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Category: NCAA

Looks Like a Star to be Born with Golden Gophers Basketball

Posted on September 27, 2024September 27, 2024 by David Shama

 

Enjoy a Friday notes column on various sports that even includes quotes from former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty.

The Golden Gophers men’s basketball team started official practices this week and insiders are confident the program has a special player in freshman point guard Isaac Asuma from Cherry, Minnesota.

If coach Ben Johnson didn’t have veteran guards, it’s likely Asuma would be in the starting lineup beginning with the first game on November 6 against Oral Roberts at Williams Arena.  A four-star recruit by both Rivals.com and 247Sports, he was considered a top 100 player in the national high school class of 2024.

At 6-3 and about 200 pounds, Asuma has a Big Ten ready body with length and strength.  He is also an unselfish playmaker with all-around physical and basketball skills that have caught the attention of observers since he arrived on the Minnesota campus earlier this year.

Isaac Asuma photo courtesy of University of Minnesota

Asuma’s willingness to learn, along with his friendly and outgoing personality, is the stuff of leadership.  He has a poise and charisma often not seen in teenagers just out of high school.

Put it all together and it’s apparent why the attractive Asuma is referenced as a “stud.”

The team’s established star is senior Dawson Garcia who averaged 17.6 points per game.  He is the leading Big Ten Conference scorer returning from last season. The 6-11 forward from Prior Lake High School was second team All-Big Ten last winter.

A scenario Johnson, his staff and Gophers fans want to see is for Asuma to stick around for a couple of years at Minnesota and play with Cretin-Derham Hall senior Tommy Ahneman.  The 6-foot-10 center’s improvement has attracted the attention of major college programs including Notre Dame where he is scheduled to visit this coming weekend.  Last season’s North Dakota Gatorade Player of the Year is a big target for the Gophers.

Asuma and Garcia are two of seven native Minnesotans on the Gopher roster.  Women’s basketball coach Dawn Plitzuweit has 12 natives of the state.

The death last month of former Gopher assistant basketball coach Jimmy Williams reminded Minnesota sports fan Bob Klas of a Williams one liner when he was Minnesota’s interim head coach in 1986. Williams quipped: “I’m one of just two people who coaches in an arena that’s named after him.” (The other facility being the Dean E. Smith Center at North Carolina).

Eric Curry, the well-known Minneapolis area college basketball referee, plans to work 65-70 games this coming season with assignments in the Atlantic 10, Big 12, Missouri Valley and West Coast Conferences.

In the last 12 months news has surfaced about replacing Target Center and also costly renovations to improve Xcel Energy Center.  The Timberwolves, if they emerge from an ownership dispute being led by Marc Lore and Alex Rodriquez, apparently have interest in building a new facility in the Farmers Market area in downtown Minneapolis.

Public financing for a new Wolves arena will be difficult to secure including from a Minneapolis city council that seems most interested in grassroots and common folk agendas.  “…If Minneapolis doesn’t want it, I would predict there could be more than one or more other cities that would like to bid for it, or try to get involved with the new Timberwolves stadium,” former Minnesota governor Tim Pawlenty told Sports Headliners. “So they’re going to have competition, I would think, if they are interested.”

Pawlenty was supportive of Minnesota’s professional sports facilities concerns as governor.  He is a sports fan and values the quality of life component sports contributes to the lives of Minnesotans.

Asked about the idea of building a new multipurpose arena in Bloomington near the Mall of America for both the Wild and Wolves, Pawlenty defended the importance of Xcel and Target Center to their cities.

“With the exception of the Xcel Center, there’s not a lot of positive things happening in downtown St. Paul.  In fact, a lot of negative things happening.  If the Wild were to leave and not exist, I think that would present an existential threat to further threat(en) downtown St. Paul.

“So I gotta believe the St. Paul city and St. Paul legislative representatives would fight very hard to keep the Xcel Center or its future version in St. Paul.  And I think the same would be true for Minneapolis.”

If the amazing Lynx make the WNBA Finals, they will have an October 18 Target Center conflict with the Timberwolves preseason game scheduled with the Nuggets that evening.  The Wolves game would shift to October 17, per a local insider.

The Vikings annual game in Green Bay often prompts memories of former Pioneer Press sportswriter Don Riley who for decades wrote a pot-stirring column called “The Eye Opener.” Riley, who died in 2015 at age 92, loved to provoke the Packers and their fans.

“I never mention them as Green Bay. I just said the capital B Bushers,” Riley told Sports Headliners in 2011.  He was then long retired after leaving the newspaper in 1987, with a “fan club” that included Packers fans in western Wisconsin who he insulted at banquets by suggesting they be searched for stolen silverware before leaving the facility.

