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Category: Media

Glen Taylor: No Interest Now in Selling Wolves, Lynx

Posted on March 28, 2024March 28, 2024 by David Shama

 

Glen Taylor told Sports Headliners this morning his Timberwolves and Lynx franchises are no longer for sale.  The closing deadline for the final payment to gain controlling interest of the franchises by Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez was March 27.  “…That was yesterday and they didn’t get it done,” Taylor said.

Taylor also said the March 27 deadline was an extension of a previous date in late February for the Lore and Rodriguez group to pay the final amount of $600 million in the $1.5 billion deal.  Taylor said there was no request to extend the March 27 deadline as part of a payment schedule that began with an agreement in 2021.

Taylor said Lore and Rodriguez own about 36 percent of the franchises.  Will they continue as limited partners.  “That’s my assumption,” Taylor said.  “They certainly can and my assumption is they would want to.”

Asked about whether he is disappointed about the sale falling through, the 82-year-old Taylor answered: “No, I am not disappointed.  I think that I’ve run the club in the past and I will in the future.  We worked really hard to put this team (the Timberwolves) together and I am more apt to want to just continue it out for a longer period of time.”

Taylor, who has enjoyed owning both franchises for more than 25 years, frequently receives inquiries about selling his teams.  He said he won’t be entertaining offers or seeking them in the foreseeable future.

The going price for NBA franchises is considerably more than the $1.5 billion that sparked an agreement in 2021.  The Timberwolves, who might command $3 billion now, are 50-22 and having one of the best years in franchise history.  Taylor is enthusiastic about the season and hoping for a deep playoff run.

It was reported earlier in the month that Lore and Rodriguez were positioned to make their final payment with the help of a private equity company.  Did Taylor hear what happened with the investor?  “No, I wasn’t involved in any of that.”

Asked if he expected any pushback or litigation regarding the failed transaction, Taylor said: “Just as a businessman I am always aware that’s always a possibility.  I think that would be a legal matter.”

Taylor said he is open to communications with Lore and Rodriguez.  “I certainly would talk to them if they want to talk.  They are owners.  They’re partners.  Why wouldn’t I talk to them?”

Worth Noting

In reply to a Discovery request from Sports Headliners, the University of Minnesota said by electronic reply there is no preference at this time on whether to renovate Williams Arena or replace it.  The U is in the early process of deciding what action to take with the facility that will be 100 years old in 2028.

Presumably renovation will be less expensive than a new arena. The Athletic Department already owes millions of dollars for loans on existing facilities including The Athletes Village and Huntington Bank Stadium. Renovating Williams Arena as the home for the men’s and women’s basketball teams could well be more attractive to the U than a new building.  Keeping the old facility will also be popular with many ticket buyers who are nostalgic about the place affectionately referred to as “The Barn.”

Regardless of the decision, the prediction here is for a home with less than the current capacity of Williams Arena, 14,625.  The last two seasons the men’s program has been averaging fewer than 10,000 fans per game.  Fewer seats mean fewer tickets to sell and if there is demand to see the Gophers that puts pressure on buyers to purchase seats early including full season commitments.

Kali Engeman, a middle block from Excelsior, is transferring from Georgia Tech to play for the Gophers where she will have two seasons of eligibility.  She is the granddaughter of Steve Lundeen, starting center on the last Gophers Big Ten championship team in 1967. “I’m, as you can imagine, over the moon happy,” Lundeen texted about Kali who will graduate a year early from Tech in May with her engineering degree.

This is a milestone time for broadcast icon Dave Lee, the former WCCO Radio morning drive time host who for years has been the play-by-play TV voice on Minnesota state tournament high school basketball games.  It was 50 years ago that he broadcast his first play-by-play boys and girls games for KRAD Radio in East Grand Forks, Minnesota.

