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Category: Golden Gophers

Predictions for 2025? Gather Round Ladies and Gentlemen!

Posted on January 1, 2025January 1, 2025 by David Shama

 

Yogi Berra supposedly said: “It’s difficult to make predictions—especially about the future.”

I agree with the Yankee Hall of Famer and sage for the ages.  But after several days at a darkness retreat, I somewhat cautiously offer the following prognostications for 2025:

Let’s get it over with at the start, Purple Crazies.  The Vikings will play in the Super Bowl for the first time since 1977.

Let’s also get greedy and predict the result—although the Crazies won’t like it.  The 0-4 in Super Bowls Vikings will lose to the 0-4 Bills.  Or my admittedly cloudy crystal ball says Minnesota will lose to the Chiefs, the franchise that defeated Minnesota 23-7 in the Vikings’ first Super Bowl in 1970.

And did you know the 1970 game was in New Orleans? Yup, and the same city hosts the 2025 Super Bowl.

“It’s like déjà vu all over again,” Yogi might quip.

Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell will be rewarded in 2025 with a new contract paying him in the range of $12 million to $15 million annually.

Rest easy about Sam Darnold as he nears free agency. The Vikings will franchise tag him in 2025 and pay their quarterback something like $40 million for one season.

The Vikings will also retain free agent running back back Aaron Jones with another one-year deal.

The Hitman may bow out.  After 13 seasons in purple, I am forecasting 35-year-old Vikings safety Harrison Smith will retire.

I predict Taylor Swift—oops, I mean Travis Kelce—will top the NFL Pro Games fan balloting. Can’t wait for Thursday’s announcement about voting for players on NFL Network’s Good Morning Football.

Retirement could be next, too, for 37-year-old Timberwolves point guard Mike Conley who will be 38 by the time next season is about to tip.

Leaving the Wolves could be power forward Julius Randle who might be moved prior to the NBA trade deadline February 6.

With revenue sharing starting in big time college sports, there will be scores of Golden Gophers athletes who earn five, 10 times or more than a first-year graduate from the University of Minnesota.  With NIL earnings and revenue share money, the millionaire athlete arrives in Dinkytown.

Don’t be surprised if a state of Minnesota high school athlete will approach $500,000 in NIL earnings this year.

The Gophers may have a new head men’s basketball coach in 2025. A qualified but long-shot candidate to get the job would be Badgers assistant Joe Krabbenhoft who considered playing for Minnesota coming out of high school in South Dakota but went to Madison.

U basketball forward Parker Fox will not be eligible for a ninth season of college basketball.

John Tauer’s St. Thomas men’s basketball team will win the Summit League title in a year or two.

Former Lynx superstar Maya Moore, a first-year nominee, will be enshrined in 2025 in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

I am establishing the over-under on a Twins starting pitcher being allowed to go nine innings in a game next season at two.  Offseason optimism!

The state will approve legalized sports wagering in 2025. This means betting on your local favorites will now hurt not only emotionally but also gash your wallet.

Kirill Kaprizov

“Kirill the Thrill” Kaprizov maintains his status of best nickname among Minnesota sports elites.

It will be one of the feel-good stories of the year when popular men’s hockey coach Bob Motzko wins his first NCAA championship and the Gophers’ first since 2003.

Drake Lindsey, a freshman last fall, will win the starting Gopher quarterback competition against Zach Pyron, the transfer from Georgia Tech.

As he nears his 50th birthday late next year, Tiger Woods, paired with 16-year-old son Charlie, will win the 2025 PNC Championship for the first time.

Nobody asked about my golf game, but I am anticipating a hole-in-one on a local par 3.

Celebrity local athletes will have armed security at their homes to combat the national trend of burglaries of the rich and famous.  At our home, we’ll install a light timer.

It will be another year of restaurant closings and even bankruptcies.  Things aren’t so hot at the grocery store either where I recently paid $4.99 for a can of soup.

Someone, not me, will become famous for writing a dating app instructional manual.

Most of you, sorry to type this, won’t keep your New Year’s fitness resolutions.  BTW: Word is Gen Z is opting for weight loss drugs and skipping the gym.

And, no, I am not prognosticating anyone will patent an anti-hangover drink in 2025!

Finally, I predict another year for the Sports Headliners Ducky Awards introduced last fall in this space. The honor is bestowed on a Minnesota sports figure who is doing “just ducky.”  To be considered by the Ducky committee a person has to be going through a delightful period in his or her career.  The highest criteria will be someone we can look at and declare that life is “pretty peachy keen.”

