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Category: Lynx

Glen Taylor Filled Void in Starting the WNBA Lynx

Posted on June 13, 2023June 13, 2023 by David Shama

 

Sports Headliners interviewed Glen Taylor about various subjects including why he started the Minnesota Lynx, the Karl-Anthony Towns trade rumors and whether he incentivized president of basketball operations Tim Connelly to stay with the Minnesota Timberwolves.

The Lynx celebrated the franchise’s 25 seasons last weekend at two games in Minneapolis.  Taylor, who founded the expansion franchise in 1998, has seen the highs and lows including four WNBA championships.  Women’s basketball has increased in popularity in the new millennium and justified Taylor’s commitment to the league and his franchise.

“I did it (started the Lynx) because I just thought Minnesota was a leader in women’s issues, and certainly this was one area that I could control and wanted to get involved in.  To me it was natural that we do it,“ Taylor said recently.

The Mankato-based billionaire kept a commitment to the Lynx with his head, heart and pocketbook. There have been championship seasons when the franchise made money, but Taylor said there were “more years that we lost a million dollars.”

Taylor recognized the Lynx as a startup business and has been willing to accept the financial losses.  “I never really felt I wanted to get rid of it,” he said.

It’s been satisfying for Taylor and his wife Becky to not only have championship teams, but become acquainted with staff and players.  “Becky and I are pretty close to all the people so it becomes a friendship,” he said.

A longtime attendee at home games of both the Lynx and Wolves, Taylor sometimes talks like the fan he is.  He gets frustrated when his teams have defensive lapses and make turnovers.  “When they play good, you’re so proud and happy but when they play poorly you know that they could do better, and it’s disappointing.”

Since the Wolves season ended in April with a first-round loss to the Nuggets rumors have persisted Towns will be traded. A two-time All-NBA player, he could potentially be traded for future first and second round draft picks and bolster Minnesota’s minimal inventory for upcoming drafts.

“We’re not looking (to trade Towns),” Taylor said. “We’re not trying to do it.”

Taylor added this regarding receptivity to a Towns trade discussion: “If somebody came…and offered you something ridiculous, but that’s not part of our plan.”

The plan, the owner said, is “basically to stay with the same guys we have.”  That means keeping the “Twin Towers” of 7-foot forward-center Towns and 7-1 center Rudy Gobert, plus star shooting guard Anthony Edwards, defensive forward whiz Jaden McDaniels and veteran point guard Mike Conley.

Towns and Gobert already have deals paying them more than $30 million per season and in the near future Edwards, 21, and McDaniels, 22, will carry big price tags too. Taylor didn’t offer specifics on retaining that core of four but the subject has been addressed internally with the owner, Connelly and coach Chris Finch.

“I mean that’s one of the things we talked (about) with Tim and Chris when they were here.  We’ve gone over all of that, what are our options and how we might do it and stuff like that. So, I think we’re ready.”

Glen Taylor

Taylor told Sports Headliners last month Connelly had contacted him and made it clear he wasn’t leaving to head the basketball operations with the Wizards, the organization that gave him his start in the NBA.  A year ago the Wolves brought Connelly to Minneapolis with a lucrative contract and Taylor said no further incentive was provided for him to keep his commitment here.

When Connelly was making the front office player personnel decisions for the Nuggets from 2013 to 2022, he acquired foundational players Nikola Jovic and Jamal Murray who led the team to its first ever NBA championship last night.  The Wolves had competitive moments in their playoff series against the Nuggets who eliminated Minnesota in five games. The Wolves managed one win but lost three games by a combined 21 points. Taylor said the series performance by his team leaves him feeling “fairly good about” next season.

The Nuggets played a Heat team in the NBA Finals partially built by the genius of president Pat Riley, defeating Miami 4-1 in the best of seven series. His ability to judge talent is evidenced by seven players on the Heat roster who were undrafted by NBA teams.

Taylor refers to Riley as a “guru” in judging talent and understanding how to run a team. The two men have communicated in the past, but Taylor wouldn’t report what he learned from Riley who has been a leader of great teams with the Lakers, Knicks and Heat.