The Minnesota Football Coaches Association and its leadership continue to impress with their lineup of activities, programs and speakers for the MFCA Clinic April 4-6 at the DoubleTree Park Place in St. Louis Park and on the U campus. Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell has been added to the lineup of powerhouse speakers that includes the Gophers’ P.J. Fleck and assistants, Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz and former Gophers defensive coordinator and now Wyoming head coach Jay Sawvel.

Four longtime sports executives with Minnesota ties have launched a company called Ignitor Partners that will provide marketing, communication, public relations, legal and sponsorship expertise to brands, sports properties, organizations and municipalities in Minnesota and other places.  President Patrick Klinger said via email the company takes its name from his friend Paul Molitor who during his Hall of Fame baseball career was known as the Ignitor.  Klinger’s three colleagues in the new endeavor are Scott E. Erickson, Bob Hagan and Bill Robertson.

Isaac Morton, the Texas A&M freshman pitcher from Spring Lake Park High School, is 1-0 with the Aggies.  Morton, who was selected in the 19th round of the 2023 MLB Draft by the Brewers, has pitched 11.1 innings with a 2.38 ERA.

Comments Welcome

Nanne Steps Away from Mic But Comeback Possible

Posted on March 10, 2024 by David Shama

 

In the “never say never” category put this down: Lou Nanne, 82, might not have worked his last State High School Boys Hockey Tournament on local TV.

Multitudes assume Nanne retired last night after 60 years of providing entertaining tournament commentary as viewers watched Edina win the Class 2A championship against Chanhassen.  Except in 10 years or so, a great grandchild, or two or three, could be playing in the tournament and that could mean a comeback to the microphone.

“If they make it, I’ll come back and make a guest appearance,” Nanne told Sports Headliners.

And Dave Stead believes the man known as the Godfather of Minnesota hockey would be greeted with open arms.  “That would be great, and I think that he’d be welcomed to make that comeback,” said Stead who was the Minnesota State High School League’s executive director for 32 years.

Now retired, Stead plans to suggest the MSHL invite Nanne back to next year’s tournament and those that follow.  Encouraging the former Golden Gopher, Olympian and North Star to be in the press box and visible at the tournament is a winning idea. His name is synonymous with hockey including on the high school level where he has been an advocate for the ages.

“Minnesota hockey is fantastic and with Lou involved it just elevated it to a different level,” said Stead.  “When you heard the voice, you knew exactly what was happening at the hockey tournament.”

When family members played in the tournament for Edina High School, they created special memories during Nanne’s 60 years behind a microphone.  Son Marty scored the winning goal in the title game and years later his sons, Louie and Tyler, won championships.  “Those are the favorites (tourney memories),” Nanne said.

Nanne (right) with well-wisher Bill McReavy.

Nanne is a senior managing director for RBC, working with companies and labor unions.  He isn’t retiring from his position with the diversified financial services company, nor is he giving up his weekly guest appearances on KFAN Radio with drive time host Dan Barreiro, and he will continue into next season doing TV color work on a select number of Wild games.

Nanne won a battle with prostate cancer over 40 years ago. He goes to the gym multiple times per week, eats “what I want,” and is pleased with his health. “I got a great report from the Mayo (Clinic) last year.  Every year I go. Been going every year since ’87.”

So why retire from the state tournament gig? “I just think it’s time to move on.  Sixty is a nice round number.”

Asked several days ago what he anticipated his thoughts would be as he left the Xcel Energy Center last night, Nanne said: “Well, I feel sad that it’s over, but I am also happy that it’s over.  I think it’s the right time to do it.  I am going to treasure the moments that I had and think about all the good memories I had but know that it’s time to move on.”

Nanne was emotional last night as the crowd and even players paid tribute to his remarkable career including 60 years of analyzing tournament games.  It was a retirement scene that Hollywood might have scripted.

Yes, change happens to everyone, even Nanne who for nearly 25 years was the face of the North Stars franchise as a player, coach, GM and president.  Ironically, the man who grew up in Canada and lived most of his adult life in Minnesota never did like ice and cold.  He has become a Florida resident while spending many days in Minnesota and Wisconsin where the family has a lake home.

