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Category: Golden Gophers

Give a Nod to Karma & U at Frozen Four

Posted on April 4, 2023 by David Shama

 

I’ve never been known as a sports writing prophet with a shiny crystal ball resting next to the keyboard.  Shama the Seer, the great purveyor of the future?  Nope, not me.

I make this confession knowing I put at risk my prediction the University of Minnesota men’s hockey team will win its two games in this week’s Frozen Four in Tampa and come home with the national championship trophy.

My history, though, is that of a dysfunctional prophet. Consider the following.

I could have been the guy who bet his retirement nest egg on the 19.5 point favorite Timberwolves to cover the spread on Sunday. They made national news by losing 107-105 to the Trail Blazers.

I once worried the world would end with Y2 K.  A computer bug didn’t spin the world into chaos, but Armageddon remains top of mind. I keep Nostradamus on speed-dial.

Remember Rocky-like punching bag Chuck Wepner? I might have predicted he was going to knock out Muhammad Ali back on my birthday of March 24, 1975.  Before you snicker, remember Wepner did go 15 rounds with the heavyweight champ before losing on a technical knockout.

Thomas Dewey? Wouldn’t be surprised if someone in my family wagered cold cash on Dewey winning the 1948 presidential election instead of Harry Truman. Heck, the Chicago Tribune even got it wrong, printing this headline the day after the election: “Dewey Defeats Truman.”

On my mother’s side, we had family who fought in the Revolutionary War.  They might have held rifles in one hand while wagering on the British Redcoats.

So more than 200 years of bad family luck predicting outcomes doesn’t deter me from writing with confidence that the No. 1 seeded Gophers will not only win Thursday night against No. 4 Boston University but emerge Saturday evening with the 2023 NCAA Division I championship.  I am overdue and so are the Gophers.

Minnesota hasn’t won the national title since 2003.  That’s 20 years ago and a good omen.

The Gophers lost in the Frozen Four semi-finals a year ago.  Coach Bob Motzko and the players benefit from that experience.

The Gophers, 28-9-1, are the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament and have been considered the nation’s best team in 2023 boasting a 26-man roster with 14 of those players NHL draft choices.

Minnesota is loaded with talent including goal tending and perhaps the best scoring line in school history with Logan Cooley, Matthew Knies and Jimmy Snuggerud. Gopher goalie Justen Close is third in the nation in shutouts with six and has a 2.08 goals against average versus top 10 teams.

Cooley and Knies are two of the three finalists for the Hobey Baker Award recognizing college hockey’s best player. Cooley’s 37+ rating leads all NCAA players, while Knies is a tight moments specialist and has scored seven game winning goals. Snuggerud is fifth in the country in points per game at 1.32, while the third Hobey Baker finalist, Michigan’s Adam Fantilli, is No. 1 at 1.85.

Brock Faber photo courtesy of University of Minnesota.

Knies typifies the Gophers’ play in clutch moments, and this team also excels on the power play and defensively.  The Gophers rank fourth nationally in power play percentage at 0.264 and that’s better than any other Frozen Four team.  The defensive corps of Jackson LaCombe, Ryan Johnson and Brock Faber is special.

Minnesota won three national championships in the 1970s under the peerless direction of the late Herb Brooks.  Later Brooks built the St. Cloud State program where Motzko was on his staff.  Good connections, great karma. Gotta believe Herbie is watching over things in Tampa this week.

The hockey gods deem not only that the Gophers win the national title but take revenge against Michigan in Saturday night’s championship game.  The No. 3 seed Wolverines, who need to beat No. 2 seed Quinnipiac Thursday to set up the retribution, defeated Minnesota 4-3 in Minneapolis last month to win the Big Ten Tournament title.

It’s always triumphant to beat Michigan in anything—from tiddlywinks to robotics to ice hockey as they call it in Tampa.  To do so in the national championship game is this soothsayer’s dream.

And one so richly deserved!

