Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room

Category: Gophers Basketball

U Not Gaining or Losing in Tyus Chase

Posted on May 6, 2013May 6, 2013 by David Shama

 

Debbie Jones told Sports Headliners her son Tyus remains interested in the Gophers.  She also said the highly coveted Apple Valley junior point guard may choose a college as part of a group decision with Jahlil Okafor from Chicago and Justise Winslow from Houston.

Tubby Smith and his staff spent time pursuing Tyus but Smith was fired as Gopher coach in March.  During the search process for a new head coach it appeared Flip Saunders might succeed Smith.  Saunders, a former point guard who made a career coaching in the NBA, knows Tyus and local recruiting observers thought Saunders might win a recruiting derby for Debbie’s son who could be the best player nationally in the prep class of 2014.

With a new Gopher coach in Richard Pitino, who is only 30 with one year of head coaching experience, are the Gophers behind or ahead where they once were in the recruiting process with Tyus?

“I think they’re the same as they always have been,” Debbie said.  “Tyus has it narrowed down to seven schools and Minnesota is one of those seven.  They were there kind of regardless of who is coaching there.  I think the new coach, coach Pitino he’s reached out and we’ve had a number of conversations.  They’re still in the running.”

The seven schools are Baylor, Duke, Kansas, Kentucky, Michigan State, Minnesota and Ohio State.  Pitino is no power coach like Mike Krzyzewski, Bill Self, John Calipari, Tom Izzo and Thad Matta but the Gophers are the hometown team. Coach Scott Drew and Baylor in faraway Waco, Texas might seem like an unusual final seven choice.

On the Baylor staff is former Hopkins High School standout Jared Nuness, a distant cousin of Tyus.  He has long admired Nuness.  “It’s family and so you know…it’s a consideration,” Debbie said.  “It’s always nice to know somebody and stuff like that.”

Does Pitino’s lack of experience as a head coach work against him in eventually convincing Tyus to become a Gopher?  “Well, I guess it’s just something you take into consideration as he (Tyus) goes through this process and we’re looking at all the schools,” Debbie said.  “You kind of take everything into consideration.  I don’t know that that will be a determining factor but you consider all the things when you look at the seven schools.”

In the Rivals.com top 150 for the national high school class of 2014, Okafor, a center, is rated No. 1 while Tyus is No. 3 and Winslow, a forward, is No. 10.  If those three decided on the same university, boosters would immediately make airline and lodging reservations in Indianapolis for the 2015 Final Four.  How much credibility is there about a possible Tyus-Okafor-Winslow package?

“I know Tyus and Jahlil talk about it frequently and I really believe that that will happen,” Debbie said.  “Justise from Texas is another one — that they’ve talked about going somewhere together.  I do see that happening.  So as we get right down to it and taking some official visits, narrowing things down, I think it’s a real possibility.”

Worth Noting

Tyus Jones’ grandfather, Dennis Deutsch, may have a kidney transplant but must have more tests.  Deutsch and Tyus have a close relationship.

Will Rashad Vaughn, the shooting guard who is rated the No. 6 player in the country by Rivals.com for the class of 2014, play his senior year for Robbinsdale Cooper or go elsewhere? Perhaps to a prep school outside Minnesota?

Each Wild home playoff game is worth about $5 million to the franchise, according to a pro hockey source who asked not to be named.  The Wild hosts the Blackhawks tomorrow night for their second 2013 home playoff game.  Revenue sources include mostly ticket sales but also suites, merchandise and local TV broadcasts.

Another hockey source, FSN’s Kevin Gorg, said the key for the Wild to even the series at two games each tomorrow night will be for Minnesota to “slow down” the pace against the more talented Blackhawks.  Gorg said Wild veteran Pierre Marc-Bouchard probably played his best game ever for Minnesota in its win yesterday.

A Timberwolves’ official said new president of basketball operations Flip Saunders will be paid a “mid-market” NBA salary.  That might mean compensation in the range of $2.5 to $3.5 million.

Although Saunders has more than 13 years of NBA head coaching experience, he wasn’t hired as a potential emergency replacement for Rick Adelman if the 67-year-old Wolves’ coach abruptly decides to retire because of his wife’s health concerns.

“I think Flip would have the potential of finding us the right coach,” said Wolves’ owner Glen Taylor.  “That’s how I really have looked at it.  But at this point I have only looked at Rick as our coach.  I have a high degree of confidence that he is going to stay.  I didn’t ask Flip to come here because he could coach.  That was not part of my consideration.”

