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Category: Golden Gophers

Ponder Rookie Stats Top Bridgewater

Posted on October 13, 2014October 13, 2014 by David Shama

 

Christian Ponder and Teddy Bridgewater have similar statistics in their first two starts as NFL rookie quarterbacks.

In 2011 Ponder threw three touchdown passes with a 80.95 rating in a loss to the Packers and win over the Panthers.  Bridgewater has no touchdown passes and a 70.1 rating after a win last month against the Falcons and yesterday’s loss to the Lions.  Ponder had two interceptions in his first two games while Bridgewater has three.   Ponder totaled 455 yards in those games, Bridgewater 505.

Since the 2013 season Ponder’s disappointing play made him Public Enemy No. 1 with Vikings fans while Bridgewater has been greeted this year as a savior.  Before yesterday’s home game Bridgewater’s mother drew attention from the media outside TCF Bank Stadium, and then sounded the Gjallarhorn prior to kickoff.  All was well when her son took the field for the Vikings’ first offensive possession and the crowd chanted, “Teddy! Teddy!”

Moments later, though, the 21-year-old Bridgewater threw a bad pass that was intercepted in the Lions’ end zone, killing the best Vikings’ drive of the day.  The next time Bridgewater took the field in the first quarter there was no chanting.  Then on his third series of the day he fumbled, although the Vikings recovered the ball.

Before the game ended the youngest Viking had thrown three interceptions and could have had a couple more picked off by the Lions.  It was a bad day for the offense as the Vikings, now 2-4, came up with only 212 yards and three points on a fourth quarter Blair Walsh field goal.

The similar stats of Ponder and Bridgewater aren’t to suggest who was initially better—or will have the superior long-term career.  The numbers, though, make the point that fans expecting rookie quarterbacks to carry offenses and teams in their first games, and seasons, is a task beyond almost any player past or present.

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer was angry after yesterday’s 17-3 loss to the Lions, a rival team that is now 4-2 and leading the NFC North with the Packers.  He didn’t go overboard to defend Bridgewater in the postgame news conference.  “There’s a lot of people that could have done better including him,” Zimmer said.

Bridgewater was sacked eight times in the game, a major indictment of the offensive line.  He also threw off-target at times while during other plays his receivers dropped balls or didn’t come up with catches that looked possible.

The Vikings only rushed for 69 yards.  Part of that is on the offensive line, too.

Left tackle Matt Kalil was frustrated after the game and pointed out the Lions have been among the best defenses in the league.  “We definitely had our hands full.  We just let some plays get away from us,” he said.  “Just little mistakes we gotta fix.  They capitalized on them and got pressure on Teddy, and that was the story today.”

Ponder has seen that story, too, but it’s not one an angry Zimmer wants to get used to.  “We’re going to look at everything again,” he said when asked about personnel changes.

Worth Noting 

Tickets reportedly were being sold for as low as $10 on the street before yesterday’s Vikings game.  Other sellers were asking for prices of $20 and $30 per ticket.

Vikings executive vice president Lester Bagley said last week no “announcement is imminent” about naming rights for the new downtown stadium opening in July of 2016.  There are 18 Fortune 500 companies in the state—including 17 in the metro area—and Bagley indicated it’s likely one will buy the naming rights.  Benefits for a Minnesota company are expected to exceed those accrued by a business from outside the state.

Jalen Myrick’s 100-yard kickoff return was the difference in the Gophers’ 24-17 win over Northwestern on Saturday.  The Georgia native said neither in college or high school had he returned a kickoff for a score.  “If they come up at me again, I am gonna have to get’em to pay,” the sophomore said.

Myrick was named Big Ten Co-Special Teams Player of the week with Michigan’s Matt Wile, and Gophers’ senior linebacker Damien Wilson was named Big Ten Defensive Player of the Week for his career high 15 tackles including 1.5 tackles for loss performance in the win over Northwestern.  He leads the conference with 11 tackles per game.

David Cobb
David Cobb

Although the Gophers are 5-1 overall, and 2-0 in the Big Ten, they aren’t included in the nation’s top 25 polls.  David Cobb, who rushed for 103 yards in Minnesota’s win on Saturday, was asked if the Gophers belong.  “That’s up to the people who rank,” he said.

