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Category: Media

Hopkins Coach Cosgriff to Make Decision

Posted on March 16, 2020March 16, 2020 by David Shama

 

Hopkins girls’ basketball coach Brian Cosgriff told Sports Headliners he doesn’t know if he will be coaching next season. He has been the Royals head coach for 21 seasons, with seven state titles, 19 Lake Conference championships and 14 section titles.

Daughter Brooke is a senior at Hopkins and has been a reserve on a Hopkins team that won 62 consecutive games. Her college destination is yet to be determined and that was on dad’s mind when he talked about his future Saturday.

“I want to be around to follow her collegiate career, and if coaching doesn’t allow me to do that, I am going to have to have a serious conversation with myself and some people.” Cosgriff said. “But I haven’t made up my mind right now (about next year).”

Coach Cos, as he is known to so many admirers, has experienced so much emotion in 2020 including induction into the Minnesota High School Basketball Hall of Fame. In the last 12 months he’s had a dream run seeing his team win the 2019 Class 4A championship while coaching his daughter and a roster of talented and unselfish young athletes. That roster for several years has included Paige Bueckers, the do-it-all National Player of the Year, and perhaps the greatest girls basketball player in state history.

The winning streak, the 2020 journey to another state tournament, the joy of playing and coaching all came to an abrupt halt last week after the Royals had won their state tournament semifinal game. Because of the coronavirus threat, the Minnesota State High School League cancelled what would have been the 4A title game Saturday between Hopkins and Farmington. This week’s boys’ tournament is also cancelled and spring sports teams as of now are allowed to practice but not play games.

Seeing competition end on the court or fields is frustrating for all concerned. For the Royals and Farmington to stop playing one game short of determining a state champion prompts a lot of emotional pain. Cosgriff said his players were “crying their eyes out” when he told them the bad news.

The coach wanted to offer something to say that would console them. He and the players are used to fixing problems like watching film after games and correcting mistakes. All he could say to his players was to savor the journey they had experienced, and find joy and satisfaction in knowing each other and all they had achieved.

As of Saturday, though, Cosgriff and the Royals yearned for one more game, and another state title. Could something be worked out? “I haven’t been told anything,” the coach said. “At this point it’s cancelled. I haven’t been told that both teams will be crowned state champions, (or) there is a makeup date, or anything like that.”

Brian Cosgriff

On Sunday Governor Tim Walz announced all schools in the state, starting Wednesday, will be closed for at least eight days. Shortly afterward the announcement came that Hopkins schools are closed as of today. Saturday Cosgriff was struggling with two realities—his team couldn’t play for a championship they had been working for since last April, yet Hopkins and other schools were open.

Cosgriff understands what a serious situation the state and nation face. He gets it that people can become very ill and inevitably there will be lawsuits involving the coronavirus. So he understands the risks but just seeks some final answers even including a banquet to celebrate what has been achieved (the school district, he said, is discouraging banquets for its teams).

Cosgriff said, “I just want some of these questions answered. What’s the alternative here? Is it just done? Is that what it is?”

Worth Noting

NFL.com is reporting this morning Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins has agreed to a two-year contract extension with the team. No further details reported yet. Cousins was in the last year of his deal and earlier media reports said negotiations were stalled.

A college sports commissioner said the NCAA is deciding whether seniors who play spring sports will be granted another season of eligibility in 2021. The NCAA, like so many organizations across the country, has placed springs sport on hold for now.

The annual Minnesota Football Clinic for March 26-28 has been cancelled and the sponsoring Minnesota Football Coaches Association also announced that its March 28 banquet is postponed. Refund options are available for both the clinic and banquet.

Northfield author Patrick Mader has written another book on accomplished athletes from the state. More Minnesota Gold is devoted to 51 Minnesota athletes who competed in the Olympics, Paralympics, and World Championships. The 392-page full-color book includes a name index and city listing. Among the many names profiled are speed skater Amy Peterson who won three Olympic gold medals, and 1980 Miracle on Ice hockey player John Harrington.

Former Minnesota governor Arne Carlson talking yesterday on WCCO Radio about 100-year-old Sid Hartman’s impact on the state: “He is Mr. Sports. That’s all there is to it.”

Comments Welcome

Will Lynx Reach Out to Maya Moore?

Posted on March 11, 2020March 11, 2020 by David Shama

 

Enjoy a Wednesday notes column with newsmakers Maya Moore, Gabe Kalscheur, Kirk Cousins, Sid Hartman and others.