Riley chose the term “Bushers” because it was “derogatory” without picking on one individual.  However, he did take an occasional shot at someone including legendary coach Vince Lombardi whose wife wanted him fired from the St. Paul newspaper.  “Vince told her to lay off because he’s selling tickets for us,” Riley said.

Riley built much of his controversial column’s success on bashing the Packers and Green Bay.  He wrote that Green Bay had the “world’s largest toilet paper factories” and once boasted that if the Vikings didn’t beat the Pack he would push a peanut with his nose from Appleton to Green Bay.  The Vikings lost, Riley never pushed the peanut, and the Green Bay newspaper accused him of having no guts.

No Minnesota sports figure is under more fire than Twins manager Rocco Baldelli who has had a front row look at his team’s depressing late season collapse.  From critical emails to chants at Target Field calling for his ouster, he is a likely scapegoat for a team that in August looked like a safe bet to make the playoffs and now is a long shot.

The opinion here is it’s 65-35 Baldelli returns for the 2025 season.  His staff? Perhaps 80 percent probability there will be changes.

The Lindenwood football program went Division I in 2022, one year after St. Thomas did so. Lindenwood, located in St. Charles, Missouri, defeated the Tommies 64-0 at home on September 21.  The Lions come to Minneapolis to play the Gophers on September 18,  2027.

Comments Welcome

Koi Perich Adds Intrigue to Minnesota-Iowa Rivalry Game

Posted on September 18, 2024September 18, 2024 by David Shama

 

The unexpected comes to mind this week as Minnesota and Iowa prepare for their 118th  football game.  Why? Because both teams and their fans had no idea last year’s game in Iowa City would end with such drama.

With less than two minutes remaining in the game, Iowa’s Cooper DeJean fielded a punt and ran 54 yards for an apparent touchdown to give his No. 24 ranked team a 16-12 lead.  However, the go-ahead score was negated after officials determined that before fielding the football, DeJean signaled an illegal fair catch.

Emotions always run high in rivalry games but the replay ruling that wiped the touchdown off the scoreboard took things to a higher level. Iowa fans reportedly threw bottles, cans, and food onto the field.  The Minnesota bench was targeted with debris, forcing the players to move out of their sideline area.

The Golden Gophers hung on to their 12-10 lead, winning for the first time in Iowa City since 2000 and taking home the famous rivalry trophy, Floyd of Rosedale. Minnesota’s other four wins this century all came in Minneapolis where Saturday’s game will be played.

The 2023 game was a bitter defeat for the Hawkeyes, including for DeJean who now is in the NFL playing for the Eagles.  DeJean is only 21 years old, but he will be remembered as a legendary player for Iowa.  He has a charming backstory with origins in Odebolt, Iowa, a small town with less than 1,000 people.

As a high school player, the scholarship offers were modest coming from the likes of North and South Dakota schools.  But like a movie character DeJean had a passion for the home-state Hawkeyes and, boy, did he make their fans happy soon after he accepted an Iowa scholarship.  It was the only Power Five offer he received.

A superb cornerback and punt returner, he played three seasons at Iowa and the results were the kind of stuff that gets your uniform number retired and name on a short list of program legends.  In 2022 he set a school single season record by returning three pass interceptions for touchdowns. He was a unanimous cornerback All-American last season on a who’s who of All-American teams. He was also named Big Ten Defensive Back of the Year and Return Specialist of the Year after dazzling on punt returns including a 70-yard TD against Michigan State—and the score that wasn’t against the Gophers.

On Saturday, the Gophers will introduce Iowa to—just maybe—their own version of Cooper DeJean.  Minnesota’s nominee, of course, is prized freshman recruit Koi Perich, a substitute safety for now but already the team’s punt returner.

Perich has that small town background, too, coming from Esko, Minnesota, with a population of about 2,000.  Unlike DeJean coming out of high school, the college football world coveted Perich including mighty Ohio State who he turned down at the last minute.

After signing with the Gophers in December, Perich showed what he could do in a high school all-star game in San Antonio. Playing in the All-American Bowl against some of the better prep talent in the country last January, Perich was named MVP.  He had an interception, broke up two passes, made a tackle for a loss, and blocked and recovered a punt.

As a high school senior last fall Perich played defense, offense and special teams while leading Esko to a 10-1 record.  He accounted for 27 touchdowns, including five on defense, along with three scores on punt returns and one on a kickoff return.

