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Category: Golden Gophers

U Needs Another ‘Echelon’ on Road

Posted on January 9, 2015January 9, 2015 by David Shama

 

The Gophers basketball players have been reminded the Big Ten schedule is a different “neighborhood” than the “walk-in-the-park” nonconference games they experienced during November and December.  The Gophers, for example, still rank second nationally in both steals and assists per game—11.7 and 18.6 averages—but in Big Ten games only, those numbers are 8.7 and 11.3.

Other stats including overall field goal percentage are down in conference play, too, but the most important number is this: 0-3 in the Big Ten heading into tomorrow’s game at Michigan.  Instead of playing inferior nonconference teams like Franklin Pierce, Seattle and Southern, Minnesota has of late been dealing with Big Ten opposition including nationally ranked Maryland and Ohio State.  The Gophers were 11-2 in nonconference games and are now 11-5 overall.

DeAndre Mathieu
DeAndre Mathieu

Gophers point guard DeAndre Mathieu credits Big Ten teams with impressive preparation for his team.  “Teams are really scouting us.  I think (when) we played Purdue they said they practiced…seven guys on the court at one time.  Teams are (also) doing a good job of challenging our shots.  Things like that.”

A loss tomorrow and the Gophers will start 0-4 in the Big Ten for the first time since the 2011-2012 season.  Two of the three losses have been by a total of six points and the schedule makers have given the Gophers only one home game (last Tuesday night) among their first four games.

“It’s the best league in the country for a reason,” said Gophers center Elliott Eliason.  “It’s just if you don’t bring it every night you’re gonna get beat.  We’ve played some really good teams.  They’ve made the plays. You gotta give them the credit.  They beat us.”

Eliason said the Gophers are playing with determination and want to win, but he won’t guarantee a victory in Ann Arbor against 2-1 Michigan.  “It’s really tough on the road.  You gotta play even another echelon above when you play at home, because things aren’t going to go your way.  Breaks are just not gonna happen, seems  like on the road.”

The Gophers lost by four points at Purdue and by 12 at No. 9 ranked Maryland.  Tuesday night Minnesota lost by two points in overtime to No. 20 ranked Ohio State.  Senior guard Andre Hollins said the Gophers “definitely” are the equal of the teams who have defeated them.  “(We’re) just taking ourselves out of the game, not making winning plays, is what’s wrong with us.”

Worth Noting

Hollins, who last season was the team’s leading scorer but now is third at 12.4 points per game, missed all six of his first half field goal attempts against Ohio State and was scoreless.  He came into the game converting three of 19 shots in his previous two games.  In the second half Tuesday night he was three of seven on field goal attempts and finished with 12 points. “I was shooting the same way (in both periods),” Hollins said.  “It was just going in.”

Eliason grew a thick beard for six weeks that drew attention from fans and media when the Gophers played at Purdue on December 31.  But he said coach Richard Pitino put the “kibosh” on the beard and he shaved it off.  What was the coach’s reasoning?  “I don’t know,” Eliason said.  “He just said get rid of it and I said, ‘Yes, sir.’ “

Sports historian Dana Marshall e-mailed that on January 5, 1957 the Gophers pompom girls, “organized by Bob Patrin,” made their debut at Williams Arena in a game against Illinois.  Marshall, the student manager on the Gophers 1960 national championship football team, also noted Minnesota won the game.

Don Lucia
Don Lucia

The Gophers men’s hockey team also will be in Michigan this weekend.  Coach Don Lucia’s team (10-5-1) has games in Ann Arbor tonight and Saturday against the Wolverines (10-7).  The series between the two programs dates back to January 23, 1923.

Michigan coach Red Berenson has 798 career wins while Lucia has 661.  They rank second and third in Division I wins among active coaches.  Boston College’s Jerry York has 974 career wins—the most among both active and former coaches.

Club president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners “never say never” but the Twins are unlikely to add additional free agents to their roster.  Their major free agent signings since the end of last season include pitcher Ervin Santana and outfielder Torii Hunter. “Our roster is pretty well set,” St. Peter said.