Texas Tech, coached by Tubby Smith, is last in a Big 12 coaches poll released last week forecasting the order of finish for conference basketball teams in 2015. Smith never had a winning league record in six seasons as Gophers coach, nor did he in 2013-2014 at Tech, his first season there.  Smith did coach three NCAA Tournament teams at Minnesota and five times won 20 or more games.  Iowa State, coached by former Timberwolves player and executive Fred Hoiberg, will place fifth in the 10-team league and Kansas will finish first, according to the poll.

Smith successfully recruited Rice Lake’s Wally Ellenson but after Ellenson transferred earlier this year Minnesota lost any chance of getting his brother Henry, now a coveted high school senior.  Both Ellensons will play at Marquette a year from this fall.

Tech has offered a scholarship to Tre Jones, the Apple Valley High School ninth grader. His brother Tyus is a freshman at Duke where first-year teammate Jahlil Okafor is a favorite to win college player of the year awards but he will have competition from Wisconsin senior Frank Kaminsky.

Preseason polls will have Duke and Wisconsin at or near the top, while the Gophers are a contender for an early top 25 ranking.

Apple Valley plays DeLaSalle, featuring Gophers commit Jarvis Johnson, in one of 15 games on December 13 at Minnetonka High School as part of the Tip Off Classic.

Former Timberwolves center Darko Milicic announced last month he will become a professional kickboxer.

Flip Saunders might start answering to the nickname “Cop.”  He is coach, owner (minority) and president of basketball operations for the Timberwolves.

Comments Welcome

Big Ten Authority Picks Cats Tomorrow

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

 

“J” Leman predicts a close game tomorrow when the Gophers, 4-1 overall and 1-0 in the Big Ten Conference, play Northwestern, 3-2 and 2-0, at TCF Bank Stadium.  But the former University of Illinois All-American who is now a Big Ten Network football analyst told Sports Headliners he predicts the Wildcats will win.

Leman followed Northwestern’s 0-2 start this season, losing to California and Northern Illinois in Evanston, but since then the Wildcats have won three consecutive games including a dominating performance against Penn State on the road and a home win last Saturday over nationally-ranked Wisconsin.  Leman, who was the analyst on BTN’s coverage of the Northwestern-PSU game, said this is a “tale” of two Wildcat teams and the group now on a three-game winning streak is featuring an “opportunistic defense” that stops teams from scoring at 20 yards and closer to the goal line.

“They’ve never been a shut down, lock’em down Michigan State style defense,” Leman said.  “They bend a lot.  They’re not going to give up a big play. …They’re going to make you work all the way down the field.”

Last Saturday the Wildcats held Wisconsin’s nationally-feared run game to 284 yards and only one touchdown rushing in a 20-14 win.  The Wildcats came up with four interceptions including three by safety Godwin Igwebuike who was honored this week as Big Ten Defensive and Freshman Player of the Week.

The Wildcats and Gophers are tied for second in the Big Ten behind Michigan State with +6 turnover margins.  “Here’s the key for Minnesota—it’s not turning the ball over and it’s red zone efficiency,” Leman said.  “Northwestern is great at making a play when they need a play. …If Minnesota can win the turnover battle, they’ll win the football game.”

Mitch Leidner
Mitch Leidner

But Leman predicts the Gophers, who had a bye on the schedule last week, won’t win because of Minnesota’s suspect passing game.  The Gophers are last in passing among conference teams averaging 113.2 yards per game, although quarterback Mitch Leidner did have his best performance of the season against Michigan when he completed 14 of 22 throws including one touchdown in an upset win on September 27.

“Until they can find consistency at that position, they’re going to struggle in close games,” Leman said.  “That’s usually what happens when you have issues at quarterback.  When you have issues at quarterback you’re going to turn the ball over, and you’re already playing an opportunistic defense (Northwestern).”

When Leman looks at the Wildcats he sees an “offense that’s coming together.”  Senior quarterback Trevor Siemian can be productive and has talent among his receivers but the player Leman raves about is 5-11, 185-pound freshman running back Justin Jackson.  He ran for a career high 162 yards against the Badgers.  “I think Jackson will be the premier running back in this conference by the time he’s a junior or senior,” Leman said.

