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Category: NCAA

Saturday Ceremony to Honor Remarkable U Baseball Coach

Posted on May 9, 2024May 9, 2024 by David Shama

 

For years friends and insiders have affectionately referred to John Anderson as “14.”  On Saturday his uniform number as the Golden Gophers baseball coach will be retired in a pregame ceremony at Siebert Field.

Prior to the 2 p.m. game against Michigan State there will be a special event commemorating his glorious place in University of Minnesota sports history.  Fans are encouraged to be in their seats by 1:15 p.m. to pay tribute to the longest tenured coach (any sport) in Gopher history. The first 500 fans (gates open 12:30 p.m.) in attendance will receive a John Anderson commemorative pennant in recognition of his final season coaching the Gophers.

A mural of Anderson will be unveiled on the left field wall at Siebert Field as part of the pregame ceremony. His mural will be the seventh added to the wall. He will join former Gophers Paul Giel (No. 34), Dick Siebert (No. 24), Dave Winfield (No. 31), Paul Molitor (No. 11), David Chelesnik (No. 26) and Herb “Ike” Isakson (No. 5) in having his number retired.

John Anderson

Anderson, who turns 69 next week, announced in December that the 2024 season would be his final.  This weekend’s Friday-Sunday series with the Spartans will be the last at home for Anderson who is in his 43rd season leading the Gophers.  In a remarkable feat of longevity, this is his 49th season overall at Minnesota counting time as a player, student assistant coach, graduate assistant, and assistant coach.

It’s believed Bethel coach and 1990 Gophers All-American second baseman Brian Raabe will succeed Anderson.  Raabe is in his 13th season at Bethel and is much admired on and off the field.  At 56, he won’t approach the longevity of Anderson but as a former Gopher and learned baseball man he has the “right stuff” to carry on the tradition of the oldest sport at the U.

Since taking over as Gophers’ head coach in 1981, Anderson has been named the Big Ten Coach of the Year eight times. The winningest coach in Big Ten baseball history, his teams have won 11 regular season conference titles and 10 postseason league tournaments.  Among his hall of fame inductions is membership in the American Baseball Coaches Association, an honor that came in 2008.

Anderson has coached 28 All-Americans, nine Big Ten Players of the Year, three Big Ten Pitchers of the Year and four Big Ten Freshman of the Year.  He has seen 115 of his players drafted by major league teams.

In 36 consecutive years MLB teams have drafted Anderson’s players. The streak is the longest in the Big Ten, ahead of Ohio State (12 years) and Michigan (10 years.)

To know Anderson even casually, though, is to recognize his career satisfaction extends deeply into how much he cares about the well-being of his players as individuals. He knows his role is that of a teacher devoted to guiding his players way beyond baseball, helping develop their academics, life skills and character with the intent they can thrive as adults in a competitive and changing world.

“It’s not just about wins and losses,” Anderson said in an interview last spring. “My philosophy has always been I am here to prepare people for the next 50 years of their lives.  Kids have to understand there’s a 50 percent less chance to play professional baseball today because the draft got reduced by 20 rounds.  You better be preparing people for life after baseball.”

Anderson told Sports Headliners then that 100 percent of his seniors would graduate with degrees from the U.  During his time as head coach, he’s had 335 Academic All-Big Ten selections.

The Gophers have had just three coaches since 1948, including Dick Siebert who won three national championships before retiring in 1978. Anderson, a Minnesota native, was a pitcher for the “Chief” in 1974-1975 before sustaining an injury and becoming a student coach. At 26, he succeeded George Thomas (1979-1981) as head coach. He had been an assistant coach to Thomas.

Anderson’s character and track record of success on and off the field drew suggestions over the years by boosters that the U administration make him the athletic director.  Instead, he has worked for nine athletic directors including interim hires.

There is no doubting his leadership and devotion to the U.  He could have left for better paying jobs, including ones with more resources for winning but he has been loyal to the end to his program, players and school.

Born in Hibbing and a graduate of Nashwauk-Keewatin High School, Anderson once told me this about his tenure at the U: “I don’t want to be here, just to be here.”

Gulp.

No one would ever think that about 14.

