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Category: Joe Mauer

U Coordinator Raves about WR Recruits

Posted on April 14, 2014April 14, 2014 by David Shama

  

The statistics make a point.

Last season the Gophers had only 12 touchdown receptions in 13 games.  Five were caught by redshirt freshman tight end Maxx Williams, and five more came from senior wide receiver Derrick Engel.  Freshman wide receiver Drew Wolitarsky and junior tight end Drew Goodger each caught a touchdown pass.

The 2013 Gophers were last in the Big Ten Conference in touchdown passes.  Not only that but Engel has used up his eligibility, leaving Minnesota with one wide receiver, Wolitarsky, who caught a touchdown pass last season.  As the Gophers went through their spring practices, offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover watched the returning wide receivers and saw improvement—although none of them caught more than two passes or had long gains in the annual spring game on Saturday.

Competition makes players better and not only do the Gophers returnees have each other to face but they’re aware of three freshman wide receivers who will join the team next season—Melvin Holland, Isaiah Gentry and Conner Krizancic.

“I think our receivers know we recruited three phenomenal freshmen,” Limegrover told Sports Headliners in late March.  “Those kids are going to be able to come in and compete right away.

“Those guys who are here understand they have an advantage because they’re here and they’re getting those reps and doing those things. …I’ve seen them take a step up as far as how they’re trying to approach things and what they’re (supposed) to do now because they know some young guys are gonna come and be pushing them.”

Holland is from Ashburn, Virginia, Gentry from Cincinnati and Krizancic is from Mentor, Ohio. Limegrover believes their commitment to attend Minnesota represents a recruiting milestone for the Gophers.

“We’re really, really fortunate,” Limegrover said.  “Those are guys that in the past wouldn’t have made their way to Minnesota—that (would) have gotten gobbled up by somebody else and we would have been left trying to find the scraps at the bottom of the heap.  The stars aligned for us recruiting those three kids and we’re pretty excited about them.”

Limegrover has been an assistant coach for Minnesota head coach Jerry Kill for 15 years.  He admits being as excited about Holland, Gentry and Krizancic as any recruits he’s been involved with.

“Yeah, you know why?  Because they were all three kids that when we looked at them we said, ‘These are legit guys that can come in and they can make us a different offense as soon as we can get them up to speed.  As soon as they can get themselves on the field.’ …”

The Gophers want to improve their 2013 scoring offense of 25.7 points per game, second to last in the Big Ten.  Minnesota’s total offense of 343.3 yards per game also ranked 11th in the 12 team Big Ten.  Whether it’s the quarterback position, wide receivers, tight ends, or running backs, the offense is being targeted for improvement in 2014.

“We need more playmakers,” Limegrover said.  “We need more guys that can threaten opponents in a lot of ways.”

Any offense starts with the quarterback.  Philip Nelson, who threw nine of the 12 touchdown passes last season, has transferred to Rutgers leaving Mitch Leidner as the No. 1 QB.

Leidner, a redshirt sophomore next fall, threw three touchdown passes last season.  He was a part-time starter but that experience is valuable while none of the quarterbacks behind him has ever played in a game for the Gophers.  Limegrover feels “good about the group of guys” he has but admits not having the experience of Nelson, who was a starter for two seasons, presents a challenge.

“It would be great (to have him) but nobody on our staff begrudges Philip because he had to make a decision that was best for him,” Limegrover said.  “We all understand that and we wish him all the best.  Of course you feel a little better having more experienced guys at every position, but at the same time you also want guys that want to be there. …”

Worth Noting 

Ra’Shede Hageman’s Washburn High School football coach, Giovan Jenkins, will be among his guests at the NFL Draft in New York on May 8.  Hageman, the former Gopher defensive lineman, could be selected in the first round.  The NFL covers expenses for up to five guests of a high potential draft choice, Jenkins told Sports Headliners.

Expect an announcement today or later this week that Adam Weber will be joining a Canadian Football League team.  The former Gophers quarterback has been unable to receive a commitment from the NFL including this spring with the Bears and he told Sports Headliners he’s headed to Canada but wouldn’t identify the team yet.  “I just want to play,” he said.

Ex-Gopher tight end Matt Spaeth, now with the Steelers, was in Minneapolis the last few days.  Gophers coach Jerry Kill invited Spaeth to attend team meetings.  “He’s awesome,” Spaeth said of Kill.