Koi Perich photo courtesy of University of Minnesota

In Perich’s brief career with the Gophers, he’s played special teams and also spot minutes as a defensive back and has an interception.  But it’s been as punt returner that he has mostly caused a stir.  Replacing regular returner Quentin Redding who is injured and out for the year, Perich already has a 28-yard return. He has returned three punts for an average of 16.67 yards (in 2023 DeJean averaged 11.5 for the season).               .

The moxie and athleticism are so evident when Perich is on the field that his presence makes observers watch in anticipation of what he will do.  He has inspired confidence in Minnesota head coach P.J. Fleck who is quick to point out that Perich, unlike some freshmen who enrolled in January, has only been in the program since June.

Perich has had some catching up to do with all there is to learn in college football, but Fleck said the freshman can handle the process by the “shovels.”  Talented, intelligent and confident, Perich has inspired trust in Fleck—something a freshman doesn’t easily earn.

“He’s a heck of a football player,” said Fleck who talks about the 6-foot-1, 200-pound Perich as a player who prompts anticipation that something good is going to happen when he is on the field.

Perhaps like a punt return or interception to beat the hated Hawkeyes on Saturday, or next year, or the year after?

Minnesota, with a 2-1 record, is about a 2.5-point underdog to Iowa, also 2-1.  For the Gophers to win they likely will need sophomore running back Darius Taylor’s big play ability.

Taylor, who is one of Minnesota’s top Name, Image and Likeness earners, missed the North Carolina opener because of a hamstring issue.  The Gophers probably win that game, a 19-17 loss, if Taylor had played.

Taylor, who averaged 133.2 yards rushing in 2023 (third best in program history), had a hamstring injury that caused him to miss seven games last season.  Darrell Thompson, the record setting former Gopher running back and now color analyst on the Gopher Radio Network, acknowledged how hamstring injuries can be re-occurring.

Thompson said hamstring prevention and maintenance are challenging because “you gotta really take care of it and rehab it and never forget about it.”  He added: “…It’s a big delicate muscle, especially when you’re a running back, receiver, defensive back, where you gotta…(track) the problem like all the time.”

Thompson told Sports Headliners fingers are crossed regarding Taylor.  “Absolutely.  We need him.  He’s a very integral part of the offense.  He’s the straw that stirs the drink, so we need him to be in one piece.”

Thompson believes Taylor’s production can go to a new level this fall for a couple of reasons. His workload will be shared with other backs, mostly Oklahoma transfer Marcus Major.  Odds are that a “pitch count” can reduce his vulnerability to injury.

Another positive is it looks like Taylor will be targeted more as a pass receiver. In two games he already has nine receptions after a total of 11 in six games last year.

Fleck, of course, knows what he’s got in Taylor who had a 80-yard touchdown run last Saturday in Minnesota’s win over Nevada.  “I think he’s one of the best players on this football team, and maybe in the country. …He’s really important to our team, not only on the field, but off the field. The type of person he is, the leader he is. How he’s developing as a man.

“There’s so many things that I love about Darius, but yeah, we missed him (against North Carolina). I mean you can’t sit there and say you don’t miss your best players when they’re not in there. …”

Thompson, BTW, was expected on Monday to start his annual routine of eating bacon each day leading up to the Iowa game.  His plan is to “eat as much bacon as possible” during the week, although he confessed there are limits. There was a year when he had nine pieces in one day and he didn’t feel so “great” after gobbling all that down.  The news, he said, didn’t go over well with his cardiologist.

Comments Welcome

J.J. McCarthy Might Have Made Vikings QB History

Posted on September 4, 2024September 4, 2024 by David Shama

 

In the 63-year history of the Vikings, no rookie quarterback has started every regular season game.  That might have changed if 2024 first-round draft choice J.J. McCarthy wasn’t sitting out his first NFL season after right knee meniscus surgery in mid-August.

Journeyman Sam Darnold will start at quarterback on Sunday when the Vikings open their regular season against the Giants on the road.  But going back to before training camp opened in late July, McCarthy’s potential teased at being the day one starter.

A former NFL executive with two clubs, who asked that his name not be published, said this to Sports Headliners in May: “I expect him to be the starter, maybe not week one, but I would say certainly by October. I think he’ll have taken over for Darnold, and I think he could beat him out in training camp. That they (the coaches) may just say hey, we’re going to go with the more talented guy here.”

In training camp, the 21-year-old McCarthy impressed head coach Kevin O’Connell and others inside the organization.  In McCarthy’s only preseason game, he was 11 of 17 for 188 yards and threw two touchdown passes.

