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Category: Golden Gophers

Must-Win for Football Gophers Tonight

Posted on October 26, 2018October 26, 2018 by David Shama

 

KFXN Radio’s Dan Barreiro asked for suggestions on air this week for a trophy to be awarded to the winner of the Minnesota-Indiana football game. How about the Splintered Crutch Trophy?

A fight broke out in Bloomington, Indiana near the end of the 1968 Gophers-Hoosiers game. Minnesota fullback Jim Carter took his helmet off and was swinging it as a weapon in the fight. “(It) kept people away from me,” Carter said yesterday.

Carter was doing okay until an injured Indiana lineman in street clothes came out on the field to get in on the action. The Hoosier swung a crutch at Carter, just missing his head and landing on a shoulder pad. The crutch splintered on impact and Carter speculated he could have been in “serious trouble” if the blow had been to his head.

Creation of the Splintered Crutch Trophy could put a little excitement into two programs that historically have struggled to win games. The last time the Hoosiers and Gophers won a Big Ten championship was 1967 when the two programs shared the title along with Purdue. Indiana hasn’t been to the Rose Bowl since 1968. Minnesota last earned its way to Pasadena in 1962.

This fall the two teams find themselves in familiar positions in their Big Ten divisions. Indiana, 1-4 in conference games, is in next to last place in the East Division, while the Gophers, 0-4, are at the bottom of the West Division standings.

The Hoosiers are on a three-game losing streak, Minnesota has a four-game going. No surprise that a former Big Ten coach predicted this about tonight’s game, “It will be close.”

P.J. Fleck

This is a matchup P.J. Fleck and his coaching staff badly need to win. The remaining schedule has Indiana, Purdue and Northwestern at home, with road games at Illinois and Wisconsin. The best opportunities for wins will be tonight and against hapless Illinois. If the Gophers can earn victories against IU and the Illini, and upset either Northwestern or Purdue, they will finish the season with an overall record of 6-6 and qualify for a bowl game.

There will be drama and judgment surrounding what Fleck and the Gophers accomplish between now and the last game of the season on November 24 against Wisconsin. The second-year coach won only two conference games last season but the scenario above delivers an improved 3-6 league record in 2018. The team’s overall record with three more wins will be 6-6, and a step forward from last year’s 5-7.

The Gophers need to restore confidence in themselves and their followers in the last five games of the season starting tonight at TCF Bank Stadium. Fleck’s image with fans and media will improve with a couple more wins, and provide more interest in the program going into 2019.

This is test time for the coaches and players. They need to rally after having the misfortune of losing some of their best players to injuries. Minnesota also has to recover from poor performances on defense when the unit has often looked under coached, confused and even disinterested.

The Gophers will have to pretty much inspire themselves tonight. The crowd will be small and while some loyalists will cheer for the Gophers like it’s a Big Ten championship game, there will be thousands and thousands of empty seats.

Ticket sales for 2018 remaining home games, and for next season, are part of what’s on the line for Fleck and the program tonight and in the weeks ahead. Attendance for 2018 home games could be the lowest at TCF since the stadium opened in 2009.

For Fleck this is an important time and an opportunity for momentum leading into 2019, when in his third year expectations will rightfully be greater than they have been.

Worth Noting

Kirk Cousins has been drawing notice for his pregame remarks to Vikings teammates but a lot of people have been following his verbal leadership skills since a famous speech he made in 2011. Representing the Big Ten Conference football players, Cousins made a speech at the league’s kickoff luncheon in Chicago that has become a YouTube favorite.

Cousins ranks fourth in the NFL with 2,162 passing yards and also fourth with a 70.0 completion percentage. He and Atlanta’s Matt Ryan are the only quarterbacks with at least 2,000 passing yards and a 70+ completion percentage this season.

When the national TV ratings come out for the week of October 28, it’s likely the Vikings-Saints game this Sunday night will be No. 1 for all programming.

The field reporter for the NBC televised game from U.S. Bank Stadium will be Edina’s Michele Tafoya.

Local NBA fans will see two of the league’s most intriguing players at Target Center before October ends. Tonight the Wolves play the Bucks with “Greek Freak” Giannis Antetokounmpo. LeBron James, considered the best player on the planet, is in town with the Lakers on Monday night.

Then on Wednesday popular former Wolves point guard Ricky Rubio and the Jazz play at Target Center.

The Minnesota-North Dakota U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame game Saturday night from Las Vegas will be streamed on NCHA.tv, and seen on cable companies Charter, Comcast (999), Mediacom (MC22) and Midco.

Tickets have sold out for Lindsay Whalen’s debut game November 9 as the Gopher women’s head basketball coach. The Gophers haven’t announced a crowd of over 10,000 since January of 2007.  Discounted single game tickets and the excitement about Whalen resulted in the sellout for the nonconference matchup against New Hampshire.

“Behind the Game,” the Twin Cities cable TV show co-hosted by Patrick Klinger and Bill Robertson, regularly schedules sports newsmakers, with the latest guest former MLB umpire Tim Tschida. Tom Chorske, who played 11 seasons in the NHL and now is a hockey commentator on local TV, will be an upcoming guest. The Tschida program can also be viewed on YouTube.

