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Category: Golden Gophers

The ‘Polish Eagle’ Flies High in Life

Posted on January 29, 2016February 1, 2016 by David Shama

 

Dick Jonckowski—a.k.a. the “Polish Eagle”—says no two days are the same for him.  He wouldn’t have it any other way.

Jonckowski is 72 and has made a livelihood from stringing together small town radio jobs, speaking engagements and public address assignments at sports events.  His trademark smile, vintage jokes and passion for sports have made him well-known in Minnesota for decades.  His work and personality have landed him in eight halls of fame in the state including those sponsored by Minnesota high school coaches for baseball, basketball and football.

The money has not been that great but, what a fun ride!  Having fought off cancer, and with his diabetes under control, Jonckowski has the same energy as 10 years ago—with no plans to change anything about a life that sometimes has him travelling from Shakopee to Dinkytown, from MSP Airport to Canada.

Jonckowski has lived in Shakopee with his wife Arlene for 50 years.  He is one of only two public address announcers in Williams Arena history.  The famous basketball home of the Gophers opened in 1928 and Julie Perlt was the P.A. man until Jonckowski succeeded him starting with the 1986-87 season.

Dick Jonckowski
Dick Jonckowski

Seven athletic directors and five coaches later, Jonckowski is still courtside providing fans with information during games.  Sometime later this season a halftime ceremony at Williams Arena (date not announced yet) will recognize him for his 30 years behind the microphone.

Ask Jonckowski about the 30 years and the memories come so fast it seems like he doesn’t know where to begin telling stories.  A classic memory was the night Northwestern coach Ricky Byrdsong left the team bench during the game and walked up an aisle while Gophers fans looked on with amazement.  Byrdsong started wandering around Williams Arena after a disputed call by a referee.  The coach’s brain cells seemed awry that evening, and Byrdsong even challenged the final score of the game—insisting to Jonckowksi the Wildcats, not the Gophers, won the game.

When Tubby Smith coached the Gophers he checked in with Jonckowski just before tipoff.  He wanted a quick story—a funny joke—to loosen him up before the game.

Jonckowski might have told Smith he just got back from a pleasure trip: “I took my mother-in-law to the airport.”

In 2013 Smith’s Gophers upset then No. 1 ranked Indiana at Williams Arena.  Jonckowski loved it and so did the fans who poured out of their seats and onto the floor when the game ended.  “They jumped right over my head,” he said.

The Gophers’ 1994 triple overtime win against Iowa at Williams Arena is a special memory.  “I was so exhausted at the end of that game—because I was really into it,” Jonckowski remembered.  “I was actually hyperventilating at the end of the game.”

Voshon Lenard had 38 points for Minnesota in the game.  Jonckowski lists Lenard as one of his favorite Gophers during the last 30 seasons.  The others are Willie Burton, Austin Hollins, Bobby Jackson, Sam Jacobson and Jim Shikenjansky.

Jonckowski, who will be in his 28th season as the Gophers baseball P.A. man this year, got his start working U games because then athletic director Paul Giel liked him.  He teased Giel about his major league baseball career as a journeyman pitcher.  Jonckowski claimed there was a game when three consecutive balls thrown by Giel were knocked over the fence.  The manager made a trip to the mound and asked the catcher what Giel’s pitches looked like to him.  “I don’t know,” the catcher said.  “I haven’t caught any of them yet.”

Jonckowski has been doing P.A. work for Shakopee High School basketball games since 1989.  Before games he goes on the court and throws behind the back passes to players while they take their warm-up shots.

Jonckowski has been tossing behind the back passes for decades.  For years he worked as a field usher for Vikings games at Met Stadium.  A stray football might be returned to a game official with a behind the back pass.  And as a kid he would practice the move with a basketball in his basement, inspired by 1950s Celtics guard Bob Cousy.

It was Cousy, playing on national TV, who dribbled and passed behind his back, threw no-look passes and inspired a generation of young admirers like Jonckowski.  He loved the showmanship and tried the Cousy routine at New Prague High School where he was a starting guard.

Coach Doug Shonka wasn’t buying in.  “Richard, we don’t play like that,” he told his maverick guard.

Sorry, coach, but Jonckowski is still doing a little showboating.  “I can (still) throw it 45 feet behind my back,” he said.

