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Category: Golden Gophers

Vikings Want Lions Sackless on Sunday

Posted on December 10, 2014December 10, 2014 by David Shama

 

Will Sunday’s game in Detroit be decided by the matchup between the Vikings’ rebuilt offensive line and the Lions’ formidable front four on defense?

That has to be at least a major storyline. The Lions dominated the Vikings’ offense in a 17-3 win in Minneapolis on October 12.  The Vikings gave up a season high eight sacks in the game.  Rookie quarterback Teddy Bridgewater threw three interceptions in his second career start and the Vikings were limited to 188 yards passing.  Rookie running back Jerick McKinnon had a team best 40 yards and the Vikings totaled only 69 yards on the ground.

The Lions’ defense ranks second in the NFL giving up 295.7 yards per game.  The rushing defense is No. l, yielding 62.8 yards per game.

When the two teams played in Minneapolis, the Vikings were without right guard Brandon Fusco—already out for the season because of a torn pectoral muscle.  Since then the Vikings have also lost right tackle Phil Loadholt (another torn pectoral) and possibly left guard Charlie Johnson whose status for Sunday’s game is uncertain because of a sprained ankle. “It seems this year has been really unlucky for us,” Fusco told Sports Headliners.  “We’ve had some key injuries.”

Mike Harris, who has replaced Loadholt, didn’t play against the Lions in October and watched from the sidelines.  He realizes what he’s facing on Sunday, though.  “I know it’s going to be a challenge for the offensive line,” he said.  “They have a great front, a great defense, but I am up to the challenge.”

The Lions’ front four has much to do with Detroit having a 9-4 record and contending to win the NFC North.  “They get off the ball fast,” Harris said.  “They’re big and strong.  This group that we have, we’re totally capable of getting the job done if we just use proper technique and match their intensity.  That’s what it is going to come down to.”

The front four is led by defensive tackles Ndamukong Suh and Nick Fairley.  “Suh and Fairley are no joke,” Fusco said.  “They’re the best in the league and week in and week out they show that.”

Fusco admitted having a rebuilt line is challenging because players become accustomed to working with one another.  They know each other’s tendencies, strengths and weaknesses—and learn how to play as a unit.  “Communication is big. Playing with someone you’re used to, makes your job a lot easier,” Fusco said.

Fusco believes the Vikings’ offensive line can have success on Sunday.  The linemen will study film and receive direction from offensive line coach Jeff Davidson.  “Coach Davidson is a great coach,” Fusco said.  “He’s gonna draw some good stuff up for us.”

Worth Noting 

The Vikings are 69-35-2 all-time against the Lions—the most wins Minnesota has against another NFL team.  Since 1996 there have been only two seasons the Lions won both regular season games against the Vikings.  The Lions, long regarded as a dysfunctional franchise on and off the field, can sweep the season series from the Vikings on Sunday and no longer deserve to be labeled the “Motor City Kitties.”

The Vikings announced this morning they have signed tackle and Eden Prairie native Carter Bykowski to their practice squad.  Linebacker Michael Mauti has been placed on the injured reserve list.

Blair Walsh, the Vikings field goal kicker, badly missed a late fourth quarter attempt that could have won the game against the Jets in regulation last Sunday inside cold and windy TCF Bank Stadium.  He acknowledged that kicking outdoors this time of year can be “brutal” but wouldn’t offer the weather as an excuse.  “You gotta perform outside,” he said.

Walsh, who lives in Boca Raton, Florida and attended the University of Georgia, expects 20 to 30 family members and friends at the Vikings game in Miami on December 21.  His father has purchased tickets for the group.  Walsh plans to have dinner with family and friends the night before the game.

Mo Walker
Mo Walker

Gophers teammate and point guard DeAndre Mathieu predicted center Mo Walker could be the Big Ten’s best low post scorer after Walker produced a career high 22 points in 23 minutes on Monday night when the Gophers defeated North Dakota 92-56. Walker, a senior, had 13 of Minnesota’s first 18 points less than six minutes into the game.