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How P.J. Fleck Ranks with Big 10 Peers

Posted on October 24, 2018October 24, 2018 by David Shama

 

This space has provided power rankings of Big Ten football teams in the past, but today I offer my listing of the league’s 14 head coaches. Most readers will immediately wonder where Minnesota’s P.J. Fleck ranks. He checks in at No. 11 and here’s my capsule on the 37-year-old “Row the Boat” specialist:

About halfway through Fleck’s second year at Minnesota his record in conference games is 2-11. His only two wins came last season against two underwhelming teams, Illinois and Nebraska. In nonconference games his record is 6-0, with those victories earned mostly against inferior opposition. Give Fleck, his assistant coaches and players credit for impressive performances in wins over Nebraska and Oregon State in 2017, and this season’s victory against Fresno State.

Team defense is now in alarm status. The Gophers were outscored 70-0 in their last two Big Ten games in 2017. In their four conference games this year they are giving up 43.5 points per game including a 53-28 loss to Nebraska last Saturday.

Fleck has gone overboard in emphasizing how young his roster is but the starters on defense are primarily juniors and seniors. Despite their experience, Minnesota defenders are often out of position or nowhere to be seen, as they allow opposing offenses to break off long gains. Defensive coordinator Robb Smith, who according to a college football insider was forced out at Arkansas before being hired by Fleck, should be under scrutiny.

Fleck and staff have improved the offense, including by bringing in young talent such as true freshmen quarterback Zack Annexstad and wide receiver Rashod Bateman. Fleck has done well in national recruiting rankings and been tireless in talking about his vision to make the Minnesota program “elite.”

P.J. Fleck

But the Gophers have to stop giving up easy scores and start winning conference games. The program was 5-4 in Big Ten games the season prior to Fleck’s arrival in January 2017. Minnesota had winning records in the Big Ten in two of the three seasons prior to Fleck being hired.

The conference totals on wins and losses say the program is going backward. It’s up to Fleck and his staff to soon change that.

In ranking all 14 Big Ten coaches (below) multiple factors were considered including not only wins and losses, and championships, but also the difficulty of their assignments. It’s not an even “playing field” when comparing resources at each of the Big Ten programs. Far from it. Among the most difficult jobs are Illinois, Minnesota, Northwestern and Rutgers. Places of privilege include Michigan, Ohio State and Penn State.

1. Mark Dantonio, Michigan State. He is a taskmaster’s taskmater whose defenses have allowed the Spartans to overachieve and win for many years.

2. Urban Meyer, Ohio State. He won’t lead any popularity polls nationally, or in Big Ten country, but he’s won every place he has coached and is 77-9 in seven seasons with the Buckeyes.

3. Pat Fitzgerald, Northwestern. Historically not a program with great resources but Fitzgerald is a superb leader and coach who gets the most out of the Wildcats.

4. Kirk Ferentz, Iowa. There is a reason Ferentz has been at Iowa for 20 seasons. He and his staff are masters at identifying under the radar player talent and developing it.

5. Jim Harbaugh, Michigan. Harbaugh failed in three previous seasons to find a quality quarterback but the fiery coach has one now in Shea Patterson and the Wolverines’ coach could be on his way to a first Big Ten title.

6. Jeff Brohm, Purdue. Beating No. 2 ranked Ohio State last Saturday was no fluke. The second-year coach immediately improved a dreadful Purdue program in 2017 and is the real deal.

7. Scott Frost, Nebraska. He is 1-6 in his first season at Nebraska but he was 13-0 at Central Florida last season, and just as importantly comes from a gold-plated coaching tree that includes Tom Osborne and Bill Walsh.

8. Paul Chryst, Wisconsin. Chryst was given the keys to a national top program and in four seasons is 38-10 overall and 25-5 in league games, but the Badgers have occasionally stumbled including a surprise loss to BYU and poor performance against Michigan this year. Maybe he is more of a maintainer than a builder.

9. James Franklin, Penn State. Impressive recruiter who has helped restore the Penn State program but he couldn’t close out big home games this fall against Ohio State and Michigan State.

10. DJ Durkin/Matt Canada, Maryland. Canada is the interim coach with Durkin on administrative leave while the school investigates his program. What is certain is the Terps have recruited successfully the last few years.

11. P.J. Fleck, Minnesota. See comments at the top.

12. Tom Allen, Indiana. A coin flip in ranking Allen behind Fleck. The second-year IU coach is 3-11 in Big Ten games.

13. Chris Ash, Rutgers. He was smart enough to hire Jerry Kill as offensive coordinator for one season in 2017 but Rutgers is one difficult place to coach. In Ash’s third season he has yet to show a lot and is likely to go winless in the Big Ten.

14. Lovie Smith, Illinois. The Illinois job is deeper in resources than Rutgers but you wouldn’t know it looking at the mess Smith has contributed to in three seasons. The former Bears Super Bowl coach has a league record of 3-18.

 

Comments Welcome

Good Guy Adam Thielen Worthy Hero

Posted on October 19, 2018October 19, 2018 by David Shama

 

Scan the crowd during Vikings games at U.S. Bank Stadium and notice all the fans wearing Adam Thielen jerseys. His familiar No. 19 is not only a top seller in Minnesota but also across the country.

