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Category: Golden Gophers

How Peterson’s World Changes Again

Posted on December 2, 2015December 2, 2015 by David Shama

 

On the football beat with insights about the Vikings, Gophers and St. Thomas:

Adrian Peterson is in a different place today than he was 12 months ago, and his circumstances are even in contrast to two years ago.

Peterson leads the NFL in rushing and appears all but certain to receive All-Pro recognition as the league’s best running back for 2015.  He is the centerpiece of an offense that otherwise is pretty much comprised of inconsistent players including second-year quarterback Teddy Bridgewater.  Peterson’s running along with a superb defense are mostly responsible for the Vikings’ surprising 8-3 record and first place position in the NFC North.

Adrian Peterson (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)
Adrian Peterson (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)

A year ago Peterson was on his way to missing all but one game of the 2014 season.  He was barred from football activities by NFL commissioner Roger Goodell for developments involving disciplining of his four-year-old son.  In early December of last year it was unknown when he would be allowed to play again, and whether he was going to be a Viking.

Minnesotans, including many Vikings fans, were appalled at details about Peterson using a switch on his child.  Twelve months ago there was controversy whether Peterson should be allowed to remain with the team and if the Vikings franchise wanted to be associated with him.  It wouldn’t be surprising if there were power brokers within the Vikings organization who wanted Peterson gone in 2015, advocating to separate the controversial superstar from the franchise’s marketing and image-making while plans developed to move into U.S. Bank Stadium in 2016.

A source told Sports Headliners in late April the Vikings were in talks with the Cowboys about a trade involving Peterson.  While there may have been interest in determining what assets a Peterson deal would yield, it seems clear that general manager Rick Spielman and coach Mike Zimmer saw the impact their future hall of fame runner could have on the 2015 team.

Peterson is 30 years old—a number that typically puts most NFL runners on the brink of old age or even in it.  Two seasons ago the Vikings were slogging through a losing year and there was conjecture it was time to trade a then 28-year-old Peterson.  Move him before his legs fell off and get something back in value, maybe a draft choice to land a first-rate quarterback prospect to replace Christian Ponder.

The Vikings finished 6-10 in 2013 and Peterson had an okay season playing in 14 games, rushing for 1,266 yards and 10 touchdowns.  This season he already has 1,164 yards and eight touchdowns in 11 games.  On Sunday against the Seahawks he could best his 2013 numbers and still have four remaining regular season games.

The man some fans wanted traded two years ago is on a short list of league MVP candidates.  After a slow start in game one against the 49ers when Peterson was trying to ditch the rust of not playing in the preseason and even further back, he has often looked like the best back in the NFL.  In four of the last five games he has run for over 100 yards including 158 last Sunday in the win over the Falcons.

Did Zimmer expect this kind of performance from Peterson after being sidelined last season?  “Yes.  I just know he’s a really special player and I just think I figured that he’d be pretty good, yeah.”

Peterson and the Vikings have sometimes faced challenging competition.  The Falcons had the league’s best rushing defense before the Vikings gained 191 yards against them.  That Falcons team is ranked No. 8 in the Profootballfocus.com power rankings.  The Vikings, who are ranked No. 6, have also defeated the No. 10 Raiders.  Minnesota has lost to the No. 5 Broncos and No.7 Packers who ranked behind the Panthers, Patriots, Bengals and Cardinals. …

After five years of the Jerry Kill revival, the Gophers football program is much improved but doesn’t match more famous turnarounds in Big Ten history—at least not yet.

The coach Tim Brewster era prior to the 2011 season and Kill’s arrival produced annual records of 1-11, 7-6, 6-7 and 3-9.  Kill created a success story by reviving a program on life support academically and on the field, with his best work in 2013 and 2014.  Those were eight win seasons and the 2014 team earned an invitation to Minnesota’s first January 1 bowl game since 1962.