Mathieu wants the good-natured Walker to have an assertive approach on the court.  “He’s getting a lot more mean,” Mathieu said.  “When he gets his mean streak, then we’ll be a really, really good team.”

Mathieu, also a senior, had a double-double with 15 points and 10 assists on Monday night.  That was the first double-double in those categories by a Gopher since Damian Johnson accomplished it in 2010.

Gophers coach Richard Pitino mentioned Walker and Mathieu as two of his most improved players since the start of the season—and both were major contributors last season.  He said Walker, who has had past weight issues, is in “great shape” and described Mathieu’s assist to turnovers total as “phenomenal.”  Mathieu has 54 assists and just 14 turnovers in nine games.

Former Apple Valley High School all-state point guard Tyus Jones has played a major role for Duke during his first weeks as a freshman leading the team on the floor.  The now second ranked Blue Devils are 8-0 and Jones has turned heads including with his team-high 22 points, six rebounds, four assists game last week against then No. 2 Wisconsin in Madison.  “He controlled that game,” said Al Nuness.

Nuness, a former Gophers guard and assistant coach, is Jones’ cousin.  The two have been close for years and Jones refers to Nuness as his uncle.  “You just can’t teach what he’s doing—running the offense like an upperclassman,” Nuness said.  “That’s hard to do.”

Nuness said Jones is learning on defense.  “I think he needs to improve the most (with) on-ball defense.  He’s gotta recognize when a player is a little quicker than he is, that he needs to be like a half step further from him.  He’s getting a little too close and that’s why they’re able…to get around him.”

Fans here had hoped Jones would play for Minnesota but Nuness doesn’t believe the Gophers’ style of play is best for Jones because his minutes would likely be more limited.  “They play guards by committee at the University of Minnesota,” Nuness said. “They press, press, (and then) you’re tired, and you come out.”

Two other high profile Minnesota natives, Reid Travis and Rashad Vaughn, are also starting and excelling as college freshmen starters.  Travis is fifth in scoring and third in rebounding for Stanford.  Vaughn averages a team best 16.2 points per game for UNLV.

It wouldn’t be a surprise if the Wild traded a prospect or two to improve the club’s goaltending.  Neither Darcy Kuemper, Niklas Backstrom nor Josh Harding have consistently shown they can claim the position that will be vital to how far the Wild advance in the playoffs.

Comments Welcome

U Needs Bowl Rally Starting January 1

Posted on December 8, 2014December 8, 2014 by David Shama

 

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

Talk about incentives.

The Golden Gophers can “exorcise a lot of demons” if they defeat Missouri in the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl on January 1.  Coach Jerry Kill’s team learned yesterday they have an invitation to that prestigious New Year’s Day bowl.

A source told Sports Headliners last week the Citrus Bowl in Orlando, Florida was Minnesota’s preferred bowl destination.  The Citrus is the highest ranking bowl game the Gophers could have been invited to and provides Minnesota with its first New Year’s Day matchup since 1962.  The Citrus is the Big Ten’s second-oldest current bowl partner behind only the Rose Bowl.  Big Ten teams have played in 24 Citrus Bowls, including each of the last 22 seasons.

The Gophers have lost six consecutive bowl games.  All, of course, have been disappointing but some were particularly bitter defeats including last December’s loss in the Texas Bowl to a mediocre Syracuse team.  To this day the Gophers will shake their collective heads over their effort and performance.

The Gophers don’t want to lug yet another bowl loss into their offseason workouts and spring practice.  The program picked up momentum this season with a 5-3 Big Ten record, Minnesota’s best since 2003.  Wins included trophy game triumphs over Michigan and Iowa.  A season-ending loss to Wisconsin, along with a defeat in the bowl game, will take some shine off this year.

The flip side, though, is the Gophers cannot only put themselves in good spirits during the off-season but also put more juice into the fan base.  More ticket sales and interest in the program are for sure if the Gophers defeat Missouri, a team that is among the best in the SEC—America’s top college football league.

The Tigers, 10-3, won the SEC’s East Division and are No. 16 nationally in the College Football Playoff rankings.  The Gophers, 8-4, are ranked No. 25.

