Big Ten teams don’t.

Comments Welcome

Tommy Kramer Sees Vikings QB Battle

Posted on January 2, 2017January 2, 2017 by David Shama

 

Tommy Kramer sees a potential battle for the No. 1 quarterback spot when the Vikings are in training camp next summer. Kramer, the Vikings All-NFC quarterback in 1986, qualified his prediction based on the health of Teddy Bridgewater who missed this season because of a serious knee injury. It’s unknown whether Bridgewater will be fully recovered by next summer.

Sam Bradford had a career season in 2016 but Kramer thinks a healthy Bridgewater will create a lot of competition in the future. “Oh, yeah, it will definitely be an open competition,” Kramer told Sports Headliners.

Bradford, 29, had a career high passer rating of 99.3 this season, among the best for NFL starters. He threw 20 touchdown passes in 15 games, and was intercepted only five times despite playing behind one of the league’s worst offensive line. He set an NFL completion percentage record for a single season with a mark of 71.6 percent.

Sam Bradford (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Sam Bradford (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer said last week that Bradford has done “an unbelievable job.” Part of the coach’s perspective is how his quarterback adjusted to being traded to the Vikings eight days before the start of the season, having to learn a new system and teammates (including replacements during the fall), and even dealing with a change in offensive coordinators in November. “Maybe this is the best year he’s ever had,” Zimmer said. “If you put all those together and look at the things he’s had to deal with, I think he’s been amazing.”

Bridgewater, 24, was starting his third NFL season when he was injured in August. At the time he was considered the Vikings’ franchise quarterback, although he had mediocre career totals of 28 touchdown passes, 21 interceptions and a passer rating of 90.1.

“It doesn’t hurt to have two players (Bradford and Bridgewater) like that, anyway,” said Kramer who was the Vikings’ No. 1 draft choice in 1977. “(If) something happens again, at least both of them will be more prepared.”

One of the knocks on Bridgewater was his inability to throw down field. Bradford, when the offensive allowed him the time, showed accuracy on all kinds of throws—deep, intermediate and short.

Bridgewater was expected to show improvement in his overall passing this season before his injury. Better production in passing, to go with his running, would make Bridgewater special. “He can pick up yards with his legs, but he’s gotta learn to slide all the time,” Kramer said. “No reason to take a hit trying to get an extra yard.”

Kramer, who now lives in his native Texas, likes both quarterbacks. “They each have things they do better than the other one,” he said.

Regardless of who is the quarterback in 2017, Kramer wants the Vikings to draft “as many offensive linemen” as they can. The Vikings have selected only two offensive linemen in the first three rounds since 2007. With a run of injuries and below par performances by some linemen, the offensive line had a lot to do with the team’s final record of 8-8 after a 5-0 start.

“Their defense is good enough to win, but you get worn out when you can’t convert on third down situations to keep the ball and let the defense rest,” Kramer said.

Worth Noting

Yesterday’s game against the Bears was the fourth time in 12 years the outcome had no playoff implications for the two franchises.

Cornerback Captain Munnerlyn on whether the Vikings talented nucleus of players bodes well for better than .500 results next season: “You can look good on paper and not be good on the field, so we gotta still put in the work and still go out there and compete.”

That was the Wild’s Erik Haula who sounded the gjallarhorn before yesterday’s game that included an incident with Dakota Access Pipeline Protestors. A Vikings source told Sports Headliners 185 fans had to be relocated from their seats because of safety concerns.

Kyle Rudolph set two tight end records for the Vikings yesterday, with his 29th career touchdown and total of 83 receptions for the season. He broke Steve Jordan’s record for career touchdowns and Joe Senser’s most receptions in a season total. Senser, progressing but still recovering from a stroke, was at the game.

Construction at the Vikings 40-acre headquarters in Eagan continues since last summer’s groundbreaking. The erection of steel, for example, on the indoor practice facility is scheduled to be completed by April 1. The campus will have five outdoor practice fields including a stadium with anticipated capacity of 6,000, plus training and rehab facilities, and also a locker room, team auditorium, and administrative offices. The new Vikings campus is known as the Twin Cities Orthopedics Performance Center and the target date for opening is March of 2018.