Early favorite: Sam Darnold.  Dark horse: Royce Lewis.

3 comments

No Chance Now of Viking Playoff Game at Frigid Lambeau

Posted on December 30, 2024December 30, 2024 by David Shama

 

A last of the year column while using a notes format and featuring the Vikings, Golden Gophers and Timberwolves.

There is a missing storyline coming out of Sunday’s 27-25 Vikings win over the Packers in Minneapolis.  With the victory, the Vikings eliminated a possible matchup against the Pack in Green Bay during the playoffs.

A game at potentially frigid Green Bay in January is something any Packer postseason opponent wants to avoid.  Numbing temps and gusty winds could negatively impact Minnesota’s elite roster of offensive playmakers and favor Green Bay’s running offense with stud ball carrier Josh Jacobs.

The 14-2 Vikings defeated the 11-5 Packers by a total of four points in two wins this season.  The talent margin between the two teams is not huge and the Vikings would be a more solid bet to win a playoff game at climate-controlled U.S. Bank Stadium.

The Vikings, of course, can host all their NFC postseason games at home if they defeat the Lions, 13-2, in Detroit Sunday.  The game time has been changed to an evening kickoff, with NBC televising the match up that will determine the NFC North Division title and playoff seeding.

No matter what quarterback Sam Darnold does in the Detroit game, or in the playoffs, it appears likely the Vikings will bring him back for at least another season.  The club could put the franchise tag on him for something like $40 million for one season, or possibly commit longer to the 27-year-old who before 2024 was an NFL journeyman.

Darnold, who passed for a career high 377 yards and three touchdowns against the Packers on Sunday, is the first starting quarterback in NFL history to win 14 games in his first year with his team.  He is playing on a one-year $10 million deal.

“Sam Darnold is the best quarterback in the NFL,” teammate J.J. McCarthy posted on Instagram.

McCarthy, the rookie quarterback sidelined all season, was thought to be the heir apparent to Darnold next season.  But Darnold is playing at such an elite level that it seems prudent to re-sign him and let McCarthy recover more from knee surgeries and sit and learn in 2025.

The 7-5 Gophers are about a touchdown favorite to win the Duke’s Mayo Bowl Friday night against 6-6 Virginia Tech. It’s tradition at the annual bowl in Charlotte for the winning coach to be drenched in mayonnaise after the game.

That prospect prompts anticipation about Minnesota coach P.J. Fleck’s fate with his bald head. “Yeah, I am excited,” quarterback Max Brosmer said of the possibility.  “I am not sure how fond of mayonnaise coach Fleck is, so we will see what that looks like if we come out with a win up there at the Duke’s Mayo Bowl.

“I kind of wish he had hair because I think it would be stuck in his hair a little more. It might be easier to clean off if he’s clean shaven. …”

In one season Brosmer established himself as one of the best Gopher quarterbacks in decades.  His physical skills, mental acuity and work ethic are a combination seldom seen in Dinkytown.

“I feel comfortable knowing that I didn’t take any days for granted,” Brosmer said. “I put as much effort as I could into every single day. …”

Brosmer, who transferred to Minnesota from FCS New Hampshire, is the “best processor” of information Fleck said he has ever coached.  The coach said this year’s offense was probably the most “complex” he’s had in 12 years as a head coach but Brosmer “processes it like it’s the easiest.”

Max Brosmer

“…We only had him for eleven months, twelve months, but the legacy he’s going to leave is what he passed down in terms of the process—the preparation—to the other guys. And I think that’s the ultimate definition of a leader is what you’re passing down that other people are going to use to make the team and themselves better.”

Brosmer’s likely successor will be freshman Drake Lindsey.  Brosmer is complimentary of Lindsey’s passion to play and work ethic.  “No team will be successful without a quarterback that just loves football,” Brosmer said.

On the defensive side, lineman Anthony Smith is likely to be a key player in the bowl game and in 2025 when he could achieve postseason honors.  The 6-6, 295-pound redshirt sophomore has gone from a spot player in his career to a starter.

Fleck said early on Smith was moved around with different responsibilities and that was a learning process, “but he’s grown a ton mentally, physically and emotionally. The maturity level is going through the roof. He knows why in everything that he’s doing, he’s able to play a little bit faster. And he’s so versatile. I don’t think I’ve ever had a guy that big with that versatility, at 6’6″, 295 pounds, and he can do a lot of different things. …”

“He’s a dude.  He’s a very built player.  Very big, naturally strong,” said nose guard and teammate Jalen Logan-Redding. He believes Smith has “really realized how big of a player he actually is when he is on the field.”