The Tigers are perceived as the team with the better personnel and figure to be a wagering favorite, at least by a touchdown.  The Gophers, though, will embrace the underdog role they have played throughout the season.  Last summer virtually no one predicted Minnesota would contend for the Big Ten’s West Division title but the Gophers went into the last game of the regular season with a chance to advance to the conference championship matchup with East Division champ Ohio State.

The Gophers cannot only help their own image by winning on New Year’s Day against an SEC team.  They can help pump life into the Big Ten brand.  Dating back to 2000, conference teams have only twice won more bowl games than they lost.  The last four years the Big Ten record in postseason is 10 wins, 21 losses.

The national exposure on New Year’s Day can help Minnesota’s recruiting which is already on an upswing because of this season.  The Gophers target recruiting high school players in the Southeastern part of the country, so playing in a major bowl game in Florida for the first time since 2000 is valuable.

Drew Wolitarsky
Drew Wolitarsky

Minnesota players who have been injured will have extra time to heal before the Citrus Bowl.  An earlier bowl date meant, for example, that wide receiver Drew Wolitarsky would have less chance of recovering from his high ankle sprain.  A starter in the Illinois game when he was injured, Wolitarsky would be a welcome returnee for quarterback Mitch Leidner who has played on a bad knee.

Like other bowl teams, the Gophers will receive 15 extra practices.  That’s an incentive for a lot of players to improve and impress the coaches.

There’s that incentive word again.

Worth Noting 

The Vikings have won consecutive cold weather games the last two Sundays at home.  Yesterday the temperature was 32 with a wind chill of 21.  A week ago Sunday the temp was 12 and the wind chill at minus seven.  Vikings running back Ben Tate said players stiffen up in the cold.  “You feel like you’re running in slow motion,” he told Sports Headliners.

The Vikings have one home game remaining, December 28 against the Bears, and then next year more outdoor football before moving into their new enclosed stadium in 2016.  When it’s miserably cold at TCF Bank Stadium can a bad team that is losing to the Vikings by a big score give up?  Tate thinks so.  “In a climate like this, probably pack it in and just want to get the game over.  I definitely think that’s an advantage for us playing in the cold weather.”

Vikings defensive end Everson Griffen is in his first season as a starter.  The team’s other starting end, Brian Robison, believes Griffen has been playing at an All-Pro level.  “I absolutely think so,” Robison told Sports Headliners last week.  “The guy’s been playing out of his mind this year.  To have 11 sacks (12 after yesterday) at this point in the season is huge.  I think he’s done a lot more things than that (too)…so I think the guy is playing on a tremendous level right now.”

The Pro Bowl will be played January 25 in Glendale, Arizona and Griffen could be among the players selected.  Pro Bowlers are determined by voting from fans, players and coaches.  “I would think it would be a shame if he didn’t make the Pro Bowl for sure,” Robison said.

Former Gopher Simoni Lawrence, now a linebacker for Hamilton in the CFL, started all three playoff games for the Tiger-Cats including their Grey Cup loss to Calgary.

TwinsFest tickets—$20 for adults and $10 ages 14 and younger—go on sale to the general public on Thursday.  Twins president Dave St. Peter said in the past all players on the 40-man roster have usually made appearances at TwinsFest, and for 2015 that means fans will likely be able to meet top prospects like Byron Buxton, Eddie Rosario and Miguel Sano.  The event, January 23-25, will be at Target Field for a second consecutive year and attendance could total a capacity maximum of 15,000, or about half the size for some TwinsFests at the Metrodome.

St. Peter said new manager Paul Molitor has “made contact” with players and will do more off-season communications at TwinsFest.  Molitor’s contacts have been made with players here in town, not out of Minnesota.

Baseball’s winter meetings began yesterday in San Diego and are a catalyst to rumors about free agent signings.  St. Peter said the Twins are shopping for pitching but wouldn’t predict how soon the club might have an announcement about acquisitions.  “It could play out over 60 to 90 days,” he told Sports Headliners.