Eventually an overall 200-acre development is expected to include offices, retail, residential, hospitality and a conference center with the Vikings headquarters as a development anchor.

Gophers point guard Nate Mason was named Co-Big Ten Player of the Week this afternoon with Nebraska’s Tai Webster.  Mason has averaged 24.5 points, 7.5 assists and 5.5 rebounds per game in Minnesota’s first two Big Ten games, a loss last week to Michigan State and victory yesterday over Purdue.

The Big Ten basketball season is less than a week old and already only three of 14 teams are undefeated, Michigan State, Nebraska and Wisconsin. The Gophers’ surprise win over nationally ranked Purdue yesterday evened Minnesota’s record at 1-1.

Richard Pitino
Richard Pitino

Minnesota is No. 1 in the league in blocked shots and in three-point defense field goal percentage. Coach Richard Pitino’s team is No. 2 in overall defensive field goal percentage and also in defensive rebounding.

Former Gophers football captain Jim Carter, who has been pursuing membership on the University of Minnesota Board of Regents, is less optimistic about his chances than he was several weeks ago. Carter has been criticized by some state legislators for support he voiced for Gophers football players. Critics have mistakenly assumed he isn’t supportive of advocates for prevention of sexual assault. His name has been in the media after news developed about the suspension of 10 Gophers football players and an alleged sexual assault in early September.

“I was supporting the team out of loyalty as a Gopher to get due process (for the suspended players), and…trying to get the fairness and transparency that they deserve,” Carter told Sports Headliners.

The State Legislature will approve four individuals next year to fill vacancies on the Board of Regents.

Tickets remain for all Timberwolves home games including against NBA champion Cleveland on February 14 and March 10 with Golden State, the team that lost to the Cavs in the NBA Finals last June. The Wolves are averaging 14,055 fans, the second lowest total in the 30-franchise NBA, according to ESPN.com. The Nuggets have the lowest average at 13,610, with the Bulls first at 21,606.

Timberwolves center Nikola Pekovic, who is out for the entire 2016-2017 season because of recurring pain in his right ankle, turns 31 tomorrow. Since being drafted by the Wolves in 2008, he has played in 271 games. Pekovic didn’t join the Wolves until the 2010-2011 season and injuries have characterized his career. After this season he will have averaged 38.7 games per season for the Wolves, or less than half of the annual 82 game schedule.

Comments Welcome

Izzo, Dutcher Positive on U in Big Ten

Posted on December 30, 2016December 30, 2016 by David Shama

 

Michigan State coaching legend Tom Izzo and former Minnesota Big Ten championship coach Jim Dutcher are impressed with the Gophers.

Izzo, an eight-time national coach of the year, talked to Sports Headliners about the Gophers after his Spartans defeated Minnesota 75-74 in overtime on Tuesday night in Williams Arena. “They’re a good team,” Izzo said. “They’ve got (big) bodies and they’ve got good guard play. (They) don’t always shoot it great, (but teams have) gotta have some weakness—we got about five.

“We just happened to find a way to win. They were the better team most of tonight. I think Rich (Pitino) has done a hell of a job with them now. I think he’s got them headed in the right direction. They’ve won a lot of games. They didn’t play all (nonconference) cupcakes either. This was a tough physical game and I am sure they will learn from it, just like we will.”

Jim Dutcher
Jim Dutcher

The Gophers are 12-2 overall and 0-1 in the Big Ten under fourth-year coach Richard Pitino who was 2-16 in league games last season. The Gophers added new players during the offseason and key returnees have also helped improve a team that lost its first 13 conference games during 2015-2016. “I just think they’ve got a good blend of talent,” said Dutcher, who coached the Gophers to the 1982 Big Ten title.

Dutcher likes the quality of Minnesota’s eight-man rotation and sees not only a more talented team than last season but one with better size. There’s something else of importance he mentioned, too. “I think they’re a better defensive team than they were,” he said.