“I talked to him and he’s really interesting because he’s kind of the type of guy that’s willing to help you, even though I am…his competition,” Taylor said.

Taylor is transitioning from majority owner of the Wolves and Lynx to having a minority stake.  New owners Mar Lore and Alex Rodriguez are expected to address the playing home of the teams, Target Center.  The facility opened in 1990 and although it has since been renovated, the building will be a future issue.  NBA commissioner Adam Silver has made it clear expectations are high for facilities of all 30 league teams.

“I just think that as everybody would know, that sometime in the future we as the team, or the city, are going to have to face that issue,” Taylor said.

Taylor has national and international businesses in varied fields. His career and successes are being chronicled in a new video being produced internally for employee audiences.

Comments Welcome

Prep Authority Raves about U Hire

Posted on March 19, 2023March 19, 2023 by David Shama

 

University of Minnesota Director of Athletics Mark Coyle checked the right boxes with the hire of Dawn Plitzuweit as the Gophers new head women’s basketball coach.  Plitzuweit (pronounced PLITTS-zoo-white) is an experienced coach with a winning record who has recruiting relationships and cultural ties to this region.

Brian Cosgriff, the girls’ basketball coaching legend who won seven state titles at Hopkins and is now at Minnetonka, told Sports Headliners “it’s an incredible hire.”  Plitzuweit and Cosgriff have known each other for years and the new Gopher coach called her friend Saturday morning. “She is really a bright, forward-thinking lady,” Cosgriff said.

In regard to experience, she is in contrast to Lindsay Whalen who as a first-time coach couldn’t make the transition from great player to building a winning program at her alma mater during a five-year trial. Coyle took a chance on Whalen and most everybody else in the state would have done the same with the former Gopher and Lynx legend.

Plitzuweit has 28 years of coaching experience, with 16 as a head coach. She has been the head coach of winning teams at (most recently) West Virginia, South Dakota, Northern Kentucky and Grand Valley State.

As a head coach she has 15 winning seasons including nine 20-win seasons and two 30-win years. Plitzuweit’s teams have participated in the postseason 15 of 16 seasons and been in the last four NCAA Tournaments. Her career coaching record is 356-141 (.721) and she is 201-66 (.752) in league play.

Her resume includes the Big Ten where she was associate head coach at Michigan.  The Michigan Tech graduate and West Bend, Wisconsin native has recruited Minnesota over the years.”…I am…looking forward to reconnecting with local high school and club coaches. I can’t wait to get to work,” Plitzuweit said in a statement released by the Gophers.

Plitzuweit, 50, could be the right age to make Minnesota her last career stop and turn the Gophers into a special program. “I honestly think it’s her dream job,” said Cosgriff.

She reportedly earned $550,000 last season at West Virginia.  Whalen, who stepped down as Gopher coach in early March, was to be paid $574,761 starting next month. Most recently she earned $547,391. Specific compensation hasn’t been announced for Plitzuweit but she will receive a six-year contract pending approval by the Board of Regents.

Plitzuweit is the 13th head women’s basketball coach at Minnesota, all females.  The Gophers will hold a news conference Monday at 12:30 p.m. to introduce their coach. It will be carried live on the Big Ten Network and the Gophers’ YouTube channel.

Worth Noting

Minnesota lost the Big Ten Tournament hockey championship game last night to Michigan, 4-3 , playing in an electric atmosphere at 3M Arena at Mariucci.  The game sold out in less than 36 hours and was the team’s ninth home sellout of the season as fans clamored to see a game between the No. 1 nationally ranked Gophers and No. 4 Wolverines and featuring 26 NHL draft choices.

In a home two-game series against Michigan January 20-21, the Gophers had a total attendance of 20,755, the most fans for a weekend series in arena history.  Minnesota has been a draw on the road, too, mostly playing in front of sellout crowds.