The North Dakota basketball team that plays the 6-2 Gophers tonight at Williams Arena has a 3-4 record including a 37 point loss to Utah and 12 point defeat against Northern Iowa.  The North Dakota roster has six Minnesotans including sophomore guard Quinton Hooker, the 2013 Minnesota Mr. Basketball from Brooklyn Park, who is averaging 9.6 points—third best on the team—and leads in assists with 17.

Gophers basketball and baseball public address announcer Dick Jonckowski is recovering from non-Hodgkin lymphoma; and his last chemotherapy session is tomorrow.

Richard Pitino
Richard Pitino

If the Gophers season is to be a success, junior college transfer Carlos Morris needs to be a leading contributor.  Morris was important to Minnesota before the season began, but is even more vital now with fellow small forward Daquein McNeil off the team indefinitely after being arrested for an off-court incident.  Morris’ athleticism has been impressive including on Friday night when the Gophers defeated West Carolina, but coach Richard Pitino expects a lot from the 6-5, 175-pound junior.

“You can’t play 32 minutes at the small forward spot and only get two rebounds (Friday),” Pitino said.  “He did a lot of good things—16 points, four assists, three steals—but you gotta rebound the ball at that spot.”

Pitino doesn’t plan to be overly patient with Morris who is the team’s second leading scorer at 11.6 points per game.  He wants consistent effort and versatile production from Morris.  “A lot of times with jucos it takes them a year,” Pitino said.  “We don’t have a year with him.  Just like we didn’t have a year with DeAndre Mathieu (juco point guard transfer in 2013).

“He’s gotta figure it out right now because he’s our only true small forward in the program.  He’s gotta figure out a lot of things quickly which is normally difficult, but he’s got the talent which is good.”

The Gophers will wear black uniforms for their January 6 Big Ten home opener against Ohio State.  The “Barn Blackout” game will encourage fans to wear black clothing.

Former Gophers golfer and New York Times bestselling author Harvey Mackay will ring a bell for the Salvation Army from 2 to 4 p.m. on Wednesday at Byerly’s in St. Louis Park.  This will be Mackay’s 12th consecutive year helping with the organization’s holiday fundraising effort.  Mackay usually tells WCCO Radio listeners if they make a contribution to his kettle they will receive one of his books for free.

Comments Welcome

Gophers Want Citrus Bowl on January 1

Posted on December 5, 2014December 5, 2014 by David Shama

 

The Gophers athletic department will learn on Sunday what bowl destination the football team will have, and the Buffalo Wild Wings Citrus Bowl on January 1 in Orlando is the preferred site.

The Citrus is the highest-ranking bowl possibility for the Gophers based on their record and the complicated bowl agreements and factors involving the Big Ten Conference. When bowl invitations are extended, more than team records and conference finishes can be involved.  A disadvantage potentially influencing a Gophers bowl invitation is the fan base’s reputation for not following the team in large numbers to postseason games. That stigma will follow the program until attendance counts tell a different story.

Athletic department officials are excited about possible bowl destinations—even if the Citrus invitation doesn’t materialize.  The potential bowls for the Gophers are all in Florida or California.  Minnesota’s last seven bowl games have been in Arizona, Tennessee or Texas, so a change to either coast is welcome.

In addition to wondering about a bowl destination, some Gophers fans fret about head coach Jerry Kill leaving for another job.  Speculation has included the opening at Michigan—and until yesterday Nebraska, too, which just hired Oregon State coach Mike Riley.  Both schools are Big Ten rivals of Minnesota and history indicates it’s unlikely a league school will pursue another’s coach.  It’s been more than 35 years since that happened in the Big Ten.  The Big Ten promotes unity among its members and hiring away someone else’s coach would stir up resentment among a group with shared interests and values.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

There are also coaching opportunities at schools outside the Big Ten including Kansas.  Kill denies interest, though, in going anywhere else. He addressed the feelings of he and his wife Rebecca on WCCO Radio’s Dave Lee program earlier this week.