The team’s full season ticket equivalents sale was 17,500 last year and St. Peter predicts by the start of the 2015 schedule the total will be in the 13,000 to 14,000 range.  Twins spring training tickets go on sale tomorrow.  The club expects to sell 100,000 or more tickets for its home games in Fort Myers.

The 19th annual Timberwolves Shootout is tomorrow at Target Center and fans can watch four high school basketball games.  Central High School of Omaha, Nebraska plays Apple Valley in the first game starting at 9:15 a.m.   North Scott from Eldridge, Iowa faces Cretin-Derham Hall at 11 a.m., followed by Morgan Park of Chicago and DeLaSalle at 12:45 p.m.  The last game at 2:30 p.m. has Rice Lake, Wisconsin against Champlin Park at 2:30 p.m.

Twenty-seven future NBA players have participated in past Shootouts including Jrue Holiday, DeMarcus Cousins, Kevin Love and Josh Smith.  More than 200 participants went on to play Division I basketball.

Condolences to former Gophers football player and Minneapolis businessman Mark Sheffert and wife Jennifer after the death this week of Jennifer’s mother Orlu Severson.  Orlu was the wife of former St. Cloud State basketball coach Red Severson.

The Minnesota Football Coaches Association will honor coaches of the year at its awards banquet on March 28 at the DoubleTree in St. Louis Park.  The award winners and their football classifications are: 9-Man, Gary Sloan, Grand Meadow; Class 1-A, Charles Adams, Minneapolis North; Class 2-A, Luke Mitchell, Holdingford; Class 3-A, Mike Kesler, Rochester Lourdes; Class 4-A, Dwight Lundeen, Becker; Class 5-A, Rex King, Simley; Class 6-A, Jeff Ferguson, Totino-Grace.  The state Coach of the Year representing all classes will be announced at the banquet.

Ferguson, along with Paul Miller from Apple Valley and Steve Solem of BOLD, will also be recognized as new coaching members of the MFCA’s Hall of Fame.  John Sherman of Sun Newspapers will be honored in the Hall of Fame citation division.

The City of Edina will hold an open house from 6 to 8 p.m. Monday at the Braemar Golf Course Clubhouse to share the draft Braemar Golf Course Master Plan and receive feedback.  The presentation is open to anyone interested in the plan.  Braemar’s address is 6364 John Harris Drive.

Comments Welcome

Don’t Bid Adieu to Gophers Football Yet

Posted on January 7, 2015January 7, 2015 by David Shama

 

North Dakota State plays Illinois State for the FCS national title on Saturday and Ohio State faces Oregon for the College Football Playoff National Championship next Monday but otherwise the 2014-2015 college season, including for the Gophers, is history.  Here are one man’s random observations about the Big Ten and Minnesota.

Big Ten Power Poll ranking teams?  Let’s go six-deep: Ohio State, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska and Penn State.  Power polls of teams are common but here’s a ranking in order of the conference’s best half-dozen coaches:

1. Urban Meyer, Ohio State.  In three years in Columbus he is a preposterous 37-3, including 24-0 for Big Ten regular season games.  Many college football authorities will argue he’s the best coach in the land.  Need more be said?

2. Mark Dantonio, Michigan State.  The Spartans’ stunning fourth quarter rally to defeat point-a-minute Baylor in the Cotton Bowl on New Year’s Day is just a snapshot of Dantonio’s success at MSU, a program that historically has underachieved. The Spartans are 75-31 under Dantonio and MSU has become more than a basketball school.

3. Jim Harbaugh, Michigan.  He announced years ago at then-lowly Stanford that his program will bow to no one.  The Cardinal became a national power and is still feeling his impact.  Imagine now what he can do at Michigan, college football’s winningest program.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

4. Jerry Kill, Minnesota.  In four years at Minnesota Kill has become a poster boy for program turnarounds.  The Gophers have won nine Big Ten games during the last two years, the best run like that since 1999-2000.

5. James Franklin, Penn State.  Check the Rivals.com recruiting lists since last January when Franklin took over in Happy Valley to get one measure of his impact at this scandal torn program.  Now look at his impressive 24-15 record at Vanderbilt—where nobody wins—to understand why Franklin is placing the roar back in the Nittany Lions.