Saturday morning StubHub, the Gophers’ secondary ticket partner, was listing tickets ranging from $135 each to $666. The public is starved for a Minnesota winner and this Gopher team has a chance to win the school’s first national championship since 2002.

The foundation is built on both defense and goal scoring. Defenseman Brock Faber and goalie Justen Close are names that surface quickly when talking about shutting down opponents, while the nationally publicized line of Logan Cooley, Matthew Knies and Jimmy Snuggerud is talked about as among the best in school history.  Cooley and Knies are among 10 finalists for the Hobey Baker Award, and one of them could win the honor of being named the nation’s best college hockey player, and the first Gopher to do that since Jordan Leopold in 2002.

Coach Bob Motzko has been true to program tradition in assembling a 26-man roster dominated by Minnesotans with 20 players from the state.  But he’s kept up with the times bringing key personnel from beyond the border.  Cooley is from Pittsburgh, Knies from Phoenix and Close from Saskatchewan.

If the Gophers qualify, Stillwater-based Creative Charters is offering a fan trip, April 6 to 9, to the Frozen Four in Tampa.  The trip is part of a creative list of 2023 travel experiences planned by Steve and Dorothy Erban including what they’re billing as “the trip of a lifetime” to North Carolina in September.

The football Gophers play in Chapel Hill Saturday, September 16 against North Carolina and Heisman Trophy quarterback candidate Drake Maye.  In addition to football entertainment, the goal of the September 13-17 trip is to “provide a true North Carolina experience.”

Travelers will visit the Charlotte Speedway and get an inside look at NASCAR racing. Not only that, but some Minnesotans will be able to ride in a high-speed Ford Mustang performance car driven by a professional driver. There will also be a visit to learn about the famous North Carolina furniture industry, opportunity to play golf and tour the historic North Carolina and Duke campuses.

Matt Weimann (left). Photo courtesy of University of St. Thomas.

Among the many prospects working out in front of professional scouts at Minnesota Pro Day last week were decorated players like Gophers All-Americans Mo Ibrahim and John Michael Schmitz.  But there were also many players much more uncertain about their professional football futures including former St. Thomas center Matt Weimann.

The former Hill-Murray player told Sports Headliners his hope is to be signed as a free agent and gain an NFL tryout but he “would love to play anywhere.”  In his mind the USFL or Canadian Football League could be options.

Weimann, about 6-3 and 300 plus-pounds, was All-Pioneer League last season.  He has lost some weight and was pleased with his 28-inch vertical jump at the U Pro Day.  He said his strength is as a run blocker and he is training to play guard and center at the next level, knowing versatility in skills is valuable.

Weimann raves about the coaching he received at St. Thomas including from head coach Glenn Caruso who he refers to as “phenomenal.”  He said Caruso treats his players like family and that his leadership is unlike any he’s seen in coaching.

An All-District player in high school, Weimann didn’t receive attention from the Gophers. “The U didn’t recruit me at all.  I tried to reach out.  Definitely would have been interested in walking on, or at least looking and seeing what the program was about.  But I never got any responses from any sort of recruiting from the U of M.”

Schmitz, one of college football’s premier centers last season, is expected to be drafted in the early rounds.  Ibrahim, cornerback Terell Smith, safety Jordan Howden and quarterback Tanner Morgan are candidates for later rounds.

Cathy Gorlin & Marshall Tanick with Mark Wilf (center). Photo courtesy of Marshall Tanick.

Vikings co-owner Mark Wilf paid tribute to the late Bud Grant and spoke on other subjects Friday as the guest speaker at the Minnesota Breakfast gathering in Naples, Florida.  Wilf also referenced a survey of NFL players that ranked the Vikings No. 1 among 32 teams in off the field satisfaction with the organization. He said the team will seek offensive linemen in the NFL Draft and through free agency to provide better pass protection and promised an improved defense in 2023.

Wilf also told breakfast attendees ownership rarely gets involved with decision making for the NFL Draft, except for concerns about player character. He added that “60 to 70” draft prospects are disqualified each year by the Vikings because of character issues.