“This is where Rebecca and I want to be, and we love it here,” Kill said.  “The big thing is, I hope the University wants me, and the commitment to where we want to go.  There’s a lot of things we gotta do.  We need to take those steps.”

Kill said to recruit “great players,” the Gophers need “good facilities” to effectively compete against other programs.  “I know our people are trying to get that done so I am looking forward to being here,” he said.

Kill, selected earlier this week as Big Ten Coach of the Year, has been campaigning for a new indoor football practice facility.  The Gophers facility that opened in 1985 is inferior to many others in college football.  Kill wants ground broken next year on a new facility that could cost about $25 million.  Such action will signal a commitment to football resources at Minnesota and that is important for Kill to see.

An athletic department spokesman said the new practice facility will be built “as fast as humanly possible.”  That’s not a commitment to next spring, although someone in authority may have told Kill awhile ago spring was a circle-it-time on the calendar.

The practice facility is part of a master plan to improve athletic facilities at Minnesota and is tied to a $190 million fundraising campaign.  Sources report progress continues to be made on the fundraising.  Major help from at least one local corporation and also a private source (reportedly $15 million) is said to be in place.

Earlier this year Land O’ Lakes made a $25 million commitment to support a wide range of University of Minnesota activities, but the centerpiece will be building the Intercollegiate Athletics Center for Excellence that will benefit over 700 student-athletes through academics and nutrition.

Sources indicate, though, that to reach $190 million the University will have to borrow money as part of the funding mix.  Kill won’t make final decisions on fundraising, but knowing the coach I believe eventually he could become restless regarding his job here if he doesn’t receive the resources he wants.

In a couple of years the Kansas State head coaching position is almost certain to open up.  Wildcats coach Bill Snyder is 75 years old.  Kill has roots in Kansas and grew up in Cheney, about 158 miles from Kansas State’s campus in Manhattan. Snyder is a great coach and one who will leave a lot of resources behind for his successor.

But remember this when speculating Kill will leave the Gophers: he is 53 years old and has overcome cancer and battled epilepsy.  Some schools looking for coaches will see the health history as a red flag.  Kill has suffered multiple seizures in four seasons as Gophers coach, although this year hasn’t been a problem.

The Gophers stood by Kill when fans and media suggested he wasn’t up to the job.  Kill remembers the loyalty of administrators at Minnesota and his many supporters in the community.  He is a good man with the right values.  He will be the Gophers coach for a long time if he believes football is important at the University.

Worth Noting

Kill’s battle with epilepsy has been an inspiration to his players.  Gophers senior defensive tackle Cameron Botticelli said the players have experienced difficult times including the death of teammate Gary Tinsley in 2012 and Kill’s seizures on and off the field.

“You look at coach Kill’s overcoming epilepsy and living with that.  This program has been surrounded by people who are models of resiliency in fighting back against adversity,” Botticelli said.  “You don’t coach that.  That’s a mindset.  I think it’s been ingrained by the great people that we have in our program.”

Giovan Jenkins
Giovan Jenkins

The Gophers were 5-3 in the Big Ten this year, the program’s best conference record since 2003.  A major contributor to the success was senior running back David Cobb who gained 1,548 yards, a single season school record.  Washburn High School football coach Giovan Jenkins believes former Miller Jeff Jones will contend to replace Cobb as the starting running back next season.  “There aren’t too many people out there that are as good as him (Jones),” Jenkins told Sports Headliners.

Cobb’s skills include exceptional vision—being able to see tacklers and openings to gain yards.  “I think Jeff’s vision is equally as good as David Cobb’s,” Jenkins said.  “He’s a little bit quicker, I believe, in terms of his first couple steps.  He gets to full speed a little faster than Cobb. …Jeff has that ability to make the second guy miss when he’s running by the first guy.  The first guy is not really going to get him.”

Cobb runs with patience and Jenkins said that Jones will learn the skill.  “That’s coaching.  Jeff will have that when he gets coached by the coaching staff at the University of Minnesota.  That’s what a senior should be able to do, is wait until that thing (the hole) opens up and then hit it full speed.”