6. Kyle Flood, Rutgers.  Bet you never would have guessed the Scarlet Knights head coach gets the No. 6 spot.  He is the lowest paid head coach in the Big Ten but far from the worst.  In three seasons in Piscataway he is 23-16 including a win in the recent Quick Lane Bowl.  He does more with less including hiring quality staff like former Maryland head coach Ralph Friedgen as offensive coordinator. Other assistants include Mitch Browning who coached for the Gophers and Norries Wilson who played for Minnesota.

Among those who didn’t make the super six list are Iowa’s Kirk Ferentz, Nebraska’s Mike Riley and Wisconsin’s Paul Chryst.  The Iowa program has grown stale under Ferentz and that’s not a good thing when you earn about $4 million per year.  Riley is a solid coach who proved his worth over and over at Oregon State—Oregon’s poor sister.  Don’t expect him to be Tom Osborne, though.  And another new head coach in the Big Ten, Chryst, will operate in the large shadow of Badgers athletic director Barry Alvarez.  Badgers fans will expect a lot more than Chryst delivered as head coach at Pittsburgh where he was 19-19 in three years.

The Big Ten can thump its chest (for a change) about its bowl results.  League teams are 5-5 in bowl games this season and the Buckeyes can give the Big Ten a winning postseason record if they win the national title.  The Big Ten was 10-21 the previous four years in bowls.  No team from the conference has won the national championship since Ohio State in 2002.

Rich Exner, writing on Monday for Cleveland.com, pointed out the Big Ten has more bowl wins in 2014-15 against ranked opponents than any other conference.  The Pac-12 has the best bowl record at 6-2 while the SEC is 7-5.

It’s unique that Ohio State has three quarterbacks as talented as sophomore Cardale Jones (now the starter), freshman J.T. Barrett (No. 1 most of the season) and senior Braxton Miller (injured all year but a preseason Heisman Trophy candidate).  Can’t think of another college team that ever had the collective skill set of the Jones, Barrett and Miller trio.

After the January 1 Citrus Bowl loss to Missouri, the Gophers are now winless in their last seven bowls, including 0-3 under Kill.  Ball State and Minnesota have the longest bowl losing streak in the country at 0-7.

That’s something Kill and his staff will fix.  The Gophers have been 8-5 the last two seasons and Kill expects to have his best team in 2015.  Recruiting and coaching are paying off with more talent and production.  The defense has been rebuilt and the special teams are usually solid if not exceptional.  The way Missouri caught Minnesota unprepared at the Citrus Bowl on a fake punt and onside kick was unusual for the Gophers and not the norm.

The offense is still a project in Kill’s brick-by-brick rebuilding of the rubble he inherited in 2010.  Against top 20 teams like Missouri, having an offense that produces 17 points isn’t going to generate a “w” very often.  The staff still has to solve personnel challenges at quarterback, receiver and perhaps in the line.

Mitch Leidner
Mitch Leidner

Even if Mitch Leidner has arrived at being the program’s first consistent quarterback in awhile, a reliable backup who can pass is needed.  Quality and depth at wide receiver has been an ongoing issue and that needs to be solved in 2015.  Line play has been inconsistent during the Kill regime but improved last fall. That maturation should continue this spring and beyond.

Leidner’s 21 of 31 passing for 258 yards in the bowl game was impressive.  The Gophers are 2-25 under Kill when trailing at halftime but a better passing game led by Leidner, a junior in 2015, will help change that stat.  (Kill’s record when leading at halftime is 20-1).

Leidner, Gophers teammates and fans will obviously miss tight end Maxx Williams who is leaving for the NFL Draft with two seasons of eligibility remaining.  The All-American simply was the best big play tight end in school history.  His spectacular 54-yard touchdown against Missouri, after catching a Leidner pass, will be archived in the school’s football highlights vault for decades.