Lou Nanne doesn’t make many changes but when the time is right, he pulls the trigger, even taking up residence in sunny Florida.

Worth Noting

It could be one of two veteran right handers, either Seth Lugo or Michael Wacha, who will be the Royals’ opening day pitcher March 28 in Kansas City.  If so, left-handed hitting first baseman Alex Kirilloff is likely in the Twins’ lineup, with probably newly acquired switch hitting free agent Carlos Santana filling the DH spot.

Other probable Twins starters are left fielder Matt Wallner, center fielder Byron Buxton, right fielder Max Kepler, third baseman Royce Lewis, shortstop Carlos Correa, second baseman Eduardo Julien, catcher Ryan Jeffers and pitcher Pablo Lopez.

Do-Hyoung Park wrote a few days ago on MLB.com that Julien, who grew up speaking French in Quebec and went off to college at Auburn not knowing English, has become a popular player with teammates in his second season with the Twins.

If North St. Paul’s Louie Varland makes the Twins roster, he would be the third native Minnesotan on the 2024 roster along with Wallner and pitcher Caleb Thielbar.  He could also be the St. Paul Saints opening day starting pitcher.

Renovations to Xcel Energy Center remain a priority for the Wild with word that St. Paul mayor Melvin Carter is supportive.

The International Hockey Federation World Junior Hockey Championship will stage games in December of 2025 and January of 2026 at 3M Arena at Mariucci and Xcel Energy Center.  The event has been wildly popular on Canadian TV for years, annually drawing millions of viewers.

While the University of Minnesota basketball team has no certain NBA prospects, guard Cam Christie, a candidate for Freshman of the Year in the Big Ten, could inquire this spring if pro teams project him as draft worthy.   The smooth shooting guard, who is remindful of U All-American and former first round draft pick Lou Hudson, has the potential to improve his draft status next season.

Among regulars in the crowd at Williams Arena for Gophers games is former MLB umpire Tim Tschida, the St. Paul native.

The March issue of Sports Illustrated, writing about fragile coaching security in the NFL, points out there is not one offensive coordinator in the league who was with the same team in 2021.

Legendary Iowa coach Kirk Ferentz and former Gophers defensive coordinator Jay Sawvel, now head coach at Wyoming, will speak at next month’s Minnesota Football Coaches Association Clinic.  Speakers also include Gophers’ head coach P.J. Fleck and his assistants.  The April 4-6 clinic is held at the DoubleTree in St. Louis Park and on the U campus.

Comments Welcome

Coach Ben Johnson’s Job Security Looks Like a Lock

Posted on March 3, 2024March 3, 2024 by David Shama

 

If there was any doubt about Ben Johnson returning as the University of Minnesota head men’s basketball coach, it was erased yesterday with the team’s ninth Big Ten win of the season.  The Gophers overcame a 23-point first half deficit to defeat Penn State, 75-70, at Williams Arena.

The victory left Minnesota with a 9-9 league record with two games remaining in the regular season.  The Gophers are tied with Michigan State for fifth place in the Big Ten standings, and have an opportunity to finish 11-9 if they defeat Indiana at home Wednesday night and win at Northwestern next Saturday.  The overall record is 18-11, with a 20-win season possible for the first time since 2019.

Pretty upbeat status for a team that was a popular pick before the season to finish last in the Big Ten.  That outlook last fall only added to the gloom from at the bottom conference finishes the prior two years (6-33 record).  Those were discouraging starts to Johnson’s head coaching career and caused loud grumbling about him heading into the season five months ago.

Johnson could currently be bought out of his contract for $6,519,340.  Other media have reported a lower figure but the above is the correct number.   A disastrous season this winter presumably would have caused athletic director Mark Coyle to think hard about staying with the Minneapolis native, former Gopher guard and the Big Ten’s youngest head coach at 43.