Dutcher predicts the Gophers will have a 9-9 conference record and could make the NCAA Tournament. In Minnesota’s favor in being able to earn a tournament invite for the first time since 2013 is that the Big Ten doesn’t look all that imposing. “Top to bottom it’s not a great league,” Dutcher said about the Big Ten, a conference without a top 10 ranked team.

The Gophers will finish seventh in the Big Ten after Indiana, Wisconsin, Purdue, Michigan State and Ohio State, Dutcher predicted. Behind the Gophers will be Michigan, Maryland, Northwestern, Iowa, Illinois, Nebraska, Rutgers and Penn State.

Minnesota missed a big opportunity by not winning Tuesday after the Gophers couldn’t hold a 39-26 halftime lead. The Spartans came into the game without their best player in freshman guard-forward Miles Bridges. Michigan State, which has won one national title and made seven Final Four appearances in 21 previous seasons under Izzo, arrived in Minneapolis with an uncharacteristic 8-5 record, although the schedule included nonconference games with national toughies Duke, Kentucky, Arizona.

Now the Gophers must play four of their next five league games on the road, starting with Sunday at nationally-ranked Purdue, 12-2 and 1-0. The Gophers certainly can’t start the conference schedule 0-6 and still have solid NCAA Tournament ambitions. Dutcher doesn’t think they will, with early opportunities for wins probably coming at Northwestern January 5 and at Penn State January 14. Minnesota’s next home game, January 8 with Ohio State, is already a circle it date too. “My view is there are a lot of wins to be had in this league,” Dutcher said.

The Gophers were out worked and gave up too many scores near the basket in the second half of the MSU game but Dutcher said it wasn’t like Pitino’s team “laid an egg” in the game. Dutcher isn’t discouraged by the loss. “It’s not so much about what Minnesota did wrong, as what Michigan State did right,” he said.

Last season the Gophers had issues on and off the court. Pitino said after the nonconference schedule ended that his team had made progress but acknowledged more progress awaits. “Our guys have worked really, really hard to climb out of the gutter off the court, on the court, all those things to get everybody’s respect back. …We trusted that we’d be better. We’re better but we still got a long way to go.”

Izzo Storytelling on Flip Saunders

Flip Saunders (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Timberwolves)
Flip Saunders (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Timberwolves)

Izzo confirmed what other friends of the late Flip Saunders have said about Saunders coming close to accepting the Gophers job in the spring of 2013. The former Gophers guard in the 1970s was between coaching opportunities in the NBA back then and Saunders ultimately decided he didn’t want to work for athletics director Norwood Teague, according to a top source.

“Flip loved the Gophers,” Izzo told Sports Headliners. “His passion for Minnesota in general was off the charts, and the University was just even more off the charts.”

Izzo and Saunders forged a friendship over the years including when Saunders coached the NBA Pistons in Detroit. At Saunders’ funeral in 2015 Izzo read from the Bible during the service for his friend who died at age 60 from cancer.

“I miss him,” Izzo said about the former Timberwolves executive and coach. “I miss the late night calls. He always had some good plays for me.

“I can honestly say I loved the guy. I still feel for Debbie (Saunders’ wife) and I stay in touch with Ryan (his son and Timberwolves assistant). I am proud of what he is doing.

“But to have had Flip in the league (the Big Ten) would have been an honor. It really would have been.”

Izzo recalled working to recruit Apple Valley High School point guard Tyus Jones for a couple of years. Izzo laughed about how Saunders evolved from helping the Spartans, to becoming more interested in the prep All-American choosing Minnesota as Saunders started to seriously consider the Gophers job. “Are you helping me, or are you helping yourself?” he asked his buddy.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 102
  • 103
  • 104
  • 105
  • 106
  • 107
  • 108
  • …
  • 178
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Impatience with McCarthy by Fans, Media Wrong Approach
  • Glen Mason Speaks Out about Honoring U Football Players
  • 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

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

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