Jonckowski’s father George owned movie theaters and the family lived in various Minnesota towns.  “Between first and ninth grades we moved six times,” Jonckowski recalled.  “I didn’t like that.”

George had a good sense of humor and advocated enjoying life.  “No one gets out alive,” he told his son.

That zest for life attitude is Jonckowski’s mantra.  “Some of my friends are pretty negative people.  Every day is a negative day for them.  I just say, ‘You’re alive, you might as well make the best of it.’

“I always say you’re dead a long time, so you better do what you can while you’re here.”

Jonckowski had a brief try at minor league baseball after high school and then started a radio career that includes KSMM in Shakopee.  He was on the station for 38 years with various assignments including his popular “Coaches Round Table Show.”

The last 10 years the focus has been on public address work and emcee and speaking assignments.  Well-known in Minnesota, Jonckowski has networked with contacts that led to engagements out east and also in Canada.  The assignments can be sporadic but Jonckowski always shows up ready to have fun and provoke laughs with jokes like this one:

A burglar breaks into a couple’s home and goes to the bedroom.  He asks the terrified wife what her name is.  “It’s Betty,” the woman answers.

“Oh, my God,” the burglar said.  “My grandmother’s name is Betty.  My mom’s name is Betty.  My wife’s name is Betty.  I couldn’t possibly think of harming you.”

Then the burglar asks the husband for his name.

“It’s Frank—but all my friends call me Betty,” the husband answers.

Jonckowski tells that story and laughs hard.  He guesses he could recall 50 or more jokes without skipping a beat.

That humor helps feed his soul.  So, too, does the museum-like sports memorabilia dominating the Jonckowski residence in Shakopee.

Drive up to the home and the first thing you might notice is the Philadelphia Eagles styled mailbox.  Or maybe it’s the statue of an eagle near the front door.  And there is no missing the personalized license plates on his Chevy Malibu: E GLE 1.

As a kid Jonckowski fell in love with the Eagles.  During a short stint as a car salesman in Shakopee his boss told him everyone working at the dealership needed a nickname.  He was dubbed the “Polish Eagle” because he is Polish and for his fondness for the Philadelphia NFL team.

Jonckowski became an avid collector of sports memorabilia while growing up and he’s spent much of his adult life acquiring more.  He has a couple hundred bobbleheads and all kinds of other stuff ranging from pennants to programs, from magazines to autographed photos, and from vintage clothing to models of stadiums.

Arlene and Dick in their basement surrounded by memorabilia.
Arlene and Dick in their basement surrounded by memorabilia.

The memorabilia fills an upstairs bedroom, part of the basement and the walls of the garage.  It’s fascinating to look at memorabilia spanning seven decades but all that stuff takes up a lot of space.

“Well, it’s been a challenge—have to say that,” Arlene said.  “Recently he’s downsized, so that has helped a lot.”

Dick and Arlene met at New Prague High School.  He was a jock and she was a cheerleader.  Dick was two years ahead of Arlene in school but once they started dating that was it.  A courtship followed and 50 years of marriage will be celebrated on April 30 of this year.  The Jonckowskis have two adult children, Jennifer Eich, 48, and Jeff Jonckowski, 44.

Arlene is retired after a career that included nursing.  She is a sports fan but sometimes she and Dick aren’t always on the same page.  Last Sunday their interests collided when the Broncos played the Patriots for the AFC Championship.  Arlene likes the Patriots, while her husband was for the Broncos.  The couple had to separate on Sunday.  “We couldn’t be in the same room (watching on TV),” Arlene said.

Arlene has a vintage telephone with a crank handle that once belonged to her grandparents.  She also has a collection of copper kitchen items, but she has no ambitions to fill rooms with memorabilia like her husband.

Arlene, however, does have a poster down in the basement where a lot of Dick’s stuff dominates.  On display is a full color poster of a sexy soap opera actor.  It is personally inscribed like this:

“Arlene, with lust.  Drake Hogestyn.”

Even with all his array of sports memorabilia, Dick might not be able to top that poster from the “Days of Our Lives” heartthrob.

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Goal Drought Ongoing for the Wild

Posted on January 27, 2016January 27, 2016 by David Shama

 

Goal scoring is a Minnesota Wild problem that doesn’t get solved.  It was a barstool and chat room topic a couple of years ago, and there it was again last spring after the Wild was swept in the second round of the playoffs by the Blackhawks.  Minnesota scored just seven goals in the four games, once being shutout and in another game coming up with one goal.