The 28-year-old Vikings’ wide receiver deserves the adulation. There are so many bad characters in professional sports, but they are adored by fans because of what they do on the field or court. Often the public is unaware or doesn’t care about their lowlife behaviors. Thielen, though, checks all the right boxes on the football field and off. Spend time around the Detroit Lakes, Minnesota native and you realize he is a poster boy for Midwest values such as courtesy, friendliness, compassion, thoughtfulness and modesty.

To be honest, Thielen isn’t all that interesting to interview in the locker room. He takes a humble demeanor in answering questions, avoids controversy and is looking out for the team while talking to the media—and there’s nothing wrong with that approach.

Thielen could have developed a head full of self-importance the last couple of years, but his character won’t allow it. His pro football career has evolved from a guy who hardly interested anyone to a player who perhaps deserves a place among the top 30 players in the NFL.

In Minnesota’s home win over the Cardinals last Sunday Thielen became the first receiver to start a season with six consecutive 100-yard games in the Super Bowl era. Through less than half of the season he has 58 receptions for 712 yards and four touchdowns. His receptions and yardage totals are tops in the league. The Vikings’ single season team records in those categories are 122 catches, 1,632 yards and 17 touchdowns.

As an undrafted free agent out of Minnesota State in 2013, Thielen did enough to earn a place on the practice squad. In 2014 he made the 53-man roster and became a contributor on special teams. That was his niche in 2015 when he was named the club’s Special Teams Player of the Year. His transition season as a receiver came in 2016 when he started 10 games, and then last year he had 1,276 receiving yards on his way to being named second team All-Pro.

Thielen has used his physical skills including running speed and eye-hand coordination to become an elite receiver. His work ethic and the repetition that has gone into perfecting his craft have played a huge role, too. There is a blue collar element to his makeup that no doubt was impacted at an early age when his dad’s favorite Viking was “Benchwarmer” Bob Lurtsema.

Maybe that mentality has contributed to Thielen seemingly being content with the four-year $19,246,000 contract that Spotrac.com reported he signed in 2017. That deal now looks like a bargain but search hard to find any complaints from Thielen.

What’s Thielen done off the field? He has used his name and influence to give back to others. He has hosted football camps, opened a gym, worked with the Humane Society, been involved with Vikings community sponsored activities, and last month with wife Caitlin announced the Thielen Foundation. The foundation’s first gift is to the University of Minnesota Children’s Hospital with a $100,000 pledge.

Worth Noting

Thielen has been able to play this season without experiencing serious injury. After the 2016 season he had shoulder surgery. “I’ve had a lot of (career) injuries but you just try to play your best when you have them,” he told Sports Headliners.

Does Thielen think about the possibility of injuries? “You’re going to think about that stuff, but once you get on the field you’re not thinking about getting hurt. You’re just trying to do the things off the field to try to prevent it—in the offseason, that is.”

Vikings linebacker Anthony Barr has a foundation called Raise the Barr that provides financial help for college to single moms in California and Minnesota. Barr is from Los Angeles and is a Lakers fan. He wears a vintage Minneapolis Lakers jacket to show his support of two places he has lived. “Cross up the love, so that’s all that is,” Barr said.

Jerry Reichow, who played for the Vikings in their 1961 inaugural season and has over four decades of experience working for the club with personnel decisions, is still with the franchise as a consultant and is living in Santa Fe, New Mexico. A former wide receiver, Reichow’s expertise includes evaluating quarterbacks.

JD Spielman

JD Spielman, the redshirt sophomore receiver from Eden Prairie who the Gophers face tomorrow in Lincoln, led the Big Ten in conference games in receiving yards per game at 88.1 last year. The former Minnesota Mr. Football is five receptions from 100 career receptions and would be the first Nebraska player to achieve that total before his junior season.

Over 180 high schools, plus the Vikings and most college football programs in the state, are hosting “Tackle Cancer” games this year. The initiative has raised more than $1.3 million since its inception in 2012, and supports cancer research and patient aid in Minnesota.

Former Gophers basketball captain and assistant coach Al Nuness had a first-time experience last week on a friend’s shrimp boat near New Orleans. He worked as part of the crew and helped haul in 600 pounds of shrimp and 200 pounds of blue crab.

Lindsay Whalen said among her adjustments as a first-year head coach is being in a gym “12 to 14 hours” watching potential recruits. She acknowledged how the Gophers perform on the basketball court this season will impact the perspectives of recruits.

At the home opener tonight against the Cavs, the Timberwolves and Levy Restaurants will debut new food offerings at Target Center including a “Kid’s Meal” available for $5 in the “Kid’s Zone” (Section 225). The meal emphasizes healthy options and includes a Timberwolves-themed toy.

That was former Gophers men’s hockey coach Don Lucia jogging on campus this week. Lucia said he runs four miles or more a few times per week.

Clark Griffith, son of former Twins owner Calvin Griffith, turned 77 on Wednesday. He is an astute historian and observer of baseball, and a longtime Minneapolis resident.

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