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Category: Joe Mauer

Worth Noting

Posted on July 9, 2012July 9, 2012 by David Shama

 

Lou Nanne told Sports Headliners the Wild’s acquisition of free agents Zach Parise and Ryan Suter last week will likely make the team “12 to 15 points better” next season.

The Wild had 81 points last season and missed the playoffs.  An additional dozen or more points would have pushed the club ahead of teams who qualified.

“Each player is in the top 10 in the league,” said Nanne, the former Minnesota North Stars player and executive.  “Suter played more minutes than any player in the league last year.  Parise is the hardest worker in the league.”

The Wild will introduce Parise and Suter, both 27, at a news conference today.  Parise, a forward, accounted for 69 points last season playing for New Jersey.  He scored 30 or more goals in five of the last six seasons and brings badly needed offense to the Wild.   Suter, a defenseman, had career highs in points, 46, and power play points, 25, last season with Nashville.  He was third among defensemen in power play points and 10th in scoring.

Nanne said no NHL team has ever executed a one-two signing at the same time with so much star power as the Wild accomplished last week.  The signings set off euphoria among hard core fans and excited casual followers of a franchise that has seen season ticket sales decline.

But not now with fans buying over 1,500 new full season tickets and Nanne predicting the Wild could approach sellouts for every game next season gate receipts, corporate revenues and TV ratings will be headed upward.  “This is a move (signing Parise and Suter) they needed to make,” Nanne said.

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor is 71 but team president Chris Wright told Sports Headliners he doesn’t believe the Mankato billionaire is aggressively shopping the team.  However, Wright believes Taylor is “willing to entertain people who might want to have this franchise long term.”

The priority consideration, Wright said, is keeping the team in Minneapolis. “The Minnesota Lynx and Minnesota Timberwolves are Glen Taylor’s legacy in this market,” Wright said.  “Over a longer period of time he wants to make sure that it’s in place. …”

The Wolves, 26-40 last season, haven’t finished over .500 since 2005 when the club was 44-38.  Wright said there’s a “real drive in the organization” to win next season.  “The goal is absolutely to make the playoffs next year,” he said.

Taylor has owned the team since 1995 and wants to win an NBA championship after seeing his 2011 Lynx become WNBA champs.  Admired coach Rick Adelman is 66 and has never coached an NBA champion.  Adelman impressed in his first season here during 2011-2012 and so, too, did young stars Kevin Love and Ricky Rubio.

“The great thing is that they (Rubio and Love) really like each other,” Wright said.  “They work hard with each other. They’re the backbone of our franchise right now.”

Love is an ESPY candidate for “Best NBA Player.”  Fans can vote online until 10:59 p.m. tonight Minneapolis time.  www.espn.com/espys

Joe Mauer’s grandfather Jake and about 20 other relatives and friends were scheduled to board a bus this morning at Mauer Chevrolet in Inver Grove Heights and ride to Kansas City for tomorrow night’s All-Star game.  The Twins catcher will be a reserve for the American League all-stars.

Jake told Sports Headliners his grandson will pay for the bus and take care of the group’s lodging in Kansas City.  The group buses home on Wednesday.

The Vikings have a database of 18,000 email contacts used for advocating support to build the new downtown football stadium approved this spring.  The Vikings will use their contact list in the fall prior to November elections for House and Senate seats in the state legislature, reminding stadium supporters who did and didn’t vote for the new facility expected to open in 2016.

Steve LaCroix, the Vikings vice president of sales and marketing, has an unusual challenge in the years ahead.  Because the Vikings aren’t expected to occupy their new stadium for four more years, the club will play all or part of future seasons at not only Mall of America Field but also TCF Bank Stadium.  That’s a lot of variables involving individuals and corporate partners LaCroix and staff will sort through.

Vikings cornerback Marcus Sherels, 5-10, has struggled to gain weight during his football career including with the Gophers.  He was up to 177 pounds late last month, according to his brother Mike who will help coach the Gophers linebackers next season.

Jim Marshall, the retired Gophers athletic trainer, turned 82 last Tuesday.  For many years Marshall assisted legendary Gophers trainer Lloyd “Snapper” Stein who retired in 1975.  On this date 37 years ago Minnesota governor Wendell Anderson declared Lloyd “Snapper” Stein Day in the state.  (Source: June 1975 University of Minnesota Alumni News).

Comments Welcome

GM Brings Hope to Faltering Twins

Posted on June 18, 2012June 18, 2012 by David Shama

 

Terry Ryan’s return this season as Twins general manager adds optimism to discussion about the franchise’s future.  Ryan, who was the team’s general manager from 1994-2007, returned to that position last fall with the task of improving a club that lost 99 games and finished last in the Central Division.

The Twins have struggled again this season, compiling a 26-39 record compared with 29-39 on this date in 2011.  But Ryan’s positive influence on the franchise is evident.

“I think the work he did in the off season, particularly in and around Josh Willingham, Ryan Doumit, a Jamey Carroll, I think those moves are indicative of what Terry and his staff will be able to do here to improve this team,” Twins president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners late last week.  “We have a lot of work to do, particularly on the starting pitching front, but I think Terry’s leadership continues to pay dividends for us.  And certainly the amateur draft that just concluded. …His fingerprints are all over that draft.”