Tracy Claeys
Tracy Claeys

The Gophers took a step back this season, misfiring because of a difficult schedule, numerous and serious injuries, and Kill’s resignation to save his health.  With Tracy Claeys elevated to head coach, Minnesota struggled late in the season winning only once in five games.  The team’s final 5-7 record, including 2-6 in the Big Ten after last season’s 5-3, added up to the most disappointing year in the Kill era.

Minnesota’s 12-game schedule included six major college opponents who won nine games or more in 2015.  Next season the schedule will be softer because Michigan, Ohio State and TCU get swapped out for Maryland, Oregon State and Rutgers.  It’s also hard to believe the Gophers will be so devastated again by injuries that forced players to the sidelines for long stretches.

The Gophers will have some talented and experienced players returning next season as they try to restart the program turnaround.  Gophers fans have waited for decades to see results similar to well-known turnarounds at Iowa, Wisconsin, Northwestern, Purdue and Michigan State.  All except Purdue established success that continues to this day.

Those turnarounds were led by Hayden Fry at Iowa, Barry Alvarez at Wisconsin, Gary Barnett at Northwestern, Joe Tiller at Purdue and Mark Dantonio at Michigan State.  Each one of those coaches had a nine win season or better in his first five years on the job, and all but Dantonio took a team to the Rose Bowl in that time period, according to statistics from Sports-reference.com.  Dantonio reached Pasadena in his seventh season with a team that won the Rose Bowl and finished with a 13-1 record. …

Glenn Caruso
Glenn Caruso

St. Thomas hosts Wabash (Indiana) on Saturday in a quarterfinal Division III playoff game involving two 12-0 football teams.  The Tommies figure to be prepared including with clock management—something head coach Glenn Caruso started perfecting 30 years ago as a kid playing video games.

Caruso told Sports Headliners he played “every conceivable football video game I could” and credits the experience with helping him to best use the clock in various situations.  Even on the professional level, clock management is a skill that sometimes escapes coaches.  “It boggles the mind how people don’t pay more attention,” he said.

Caruso, 85-13 in eight seasons at St. Thomas, coached the 2012 Tommies to the national championship game.  He believes this year’s team might not have “all the high-end talent” of the 2012 group but is deeper, healthier and even more focused.  There are 140 players on the team and Caruso said they understand and execute their roles.

Not that the Tommies don’t have talent this year, including star running back Jordan Roberts who had three touchdowns in last Saturday’s 38-19 win against Saint John’s.  Roberts is a 6-2, 220-pound junior from Sheridan, Wyoming who played two years at South Dakota.  Caruso said he’s the best back he’s coached at St. Thomas and if Roberts keeps improving he could one day receive an NFL tryout.

The Tommies, who have 12 coaches including Caruso, will practice outdoors this week unless the weather makes it impossible.  Caruso is a believer in working out the team in conditions similar to game day.  The Tommies are 16-0 in rain games under him.

Attendance for Saturday’s game at O’Shaughnessy Stadium might be somewhere between 2,000 and 8,000.  A week ago last Saturday, for the Tommies first playoff game against La Verne, attendance was 1,832 at O’Shaughnessy.  Last Saturday in a second round playoff game at home against legendary rival Saint John’s, the announced crowd was 8,025.

Comments Welcome

Dan O’Brien Joins U Football Staff

Posted on November 30, 2015November 30, 2015 by David Shama

 

Dan O’Brien is joining the staff of Gophers football coach Tracy Claeys as assistant to the head coach, assistant defensive backs coach and co-special teams coordinator.  The announcement was made this morning by interim athletic director Beth Goetz in an e-mail to staff.

O’Brien was a senior associate athletic director for the Gophers overseeing the football program.  The Winthrop, Minnesota native was director of football operations for ex-head coach Jerry Kill before being promoted to the administrative position in the athletic department.  His career coaching experiences include high school positions and being head football coach at Concordia, St. Paul.

Dan O'Brien
Dan O’Brien

The announcement seems surprising but the new assignment may provide O’Brien with more job security since the athletic department leadership is uncertain with a new AD expected to be hired next year.  A source told Sports Headliners O’Brien’s salary will increase by a lot in his new role which includes working with Pat Poore in coordinating special teams.