With a devastating run of injuries that turned the Wolves into a team that had a 31-51 record, the team’s TV ratings for 2012-13 averaged 2.2, a decline from 2.9 the previous season.  A Wolves’ spokesman emailed that information and said a playoff contending club could produce numbers two and three times the 2.2.

Vikings’ defensive tackle Shariff Floyd, the team’s first selection in the first round of last month’s NFL draft, said his sleeve length is 31 inches.  Draft observers have questioned his ability to pass rush because of short arms but Floyd told Sports Headliners that’s “not a factor at all.”

Floyd, 6-3, 297, has asked for help from retired Vikings’ defensive lineman Pat Williams who played at 6-3, 317.  Williams has agreed to mentor Floyd.

Cordarrelle Patterson, another of the team’s first round draft choices, said the playbook has already been more manageable for him than expected because he’s been given time to absorb the material and coaches have been helpful.  He’s open to whatever assignments the team gives him as a wide receiver, punt returner or kickoff returner.

Community involved former Viking and St. Paul native Matt Birk is the honoree at the annual Bobby Jones dinner tonight at Interlachen Country Club in Edina.

Murray’s Restaurant owner Tim Murray has another summer baseball trip planned with friends.  This year’s itinerary will feature games in New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore.

Paul Allen, the radio play-by-play voice of the Vikings, will speak to the C.O.R.E.S. group on Thursday at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington.  Author Jim Bruton and former Viking Dave Osborn will autograph copies of Bruton’s book on the Vikings’ 50 greatest players.  Anyone interested in attending the luncheon and program should contact Jim Dotseth by Tuesday, dotsethj@comcast.net.

Allen is the track announcer at Canterbury Park where the Shakopee racing facility had an estimated 11,000 patrons on Saturday for the Kentucky Derby and set a simulcast wagering record of more than $1.61 million.  The previous record of $1.48 million was set in 2004 on Derby Day.

Comments Welcome

Mauer Turns 30 with Critics & Admirers

Posted on April 19, 2013April 19, 2013 by David Shama

 

Joe Mauer’s 30th birthday is today.  A cynic might suggest the Twins’ catcher will receive more well wishes from across the country than here in Minnesota.

“He’s under appreciated in his own market,” said Dave Mona, co-host of WCCO Radio’s Sports Huddle.  “Talk shows rip on him all the time.”

The rant over Mauer is about his $23 million salary, minimal home run production and the losing ways of his team.  In 2009 his future with the Twins was uncertain until he signed a contract that puts him among a half dozen or so of the best paid players in major league baseball.

Mauer’s critics argue the hometown hero makes the list of baseball’s best paid players but he isn’t a top five player.  Some baseball authorities wouldn’t even grant Mauer No. 1 status among catchers, preferring the Giants’ Buster Posey or the Cardinals’ Yadier Molina.

But how is it fair to blame Mauer for having leverage with the Twins back in 2009 to command one of baseball’s richest contracts?  “I do believe the Twins had to sign him to a large contract because they were moving into a new ballpark and needed the fan base to be on board that they were going to build a winner,” said a sports marketing authority who spoke anonymously.

In two of their three seasons at Target Field the Twins have finished last in the Central Division.  While injuries sidelined Mauer for much of the disastrous 2011 season (99 losses), he came back last year to play in 147 games and the team still lost almost 100 games.  Mauer doesn’t deserve blame for a franchise whose front office let the talent pool dry up, led by a pitching staff that nosedived to among the worst in baseball.

Home runs?  The casual fan looks at the 6-5, 230-pound Mauer and wonders why has he hit only 22 home runs during the last three seasons, including just 10 last year in 545 at bats.  “I know people want more home runs and I think he could do it,” said Gophers’ assistant baseball coach Rob Fornasiere.  “But that’s not who he is.”

Fornasiere said that in over 30 years of high school recruiting in Minnesota Mauer is the best player he’s seen, and the former Cretin-Derham Hall three-sport star has the same beautiful batting swing he had as a sophomore.  “From a mechanical standpoint he’s just so consistent,” Fornasiere said.

Mauer has been in birthday celebration mode this week.  After consecutive four hit games on Monday and Tuesday nights, he is on a nine game hitting streak — .462 average with two home runs and seven RBI.  The hitting party has raised his batting average for the season to .386.