Minnesota has won five consecutive bowl games under Fleck.  While other teams may not focus on giving their best, that hasn’t happened with the Gophers.

“Yeah, that comes from coach Fleck,” said offensive coordinator Greg Harbaugh Jr. “He demands that we have the discipline and structure every single day to…(be) our best. It shows throughout training camp, spring ball, bowl prep, whatever season of the year it is. It comes from the top.”

The Timberwolves have won three consecutive games, and that success is coming at an opportune time because of the next two opponents.  The Wolves will play two of the best teams in the NBA, against the 26-5 Thunder Tuesday night in Oklahoma City and in Minneapolis Thursday evening against the 23-9 Celtics.

The Wolves, 17-14, have won their last three games by a total of nine points.  Before Sunday night’s 112-110 home win over the Spurs, Minnesota point guard Mike Conley talked about what was being emphasized.

“It’s finishing and that’s on both ends of the floor.  Boxing out, defensive rebounding, finishing our plays offensively. Playing through contact, just being aggressive, being physical. I think when we can get back to our nature of being that aggressive team, we can play through mistakes and be a confident team going forward.”

Guard Donte DiVincenzo came off the bench to score a season high 26 points, including 15 points in the first half when the Wolves took a 57-45 end of the second quarter lead.  It was his second consecutive 20-plus game and coach Chris Finch had him on the floor in the closing minutes when the 6-4 guard contributed offensively and defensively.

The crowd came to see the Wolves for sure, but also 7-3 Spurs’ wunderkind Victor Wembanyama.  The 20-year-old could be the future face of the NBA.  He plays with extraordinary agility and versatility, able to roam the court defensively and offensively.

Wembanyama scored a game high 34 points, making four of 12 three-point shots.  In pregame warmups he drew a roar from the crowd after making a beyond midcourt shot.

After the game Wolves power forward Julius Randle was asked about the assignment of guarding Wembanyama. “Just take up his air space. You know he’s 7’10, whatever the hell he is.  Just trying to take up his air space and make it difficult for him. You know when you let him play free in space, he’s special, so just trying to make it as hard as possible. …”

Heartfelt condolences to friends and family of Bill McReavy Sr. who passed away recently at age 92.  Bill is in the Loyalists’ Hall of Fame among devoted supporters of Gophers athletics.  He always had a smile for friends and was an icon in the community heading up Washburn-McReavy funeral and cremation services.

Sad to report the deaths of former Gopher hockey player Len Lilyholm and wife Carol after a car accident on Saturday in Iowa. They were travelling from Minnesota to their home in Florida where they planned to spend time with friends Lou Nanne and Dave Brooks, a source told Sports Headliners.  Len played in the early 1960s for Minnesota on the “Smurf line” that included Brooks and Gary Schmalzbauer. Nanne, a defenseman, was on the team, too.

Belated happy birthday to Randy Shaver who recently turned 69.  The former KARE 11 news and sports anchor can be followed on his podcasts.

Minneapolis native Jay Pivec, now retired but a well-traveled basketball coach who is in the NJCAA Coaches Association Hall of Fame, has a new book out about his basketball life. The Book of Piv  is a fun storytelling read and available from Amazon.

Comments Welcome

Kevin O’Connell’s Post-Game Speeches Drawing Attention

Posted on December 17, 2024December 17, 2024 by David Shama

 

ABC TV’s Good Morning America featured Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell today, recognizing the 39-year-old’s success in leading the Vikings to a 12-2 record that ranks with the best in the NFL.  https://abcnews.go.com/GMA/Culture/video/vikings-head-coach-talks-nfls-youngest-coaches-116858495

Part of the focus was O’Connell’s postgame speeches, with GMA describing them as “rousing and viral.”  The public has seen those speeches on YouTube and they offer a glimpse into the leadership of the third-year Viking leader.

O’Connell told GMA: “Everybody thinks that he must rehearse those things, or think about what he is going to say long before.  That could not be more further from the truth.

“The emotion of the moment might drive me to use a word or two I probably shouldn’t.  May be I am getting better at it. …

“When we recently beat the Atlanta Falcons, as I kind of finished up, I kind of felt like maybe they (the players) expected a little more.  Did I not deliver in that moment? It was the first time ever I couldn’t wait to watch it back to critique myself.”