David Cobb
David Cobb

During spring practices eyes will be on the running back spot to see who can replace school-record setter David Cobb.  Promising freshmen Jeff Jones and Rodney Smith will get plenty of stares but don’t be surprised if senior Rodrick Williams uses his experience, power and straight ahead speed to win the job.  What about sophomore speed-man Berkley Edwards?  Edwards must show he can avoid injuries and have an all-around game.

Defensively the Gophers’ best unit could again be the secondary.  Senior cornerbacks Eric Murray and Briean Boddy-Calhoun will be All-Big Ten candidates, and there’s plenty of other help on defense too in the secondary, and among the linebackers and linemen.  It will be interesting to watch several defensive players in the spring including linebacker junior college transfer Cody Poock who looked like a starter before tearing an ACL and also fireplug sophomore defensive tackle Steven Richardson who impressed so much as a freshman.

Special teams players include junior Jalen Myrick who finished second in the Big Ten on kickoff returns by averaging 28.2 yards.  Senior punter Peter Mortell was second in conference punting average at 45.1 yards and junior placekicker Ryan Santos excelled in kickoffs, field goals and extra points. The three returnees help form the nucleus of outstanding special teams.

Offensive, defensive and special teams players all benefit learning from a staff that has remarkable longevity with Kill.  Seven assistants have been with him 14 years or more.  Leading the list are strength coach Eric Klein, 21 years, and defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys, 20.

The biggest offseason Gophers’ story seems likely to be the announcement of a new football complex expected to cost $25 million or more.  Ground breaking and construction on the much talked about and coveted new facility is anticipated this year.

Season ticket holders and other Gophers fans will have a home nonconference game in 2015 to get excited about.  The September 3 opening game at TCF Bank Stadium is against TCU, a team that looks like a cinch to be ranked somewhere between No. 1 and No. 5 nationally in the preseason polls.  Every seat will be sold and hopefully occupied for that game because a Gophers upset could set the pace for a special season.

The season closes with two of the later fall home games in program history—November 21 with Illinois and November 28 against Wisconsin.  Bundle up!

Comments Welcome

Dutcher Picks Gophers for Third in Big Ten

Posted on January 5, 2015January 5, 2015 by David Shama

 

Minnesota is 0-2 in the Big Ten Conference heading into tomorrow night’s first conference home game at Williams Arena but Jim Dutcher is optimistic about the Gophers.  The former Gophers coach predicts Minnesota will finish third in the Big Ten standings, perhaps with an 11-7 record.  “I like their roster,” said Dutcher, who coached the Gophers to the 1982 Big Ten championship.

Mo Walker
Mo Walker

Dutcher looks at the Gophers and sees a veteran team (five seniors on the 12-man roster) with “great guard depth” and valuable size with experienced centers Mo Walker and Elliott Elliason, both nearly 7-feet tall.  “The question mark is forward play,” Dutcher said.

The Gophers, who have only unproven Charles Buggs behind Joey King at forward, opened their Big Ten schedule last week with losses at Purdue and Maryland.  That makes tomorrow night’s game against Ohio State a big opportunity for Minnesota.  “To win in the Big Ten you need to split (games) on the road and win your home games,” Dutcher said.

Wisconsin is Dutcher’s pick to finish first in the Big Ten and he has Ohio State at No. 2.  OSU also has five seniors but a lot of the news about the Buckeyes focuses on freshman guard D’Angelo Russell who is third in Big Ten scoring at 17.7 points per game.  The Buckeyes are 1-1 in league play, having lost to Iowa and beating Illinois, with both games at home.

Dutcher said the Big Ten has seen 11 players leave their schools early for the NBA in the last couple of years, including 10 No. 1 draft choices.  This year Wisconsin senior Frank Kaminsky might be the league’s only No. 1 pick.  With more mediocre talent spread throughout the league, the jockeying for high finishes in the conference behind consensus title choice Wisconsin figures to be entertaining and unpredictable.

The Gophers’ chances for a third or fourth place conference finish will partially be determined by stopping long scoring runs by opponents.  The Gophers, for example, had a 55-44 lead with 9:37 to play in the second half against Purdue.  A couple minutes later the Boilermakers trailed by three points, 56-53, before going on to win, 72-68.