2 comments

Buxton Flashes Early Season MVP Skill

Posted on April 2, 2023April 2, 2023 by David Shama

 

The Twins are 2-0 this season because of superb pitching, timely defense and (no surprise) Byron Buxton playing like the team (and perhaps American League) MVP.

The team has won two American League Central Division games in Kansas City against the Royals by identical scores of 2-0.  Buxton, the Twins’ designated hitter, has scored three of the team’s four runs and “pushed the envelope” with his base running, per manager Rocco Baldelli.

In Minnesota’s opening series win Thursday he stretched an outfield drive into a triple and scored the team’s first run.  Yesterday he scored both runs.

Buxton set up Minnesota’s second run in the sixth inning Saturday by doing what few others can.  First he advanced from second to third base on a ground ball hit by Jose Miranda to the shortstop. Then he scored on a short outfield fly ball off the bat of Kyle Farmer, running 30.1 feet per second, according to Twins TV analyst Glen Perkins.  No wonder after the game, Baldelli said approvingly that Buxton “pushed the envelope” on the bases.

Buxton has a single, double and triple in his first two games.  He is two home runs short of hitting 100 in his career.

In Buxton’s early seasons with the Twins he didn’t show a lot of power but that’s changed.  In 92 games and 340 at bats last season he hit 28 homers.  At 29 years old he has the potential this season to become the fourth hitter in franchise history to join the 40 home run club (the others are Brian Dozier, Harmon Killebrew and Roy Sievers).  If Buxton could send 50 over the fence, he would break Killebrew’s single season club record of 49.

Potential is practically Buxton’s middle name.  His career has been one characterized by do-everything talent in fielding, throwing, hitting and base running but also being sidelined by more injuries and missed time than any Twins star ever.  Only once in his nine-year career has he played in over 100 games.

For now, the Twins are trying to protect Buxton’s health by not playing him in the outfield where diving for fly balls or crashing into walls to save potential home runs can be hazardous to the uber-talented center fielder.  The first two games of the season have shown Buxton doesn’t need a glove to be the team MVP.

Worth Noting

Sports Illustrated’s baseball issue has the Twins finishing second in the division with a 87-75 record, a game behind the Guardians.  However, the magazine predicts Minnesota defeats Cleveland in the postseason before losing to the Astros.  The World Series forecast has the Yankees beating the Padres.

Weather allowing, the Twins will face an early season test against the Astros in a three-game series in Minneapolis starting Thursday.  Minnesota is starting the season against two of baseball’s weakest teams in the Royals and Marlins (Monday-Wednesday in Miami).

Sports Illustrated said the Twins “spent more money on big league free agents this winter ($241 million) than the rest of the division combined ($176.75 million).”

This is Dick Bremer’s 40th season of Twins broadcasts. The team’s TV play-by-play man will work games with a rotation of four analysts, all Twins alumni: Justin Morneau, Roy Smalley, LaTroy Hawkins and Glen Perkins.

New Timberwolves owner Marc Lore spoke about entrepreneurship at the University of Minnesota’s Carlson School of Management Friday.

Lou Holtz

Legendary former college football coach Lou Holtz, who coached the Gophers in 1984 and 1985, was just inducted into the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished Americans, the nonprofit educational organization that honors the achievements of outstanding individuals and encourages youth to pursue their ambitions through higher education.

For over 75 years the Horatio Alger Award has been awarded “to esteemed individuals who have succeeded despite facing adversities, and who have remained committed to education and charitable efforts in their communities.” Holtz, the son of a bus driver during the Great Depression, got his first job at nine-years-old as a paper boy and went to become one of college football’s most famous coaches including at Notre Dame where he won a national championship.

Two days after the football Golden Gophers open at home on August 31 against Nebraska, the North Dakota State Bison will take on Eastern Washington in the first college football game ever at U.S. Bank Stadium.  Tickets for the September 2 game went on sale Friday.