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Hall of Famers Lavish Praise on Wolves’ Anthony Edwards

Posted on May 5, 2024 by David Shama

 

Anthony Edwards, 22 years old and in his fourth NBA season, is leaving no doubt about achieving superstar status this spring.  His latest statement was scoring 43 points yesterday to lead the Timberwolves to a 1-0 advantage in their second-round NBA Western Conference playoff series with the Nuggets.

Edwards (22 years, 273 days) is the fifth youngest player in NBA history to record three or more 40-plus point playoff games, joining Amar’e Stoudemire, LeBron James, Kevin Durant (three games each) and Luka Dončić (five games).  The latter three players, all still active, are one day headed to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

“The Ant man is here to stay,” Hall of Famer Charles Barkley said on TNT’s postgame show. Dirk Nowitzki, enshrined in Springfield last year, was asked on the show about the Wolves’ shooting guard who is drawing early comparisons to legends Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant.

“I mean his poise at that age,” Nowitzki said.  “He’s an unbelievable athlete…(and) he’s got the skillset with him.   He’s the complete package.”

In Minnesota’s 106-99 win over the Nuggets in Denver, Edwards had seven rebounds, three assists, one turnover, two blocks and one steal.  A second half left-handed block of a shot attempt by Denver’s Michael Porter Jr. was a showstopper.

During the nationally televised game TNT analyst and Hall of Famer Reggie Miller raised the question of whether Edwards isn’t the best two-way player in the NBA now. “I am saying he is,” Miller said.

Yesterday morning, Trent Tucker talking on KFAN Radio, said Jordan, his former teammate and old friend, has taken notice of Edwards’ ascent to elite status.  Apparently, No. 23 likes what he sees in No. 5.

Edwards, who scored 25 points in the first half, made an impressive variety of shots during the game, converting 17 of 29 field goals.  “When I came in the league, the thing was that I couldn’t shoot,” he said at the postgame news conference.

Then Edwards explained how hard he worked on his shooting during past summers.  There were days that 2,000 practice shots were part of his effort.

Nuggets’ superstar Nikola Jokic is a near consensus candidate to win his third NBA MVP Award this year.  It’s not too soon to think Edwards could be front and center in that conversation starting next year and for many more.

“To be honest, of course he is a special player,” said Jokic who will one day be a slam dunk selection for Springfield. “I have a huge respect for him. He can do everything on the floor. You need to enjoy and respect your opponent and how good and how talented he is. …”

Worth Noting

Barkley talking on TNT about the second half taunting technical on Edwards called by Courtney Kirkland: “Hey, Mr. Official. Nobody came to see your ass play.  Stop giving taunting technicals in the game.  Nobody came to see you.  You give a kid a warning.  You don’t call a taunting technical in the playoffs. Don’t do that (for staring at another player).”

Owner Craig Leipold, GM Bill Guerin and others from the organization are meeting at an out-of-town site this week to make offseason plans for the Wild who missed the playoffs this spring for the first time since 2019.

Former Wild executive and WCHA commissioner Bill Robertson spoke via zoom the other day to Mike Max’s sports leadership class at the University of Northwestern-St. Paul.  Max, the WCCO TV sports director, is an adjunct instructor during spring semester at the school.

Robertson, now living in South Carolina, will speak May 13 in Bluffton about the business of sports to the Athletic Club of the Lowcountry.

Outfielder Matt Wallner, who started the season with the Twins and hit 080, is batting .214 with the Triple A Saints.  The 26-year-old Forest Lake native’s future may well be determined by reducing his strikeouts which have been a pro career challenge.  In 56 at bats with the Saints he has struck out 24 times.

No one should be surprised if 2023-2024 freshman guard Cam Christie, now in the transfer portal while mulling NBA interest, ends up at Michigan State where brother Max Christie, now with the Lakers, played.

Put this in the 2025 prediction bucket: incoming freshman point guard Isaac Asuma will be the Gophers’ starting point guard by mid-January.

Willie R. Braziel, who was the head boys’ basketball coach at Columbia Heights and been involved for years with Minnesota AAU basketball, is the new head coach at Simley.

Joe Alt, from Totino-Grace High School, was the only Minnesota native selected in the 2024 NFL Draft. Florida had 30 players, followed by Texas 24; Georgia 23; California, 18; Louisiana, 11; New Jersey, 11; Alabama, Maryland, North Carolina and Ohio, all with 10 each.