O’Brien has excellent relationships in the state including with high school coaches.  He and linebackers coach Mike Sherels, another Minnesota native, will be responsible for recruiting in the state.

The change appears indicative of Claey’s vision as the new leader of the football program.  Yesterday he dismissed offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover and quarterbacks coach Jim Zebrowski.

Claeys, who has shown a willingness to take risks on the field coaching his team, likely has replacements already in mind.  It would be unusual for a head coach on the major college level to make dismissals without having a solid idea regarding philosophies he wants his coordinator and quarterbacks coach to have, and also not having names of candidates he wants to pursue.

At least two former Gophers and Minnesota natives could perhaps enter the picture.  Tony Levine, who was let go as Houston’s head coach last December, might be a name to consider for the offensive coordinator job.  Levine, a wide receiver for the Gophers under Jim Wacker, has an extensive coaching resume including under offensive coaching whiz Kevin Sumlin.  A source said this morning Levine is living in Houston but not coaching.

Adam Weber received praise this year in his first season as an offensive graduate assistant working primarily with the quarterbacks.  A four-year starter for the Gophers as a record-setting quarterback under then head coach Tim Brewster from 2007-2010, Weber has playing experience in pro football and is interested in a coaching career.

His knowledge and ability to relate to young players could make him an attractive hire as quarterbacks coach under Claeys.

Worth Noting

Sports Headliners’ final Big Ten football power rankings:

1.  Michigan State, 11-1:  One controversial call at Nebraska leaves Sparty inches short of an undefeated season.

2.  Ohio State, 11-1:  Rare times when a one loss team is labeled a disappointment but the description fits the defending national champs.

3.  Iowa, 12-0:  Textbook season by the Hawkeyes who didn’t try to do more than their talent could deliver and seldom made mistakes.

4.  Michigan, 9-3: With Jim Harbaugh in charge, these are your father’s Wolverines.

5.  Northwestern, 10-2:  After two seasons of mediocrity, the Wildcats claw back near the top.

6.  Wisconsin, 9-3:  The Badgers couldn’t run the ball in Big Ten games until they arrived in Minneapolis and found a Gophers defensive line wrecked by injuries.

7.  Penn State, 7-5:  Coach James Franklin’s recruiting looks good on paper but Nittany Lions aren’t back yet as a Big Ten power.

8.  Nebraska, 5-7:  Talented Cornhuskers beat Michigan State but mostly beat themselves with self-inflicted wounds.

9.  Minnesota, 5-7:  Risk being called a homer by ranking the Gophers ahead of Indiana and Illinois but here we go.

10.  Indiana, 6-6:  Hoosiers bowl-bound for first time in five seasons under coach Kevin Wilson, who has a go-go offense, and a yikes defense.

11.  Illinois, 5-7: Illini matched Minnesota losing four of its last five games including one to the Gophers.

12.  Rutgers, 4-8:  I doubt many people in Manhattan are boasting that the Scarlet Knight’s are “New York’s college team.”

13.  Maryland, 3-9:  The Terps are searching for a new head coach and need a good one.

14.  Purdue, 2-10:  Boilers are cemented in as Big Ten’s worst after coach Darrell Hazell has won two league games in three seasons.

Gophers senior offensive lineman Jon Christenson will earn his masters degree in public health next semester.  He plans to be enrolled in medical school in the fall of 2017, hopefully at Minnesota.  What will the Minnetonka native specialize in?

“Right now I am leaning toward orthopedic surgery,” he said.  “I would love to be somewhere in sports medicine.  I really feel like I could relate well to patients, especially young athletes—having been through so much myself.  Unfortunately I know quite a few orthopedic surgeons from my experience here (being injured).”

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

After yesterday’s 20-10 win by the Vikings over the Falcons, coach Mike Zimmer has his team in first place in the NFC North with an 8-3 record.  Running back Adrian Peterson leads the NFL in rushing with 1,164 yards.  The Vikings have given up 194 points, second only to the Bengals with 193.