And now in January the Wild has scored 23 goals in 13 games.  So far during the 2015-2016 season only eight of the NHL’s 30 teams have scored fewer goals than Minnesota.

Chuck Fletcher
Chuck Fletcher

Wild fans fantasize about a trade for goal scoring help.  General manager Chuck Fletcher and the rest of the NHL have until 3 p.m. (ET) February 29 to make deals.  The Wild might pull off a move but league imposed salary cap restrictions enter into trade strategies and negotiations.

The Wild may want to trade so-so veterans and goal scorers Jason Pominville and Thomas Vanek.  Pominville reportedly earns $5.5 million and Vanek $6.5 million.  Fletcher has to make the numbers work in any trades involving the 33-year-old Pominville or 32-year-old Vanek—or other players on his roster.

The Wild  has recessed for the NHL All-Star Game break.  The Wild is 15 points behind the Central Division leading Blackhawks, 12 behind the Stars and 9 back of the Blues.  After the All-Star break the club can’t count on the phenomenal goaltending play it had last winter when Devan Dubnyk made the Wild one of the NHL’s most successful teams prior to the playoffs.

With or without a trade in the next 30 days, coach Mike Yeo and his staff will have to develop more goal scoring with existing players.  Whether it’s veterans, or disappointing younger skaters like Mikael Granlund, the Wild need to get better.

The club won only three of 13 games in January, with all the victories on the road.  The next two games after the All-Star recess are away from Xcel Energy Center.  Six of the next nine will be on the road, so maybe that’s an unexpected positive.

The Wild, with a record so far of 23-17-9, appears capable of making the playoffs but this is a franchise that historically can’t make a deep playoff run.  That will be difficult to change until the Wild consistently score more goals.

Worth Noting

The Gophers’ Big Ten losing streak reaches nine consecutive games tonight if Minnesota loses to Purdue, a team that is among the favorites to win the conference championship.  Minnesota players were emotionally low after letting a late game lead disappear and eventually losing in overtime to Illinois last Saturday night.

After the game Minnesota coach Richard Pitino was concerned about team emotions going forward.  “It’s my job to get them back and get them ready to go,” he said.  “Top 20 team (Purdue) in your building.  You gotta keep fighting.  That’s what we signed up for.  We knew it wasn’t going to be easy.  We’re close (to winning) and I think they (his players) see that.”

Nate Mason
Nate Mason

Sophomore point guard Nate Mason, who scored 19 points but couldn’t make a last second shot to win the Illinois game at the end of regulation, admitted there is a mental challenge getting ready for Purdue at home tonight.  “It’s going to be difficult but we’ll respond,” he said on Saturday.

Minnesota prep basketball authority Ryan James labels Minnehaha Academy point guard Jalen Suggs the best eighth grader in the state, and some day a potential top 100 player nationally.  Listed at 6-foot-1, Suggs’ skills include attacking defenses off the dribble.

The Timberwolves might be wise to place David Blatt—recently dismissed as Cavs coach—on their list of possible head coaching candidates for next season.  Blatt, in his first NBA season, coached the Cavs to the 2015 NBA Finals.  Warriors assistant coach Luke Walton should be on the Wolves’ radar, too.  Sam Mitchell, the Wolves interim head guy, may get the job permanently but right now the best guess is owner Glen Taylor will wait until season’s end to decide.

After U.S. Bank Stadium opens this summer, look for the covered multipurpose facility to be continually in use with events ranging from Vikings football to hundreds of amateur baseball games to concerts.  Luke Bryan is already scheduled for a first-ever August concert and a source told Sports Headliners U2 might play at the new Minneapolis stadium.  Other event possibilities could include a monster truck pull and a pro wrestling extravaganza like the WWE’s SummerSlam.  Although stadium and Minneapolis boosters were turned down for the 2020 College Football Playoff Championship Game, the same source said local interest remains for some day hosting the game.

In retrospect, the Vikings’ 2015 draft looks like one of the best in the NFL.  First round selection cornerback Trae Waynes played just okay and remains a potential future starter, and later round choices Eric Kendricks (linebacker), Danielle Hunter (defensive end) and Stefon Diggs (wide receiver) made the PFWA’s All-Rookie team.