J.J. McCarthy and his Michigan teammates received four rings last month to commemorate their 2023-2024 success: Big Ten championship, Rose Bowl, College Football Playoff and National Championship.

Condolences to family and friends of former Gophers’ fullback Dick Borstad who passed away April 25.  He played in the mid-1950s and later was an assistant coach on the 1960 national championship team. The Detroit Lakes High School alum was the 1954 Mount Olivet Minnesota State Athlete of the Year.

With Borstad’s passing, assistant coach Dick Larson is the only living coach from the 1960 championship team.  A Gopher quarterback from 1955-1957, Larson turns 88 in August and remains a treasured link to great teams of the past.

Bob Parsons, founder of sports equipment company Parsons Xtreme Golf and a “golf nut,” has a book out about his life story including the entrepreneurial success that made him one of the wealthiest people in the world. The Vietnam veteran, best known as the founder of GoDaddy, will be at an event Friday open to the public at the Minneapolis Club to talk about his book FIRE IN THE HOLE! The Untold Story of My Traumatic Life and Explosive Success. Mpls Club welcomes Bob Parsons, Founder of PXG & GoDaddy. Tickets, Fri, May 10, 2024 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite

 

 

 

 

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Ex-Vikings GM: Team Got Best Rusher in NFL Draft

Posted on April 30, 2024April 30, 2024 by David Shama

 

Enjoy a Tuesday notes column.

Former Vikings GM Rick Spielman praised his former team’s aggressiveness in moving up the draft board and early players chosen.  Minnesota’s first three picks were quarterback J.J. McCarthy and outside linebacker Dallas Turner, both first rounders at No. 10 and 17, and cornerback Khyree Jackson, No. 108 in the fourth round.

The Vikings, of course, are hoping they found their franchise quarterback in McCarthy. Defensively, having lost edge rushing talents Danielle Hunter and D.J. Wonnum to free agency, and also needing help in the secondary, the Vikings may have filled significant needs for highly regarded defensive coordinator Brian Flores.

“…In Brian Flores’ defense you have to have pressure on the quarterback which can alleviate some of the pressure on the secondary—which they needed to address as well—which they did with the Oregon kid (Jackson),” Spielman said recently on CBS Sports HQ.  “So I think they did a great job, especially in the first round making sure that they got the quarterback.  They couldn’t come out of this draft without a quarterback, and they got a legit pass rusher who I thought was the best pass rusher coming out. That’s why I think it was an A (draft grade for Minnesota).”

Vikings coach Kevin O’Connell didn’t hold back in his praise of Turner either (he was the second edge rusher drafted after the Colts selected Laiatu Latu from UCLA). O’Connell described Turner, the 6-3, 247-pound former Alabama star, as a “great fit in Flo’s defense, incredibly versatile, huge traits and skill set to be a dominant player on the edge for us.”

On the plus side, too, from this draft is the club didn’t sacrifice it’s 2025 first round pick. Speculation was GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah might offer his two first round picks in 2024 and his 2025 first rounder to move up to No. 2 or 3 on the NFL Draft board, allowing Minnesota to choose North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye.

Here are four expectations about McCarthy:

Fans are giddy about the 21-year-old former Michigan national championship quarterback.  Interest will be intense, and his summer debut will create must-see viewing for the usually “ho-hum” preseason games.  There will be a clamoring for tickets to training camp to get the earliest of looks at McCarthy and demand to buy his jersey seems likely to be exceeded in sales only by that of the other J.J.— wide receiver Justin Jefferson.

McCarthy knows he landed in an ideal situation where he is surrounded by talented offensive teammates starting with Jefferson. Also important is learning from O’Connell, a QB whisperer, and his position coach Josh McCown who played 18 seasons of quarterback in the NFL.  Teammates and teachers probably will make McCarthy comfortable, and likely the envy of quarterbacks drafted before him who landed in less ideal environments.

Among the many parts of the learning curve that won’t come overnight is McCarthy becoming totally in synch with his receivers.  Successful NFL quarterbacks and receivers have a familiarity with one another that doesn’t happen right away.  It can take a year or more for everyone to completely know the nuances of each other.  How effectively and how fast McCarthy and the key receivers click, will be a key measurement in his development.