It might just be that the Minnesota Lynx are formulating a compensation offer to entice Maya Moore back to the roster. Moore, known as the greatest winner in the history of women’s basketball, took a sabbatical last season to focus on criminal justice reform and expectations are she will miss the upcoming 2020 season, too. But a new agreement between the WNBA and the players association may have the Lynx front office thinking about a new contract offer to their missing superstar.

In January an eight-year Collective Bargaining Agreement was announced that raises pay 53 percent. Average WNBA salaries will reach six figures for the first time, with salaries for top players tripling and stars able to potentially earn more than $500,000.

In Moore’s first WNBA years of 2011 and 2012 she reportedly earned about $45,000 with the Lynx. Spotrac.com lists her most recent salary with Minnesota at $117,000. With the new CBA agreement players can earn a maximum salary of $215,000 but with other approved WNBA benefits the total can potentially exceed $500,000.

Moore turns 31 in June and while no one doubts her dedication to helping others, she may view the increased compensation as tempting and consider a return to the court with her playing days beginning to dwindle. Another factor perhaps influencing Moore’s thinking about a return to Minnesota is that a judge overturned the conviction Monday of a Missouri man whose case she has been championing.

Moore, who helped the Lynx win four WNBA titles, has been a major contributor to championship NCAA and Olympic teams. The Lynx begin the regular season May 15 at Chicago.

Gulp! This marketplace feasts on Vikings news and the next 12 months will have fans “gorging.” NFL free agency starts next week and the salary cap challenged Vikings will make additions and subtractions to their roster (including prominent names). The NFL Draft in April will be must-see TV viewing for the Purple faithful with most fans hoping the team’s No. 25 selection in the first round will be for a cornerback or offensive lineman. Also in the months ahead will be the drama surrounding GM Rick Spielman and coach Mike Zimmer, both operating on one-year contracts.

Quarterback Kirk Cousins’ contract ends after next season and media speculation this week has him potentially ending up with the 49ers in 2021. If so, might Teddy Bridgewater return to Purple land? Now with the Saints, Bridgewater becomes a free agent later this month and could sign a one-year deal with a new club.

University of Minnesota men’s basketball had a 16-game average of 10,232 announced attendance for home games this season. That is the lowest since the program had an average of 8,395 during the 1970-1971 season.

The Gophers, playing their seventh season under head coach Richard Pitino, had one sellout at Williams Arena, with an announced attendance of 14,625 against Iowa.

Fred Hoiberg

Nebraska coach Fred Hoiberg talking about the deep Big Ten with many quality teams and the conference tournament that starts tonight with the Minnesota-Northwestern game: “Be as good a tournament as there is.”

Minnesota defeated the Wildcats twice during the regular season, 77-68 in Minneapolis and 83-57 in Evanston.

Gophers sophomore guard Gabe Kalscheur, known for his three-point shooting, has expanded his offensive style late in the season by driving more to the basket, and has scored 40 points in his last two games. “Nobody works harder than Gabe,” said Pitino.

Sid Hartman’s 100th birthday is Sunday, March 15 and his longtime radio home, WCCO, will be celebrating with programming from 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. that day.

The Meet Mikko Koivu event scheduled for yesterday at Fan HQ’s Ridgedale Center store was postponed to a later date because of NHL policy regarding the Coronavirus. No date has been announced yet for an appearance by the Minnesota Wild veteran.

No. 2 nationally ranked Minnesota State and No. 12 Bemidji host WCHA playoff games starting Friday. Both Minnesota programs are 2020 Frozen Four contenders for the NCAA title. They host Michigan Tech and Bowling Green (Ohio) respectively this weekend.

Bowling Green is coached by Ty Eigner, brother of St. Thomas Academy boys’ hockey coach Trent Eigner. Before going to Bemidji the Falcons were scheduled yesterday to practice at the Academy and today at Braemar Arena.

There might not be a more frequent supporter of various Gopher sports than retired U athletic director Joel Maturi who attends as many events as possible.

Look for NCAA wrestling attendance records to be broken when the NCAA Championships are held at US Bank Stadium March 19-21.

Comments Welcome

Brian Dutcher Underpaid in San Diego

Posted on March 1, 2020March 1, 2020 by David Shama

 

If offered, Bloomington native Brian Dutcher almost certainly would have accepted the University of Minnesota men’s basketball coaching job in the past. Minnesota has hired three head coaches during the 21 years that Dutcher has been in San Diego, including 18 as an assistant for the San Diego State Aztecs and the last three as head coach for the west coast power.