During Saturday’s Gophers spring intrasquad game 6-foot-9 tight end Nate Wozniak lined up next to 6-foot-9 offensive right tackle Jonah Pirsig.  The Gophers may not play a team next fall that positions two players almost 7-feet tall next to one another.

Former 1965 Gophers All-American forward Lou Hudson died last week but will be remembered forever by those who saw him play.  The 6-foot-5 Hudson, who averaged 24.8 points per game as a junior, had athleticism and basketball skills that exceeded perhaps anyone who ever played for Minnesota.  He just teased defenders with his smooth movement and ability to score, both away from and near the basket.  He had the skill to play defense, too, but it was on offense that he stirred Gophers fans including after a broken right wrist forced him to play with a cast.  He lit up opponents with his left hand and brought down the “Barn.”

Ryan James from GopherIllustrated.com wrote Friday that new Gophers basketball commit Gaston Diedhiou, 6-9, 225, is an inside player offensively but has the ability to defend on the perimeter.  He also reported Diedhiou, who is from the Canary Islands by way of Senegal, will be 21 when he plays his first game as a freshman next fall.

New Gophers women’s basketball coach Marlene Stollings has been an assistant or head coach at seven schools since 2000.  Minnesota senior associate athletic director Beth Goetz, who oversees women’s basketball, told Sports Headliners she isn’t worried about Stollings having a brief tenure with the Gophers.

“Honestly, I don’t have any concern at all,” Goetz said.  “If you look at her track record, every move she’s made has been up the ladder.  She’s put herself in a position to coach at the highest level and the best institutions.  Personally, I am not sure I think there’s a better place to be than the Big Ten and at the University of Minnesota.”

Goetz is impressed with Stollings in multiple ways including recruiting.  Stollings has put together top-45 national recruiting classes in the past and attracted two top-100 recruits.  “Her history shows she’s been great at recruiting,” Goetz said.

The WNBA Draft is tonight but Lynx owner Glen Taylor told Sports Headliners he expects his franchise will obtain players who will develop later rather than contribute next season.  The Lynx have the No. 12 and 15 draft choices.

Media and sports executives applauded the recent announcement that Saint Paul native Bill Robertson will be the new WCHA commissioner succeeding Bruce McLeod who called the hire a “home run.”  Look for Robertson, a former executive with the Wild, to relocate the league offices from Denver to downtown Saint Paul.

Robertson graduated from Cretin High School in 1979 with Saint Paul mayor Chris Coleman who attended last week’s news conference announcing the new commissioner.  Robertson, who begins his position in mid-May, referred to Coleman as one of the school’s great soccer players.  The mayor interrupted and quipped, “I am beginning to question the (commissioner selection) decision.”

The Wild sold out its 25th consecutive game last night at Xcel Energy Center. The local NHL team has sold out 34 of 41 regular season home games.  The Wild lost to the Predators in Minnesota’s final regular season game of the year last night and opens its playoff series with the Avalanche in Denver on Thursday evening.

Wild single game playoff tickets went on sale Saturday and the club is expected to play in front of sellout home crowds during the postseason including for next Monday night’s home opener.  A limited number of tickets will be available for purchase this week.  Check the team’s website, Wild.com, for more information early in the week.

The Twins swept their three-game series with the Royals by winning 4-3 yesterday despite having only five hits.  Twins first baseman Joe Mauer, who had two hits in four at bats, stole his first base since August 26, 2012.  Mauer’s 31st birthday is Saturday.

The A’s team that swept the Twins last week at Target Field is predicted by Sports Illustrated to play in the World Series representing the American League.  In the magazine’s March 31 baseball issue S.I. projected the A’s will lose to the Nationals in the World Series.  The A’s are 9-1 against the Twins since the start of the 2013 season.

Comments Welcome

Twins Pondered Re-Signing Morneau

Posted on February 28, 2014February 28, 2014 by David Shama

 

Contrary to what fans may believe, the Twins were interested in signing Justin Morneau during the off-season.  Team president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners this week there were discussions last fall before Morneau accepted instead an offer from the Rockies.

“This is a guy that we have a very close relationship with,” St. Peter said.  “Wore our uniform since day one as a pro player and won an MVP for us.”

St. Peter also said moving Joe Mauer from catcher to first base was “going to impact Justin’s role with the team.”  Morneau would have been a DH, pinch hitter and part-time first baseman.