The Vikings have remaining games at home against the Seahawks, Bears and Giants.  Road games remain versus the Cardinals and Packers.  The Vikings could be favored in every game except the matchup against the 9-2 Cardinals.

Fox commentator John Lynch, the former defensive back with the Bucs, critiqued Teddy Bridgewater on yesterday’s telecast and said the Vikings quarterback holds the ball “longer” while attempting to pass than any quarterback in the NFL.

The 4-2 Gophers play 4-1 Clemson tonight at Williams Arena as part of the Big Ten/ACC Challenge series.  The Tigers’ one loss was 82-65 to Massachusetts but of more interest to Gophers fans should be Clemson’s 76-58 neutral court win over Rutgers, a team that is a popular choice to finish last in the Big Ten.  Minnesota is predicted to finish near the bottom of the standings too.  Tonight’s game is on ESPN2.

Save the date: the annual Breakdown Sports Tip Off Classics at Minnetonka High School involving boys and girls teams will be December 12.  Among the anticipated matchups is the 3:45 p.m. boys game between Class 4-A powers Apple Valley and Hopkins.  Apple Valley’s roster includes national recruiting targets Gary Trent Jr. and Tre Jones—junior and sophomore standouts.  Hopkins features Amir Coffey, a favorite to be the state’s best prep senior.  Michael Hurt, another senior and like Coffey committed to the Gophers for next fall, will play for Rochester John Marshall in an 8 p.m. boys game against Shakopee.  Both are 4-A teams.  More on the  tournaments at Breakdownsportsusa.com.

The Gophers hockey team has a disappointing 4-7 record so far but entering this season Minnesota had won more games (105) the last four seasons than any Division I men’s program.  The Gophers also made program history by winning consecutive regular season league titles the last four years, with two championships in the WCHA and the two most recent in the Big Ten.

Comments Welcome

Mr. Football Winner Loyal to Huskers

Posted on November 23, 2015November 23, 2015 by David Shama

 

J.D. Spielman, who was honored yesterday as the state’s Mr. Football award winner, told Sports Headliners despite Nebraska’s losing season he remains “100 percent” committed to the Cornhuskers and isn’t considering Minnesota or other schools.

Spielman made a verbal commitment to Nebraska last summer and has watched the Cornhuskers struggle in coach Mike Riley’s first season.  Nebraska goes into its final regular season game on Friday against undefeated Iowa with a 3-4 Big Ten record, 5-6 overall.  The Cornhuskers are among college football’s winningest programs in past decades and have a tradition of playing for championships.  Riley has received plenty of criticism this fall but Spielman is expected to sign a National Letter of Intent with Nebraska next year on National Signing Day for high school players.

J.D. Spielman
J.D. Spielman

“I have a lot of faith in what coach Riley is doing over there,” Spielman said.  “I know this season didn’t go as planned but it’s a process.  That’s what happens when a head coach just comes into a program and starts coaching kids he didn’t recruit.  But once the next couple of recruiting classes come in, Nebraska is going to be a big thing.”

Spielman, despite his 5-foot-8, 174-pound size, is a big thing in Minnesota high school football.  The Eden Prairie High School running back, wide receiver and defensive back is probably one of the state’s most explosive players ever.  His high school coach, Mike Grant, said Spielman can “make something out of nothing”—even running back and forth across the field leaving coaches, players and fans gasping.  “Special talent, no question,” Grant said.

The coach expects Spielman to increase his weight in college to about 190 pounds and still run a 4.4 40-yard dash.  He predicts Spielman, who combines extraordinary vision with his speed and ability to cut, will play as a college freshman.  “He’ll be on the field on offense,” Grant said.  “He’s ready to play right now.”