How much will McCarthy play during the regular season?  O’Connell has said his rookie quarterback won’t be rushed but there is a lot of time between now and next October or November.  An injury to presumed veteran starter Sam Darnold, or poor performance for too many weeks by Darnold, might send McCarthy off the bench and into the game.  Remember, the NFL is a win now league.

The Timberwolves, who closed out their first-round playoff series Sunday night with a 4-0 sweep of the favored Suns, might be undervalued by oddsmakers who have made the Celtics, Nuggets and Thunder bigger favorites than Minnesota to win the NBA championship.  The Wolves are going to be a “heavy lift” for any team as long as the defense remains among the best in the league (anchored by Rudy Gobert) and Anthony Edwards continues to be the premier clutch shooter in franchise history.

Marc Lore

Meanwhile, mediation regarding franchise ownership is expected this week.  It appears almost certain the contested sale of majority ownership between Glen Taylor and the Marc Lore-Alex Rodriguez two-some will later go to arbitration and eventually be resolved by  NBA leadership and league owners.  My guess is when the dust settles Taylor prevails—at least partially because of his successful track record with the franchise in meeting financial obligations.

Bustingbrackets.com ranks the Gophers’ Ben Johnson No. 17 in its listing this month of the 18 Big Ten men’s basketball coaches.  Michigan State’s Tom Izzo is No. 1 with USC’s Eric Musselman, son of former Minnesota coach Bill Musselman, ranked the fourth best coach.

Elevate the Arches is the new collective supporting St. Thomas athletics. Both Dinkytown Athletes (supports Gophers athletics) and Elevate the Arches are limited liability companies, not charitable organizations.

The football Tommies host their annual spring game Saturday starting at 12:04 p.m. in O’Shaughnessy Stadium.  Admission is free.  The Tommies, 7-1 in Pioneer League games last season, haven’t lost at home since 2016. They have an NCAA-leading home winning streak of 31 consecutive games.

The Twins have struggled all spring trying to develop a five-man rotation. Sonny Gray, who the Twins lost through free agency last offseason, would be the staff ace if he had been retained.  With the Cardinals, he is 3-1 and has a 1.16 ERA.

Lance Lynn, Gray’s teammate with the Cardinals and another former Twins starter, is 1-0 with a 2.64 ERA.  Other Twins alums and former starters off to impressive starts are the Blue Jays’ Jose Berrios, 4-1 with a 1.23 ERA, and the Pirates’ Martin Perez, 1-1 and a 2.86 ERA.

It was 30 years ago last Saturday that Twins’ starter Scott Erickson threw a no-hitter, walking four and striking out five in a 6-0 April 27, 1994, win over the Brewers. Francisco Liriano threw the last no-hitter for the club in 2011.

Each year the Twin Cities Dunkers stage a Dunkers Fund Dinner to raise money for the athletic programs at the 14 Minneapolis and St. Paul public high schools. The Fund has generated over $1 million in the last few years and this year’s members-only dinner is Thursday.

There is a silent auction to generate more funding and you don’t have to be a Dunker member to bid. Click on the attached https://bidpartner.net/dunkersfunddinner/silent-auction/ to preview auction items including a trip to watch the Gophers play UCLA in the Rose Bowl on October 12 and golf outings at Wayzata, North Oaks, Minikahda, Woodhill, Stone Ridge, Spring Hill, Bearpath, Burl Oaks, Somerset, Hazeltine and other courses.

Bloomington-based Vintage Sports Authentics’ spring auction includes memorabilia of former Twins Jim Kaat, Joe Mauer and Kirby Puckett with bidding open now.  www.VSAauctions.com

Chase Brixius, the linebacker from Benilde-St. Margaret’s who is ranked by 247Sports as the No. 17 state prospect for the class of 2025, is the grandson of Frank Brixius, the Academic-All-American tackle on the Gophers’ 1960 national championship team.  Among Chase’s college offers, per 247, are North Dakota State and Buffalo.

I worked for the Minnesota North Stars in the 1980s and never heard a bad word then or since about legendary radio voice Al Shaver who passed away last week at age 96.  Son Wally has been calling Gophers’ hockey on radio since 2001 and his son Jason Shaver is the broadcast voice of the Chicago Wolves (American Hockey League) for 13 seasons. Condolences to family and friends of Al, a gentleman and great announcer.

 

 

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