No doubt the Rockies offered more money to the 32-year-old Morneau who was the American League MVP in 2006 when he was a major contributor to Minnesota’s Central Division title.  Morneau reportedly has a two year $12.5 million deal with the Rockies, or $1 million less than he was paid last season by the Twins, according to a December 4, 2013 story by Cliff Corcoran on Mlb.si.com.

Morneau hasn’t been an MVP type hitter for years and the Twins traded him to the Pirates late last season.  With the Rockies he’s found a familiar face in former Twins outfielder Michael Cuddyer who at age 34 won the NL batting title last season.

“[Having Cuddyer] makes the transition a little easier,” Morneau said in Ben Haber’s story on MLB.com Tuesday. “He is a guy I have looked up to in the past and that I can go to if I need anything.”

Morneau has the opportunity with the Rockies to replace the retired Todd Helton at first base.

Twins Notes

The Twins have produced consecutive season records of 66 wins and 96 losses.  St. Peter acknowledges the need for improvement but won’t put a number on how many games he wants the Twins to win.

“I want to see us take a step forward,” St. Peter said. “The way I define it is we obviously need to be playing meaningful games in the sense that we feel as though we are contending in the months of August and September.  If we’re doing that I think we’ve taken a significant step forward and that’s ultimately what we’re hoping for.”

Baseball has made a commitment to regular season international games.  In late March the Dodgers and Diamondbacks will play in Australia.  St. Peter believes next year two MLB teams may play in South Korea.

“We’ve expressed interest in that (a foreign game) to the league,” he said. “I think it requires the right players on your roster to play in those games.”

Participation by the Twins in such a game could be three, four or five years away, St. Peter said.  A fit for Minnesota may develop if minor league prospect Max Kepler eventually plays for the major league club and MLB approves a game in Europe.  Kepler, a native of Germany, could potentially be a big draw in his home country.

Kepler, who has played first base and in the outfield during his pro career, may start this season in Class A at Fort Myers.  “He’s a very impressive physical specimen,” St. Peter said.  “Strong young man, great runner.  Just a really, really, solid athlete.” 

Comments Welcome

Molitor ‘Excited’ to Work for Gardy

Posted on December 11, 2013December 11, 2013 by David Shama

 

Paul Molitor told Sports Headliners he and Ron Gardenhire are looking forward to working with one another in 2014 including when the Twins open spring training in Florida next February. “I respect tremendously what he’s done as a leader of this franchise on the field and I am excited about the chance to work for him,” Molitor said.

Molitor, hired after the 2013 season as a Twins coach, said Gardenhire “has reached out to him.” Molitor had been working for the Twins on assignments in the minor leagues and has long been admired for his baseball intelligence.

Media and fans have speculated for awhile that Molitor’s presence on the coaching staff could be perceived by Gardenhire, the team’s manager since 2002, as a threat to his job security. “I don’t think that exists in one iota,” Molitor said. “Gardy is very comfortable in his own skin and rightfully so.

“He’s not worried about what might happen down the road. He’s kind of a day-to- day grind it out kind of guy. When he’s got a title and a job, that’s what he’s going to concentrate on.”

Molitor, 57, has known Gardenhire for many years. The Twins organization saw the opportunity to add Molitor, a Hall of Famer, as a way to improve a franchise that has been among the worst in baseball for the last two seasons. Molitor saw an opportunity to become more involved with the organization by becoming a coach.

Could his future include becoming a big league manager some day? “I don’t close doors,” Molitor answered. “I am getting older now and I think this is may be my last opportunity to get back on the field. In some ways I think getting back in this particular role and seeing what the game is like on a daily basis at the big league level will give me a lot of insight as to where this is going to go.

“I envision our club getting better and becoming more competitive this year and into 2015. If things go well, this might be a role I can settle into also. It’s hard to say what’s down the road. But our focus will definitely be just on this year and trying to be as effective a coach as I can be.”

Molitor’s assignments with players will include base running, bunting and in-game strategy. The former All-Star infielder will also work with players like third baseman Trevor Plouffe, shortstop Pedro Florimon, second baseman Brian Dozier and Joe Mauer, who will be making the transition from catcher to first base.

Molitor said former Twins manager Tom Kelly, who helps with instruction at spring training, is among the best first base authorities in baseball. Molitor pointed out Mauer’s previous part-time experience at first base will help his performance in the field.

“Hopefully we can just get Joe to where we put the catching thing behind and we can start concentrating on making him that full-time first baseman and a very efficient one,” Molitor said.

Comments Welcome

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