That statement should make an impression with the Gophers and so too is Leman’s comparison of Jackson with former Minnesota All-American running back Laurence Maroney.   “I think if you look at Justin Jackson’s build—Maroney was a little bit thicker—but the way Justin Jackson runs with breakaway speed, runs angry and  knows when to cut it up (the field) on the stretch play like Maroney…there’s some eerie similarities,” Leman said.

Leman is a fan of Northwestern coach Pat Fitzgerald and also an admirer of the Gophers’ Jerry Kill.  During Fitzgerald’s nine-year career at Northwestern the Wildcats have drawn national attention with their success and have sometimes specialized in winning close games.

Fitzgerald was one of Northwestern’s greatest linebackers in the 1990s and Kill said the Wildcats “reflect” their head coach’s intensity and intelligence.  “They’re always in the right place.  They always step up with big plays.  They have since he’s been there.”

Kill is in his fourth season as Gophers’ head coach and his staff has increased the win totals each season and Minnesota had an 8-5 record last year.  “At Minnesota they develop football players,” Leman said.

Leman doesn’t think the Gophers will earn their fifth win tomorrow, but he has a positive outlook for Minnesota—a team whose attributes includes top running back David Cobb and a solid defense.  “I still think Minnesota finds a way to get to eight or nine wins this year,” Leman said.

Worth Noting 

Cobb ranked sixth nationally in rushing at 144.4 yards per game after last weekend.  Leman rates him among the top five running backs in the Big Ten along with Ameer Abdullah (Nebraska), Tevin Coleman (Indiana), Melvin Gordon (Wisconsin) and Jeremy Langford (Michigan State).  Kill said Cobb, a 5-11, 229-pound senior, is faster and stronger than last season when he ran for 1,202 yards—the 12th best total in Gophers’ history.

“He’s got great vision at the line of scrimmage, and he’s got a knack of keeping his pad level down—and then the strength in his legs—he’s very strong down below,” Kill said. “I think he’s harder to tackle this year than he’s ever been and we noticed that in camp.”

Cobb often makes runs that are longer than expected.  He finds running room where there is minimal space and can turn a four-yard opening into 10 because of vision, burst and strength.  “You know what?  He’s amazing,” said Gophers offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover.

Maxx Williams
Maxx Williams

Maxx Williams, the Gophers’ sophomore tight end who could be named All-Big Ten this season, said he, too, is faster than last year.  Could the 6-4, 250-pound Williams, who is known for his speed, run as fast as the team’s wide receivers?  “Do my best to,” he answered.

Athletes have different ways of handling pregame anxieties.  Gophers’ senior wide receiver Isaac Fruechte told Sports Headliners he vomited before football and track events while in high school, and up until this season at Minnesota.

East Ridge High School junior quarterback Seth Green’s parents, Bryan and Teresa Green, both attended the University of Minnesota.  Bryan was a running back for the Gophers in the early 1990s.  Seth is expected to announce his college choice October 15, with Michigan State, Minnesota and Oregon the contenders.

Vikings’ executive vice president Lester Bagley told Sports Headliners the franchise has thought about one day hosting the NFL Draft.  “We haven’t worked on it but certainly it has crossed our minds,” he said.

New York City has been the long-time home of the league’s college draft but that will change next year in Chicago.  The draft will be held at a large Chicago theatre, and NFL fan activities will be staged at the city’s Grant Park.

Bagley said this area has the venues and spaces to host the draft and fan festival but the franchise has its “hands full” now with details in playing temporarily at TCF Bank Stadium, building the new downtown Vikings stadium and planning for the 2018 Minneapolis Super Bowl.  “We’re sure it’s something community (Minneapolis-St. Paul) leadership would be interested in,” Bagley said.  “We’ll see how it goes in Chicago.”

During an interview Tuesday morning on 1500 ESPN, Gophers’ basketball coach Richard Pitino indicated the most uncertainty about the team’s starting lineup is at small forward and center.  There’s competition at small forward between Carlos “Squirrel” Morris and Daquein McNeil, while Elliott Eliason and Mo Walker are trying to win the starting center job.  Guards Andre Hollins and DeAndre Mathieu, and power forward Joey King, look like starters at their positions.

The Timberwolves play their second exhibition game of the fall tonight against the 76ers at Target Center and FSN North will televise starting at 7 p.m.