If the Gophers’ job were to open this month, it’s unknown whether Dutcher will be interested despite earning a reportedly modest salary of $855,424. That amount is not even the most in the Mountain West Conference and about one-third of what Minnesota coach Richard Pitino is paid.  Pitino has a seven-year 47-79 Big Ten regular season record.

Dutcher, son of former Gopher Big Ten championship coach Jim Dutcher, has his Aztecs at 28-1 this winter. The Aztecs, ranked among the nation’s elite teams, were the only undefeated major college team in late February before losing their first game.

Other schools are certain to come calling on Brian Dutcher after the season, but even if Minnesota has an opening it could well be that Gopher athletic director Mark Coyle doesn’t make him a target. Dutcher is not only an outstanding coach and recruiter but a high character individual. He also has a minimal contract buyout of a reported $950,000. However, Dutcher turns 61 years old in October, and Coyle could favor a young hire like he did when abruptly firing head football coach Tracy Claeys and replacing him with 36-year-old P.J. Fleck in 2017.

The Aztecs are expected to soon offer Dutcher a considerable salary bump, although there are budgetary restraints on a school like San Diego State that doesn’t receive rich revenues from its football program, nor its conference. He and his family have learned to love San Diego after living there for more than two decades. Whether Dutcher wants to coach five or ten more years, he might well want to stay in San Diego, even though it will never be a job that can pay like the lucrative athletic departments in the Big Ten and elsewhere.

Of course it is speculation now where Dutcher will be two months ahead, and whether the U will even have an offer for him. But a Dutcher homecoming  to Minnesota and a program where his dad once coached, surrounded by his father and two sisters who live in the Twin Cities, would be a special story line. The one certainty now is the window is closing fast on the possibility of another Dutcher ever coaching the Gophers.

Worth Noting

This Florida visitor was recently impressed with the customer service at Hammond Stadium in Fort Myers where the Twins play their spring training games. Friendly and helpful workers abound from the security gates to the press box.

Twins first base coach Tommy Watkins, 39, is a lifer with the organization, having spent 22 seasons with Minnesota as a player, coach and minor league manager.

TV viewing choices Sunday afternoon include: Twins and Rays on Fox Sports North, or NFL Network coverage of defensive backs (presumably including the Gophers’ Antoine Winfield Jr.) from the NFL Scouting Combine. Draft expert Mel Kiper predicted last month the Vikings will use their first round selection at No. 25 to select Winfield.

Returning as Twins official scorers at Target Field for a sixth consecutive season will be Stew Thornley, Kyle Traynor and Gregg Wong.

The name of Babe Ruth hangs over baseball like no other legend. In 2019 his game-worn jersey from 1928-1930 sold for $5.64 million, breaking the previous record for sports memorabilia of his 1920 jersey that sold for $4.4 million in 2012, according to an email last month from sales@collectiblexchange.com.

The Star Tribune’s Sid Hartman, who turns 100 March 15, will become one of about 80,000 centenarians in the United States.

P.J. Fleck

Michigan State’s overreach this winter to hire Mel Tucker as its football coach could be leverage for more proven coaches like Minnesota’s P.J. Fleck when compensation discussions surface late next fall. Tucker, with one season of head coaching experience during which his record at Colorado was 5-7, will reportedly be paid $5.5 million and much more than predecessor Mark Dantonio, who ranks with the greatest coaches in MSU history. Fleck, who in three years has turned the Gophers into a nationally ranked program, makes $4.6 million.

The Gophers begin spring football practices this week with a session open to the public starting at 4:30 p.m. Friday, March 8 at the Athletes Village.

Wyoming head coach Craig Bohl, who built North Dakota State into a FCS power, will be a featured speaker at the Minnesota Football Clinic March 26-28. The annual clinic, known as among the best in the nation, is a partnership between the Minnesota Football Coaches Association and the Golden Gophers. The MFCA is offering coaches a registration discount through today (March 1) via the organization’s website.

The Hobey Baker Award, started here in 1981 with organizers Chuck Bard and John Justice from the old Decathlon Club in Bloomington, is celebrating its 40th year to honor America’s best college hockey player. Fan voting is available at hobeybaker.com/vote.

The Capital Club will hear from former Minnesota North Star and now Minnesota Wild executive Mike Modano this Tuesday at 317 Washington in St. Paul—the same building that houses the corporate offices of the local NHL franchise. More information about the club is available from Patrick Klinger, patrickklinger@klingercompany.com.

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