Purdue had lost three consecutive nonconference games before playing Minnesota and the Boilermakers presented a major opportunity for a Gophers’ win.  “A lot of time teams will get a run on them (the Gophers) and they really have some trouble just knuckling down and getting the key defensive stop,” Dutcher said.

Dutcher believes coach Richard Pitino should upgrade his nonconference schedule, taking on higher quality opponents that can help the Gophers ready themselves for the competition of the Big Ten, including playing on the road.  “It doesn’t hurt…to lose to good competition early,” Dutcher said.  “I just think it helps your preparation, particularly when somewhere along the line you gotta play a tough road game.”

Dutcher predicts Pitino will lead the Gophers to the NCAA Tournament after he coached Minnesota to the NIT title in his first season in 2014.  To do that the Gophers will have to receive much better scoring production from three of their four outstanding guards than they saw against Maryland in a 70-58 loss.  Seniors Andre Hollins, DeAndre Mathieu and freshman Nate Mason totaled six points on four of 21 shooting.  The fourth guard is junior Carlos Morris, a player Dutcher likes a lot, and he scored 18 against the Terps, second to Walker’s team high 20 points.

Despite the 0-2 start, Dutcher isn’t backing off his optimistic prediction about this team that features talented guards and an inside scoring presence with Walker.  But it’s no surprise he labels tomorrow night’s game “big” for 0-2 Minnesota.

Worth Noting

Dutcher said Big Ten Network basketball analyst Jim Jackson also predicted the Gophers will finish third in the conference.

Jim Dutcher
Jim Dutcher

Wisconsin, 14-1, is ranked No. 4 in the Associated Press poll and has all of its key players returning from last year’s Final Four team except guard Ben Brust.  Dutcher said the Badgers, though, have “trouble with quick guards,” and can also be vulnerable if preseason player of the year candidate Kaminsky, the 7-foot center, is in foul trouble because Wisconsin doesn’t have a replacement with his size.  “They’re not unbeatable,” Dutcher said.

Larry Davis, who was a Gophers assistant coach in the 1990s and credited with recruiting All-Americans Bobby Jackson and Quincy Lewis, is now interim head coach at Cincinnati because Mick Cronin won’t be coaching for awhile due to a health issue.

Gophers sophomore center Amanda Zahui B. today was named the National Player of the Week by espnW after averaging 17.3 points, 15.3 rebounds and 4 blocks per game in wins over Nebraska, Purdue and Wisconsin last week.

The 75th annual banquet for the “Original Baseball Old Timers Hot Stove League” will be at the Prom Center in Oakdale next Monday.  Sports celebrities will include former and present baseball players.  Twins manager Paul Molitor and relief pitcher Glen Perkins will be among the head table speakers.  Event and ticket information is available by calling Rudy Jannetto, 651-379-2325.

With the smallest stadium capacity in the NFL, the Vikings had the lowest average per game attendance during the 2014 regular season.  Playing at TCF Bank Stadium, the Vikings averaged 52,238 fans, according to ESPN.com.  However, the website also reported the Vikings were No. 5 in the 32-team NFL for percentage of capacity at 104.5.

The Raiders, averaging 53,699 for regular season home games in Oakland, were 31st in attendance.  The Rams, averaging 57,018 in St. Louis, ranked 30th.  There is speculation those two franchises will relocate to Los Angeles.  For a few years Los Angeles was rumored to be the new home of the Vikings and now it seems possible the city will have two teams based there.  It will be ironic if the teams turn out to be the Raiders and Rams since both franchises once were based in Los Angeles.

The Gophers and Union played for the NCAA hockey title last spring but both programs are struggling this season.  The Gophers are 10-5-1 while Union is 10-7-2.

Herb Brooks
Herb Brooks

It will be 35 years next month that Minnesotans such as former Gophers and North Stars coach Herb Brooks helped lead the U.S. hockey team to their stunning Olympic upset of the Soviet Union.  ESPN Films has produced a show to air on February 8 as part of its acclaimed 30 for 30 series that will reveal how the game impacted the lives of the Soviet players.

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