Add Cardinals’ relief pitcher and Minnesota native Pat Neshek to the list of players excelling after leaving the Twins. He has pitched in four games during the post-season with a 2.45 ERA in 3.2 innings.  During the 2014 regular season Neshek had a 1.87 ERA and 7-2 record.

Dick Jonckowski
Dick Jonckowski

Dick Jonckowski, the Gophers’ baseball and basketball public address announcer, said he sold about 4,000 of 8,000 sports memorabilia items during his sale at the Canterbury Park Expo Center.  Although he doesn’t have the final total, he thought sales might reach $13,000.00 for the fundraiser to help pay medical bills and restore the basement at his home that was flooded earlier this year. He is planning to sell the remaining inventory from the Canterbury sale to a Minneapolis sports memorabilia dealer.

Jonckowski is being treated for non-Hodgkin lymphoma and type 2 diabetes.  He finishes chemotherapy in early December and expects a full recovery from the cancer.  His 71st birthday is October 22.

For the first time in 2014 the MIAC has five teams receiving votes in both the AFCA Division III Coaches’ Poll and the D3football.com Top 25. In the D3football.com rankings, Bethel leads at No. 11 with Concordia 23rd, Saint John’s 24th and St. Thomas 25th, and Gustavus made the “others receiving votes” section of the poll. In the AFCA, Bethel is 16th, St. Thomas 21st and Concordia 25th, with Saint John’s and Gustavus also receiving votes.

Wild center Ryan Carter, from White Bear Lake and Minnesota State, is one of 16 WCHA alumni on NHL opening week rosters.  Last night the recently signed Carter made his regular season debut with the Wild in the team’s 5-0 win over the Avalanche.

Comments Welcome

Story behind Story of U Win over Michigan

Posted on October 1, 2014October 1, 2014 by David Shama

 

Last Saturday’s upset win over Michigan in Ann Arbor was unusually emotional for Gophers coach Jerry Kill who immediately after the game gave a long hug to his wife Rebecca and then praised seizure specialist Dr. Brien Smith.  Kill told ABC sideline analyst Jeannine Edwards the doctor “saved my career.”

In 2013 the Gophers had also been in Ann Arbor when on the morning of the October 5 game Kill suffered an epileptic seizure.  He has had a number of seizures but this was the first causing him to miss coaching a game.  He also didn’t coach the following game two weeks later, and while he eventually returned to game day coaching last season it was from the press box and not the sidelines.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

With a history of seizures, including at Minnesota where he started coaching in 2011, Kill drew criticism from media and fans last year who questioned whether the coach’s health should prompt his resignation.  He responded by taking a leave of absence to again confront his challenge with epilepsy and seizures.

Kill turned to Smith, a nationally recognized authority on treatments for seizures.  Last week Smith talked to Mlive.com reporter Sue Thoms for a September 27 story about Kill.  “I think he just realized, yes, I have to monitor the situation because I can’t push the envelope too far,” Smith said.

Kill has made changes with medication and in his lifestyle including management of stress, according to the story.  Close associates and other observers have praised his renewed health.  His progress, of course, doesn’t come with guarantees that he will not have future seizures.

Smith knows the concern is ongoing for those afflicted with seizures.  “It can be challenging, and it’s not always an easy fix for everyone,” Smith said. “In many cases, it’s trial and error with different medications and making other adjustments. You have to keep plugging away at it and fix the things you can fix.”

During his TV interview with Edwards, Kill gratefully acknowledged the role of Rebecca.  Kill said without her support, including willingness to let her husband continue his career, he wouldn’t be coaching.

Kill’s mother was at the game and that added to the emotional scene in Michigan Stadium.  She witnessed the Gophers’ first win over the Wolverines since 2005 and only the fourth victory dating back to 1977.  It was a milestone win for Kill who preaches all the time he coaches “for the kids” and the victory eased the frustration of 58-0 and 42-13 losses in Ann Arbor in 2011 and 2013.