Thursday will be the 56th anniversary of the founding of the Vikings franchise—January 28, 1960.

Former Minnesota Wild president Tod Leiweke and ex-Vikings center Matt Birk are rising stars in executive positions for the NFL.  If commissioner Roger Goodell were to retire in the next few years, the two might be on a list of candidates to replace him.

The Minnesota Football Coaches Association Hall of Fame Committee has announced six inductees from three divisions for its MFCA Hall of Fame.  The 2016 inductees will be enshrined in the MFCA Hall of Fame at the 52nd Annual Football Hall of Fame Banquet on April 2 at the Doubletree Hotel in St. Louis Park.  The inductees from the High School Division are Don Henderson, Triton; Bernie Litecky, Totino-Grace; Flint Motschenbacher, Detroit Lakes; and Leo Pohlkamp, Pierz.  Bethel’s Steve Johnson from the College Division will also be inducted, as will Citation Division representative Rand Middleton from the West Central Tribune.

Comments Welcome

WCHA and Big Ten Explore Alliance

Posted on January 25, 2016January 27, 2016 by David Shama

 

WCHA and Big Ten leaders are discussing ideas that could result in more men’s hockey games between the two leagues.

WCHA men’s commissioner Bill Robertson told Sports Headliners he had an exploratory meeting recently with Big Ten deputy commissioner Brad Traviolia.  Discussion included some day having a combined tournament with teams from the two leagues, and also a series of regional rivalry games.

Bill Robertson
Bill Robertson

“The next step is we’re going to continue these discussions and bring ideas to each other’s executive committees and coaches to help define how we move forward,” Robertson said.  “At this point it’s all conceptual but certainly there are ideas we will continue to build on.”

The WCHA is a tradition-rich league that still boasts nationally-ranked teams but the conference lost some prestige when historic power programs Minnesota and Wisconsin opted out to help form a Big Ten hockey league.  The WCHA currently has 10 teams including two from the state of Minnesota, Bemidji State and Minnesota State.  The six-team Big Ten began in the fall of 2013, and the league has its critics including in Minneapolis-St. Paul where fans miss old rivalries and feel the Gophers should be in a larger, more hockey oriented conference.

Robertson, who has career marketing experiences in the NHL, is an innovator and he believes both the WCHA and Big Ten could benefit in exposure and revenues with alliances that might include something similar to basketball’s ACC/Big Ten Challenge.  That annual fall matchup schedules games between teams from the two leagues that have been popular with fans and TV audiences.  A Big Ten/WCHA Challenge could include regional rivalry games like Minnesota-Minnesota State and Michigan-Michigan Tech.

Robertson, whose league offices are in Edina, continues to dialogue with Arizona State about that school’s hockey program joining the WCHA.  He said more will be known in the spring, and that 2017-2018 will be the earliest the Sun Devils would join the league.

An 11-team league isn’t ideal, though, so a 12th member could eventually be added—perhaps UNLV.  Las Vegas is a growing hockey market and a possible location for an NHL expansion franchise.

Worth Noting

Carter Coughlin, the Gophers’ four-star linebacker recruit from Eden Prairie High School, who is expected to sign his National Letter of Intent next month, will have to rest his left shoulder for about 3½ months following surgery last Thursday.  Jennie Coughlin, Carter’s mother, told Sports Headliners the shoulder injury dates back to his junior season, and the expectation is he will be healthy when the Gophers start workouts in June.  She said Carter is already recovered from the concussion he sustained in a high school all-star game earlier this month.

Richard Pitino’s basketball team is 0-8 in Big Ten games and appears headed toward a low final finish in the conference standings, but the coach will be rewarded with $450,000 this spring.  In addition to his normal compensation of more than $1.5 million, Pitino will receive $450,000 on April 30 for a “contract fulfillment incentive.”  If he is still the Gophers coach on April 30, 2019, he receives another $450,000.

Ken Lien
Ken Lien

Ken Lien, the state prep basketball authority who runs the Mr. Basketball program, travels extensively watching high school boys teams.  He shared his state rankings with Sports Headliners:

Class 4A.  1. Hopkins; 2. Apple Valley; 3. Osseo; 4. Maple Grove; 5. Champlin Park; 6. Lakeville North; 7. Shakopee; 8. Wayzata; 9.  Woodbury; 10. Rochester John Marshall.