This week Mauer looks like the hitter who batted .365 in 2009, whacking balls up the middle, finding the gaps in the outfield, and sending balls into the left field corner.  His batting average that season was the highest ever for a major league catcher.  He led the American League in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage — something no catcher had ever done before in MLB history.

Mauer has three batting titles since his big league career began in 2004.   He won the AL MVP Award in 2009.  Coming into this season he had the highest batting average in the major leagues since 2006 (.328) and his on-base percentage of .411 was fourth best.

For those who study baseball, Mauer’s prowess hitting the ball is even more remarkable because of the position he plays.  Catching is the most physically demanding position on the field.  It’s a punishing job squatting behind the plate, subjecting legs to constant stress while hands, fingers and other body parts are targets for foul tips.

Mauer has always liked being back of the plate, helping to dictate the game. His knowledge about opposing hitters helps get the most out of the Twins’ pitching staff, and his strong throwing arm is a deterrent to base runners.

Spoken like a career baseball man, Fornasiere said good baseball teams are built on quality position players in the middle of the field starting with the catcher.  “There’s not a team that wouldn’t take him (Mauer),” Fornasiere said.

If critics don’t like Mauer, then Fornasiere probably has it right when he said, “You’re dealing with other people’s expectations.”  Those who admire Mauer have their own expectations about him including one day seeing him inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame.

“He’s already done things no other catcher in the history of baseball has done,” said Mona.

And Mauer is only 30 years old.

Worth Noting

A ceremony Sunday at Siebert Field will recognize Gophers’ baseball coach John Anderson for his 500th career Big Ten win last weekend at Northwestern, according to assistant Minnesota coach Rob Fornasiere.  Anderson, who started coaching the Gophers in 1982, is the all-time winningest Big Ten baseball coach — 87 wins ahead of retired Ohio State coach Bob Todd and 205 more than ex-Minnesota coaching legend Dick Siebert.  Fornasiere said that since the fall of 1981 there have been 37 head baseball coaches in the Big Ten.

The Gophers play a series against Michigan State at Siebert Field this weekend including Sunday’s game starting at 1:05 p.m.  Fornasiere said the Spartans’ leadoff hitter and center fielder is freshman Cam Gibson who is batting .297.  He is the son of Kirk Gibson, the Diamondbacks’ manager and former major league star.

The Gophers, 23-13 overall and 7-2 in conference games, are tied for first place with Michigan in the Big Ten standings.  Minnesota pitcher Tom Windle, 5-2 with a 1.35 ERA, leads the conference in strikeouts with 57 in 60 innings.

New Minneapolis public schools athletic director Trent Tucker has known Gophers’ basketball coach Richard Pitino since Pitino was five years old.  Former Henry football coach Jim Dotseth said Tucker attended a meeting of retired city coaches on Wednesday and Tucker remembered young Pitino from his days playing for the Knicks and coach Rick Pitino, Richard’s father.

I don’t know by how much, but the odds of the Gophers convincing DeLaSalle junior Reid Travis to attend Minnesota went up when Pitino hired former Islanders’ star Ben Johnson as an assistant coach.

But not so sure about Minnesota’s chances for landing Apple Valley point guard Tyus Jones and Cooper shooting guard Rashad Vaughn, both juniors.  Elite prep players often want to know how their college experiences can help them earn a roster spot in the NBA.  Pitino, at 30 years old, can’t talk about any players he sent to the next level as a head coach.  Tough competition against power coaches like Kentucky’s John Calipari and Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski.

In a somewhat surprising prediction, Dane Brugler from Cbssports.com has quarterback Ryan Nassib from Syracuse going No.8 to the Bills in his NFL mock draft.  The Gophers beat Nassib and the Orange 17-10 last year at TCF Bank Stadium.  None of Brugler’s other colleagues have Nassib being selected in the first round of their mock picks.

Former Star Tribune Vikings writer Don Banks posted his mock draft for SI.com  with Minnesota selecting Washington cornerback Desmond Trufant at No. 23 in the first round and Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o at No 25.

In a mock NBA draft, NBAdraftnet.com projects the Timberwolves choosing shooting guards Shabazz Muhammad (UCLA) and Tim Hardaway, Jr. (Michigan) with the No. 9 and 25 picks in the first round.  The projections also include former Gophers Rodney Williams and Trevor Mbakwe going to Dallas and Utah with the No. 43 and 44 picks.