Jones isn’t academically eligible for football this semester but is off to a good start in the classroom during his first few months at Minnesota as a freshman.  Jenkins said Jones had a 3.2 GPA earlier in the semester and appears on track to be eligible for spring football.  If so, Jenkins is enthusiastic about what Jones can do.

“With him having an opportunity to run the ball next year, I don’t think there’s going to be much drop off in terms of production,” Jenkins said.  “He might not be a thousand yard guy because they still have (All-Big Ten tight end) Maxx Williams and some other options, but he’s definitely going to help out and relieve the pressure on everybody else on offense.”

The Western Carolina basketball team the Gophers play tonight at Williams Arena doesn’t have name recognition but the Catamounts only lost by six points to Alabama and 10 to Mississippi State, with both games on the road.  The Catamounts are 3-5 this season.

Andre Hollins
Andre Hollins

The Gophers, 5-2, most recently defeated Wake Forest, 84-69, in the ACC/Big Ten Challenge series.  Minnesota guard Andre Hollins was impressive making seven of 10 three point shots and scoring 27 points in the road win.  Guard Carlos Morris was second in scoring with 15 points but had six turnovers.  Excessive fouling continues to be a problem for Minnesota and Wake Forest was shooting bonus free throws before 12 minutes had elapsed in the second half.  For the game the Demon Deacons had 31 foul attempts, but made only 18.

Defensive end Everson Griffen talking to Sports Headliners about the 5-7 Vikings:  “We have a good team here.  We’re a quarter away to being a great team each and every Sunday.  Our biggest thing is that we gotta clean up our mistakes and quit beating ourselves.”

Adam Thielen received a game ball for blocking a punt and returning it 30 yards for a touchdown last Sunday in the Vikings win over the Panthers.  Thielen, who had never blocked a punt before, said he it’s the third game ball he’s received as a Viking.  He is the NFC Special Teams Player of the Week.

Vikings defensive end Brian Robison caused a stir in the locker room earlier this week when he appeared without his signature ponytail.  Robison started growing the ponytail in 2009 but tired of the excess hair and decided to have it cut.  He donated his hair to Locks of Love, a nonprofit organization that provides hairpieces to disadvantaged children.

Kevin McHale, in town tonight coaching his Rockets against the Timberwolves, still has a home in North Oaks.

Bloomington native and University of Minnesota graduate Brian Dutcher joked that his job title at San Diego State should be changed after the school extended head coach Steve Fisher’s contract through 2018.  “The head coach still in waiting” is Dutcher’s new description of his job status.  His official title is associate head coach/head coach in waiting.  Dutcher is Fisher’s top assistant and it’s been known for years he will eventually become head coach.  He will be 58 if Fisher, now 69, coaches until 2018.  Brian’s dad, Jim Dutcher, resigned from the Gophers job when he was 53.

Torri Hunter probably should have tutor attached to his job title with the Twins.  The 39-year-old free agent signed a one-year $10.5 million contract this week.  He could contribute with his bat and outfield work but it seems likely he will also mentor the organization’s brightest prospects like Byron Buxton, Eddie Rosario, Miguel Sano  and Kennys Vargas.

Hunter hit 17 home runs with 83 RBI last season for the Tigers.  Those totals would have ranked third and first for the Twins in 2014.

Augsburg junior quarterback Ayrton Scott is featured in this week’s Sports Illustrated magazine as part of its “Faces in the Crowd” section that spotlights the athletic accomplishments of amateur athletes.  Scott made news with his performance in Augsburg’s 62-61, two-overtime win at No. 18-ranked Bethel on November 15.  He completed 28 of 41 passes for a school-record 563 yards and five touchdowns, while rushing 18 times for 67 yards.  His school and MIAC record 630 yards of total offense were the most by an NCAA Division III player this season, with his 563 passing yards third-best.

Hamline will sponsor varsity women’s lacrosse starting in 2016.  The Pipers will join Augsburg as the second Minnesota D-III school to offer women’s lacrosse.  A head coach will be hired by Hamline and the team will practice and play games at Klas Field.

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