Spielman expects to be a receiver at Nebraska but Grant said his Mr. Football winner could even play tailback in college.  Spielman blossomed on offense this season after playing mostly defense last year.  Grant said a big reason for Spielman’s success in averaging 12.3 yards per carry was learning to be patient, waiting for space to open up.

Spielman, who averaged 29.3 yards on kickoff returns and 24.6 yards on punt returns, was one of 10 finalists for the Mr. Football award given annually to the state’s best senior player, and sponsored by the Minnesota Football Coaches Association and the Minnesota Vikings.  Among the other finalists was Eden Prairie teammate Carter Coughlin, the outstanding linebacker who is committed to Minnesota and has lobbied for Spielman to become a Gopher.

“I am 100 percent Nebraska right now,” Spielman said.

Why is he sold on the Cornhuskers?  “The fan base is crazy.  The fans show a lot of love and support for all the players.  That’s a big thing,” Spielman said.  “I also like coach Riley and his coaching staff.  They’re all some of the nicest people I’ve met.”

Spielman’s father, Vikings general manager Rick Spielman, didn’t sound concerned that it will require traveling to see his son play for the Cornhuskers.  “We’ll work it out,” said Rick who is on the road a lot in the fall to scout college players.

He and his wife Michele have adopted six children including J.D. who came into their home at eight months old.  J.D. has been playing football since first grade.  Although J.D. is small, Rick never felt his son was too diminutive for football because of the “size of his heart.”

He also praised J.D’s football work ethic, noting that all his children have been encouraged to apply effort to school and athletics because dedication is something “you can control.”

Worth Noting

Mike Zimmer said his team was down emotionally when he met with players earlier today.  The Vikings head coach said at his afternoon news conference he would be upset if they were laughing and joking after Sunday’s loss to the Packers at TCF Bank Stadium.  He told players that by Wednesday they should be ready to move on in preparation for next week’s game against the Falcons in Atlanta.

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

The loss to the Packers left both the Vikings and Green Bay with 7-3 records, and tied for first place in the NFC North Division.  “I still like this team.  I still believe in this team, regardless of what will be said, or what will be written, or our moods today,” Zimmer said. “I believe in this team.”

Wide receiver Mike Wallace, reportedly the Vikings second highest paid player and an offseason acquisition, has caught only two passes in the last four games.  “I am not concerned about stats, or individual stats, or anything like that,” Zimmer said.  “All I am concerned about is how to get this team better.”

Tomorrow the Wild unveil uniforms the club will wear for its February 21 outdoor game against the Blackhawks at TCF Bank Stadium.  Tickets are still available for the event, officially known as the Coors Light NHL Stadium Series game.

Tracy Claeys got his first win as Gophers head coach without the interim tag last Saturday against Illinois, but he has no plans to keep a game ball as a memento.  “I want that axe,” he said.

The Gophers and Badgers play for Paul Bunyan’s Axe on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium.  Minnesota hasn’t won the annual rivalry trophy since 2003.

A win over Wisconsin will give the Gophers a 6-6 record and ensure bowl eligibility.  Minnesota’s bowl destination might be the New Era Pinstripe Bowl in New York’s Yankee Stadium on December 26, the day after Christmas.  The late afternoon game will match Big Ten and ACC teams, and be televised on ABC.

A Gophers athletic department spokesman said as of last Saturday about 1,700 tickets remained for the Wisconsin game.

Former Gophers head coach Jerry Kill is spending time at his lake home in Illinois before returning to Minneapolis for Thanksgiving.

David Benedict, who worked as a top assistant for former Gophers athletic director Norwood Teague, is a candidate for the AD position at Tulane.  Benedict is currently chief operating officer for the athletic department at Auburn.

Ken Lien is a long time Gophers basketball fan, and offers this opinion on the current group: “For a team that lives and dies with the three, they will die more than they live.”

Lien is president and owner of the Minnesota boys Mr. Basketball award, and he has been associated with that endeavor for 41 years.  Committee members are already looking at players for the 2016 award honoring the best senior in the state.  An initial list of 50 Minnesota high school seniors has been compiled.

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