NDSU has nearly 15,000 alumni in the Minneapolis-St. Paul area and 26,000 across the state of Minnesota. The Bison drew 34,544 fans to their 2019 season opener against Butler at Target Field.  North Dakota State claims about 26,000 alums in Minnesota, including 15 in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

St. Thomas, with the nation’s longest home game winning streak at 26, opens its season September 2 against Black Hills State.  The Pioneer league champion Tommies also have nonconference games September 9 at South Dakota and September 16 at Harvard.

A college basketball source told Sports Headliners coveted point guard Andrew Rohde, transferring from St. Thomas, may enroll at Gonzaga.

The Twin Cities and state of Minnesota have long ranked at or near the top for most interest per capita in fantasy football.  That obsession in speculating how players and teams preform will carry over if legalized sports wagering is enacted in the state.  With about six weeks to the close of the current state legislative session, a bill approving sports betting could pass.

Minnesota native Bill Herzog was a basketball official for 63 years including Big Ten games from 1976 until 1988.  Herzog, a Florida resident for 30 years now, worked high school games in that state until 2019.  Sports Headliners asked his opinion awhile ago of college basketball officiating this year.

“In general, I think the officiating I have seen this year has been very good,” Herzog said via email.  “As an ex official, I look to see if they are using proper floor mechanics and very seldom do I see them out of position.  This is important because if you are not in proper position, you don’t have a very good chance to make the right call.

“There are still those marginal calls that can always be questioned.  That’s basketball and those calls were there 40 years ago and will always be a part of the game.  But in general, I think the officiating that I have seen would grade out at A-. …

“One thing has been very evident this year is that I have not seen many, if not any, overweight officials.  That’s a good thing and in general the total staff seems to be young and vibrant, which was not the case when I was working where officials just seemed to hang on forever.”

College officials can make their livelihoods from officiating over a five- month period, working several games per week.  Herzog’s understanding is the Big Ten pays $4,000 per game.  “Seems like a lot but they have to pay their own travel, hotel and meals with that fee,” Herzog wrote.  “I am assuming that the other major conferences pay the same.”

1 comment

Final Four Coach Had Gopher Interest

Posted on March 28, 2023 by David Shama

 

Brian Dutcher, a University of Minnesota alum, has his San Diego State Aztecs in the Final Four this week in Houston.  About 23 months ago there was reason to believe Dutcher might become the new men’s basketball coach at Minnesota.

Dutcher’s contract back then had a reported buyout of nearly $7 million if he were to leave San Diego for another head coaching job—with one exception.  The San Diego Union Tribune reported in September of 2020 that Dutcher had a contract in place allowing him to leave for Minnesota with a $1 million buyout.

That signaled Dutcher, a Bloomington native, had a strong interest in coming home even though the Gopher job wasn’t open at the time and wouldn’t be until early March of 2021.  A homecoming would have meant living in the Twin Cities and being near his father Jim, the former Golden Gophers head basketball coach, and his three sisters.

When the announcement came that Minnesota athletic director Mark Coyle and head coach Richard Pitino had parted ways, Dutcher was coaching his team in the NCAA Tournament. After the Aztecs were eliminated in a first round loss to Syracuse, Coyle and Brian spoke by phone about the Minnesota opening, per Jim Dutcher.

Jim told Sports Headliners yesterday his son and Coyle talked about getting together but never did.  Soon after the initial conversation, Coyle called again to say he had hired former Gopher guard and assistant coach Ben Johnson, who was then an assistant at Xavier.  Jim said he understood the reasoning at the time for Coyle’s decision to hire a coach with “Minnesota connections” for recruiting and building the program around more high level local talent.

Would Brian have accepted the Gopher job if offered? “I don’t know,” his father said.

What’s for certain is Brian publicly demonstrated his interest in the U by including the modest buyout in his contract.  “It’s my school, where I went, and was able to be part of that basketball program with my dad,” Brian told the Union-Tribune.  “But it’s still a buyout. It’s not like it’s free.”