The Twins won four division titles in Ryan’s last seven years when he was the franchise’s baseball boss.  His admirers place him among MLB’s most astute general managers. “I certainly think so and…I know his peers around major league baseball would think so,” St. Peter said.  “If you polled the other 29 GM’s I think Terry Ryan would rank certainly at or near the top of that list in terms of the most respected GM’s in the game.”

There’s no doubting Ryan’s work ethic either.  “He’s going to work his tail off to help make us better,” St. Peter said.  “He doesn’t view this (franchise) as a rebuilding process.  He views this as frankly an opportunity for us to perhaps continue to pivot, to contend.  He has not thrown in the towel in terms of 2012. …

“We’ve got to continue to play better baseball.  Get back to .500 and hopefully play meaningful games down the stretch.  We’re not focused on 2013.  We’re still focused on how we can make the Twins better in 2012.”

St.Peter said Ryan gives “150 percent” to his job and that’s a reminder the Twins general manager must manage stress.  The long hours and mental demand of the job contributed to Ryan vacating his general manager position back in 2007 and accepting a lesser role with the organization.

St. Peter said he thinks Ryan is “doing fine” managing stress.  The organization has been aware of helping Ryan shape a favorable schedule, and today’s communications technology allows him to sometimes work from home.  St. Peter suggested too that Ryan has come to better realize there are certain matters he can control and others he can’t.

Twins Notes:

St.Peter said first baseman Justin Morneau hasn’t had concussion symptoms this season.  Morneau is hitting .238 for the season compared with a career MLB average of .279.  He has 10 home runs and 33 RBI in 2012 so far.

“I expect him to have a big second half (of the season),” St. Peter said.  “I think his timing is getting closer.  He’s missed a lot of baseball games over the course of the last two years.  Often for hitters in particular, timing is the last thing to come.  I think he’s in store for a big second half, and frankly we need that out of him.”

The Twins are working on “questions and issues” with MLB and the city of Minneapolis regarding the 2014 All-Star Game being held at Target Field.  “We remain very hopeful, but nothing definitive yet,” St. Peter said.  “We still believe there’s an opportunity perhaps to have an announcement during the 2012 season.”

St. Peter described the sold out Kenny Chesney and Tim McGraw concert on July 8 at Target Field as “the concert of the year in Minnesota.”  The event will be the first concert ever at the Twins ballpark and “we could have one or more shows in 2013,” St. Peter said.

The Twins also remain interested in having Target Field as the site for the NHL Winter Classic but no date is determined at this time.

Twins catcher Joe Mauer is hitting .475 in Interleague games this season.  He had three hits in four at bats in yesterday’s win over the Brewers but had to leave the game early with a bruised right quad.  His availability is day-to-day.

Twins infielder Jamey Carroll is batting .405 with eight RBI and 11 runs scored in his last 11 games.

The Twins have been home the last three years for Father’s Day weekends and encountered rain each time.

Comments Welcome

Return on Investment Twins Problem

Posted on June 1, 2012June 1, 2012 by David Shama

 

The Twins receive plenty of scrutiny for having close to 40 percent of the payroll invested in catcher Joe Mauer and first baseman Justin Morneau, limiting what the club can spend acquiring other players to field a better team.  But winning games has also been minimized by salaries spent on unproductive players.

While Mauer makes $23 million this season and Morneau earns $14 million, as of last week the Twins had a total of about $25 million invested in other players who were making minimal or no contributions to the club’s effort to escape last place in the Central Division.  Here’s a breakdown of the unproductive: Scott Baker, $6.5 million; Nick Blackburn, $4.75 million;  Francisco Liriano, $5.5 million; Jason Marquis, $3 million; Tsuyoshi Nishioka, $3 million; Lester Oliveros, $520,000 ; Rene Tosoni, $520,00; Danny Valencia, $520,000; and Joel Zumaya, $850,000.  (Compensation data referenced is from multiple online sources including Cotsbaseballcontracts.com).

Baker and Blackburn have been injured and not pitching for the Twins.  Liriano pitched six shutout innings on Wednesday but has been so ineffective this season he’s flirted with a 10.0 ERA.  Marquis was removed from the team roster last week.  Nishioka, after being a bust as a rookie last season with the Twins, didn’t make the big league club coming out of spring training and is assigned to Class AAA Rochester.

Oliveros, acquired from the Tigers last year, is pitching for Rochester while Valencia, who started the season with the Twins, is playing third base there.  Tosoni, an outfielder, was recently demoted from Rochester to Class AA New Britain.  Zumaya, trying to make a comeback as a hard throwing relief pitcher, injured his arm in spring training and isn’t playing baseball.

According to About.com (using figures from the Associated Press), the Twins rank No. 13 among 30 MLB teams for highest salaries with an average of $3,484,630.   While the Twins are last in the Central Division standings, the second place Indians have an average salary of $2,551,082 and rank No. 24.  The Orioles, who lead the American League’s East Division standings, average $2,786,345 in salaries, ranking No. 20.

The Twins have reduced their payroll from $112.7 million in 2011 to $94.1 million in 2012, according to About.com.

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