Archives quote from Bud Grant about dancing: “Not only am I not good, I’ve never danced in my life.  I always was very shy (as a youth) and I never learned to dance.  I was too self-conscious and I was taller than most of the girls so I never learned how to dance—much to the chagrin of my wife.”

A former NFL executive talking anonymously about departed Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen: “…I think Adam Thielen will find a good opportunity, perhaps with the Jets if Aaron Rodgers ends up there. Because they have a tight relationship.”

Comments Welcome

Maya Moore: Hero On & Off The Court

Posted on February 7, 2023 by David Shama

 

I met Maya Moore during her rookie year of 2011 with the Minnesota Lynx.  Moore’s demeanor impressed me like few other athletes before or since.  She had a warmth, a calm and friendly presence about her, but no one could have predicted that by 2023—now during Black History month—she would be remembered as both a sports and cultural hero for the ages.

Moore was a three-time college player of the year at Connecticut and won two national titles with the Huskies.  Recognized as one of the 25 greatest WNBA players ever, Moore was gifted with many basketball skills including the ability to make teammates better.  She was an indispensable contributor in the playoffs to four WNBA Lynx championships.

Maya Moore

Yes, the basketball resume is awesome but she is also extraordinary because of her high character and the exemplary life she lives as a social justice advocate. Publicly, that commitment first surfaced with the Lynx in 2016 while leading teammates in calls for change.  This was long before other prominent athletes were speaking up.

That willingness to see wrong and speak out about it was followed by her stunning decision to take a sabbatical from basketball after the 2018 season to focus on criminal justice reform.  Before Moore had reached 30 years old, and at the peak of her on-court skills, she began a journey that helped free the wrongly convicted and incarcerated Jonathan Irons.

Irons, like Moore, is a Jefferson City, Missouri native, and along way the two fell in love and are now married. Moore, who hasn’t played a WNBA game since the summer of 2018, officially announced her basketball retirement last month on Martin Luther King Jr. Day as a guest of the Good Morning America program.

Glen Taylor has owned the Lynx since the franchise’s inception in 1999.   He knows that at age 33 Moore could still be leading his team.  Several years ago, before Moore left for her sabbatical, Taylor and Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve had hoped to build the team around the 6-foot, multi-positional superstar. Moore’s departure caught the Lynx, who haven’t won a WNBA title since 2017, off guard.  “Certainly it did impact our ability to compete,” Taylor told Sports Headliners.

Yet Taylor and Reeve understand Moore’s values and decisions.  .”…It’s to be admired that she had the fortitude to take that course of action,” Taylor said.

WNBA players have long been paid minimal salaries as franchises work to develop revenues locally and nationally.  Moore reportedly earned $45,000 in each of her first two pro seasons with the Lynx.  At the time of her sabbatical, Spotrac.com listed her salary at $117,000.

After Moore stepped away from the Lynx, did Taylor and Reeve try to incentivize a return with more money?  “We chose not to do that because we didn’t think money was the issue,” Taylor said.  “When I talked to her, we talked about family, we talked about religion, we talked about many things, but we never talked about money.”

Moore made a big impression on Taylor way back in 2011 when the Lynx players were invited to his home in Mankato.  After enjoying a meal organized by Taylor’s wife Becky, players went downstairs to play billiards and other games.

Not Moore, though.

Glen Taylor

“Here’s Maya standing right next to Becky doing the dishes,” Taylor recalled.  “She didn’t see herself as something special that way. She just saw herself as that was what she would have done in her house.  So therefore, she did it here.”

The Mankato billionaire has owned the NBA Timberwolves for almost 30 years.  He’s known a lot of male and female players who have impressed him but Moore is in a special group.

“I think she was one of my favorites,” Taylor said.  “Not only for basketball skills but just being the person that she was.  The leadership she provided our team, and her own personal goals that she set for herself.  I admired that and therefore (it) probably pushed her toward the top of people that I respect.”

Maybe in the not too distant future Moore will step on to the Target Center Court one more time and have her No. 23 jersey number retired.  “I see that happening,” Taylor said.

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