Brian, who after graduating from Bloomington Jefferson High School was a student manager for his dad’s teams at Minnesota, has the Mountain West Conference Aztecs in the Final Four for the first time in school history.  They play upstart Florida Atlantic Saturday, with the Connecticut and Miami game to follow. Connecticut is the betting favorite, with the Aztecs second.

Jim, who turns 90 on April 17 and still lives in Bloomington, will fly to Houston Thursday along with eight other family members including two grandchildren. There was a decision made awhile ago that if the Aztecs advanced to the Final Four the family would follow.

Despite advancing age, Jim has frequently made trips to San Diego to visit family and watch the Aztecs.  He acknowledges “creaky knees” but otherwise is healthy.

“I don’t use a walker or a wheelchair,” Jim said. “I just kind of shuffle a long. But my health is good. I don’t take one pill. My blood pressure is good. It’s just that arthritic knees make it hard to get a long.”

Jim Dutcher

Either through network telecasts or via streaming, Jim and family in Minnesota have watched every Aztecs game in 2022-2023.  They have seen the 31-6 Aztecs win the Mountain West regular season title and tournament championship and rattle off four straight wins in the single elimination NCAA Tournament. It was a team that improved over the weeks and months.

“They play defense,” Jim said.  “That’s what keeps them in the games. They’re one of the top three defensive teams in the country. …They’re not a great offensive team but the four teams they played in the NCAA Tournament, all of them had their season low scores when they played the Aztecs.”

In a trip to San Diego several months ago Jim met the players at practice.  What he’s learned about them is they are a “tight group” with no academic or off court problems. “It’s just a really good group of kids,” Jim said.

Brian uses 10 players in games and on some teams that could cause dissension about playing time but not for the Aztecs.  “…They sometimes get better when they go to the bench, and so that’s helped them keep their defense at an elite level because the guys are always rested,” Jim said.

The Aztecs reflect the admirable character of their coach.  Humble and without ego, Brian has the same high values as his father who coached the Gophers to the 1982 Big Ten title.  The Dutchers have a calm, rational and common-sense approach to basketball and life.

Basketball advice from father to son? Jim acknowledged the two occasionally talk about situational things like handling full court pressure, but Brian has the whole coaching package from recruiting to X’s and O’s. “He’s a better coach than I ever was,” Jim said.

Brian trusts his team even to the extent of falling off a ladder into the arms of his players.  It’s become a tradition after winning big games at San Diego State for the coach to climb a ladder and cut down the nets.  “…He does that trust fall where he falls backward (and) they catch him,” Jim said.  “So he’s done that for a number of years.”

Brian, 63, has been head coach of the Aztecs for six seasons following decades of assistant coaching including at San Diego State starting in 1999.   Brian’s 2020 team was 30-2 during the regular season but there was no NCAA Tournament because of the pandemic.

Jim believes that was Brian’s most talented club, with better personnel than this year’s team that is two wins away from winning the school’s and the Mountain West’s first national title.  The Aztecs don’t have an NBA prospect on the team, Jim said.

This is a new time in college basketball with players being compensated for name, image and likeness.  Each of the Aztecs receive $2,000 per month for community service work like visiting elementary schools or participating in a walk for charity, Jim said.  He referred to the amount as “peanuts” compared with what some schools are reportedly paying out for high-end talent.

Brian’s teams have won multiple Mountain West regular season and tournament titles and been to four NCAA Tournaments. His teams have won 77 percent of their games, certainly among the best percentage in college basketball during his six-year span.

Jim said at one time Brian’s goal was to coach until he was 65.  But he’s built a power at San Diego State and in the near future the Aztecs may join the Pac-12 Conference. With UCLA and USC leaving the Pac-12 and headed for the Big Ten in 2024, new recruiting opportunities for the Aztecs beckon in southern California.

Brian could certainly coach beyond 65, dad said.  Amen to that.

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