Kevin O’Connell image courtesy of the Minnesota Vikings

O’Connell certainly delivered last night in the locker room after the team’s 30-12 win over the Bears at U.S. Bank Stadium.  Speaking in front of the players and others including franchise owners Mark and Zygi Wilf. O’Connell both praised his team for its 12-2 resume and warned them that three games remain and they “have to grind” to close the season with the ultimate success.  He ended his talk by telling the players he loves them.

During the speech he also gave out game balls to linebacker Blake Cashman, outside linebacker Jonathan Greenard, running back Aaron Jones, kicker Will Reichard, and defensive tackle Jerry Tillery. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDsGKD7HXkA

Worth Noting

Vikings’ long snapper Andrew DePaola, wide receiver Justin Jefferson, cornerback Byron Murphy and outside linebacker Andrew Van Ginkel are leading NFC vote getters by fans at their positions for the AFC- NFC Pro Bowl Games in February in Orlando.

It might be the most emotional scene all season at Target Center when the Timberwolves host the Knicks Thursday night.  The game will be the first regular season game between the two teams since the blockbuster early fall trade that sent center Karl-Anthony Towns to the Knicks, with power forward Julius Randle and combo guard Dante DiVincenzo coming to the Wolves.

Towns, who played nine seasons with the Wolves, told Newsday.com yesterday he didn’t know what to expect from the fans but said regarding his time with Minnesota “…I gave the absolute best of me even when I wasn’t 100 percent.”  Towns will likely hear a few boos but more so applause as he returns to Minneapolis averaging 24.8 points and a career high 13.9 rebounds for the 16-10 Knicks.

Towns will be determined to play at a high level, as will Randle and DiVincenzo for the 14-11 Wolves.  If any of the three are subpar in their performances, they will potentially have the satisfaction of being on the winning team.. The two teams will play one other time this season, January 17 in New York.

The emotions likely go beyond the three players and fans.  Knicks coach Tom Thibodeau, once the Wolves head coach and president of basketball operations, could take extra satisfaction from a New York win.  So, too, might former Wolves president of basketball operations Gersson Rosas now a senior vice president with the Knicks.  Both men were fired by the Timberwolves earlier in their careers.

The NBA certainly thinks it’s a big game because Wolves-Knicks will be nationally televised by TNT.

Longtime Twins president Dave St. Peter talking about season tickets for 2025: “We’ll be north of 90 percent on season ticket renewal. Whether or not we’re going to get to 95 percent, which is where we were last year, I think is up in the air. But it’s still early on that and we have a lot of offseason left.”

Twins’ infielder Royce Lewis, 25, was a wunderkind in 2023, his first full season in the big leagues.  He delivered some of the club’s most timely hits back then, and finished with a .309 batting average, 15 home runs and 52 RBI in 217 at bats.

Lewis, frequently troubled with injuries during his limited career, managed 292 at bats in 2024. Although he homered 16 times and drove in 47 runs, his batting average plummeted to .233.  Over the last 30 games he hit .171.

St. Peter reminded fans Lewis is still a young player and that “baseball is hard, and it will humble you.”  He added that it will be interesting to see how Lewis works during the offseason and prepares himself for 2025.

“I am optimistic he’s going to have a big bounce back,” St. Peter said. “We see the talent.  We certainly see the enthusiasm, and when he puts in the work, I think he’s going to have a lot of success.”

Fan voting for the Twins Hall of Fame ends today, December 17.  Candidates for 2025 are former players, but the 2026 ballot will be non-players meaning that historical figures like legendary club broadcaster Halsey Hall can be voted for. https://www.mlb.com/twins/fans/twins-hall-of-fame-ballot

Jeff@MNTwinsZealot recently posted on X the concession prices for 1983 Twins games at the Metrodome.  Almost every item was under $2, with prices ranging from .60 cents for coffee to the highest price on the board: $2.75 for a large beer.

Creative Charters, the Stillwater-based company that has promoted Golden Gophers trips since 1993, will take fans to Charlotte for the Duke’s Mayo Bowl between Minnesota and Virginia Tech on January 3.  The three-night trip leaves Minneapolis on January 2 and returns travelers home on January 5.  Part of the trip’s offerings include a visit to the NASCAR Hall of Fame. Creative Charters is a Sports Headliners advertiser (see ad toward top of the page).

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