The Gophers won back the Little Brown Jug, college football’s oldest rivalry trophy.  Kill wants Minnesota fans that haven’t seen the jug to have that opportunity.  Tonight and Thursday evening the jug will be on display in the T. Denny Sanford Athletics Hall of Fame at TCF Bank Stadium from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Kill told Sports Headliners yesterday that people who haven’t seen him for awhile remark about how much better he looks.  “I’ve worked hard to walk everyday—get some time to myself everyday,” Kill said.  “Still working the same (long) hours but just being smarter about it.  Doing the best I can to sleep.  It’s hard during the season but I am doing the best I can.  It’s all good at the end of the day.  I am doing all the things that Doc Smith told me to do.”

Dan O’Brien, the Gophers associate athletic director who works closely with the football program, knows too that epilepsy means there’s never guarantees seizures won’t reoccur but the last 12 months have been positive.  “He hasn’t had any (seizures) since right after that Michigan game (2013) when they started a new treatment plan,” O’Brien said.

Kill and his team stumbled a year ago in Michigan.  Last Saturday he and the Gophers triumphed, celebrating a kind of double win on and off the field—partially thanks to a doctor from the Wolverine State.

Big Ten Power Rankings 

Here’s how Sports Headliners sees the 14 Big Ten teams after five weeks of mostly nonconference action but also league games for all but three schools.

1. Michigan State (3-1, 0-0)—Spartans are the class of the Big Ten and worthy of their top 10 national ranking with a high scoring offense, tough defense and tougher coach in Mark Dantonio.

2. Ohio State (3-1, 0-0)—Buckeyes fail to impress defensively but offense coming along nicely without injured quarterback Braxton Miller who is out for the season but coach Urban Meyer says is the starter in 2015.

3. Wisconsin (3-1, 0-0)—Badgers inconsistent so far and LSU loss will haunt this team all year, but love that running game led by Wisconsin native Melvin Gordon.

4. Nebraska (5-0, 1-0)—Cornhuskers on a sugar binge after devouring all those cupcakes and first test comes Saturday at Michigan State—wonder if coach Bo Pelini will bring his cat for good luck.

5. Iowa (4-1, 1-0)—Hawkeyes have won two games by a total of eight points and lost one by three while playing tough in the trenches (as usual).  U student body already practicing “We hate Iowa cheer” in anticipation of November 8 game in Minneapolis.

Mitch Leidner
Mitch Leidner

6. Minnesota (4-1, 1-0)—The Gophers will need the same kind of passing from quarterback Mitch Leidner and offensive line play shown in the Michigan game to become real contenders in the West Division race, but that’s not an impossible task.

7. Maryland (4-1, 1-0)—The Terps have only a game-ending loss to West Virginia but we will know a lot more after Saturday when they host Ohio State in a game that could be trouble for the Buckeyes.

8. Penn State (4-1, 1-1)—PSU fans now know new coach James Franklin doesn’t walk on water after the Nittany Lions lost to so-so Northwestern last Saturday, again showing a dismal run game that might make the late Joe Paterno hold his nose.

9. Rutgers (4-1, 0-1)—The feisty Scarlet Knights, formerly from the not so famous American Athletic Conference, have been better as a Big Ten member than most expected and have away from home wins over Washington State and Navy. Gotta give a wink to a school whose football alums include Ozzie Nelson.

10. Northwestern (2-2, 1-0)—Coach Pat Fitzgerald received major contributions from freshmen in last weekend’s dominating 29-6 win at Penn State and the Cats could give the Gophers an alley fight in Minneapolis a week from Saturday.

11. Michigan (2-3, 0-1)—Coach Brady Hoke, who won 11 games in 2011, is 9-9 in his last 18 games, and his seat is the warmest in college football while more seats are going empty in 109,901 capacity Michigan Stadium.

12. Indiana (2-2, 0-1)—The stumbling Big Ten image got such a lift from the Hoosiers’ miraculous road win over SEC member Missouri on September 20 that I don’t have the heart to rate them any lower in the power rankings than 12th although they might deserve it.

13. Illinois (3-2, 0-1)—Illinois has one of the league’s better quarterbacks in newcomer Wes Lunt and offensive coordinator Bill Cubit is talented but Illinois is in for a long season including a probable fourth consecutive loss to the Gophers on October 25.

14. Purdue (2-3, 0-1)—The Boilermakers play at Illinois on Saturday in a game that will cheer up one of these two downtrodden programs and probably give the scoreboard a workout since Purdue is yielding 27.8 points per game, the Illini 35.

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