In a comparison worthy of shoot-first former Gopher Kris Humphries, Muhammad had 27 assists in 32 games for the Bruins last season.

Former Saint John’s national championship coach John Gagliardi and his son Jim Gagliardi will speak Tuesday evening at the MVP event at Trinity Lutheran Church in Stillwater.  Together they helped coach the Johnnies to the 2003 Division III national title.  MVP stands for men, value, purpose.  MVP gatherings celebrate sports with food, fellowship and inspiration.  More information is available at Trinitylc.org.

Comments Welcome

Mussy & Pitino: Deja Vu in Dinkytown?

Posted on April 8, 2013April 8, 2013 by David Shama

 

More than four decades ago the Gophers hired a 30-year-old head basketball coach who eventually got the school in trouble with the NCAA, but Bill Musselman revived a dormant program and long after he was gone Minnesota basketball was still benefitting from his fiery work.

Last week Rich Pitino, 30, took over a Gophers’ program again in need of revival and heavy lifting to make it one of the best in the country.  His passion was obvious at his Friday news conference.  “I believe this is one of the best jobs in college basketball,” he said even though many college coaches might roll their eyes at such a statement.

Pitino’s reputation is that of a tireless worker who may devote 18 hours per day to his task at Minnesota.  He’s known as an effective recruiter and a coach who favors full court pressure defense.  To be hired as a Big Ten basketball coach at 30 years old is a remarkable achievement.

Open the Musselman file and see similarities.  Like Pitino, Musselman wasn’t the first choice to become the Gophers’ coach but once he arrived you knew this guy was serious —even fanatical— about his business.

Musselman worked long hours and prided himself on his own conditioning. When he wasn’t in the office or on the phone at home, he might be playing pickup basketball where a frustrated and immature Gophers’ coach could resort to fisticuffs.  He hated to lose in any competition.

In the summer of 1971, Musselman’s first year in Minneapolis, he told a pumped up crowd at Williams Arena he planned on his Gophers winning the 1971-72 Big Ten championship.  Skeptics in the audience remembered that Minnesota had last been conference champs in 1937, and the 1970-71 Gophers finished 5-9 in the Big Ten.

Musselman inherited some talent on his roster in 1971 but knew he needed more.  It didn’t take long to sign up junior college stars Clyde Turner and Ron Behagen.  They and others formed a roster that won the Big Ten title in 1972, just as predicted.

It was more than recruiting that made the Gophers a winner, though.  Musselman employed a zone defense that regularly held opponents to point totals in the 50s.  On offense Minnesota was a disciplined team willing to hold the ball for long stretches to find a high percentage shot.

Musselman was a motivator who could be so crazed to win he talked to his players prior to the first practice in October of 1971 about beating Big Ten powerhouse Ohio State.  Never mind that there would be no game between the schools until winter.

The desire to motivate his team and pack Williams Arena resulted in Musselman’s use of a pregame ball handling drill set to music.  As the Gopher players performed 25 minutes before tipoff, nearly all the seats in the arena were filled with hand clapping, foot stomping fans.

In less than a year Musselman transformed the Gophers on the national college basketball map.  During his career at Minnesota the Gophers had Big Ten finishes of first, second, sixth and third.  The team was so popular games were regular sellouts, and fans who couldn’t get in the arena paid to watch on a large screen in the next door hockey arena.

Musselman left the Gophers after the 1975 season with NCAA infractions brewing and the bad taste of the infamous 1972 Minnesota-Ohio State brawl on his resume.  But he had the program rolling in recruiting, victories and at the box office from the start of his assignment in Minneapolis, and that momentum carried over for years and contributed directly to the success of the two coaches who followed him, Jim Dutcher and Clem Haskins. 

If Pitino can duplicate the “Good Mussy” and not the “Bad Mussy,” it will be déjà vu in Dinkytown.

Worth Noting

Rich Pitino said he welcomes the idea of the Gophers playing nonconference games against Louisville, the team coached by his father, Rick Pitino.  “I would love to, if he would be willing to do it.  We were going to do it at FIU, and hopefully we can do something here.  I think it would be great.  It would be fun to go against him head-to-head.”