Class 3A.  1. Red Wing; 2. DeLaSalle; 3. Delano; 4. Waconia; 5. Orono; 6. Benilde-St. Margaret’s; 7. Marshall; 8. Austin; 9. Minneapolis Patrick Henry; 10. Fergus Falls.

Class 2A.  1. Caledonia; 2. St. Croix Lutheran; 3. Braham; 4. Lake City; 5. Melrose; 6. Albany; 7. Minnehaha Academy; 8. Eden Valley-Watkins; 9. Esko; 10. St. Paul Academy.

Class 1A.  1. Minneapolis North; 2. Spring Grove; 3. Rushford-Peterson; 4. Central Minnesota Christian; 5. Murray County Central; 6. Hillcrest Lutheran; 7. Goodhue; 8. Browerville; 9. North Woods; 10. Battle Lake.

The Twins announced today they have given third baseman Trevor Plouffe a one-year contract for $7,250,000 in 2016.  Plouffe, who was originally drafted by the Twins in the first round of the 2004 First-Year Player Draft, set single season highs last year in hits (140), RBI (86), runs scored (74), games (152), at-bats (573) and triples (4).  Plouffe’s .972 fielding percentage ranked third among major league third basemen last season.

After last weekend’s two-game sweep of the Badgers, coach Don Lucia’s Gophers hockey team is 13-10 overall and 8-2 in Big Ten games.  League-leading Minnesota has won five straight and could boost the spirits of often critical fans next weekend in the North Star College Cup at the Xcel Energy Center.

The Gophers play Bemidji State on Saturday while an earlier game matches Minnesota State and St. Cloud State.  If Minnesota defeats the Beavers, a cup title game on Sunday against the Minnesota State and St. Cloud State winner could be opportune for the Gophers to earn more national respect.  St. Cloud State, ranked No. 3 in the latest USCHO.com national poll, might be the best team in the country.  The Gophers are No. 20 in the poll, while Minnesota State is No. 19.

Gophers booster and St. Paul native T. Denny Sanford celebrated his 80th birthday last month in both Sioux Falls, where Tim McGraw entertained, and also in San Diego at a party with Frankie Valli performing.

John Anderson
John Anderson

The Gophers baseball team will play some of its games starting in 2017 in U.S. Bank Stadium, the new downtown covered facility.  The Gophers will have their own locker room in the multiuse facility that is expected to host over 200 amateur baseball games in its first 12 months of operation.  The longest distance from home plate to the outfield will be 400 feet, while the shortest will be 301 feet.  Coach John Anderson and his players toured the stadium last Friday.  The Gophers will also continue to play games outdoors at Siebert Field.

With Seahawks safety Earl Thomas unable to play because of an injury, Vikings safety Harrison Smith has been selected for his first Pro Bowl.  Since entering the NFL in 2012, Smith is one of two players to have at least 12 interceptions and 5.0 sacks.  Reshad Jones from the Dolphins is the other player.  The Pro Bowl will be played next Sunday in Hawaii.

New Vikings assistant coach Pat Shurmur will coach the tight ends.  The club announced today that former tight ends coach Kevin Stefanski will take over as the running backs coach replacing Kirby Wilson who is joining the Browns.  Shurmur, a former head coach with the Browns, was the Eagles tight end coach from 1999-2001.

Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway turned 33 earlier this month, and his returning for another season with the team seems questionable.  A highlight for him last year was his 22 tackles game against the Raiders, the second best in franchise history.

Greenway was durable during the 2015 season.  Ben Goessling, writing for espn.com last Wednesday, said Greenway maxed out on his per game bonus incentive by being on the 46-man roster for all 16 regular season games.  Greenway, who agreed during the offseason to take less salary in 2015, earned $500,000 in bonus money, according to Goessling.

Las Vegas sports books positioned the Panthers as four point favorites over the Broncos for Super Bowl 50, according to an online story this morning by Matt Youmans for the Las Vegas Journal-Review.

Friends of the late Steve Wilkinson remembered the one-year anniversary of his death last Thursday.  The legendary former Gustavus Adolphus national championship tennis coach touched many lives with the Gusties and his well-known Tennis and Life Camps.

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