Many years of mediocre and sometimes bad basketball at the U has lowered expectations inside the school and decreased pressure from fans, many of whom have become disinterested in the program.  Even a month of March that includes a 9-11 final regular season record, with perhaps no wins in the Big Ten Tournament and a postseason invite to the NIT will almost assuredly be enough to continue Coyle’s confidence in Johnson.

The elephant in the room for the Gophers is men’s basketball once was a huge money maker for the financially self-supporting athletic department.  Ticket sales for years have generally been in free-fall and revenues aren’t close to their potential.  A Big Ten contending team in this market could command among the higher ticket prices in college hoops and those revenues would shoulder a big load in a department where the only programs making money are football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey.

Ben Johnson

Johnson and his staff improved the roster during the last off-season.  All the key players are potentially back for next year except senior forward Parker Fox.  Potentially is the operative word in the wild world of college basketball where players change schools on a dime.  And sometimes for a bigger dime because of Name, Image and Likeness money.

Contrary to some voices, Johnson has NIL money to work with, so the cupboard isn’t bare.  Resources don’t match the blue blood programs but there has been success by the Dinkytown Athletes collective, and the potential is significant if the Gophers can take over the town like they did in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

Johnson and his staff have coaching chops and can motivate players.  Their Xs and Os can be interesting, and it’s been impressive to see how often Minnesota comes out of a timeout with a savvy play to score a bucket.  The coach’s judgment on personnel has usually worked although it’s still annoying to recall how in November the ball was put in freshman guard Cam Christie’s inexperienced hands to make the winning play in a 70-68 home court key nonconference loss to Missouri.

And Fox, who had 11 points, six rebounds and four blocks on Senior Day against Penn State, probably should have received more playing time this season.  His inside scoring, rebounding, shot blocking, unselfishness and energy merited more.  Yesterday he not only started a game for the first time this season but played a rare 28 minutes and was on the floor at the end when Minnesota finished its gutsy comeback.

Johnson, a high character guy, made a classy move in the closing seconds by taking Fox out to receive recognition from the fans.  Those same patrons want their hometown coach to be deserving of their applause in the future, and he will if he can add talent in future off-seasons like he did in the last one.

Worth Noting

The Gophers trailed by 12 points at halftime against Penn State. “The first 20 minutes was just flat, for whatever reason,” Johnson said at his news conference where he added the second half strategy was to tighten up on defense and “chip away” at the deficit.

If the Gophers can win their yet to be determined opening game in the Big Ten Tournament at Target Center next week, the town could get amped.  In game two the Gophers would feel the adrenaline and maybe make a tournament run. Minnesota’s talent is similar or better than most of the Big Ten except Purdue and Illinois.

John Anderson

An overflow crowd of more than 300 heard from Paul Molitor, Glen Perkins and John Anderson at the recent Minnesota Breakfast Club gathering in Naples, Florida, per an email from event attendee Marshall Tanick.  Molitor, the former Twin and Hall of Famer, is excited about the potential of 2023 first round draft choice and outfielder Walker Jenkins. Perkins, who played for Anderson with the Gophers before joining the Twins, lamented the pitch counts in MLB that limit innings by quality starters and strain bullpens.

Perkins praised Anderson as a “molder of men,” according to Tanick. He noted the coach’s emphasis on academics and graduating players.  Anderson is in his final season as Gopher coach after taking over in 1982.  The program has struggled of late but the Big Ten’s all-time winningest baseball coach told the gathering he sees improvement in 2024 with a “deeper and more talented pitching staff.”

Former Twins TV broadcasting icon Dick Bremer turned 68 last Friday.

Lou Nanne, the 82-year-old Mr. Minnesota Hockey icon who retires this month after 60 years of TV commentary at the boys’ state hockey tournament, speaks to the Twin Cities Dunkers at Interlachen Country Club Wednesday morning—the same day the Timberwolves Chris Finch, among candidates for NBA Coach of the Year, talks to the Capital Club at Mendakota Country Club.

Prep football coaching legend Ron Stolski emailed a note that registration for the annual MFCA Football Clinic April 4-6 in St. Louis Park is on a “record pace.”

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