Kevin O’Connell image courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

Shortly after McCarthy’s surgery O’Connell offered this highly favorable opinion of Minnesota’s No. 10 first-round selection (the highest drafted QB in franchise history): “As our fans either have already come to find out or will in the future, this guy is so motivated and so dialed in. As excited as I was to draft him, he’s confirmed everything that I hope to see not only early on through training camp, but through his performance last Saturday (August 10 preseason opening game). Our fan base and everyone should just be excited about the fact that we’ve got our young franchise quarterback, I believe, in the building.”

No one will ever know if McCarthy might have progressed so favorably after August 10 that O’Connell would have decided to make him the September 8 starter.  What is certain is that the former quarterback for the 2023 national champion Michigan Wolverines is proclaimed the future starter and would have been given a lot of scrutiny between August 11 and September 8.

In the best of scenarios, McCarthy would have surpassed the stories of other Viking rookie quarterbacks including Teddy Bridgewater who started 12 games in 2014, his first season with Minnesota.  Joe Kapp, who had played in Canada, started 11 games as a rookie in 1967.

Fran Tarkenton as a rookie didn’t start his first game but took over after it began and led the expansion 1961 Vikings to a stunning 37-13 win over the Bears in Minnesota’s NFL debut.  The former Georgia third round draft choice went on to start 10 games as a rookie and is enshrined in the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Worth Noting

The Giants will be about a 1.5 underdog in the game with a roster that includes former Golden Gopher John Michael Schmitz Jr. as the starting center.  Ex-Gophers and expected second teamers are inside linebacker Carter Coughlin and rookie safety Tyler Nubin.

The Gophers opening game loss to North Carolina last Thursday night at home was significant and follows a trend of so-so results against major competition.  In recent years the program has been unable to match the success of the often-praised 2019 season when Minnesota was 11-2 overall, 7-2 in Big Ten games and finished No. 10 nationally in the final A.P. poll.

Minnesota’s 19-17 loss to North Carolina now gives the program a 21-18 record against Power 5 teams dating back to 2020.  The Gophers are 14-13 in Big Ten games over that period.

The two point loss to the Tar Heels was clearly a missed opportunity for a win.  North Carolina entered the game without an established quarterback and lost its starter in the second half.  The Gophers had the better quarterback in newcomer Max Brosmer but frequently misfired on offense, defense and special teams.

Disappointments included offensive calling and absence of passing success.  The offseason buzz was the Gophers would have an improved passing game but while Brosmer looked okay no receivers emerged to complement 2023 second team All-Big Ten wide receiver Daniel Jackson.

Minnesota’s passing game hasn’t drawn raves since 2019 when wide receivers Tyler Johnson, Rashod Bateman and QB Tanner Morgan dazzled, and offensive coordinator Kirk Ciarrocca, now in his second season at Rutgers, was directing the show.

While the Gophers have an 11 a.m. start Saturday at home against FCS Rhode Island, St. Thomas hosts Northern Iowa looking for its first ever win against an FCS scholarship program.  Rhode Island, 1-0, defeated Holy Cross 20-17 last Saturday. The Division I Tommies lost 34-13 at home last Saturday to Division II Sioux Falls, while Northern Iowa defeated Valparaíso 35-7.

The Twins, who are 5.5 games behind the Guardians in the race to win the AL Central Division title, need September to be their best month of the season.   The second place Twins, 75-63, were 14-14 in August, the only month this season the club wasn’t over .500. Minnesota’s best record came in May, 16-12.

Third baseman Jose Miranda is second in batting average on the team at .299 (Carlos Correa, .308), after hitting .268 and .211 his first two seasons in the majors.  A key reason for success is hitting off-speed pitches with a consistency few other MLB batters can match this season.

High-A Cedar Rapids outfielder Walker Jenkins, 19, hit .310 with a .909 OPS in August and is the Twins Minor League Player of the Month for August.

Travis Adams, 24, who appeared in five games for Double-A Wichita with a 0.70 ERA in 25.2 innings, is the Twins Minor League Pitcher of the Month.

Congratulations to the Waconia Lakers who won their first ever Class C Minnesota State Amateur Baseball championship Monday, defeating Jordan 5-2 at the Mini Met in Jordan.  It was a rewarding outcome for Waconia, a team that finished second to Isanti in the 2011 Class C tournament.  Town ball teams are comprised of players from various ages, ranging from teens to adults who are decades older.

The No. 18 ranked Gophers volleyball team, coming off its upset of No. 1 Texas in Milwaukee on Monday, has an opportunity to further its national reputation on Friday with a match against No. 23 Baylor in Waco, Texas.  Minnesota is 1-1 in two nonconference matches, Baylor 3-0.

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