Although Rich Pitino didn’t say it, the game is something the Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority should be looking at for 2016, the first year of the new Minneapolis Vikings stadium.  A crowd of 20,000 to 30,000 could be likely, and  installing a basketball setup in the new covered stadium would be a trial run for hosting NCAA Tournament games.

Pitino has already contacted Minnesota high school recruits including Apple Valley junior point guard Tyus Jones.  He plans to have individual meetings with Gophers players this week.

The April 8 issue of Sports Illustrated said Minnesota natives Nate Wolters and Mike Muscala didn’t help themselves with their performances in the NCAA Tournament.  Wolters, the South Dakota State point guard from St. Cloud Tech, “got destroyed” against the quickness and long arms of Michigan defenders in the tourney, according to an NBA executive.

Muscala, the Bucknell center from Roseville, has talent but an NBA executive quoted in the magazine said, “You can see his skills. But he needs to develop. If I were taking him, I’d try to get him to play in Europe for a couple of years.”

S.I. predicted the Timberwolves, drafting at No. 8 in the first round, will choose Indiana shooting guard Victor Oladipo.

The Vikings will play a home preseason game against the Titans at Mall of America Field on either Thursday, August 29, or Friday, August 30.  A game on August 29 will be the same date the football Gophers play UNLV at TCF Bank Stadium.

A Vikings’ spokesman said the team’s date will be finalized within a couple of weeks. The Vikings’ August 25 preseason game at San Francisco will be nationally televised by NBC’s Sunday Night Football.

Gophers’ offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover said he thinks former Gophers’ quarterback Max Shortell is home in Kansas still deciding where he will finish his college career.  Shortell, who would have been a valuable junior for the Gophers next fall, decided to transfer from Minnesota after the season ended last year.

Limegrover, who used to weigh 400 pounds, is now at about 230 and coaching with renewed energy.

At the Minnesota Football Clinic on Friday night newscaster Randy Shaver thanked high school and college coaches for fund-raising $121,000 for his cancer research foundation.  The “Tackle Cancer” promotion involved 150 high schools and two colleges in the state.  The Gophers will participate this year at the San Jose State game at TCF Bank Stadium.

The clinic, a three day event led by the Minnesota Football Coaches Association and held at the Double Tree Park Plaza in St. Louis Park, reported a record attendance of over 1,300, according to an e-mail from Ron Stolski, executive director of the MFCA.

At the clinic Minnetonka High School coach Dave Nelson was given the Tom Mahoney Man of the Year Award by the MFCA.  “Tom Mahoney was one of the founders of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association, and an inspirational, tireless leader of it for decades,” Stolski wrote in an e-mail.  “The Tom Mahoney award is presented to an MFCA member who represents the best in our association. A person who devotes leadership and enthusiasm for and energy to the efforts of the MFCA.  Dave Nelson epitomizes all that the award represents.”

St.   Thomas football coach Glenn Caruso said his Tommies will return “more kids than any top five” Division III program in the country.  Among his top 60 players last year, 35 were freshmen and sophomores.  Caruso said the Tommies might be ranked No. 2 in the nation prior to the start of next season.

St.   Thomas begins the first of seven spring practices next Sunday.  The Tommies, who have 91 Minnesotans on the roster, return nine starters on offense and six on defense.

Twins’ closer Glen Perkins, who earned his second save of the season yesterday in a 4-3 win over the Orioles, has yet to give up a hit in three innings over three games.  The Twins, now 4-2, have swept their two opening series.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 149
  • 150
  • 151
  • 152
  • 153
  • 154
  • 155
  • …
  • 181
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Tommies Locker Room   Iron Horse   Meyer Law   KLN Family Brands   Culvers

Recent Posts

  • Vikings Miss Ex-GM Rick Spielman’s Drafts, Roster Building
  • U Football Recruiting Class Emphasizes Speed, Athleticism
  • Keeping QB Drake Lindsey in 2026: Job 1 for Fleck, Gophers
  • Advantage & Disadvantages: Vikes Face former QB Darnold
  • Time for Vikings to Try Rookie Max Brosmer at Quarterback?
  • Mike Grant’s Season: 400th Win & Another State Tourney Run
  • Vikings Head Coach O’Connell Calls Boo-Birds ‘Justified’
  • Why It Could be Wait Until 2026 for Vikings J.J. McCarthy
  • Fingers Crossed Golden Gophers Can Retain Drake Lindsey
  • Undrafted Brosmer Wins Confidence of Coach, Teammates

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
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

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