Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room

Category: NCAA

Jim Harbaugh ‘Cloud’ Again Hangs over Vikings

Posted on April 25, 2024April 25, 2024 by David Shama

 

Two years ago the Vikings flirted with hiring Jim Harbaugh as their new head coach to succeed Mike Zimmer.  The Michigan head coach, and former Super Bowl coach of the 49ers, didn’t strike a deal with the Vikings but his desire to return to the NFL was realized this winter when he took over the Chargers.

Harbaugh, a tough guy leader who teaches and demands physical football, has been a winner wherever he’s been in charge.  From San Diego to Stanford, from the 49ers to Michigan, his teams have been winners—with a highlight being the Wolverines’ college playoff national championship in January.

There’s no doubt at this keyboard Harbaugh would have turned the Vikings into an NFL power.  While that window is closed, the 60-year-old task master could impact Minnesota’s future if he is interested in giving up the Chargers’ No. 5 first round pick in tonight’s NFL Draft.

Kevin O’Connell image courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

Doing so might allow the Vikings to select a Harbaugh favorite—J.J. McCarthy, his gifted championship quarterback at Michigan.  Enabling the Vikings to draft high enough to obtain McCarthy would place the 21-year-old quarterback in a special environment, surrounded by gifted offensive players like tackles Brian O’Neil and Christian Darrisaw, receivers Justin Jefferson, Jordan Addison and T.J. Hockenson, and running back Aaron Jones, and coached by QB savant Kevin O’Connell.

There is near consensus that four quarterbacks, including McCarthy, will go early in the first round.  The Bears at No. 1 appear a lock to draft Caleb Williams, the Commanders and Patriots at No. 2 and 3, will likely take quarterbacks, too.  But none of those teams has anywhere near the quality resources and support system in place for a rookie quarterback like the Vikings do.

Harbaugh knows about the Vikings’ environment and naturally would like to see his protege prosper in the NFL.  But he didn’t get to be a legendary coach by just playing nice guy or concerned mentor.  The NFL is cold business and it will take, first and foremost, a trade package that helps the Chargers to get them to move off the No. 5 spot in the first round.

What is that package?  Well, giving up Minnesota’s No. 11 spot and No. 23 position in the first round of this year’s draft is common sense and a start.  But Harbaugh will demand more, looking for quality opportunities to rebuild the Chargers per his plan that includes aggressive, physical and talented players on both sides of the ball.  What he doesn’t need is a proven young quarterback, having inherited Justin Herbert, 26, who has played four pro seasons with the Chargers and should be approaching his peak years, especially with Harbaugh grooming him.

Harbaugh might say yes to an offer that includes the two 2024 first rounders, a fourth-round pick, plus wide receiver Jordan Addison.  The Chargers need help at receiver and Addison had a superb first season with Minnesota.  An alternate package could be the two 2024 first round picks and the Purple’s No. 1 pick in 2025.

Moving down to No. 11 could give Harbaugh the opportunity to draft Georgia’s Brock Bowers, recognized by many as the top tight end available.  Harbaugh has highly valued tight ends everywhere he has used his run-dominant, pass smart system.  At No. 23 he is likely to find a behemoth offensive lineman with the scowl and talent Harbaugh covets.

Among the first five selections of the draft there’s considerable media speculation the Commanders will choose Jayden Daniels from LSU.  At No. 3 the Patriots might be interested in teasing the market to see how much draft capital they could luck into (think multiple number ones in the years ahead).  But they also need a quarterback and Drake Maye from North Carolina or McCarthy are likely their candidates.

At No. 4 in the first round the Cardinals, with veteran QB Kyler Murray, may be delusional if they don’t snap up Ohio State wide receiver Marvin Harrison who appears to be a generational talent.

The Vikings conceivably could swing a trade with the Patriots, but the asking price may be exorbitant.  And how can the Cardinals make a trade that costs them the coveted receiver they need?  Maybe the Giants, positioned at No. 6, could offer the world and move up by convincing the Cardinals they can be positioned after the first five teams have drafted to take one of the two other wide receiver gems, Malik Nabers from LSU or Rome Odunze from Washington.

While the Cardinals need help at multiple positions, probably making it more unlikely they will trade their top pick is that they also have the No. 27 spot in the first round and third choice in the second round.

It seems likely, though, that if the Vikings want badly to get an elite quarterback in this draft (and there is no reason to believe after Kirk Cousins’ departure they don’t), then they have a better chance to trade with Harbaugh than anyone else who holds a high perch in the first round.

When the Vikings interviewed Harbaugh two years ago the potential was there for him to impact the franchise for a long time.  And now with the Chargers, his imprint on the Vikings could have significance too if the Vikings draft McCarthy or Maye, who they may like even better.

What if the Vikings find Harbaugh isn’t answering his phone, and nobody else presents the opportunity to move up into the first four spots in the first round?  The Vikings could still go quarterback, with either Oregon’s Bo Nix or Washington’s Michael Penix Jr. likely to be available.

Both are experienced college quarterbacks with attributes, and if not for this being a deep QB draft, might have been likely top 10 choices.  Nix appears to be a savvy talent who could fit effectively in O’Connell’s offense while Penix’s skill at throwing the deep ball is probably the best among the six quarterbacks mentioned so much in this draft.

At No. 23 the Vikings could address another position of need, cornerback.  Cooper DeJean, the Iowa native who was denied a touchdown punt return against the Gophers because of an invalid fair catch, will likely be available.  He is athletic, tough, smart and uber competitive.  And the ex-Hawkeye is no longer the “enemy.”

Comments Welcome

Randy Shaver’s Prep Football Bond Likely to Continue

Posted on April 9, 2024 by David Shama

 

Ron Stolski was on the verge of tears Friday night when talking about Randy Shaver’s Prep Sports Extra.  Stolski, executive director of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association, was speaking at the organization’s annual clinic in St. Louis Park and referencing 40 years of the KARE11 Friday night show that is imbedded in the state’s football culture.

“Thank you for four decades of the discipline, the dedication and commitment and effort to make our Friday nights special,” Stolski told Shaver and the audience of state high school football coaches.

Randy Shaver

Prep Sports Extra followed the 10 a.m. news in the fall and for a long time was the most viewed program in its time slot in the metro area.  When the lights went out at prep football games in the state, players, coaches and fans could relive and forever remember many of the evening’s most enduring moments.  “You and Prep Sports Extra have always been our fifth quarter,” Stolski told Shaver before presenting him with an award.

Stolski, the retired Brainerd High School football coach and one of the state’s winningest coaches ever, talked about the fraternity among coaches and others involved with high school football.  He saluted Shaver for his legacy and what his show has meant to prep football in the state, telling his friend that he will forever be “in the huddle of the keepers of the game.”

Shaver came to WTCN (now KARE11) at 24 years old in January of 1983.  A former high school football player in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, he worked his way up from sports reporter and weekend sports anchor to sports director, and since 2012 has been co-anchor on the evening news at the station. He announced this winter that he will be retiring from the station after his 6 p.m. June 28 newscast and ending 43 years total in the TV industry.

The departure includes an end to the Prep Sports Extra which last year celebrated its 40th anniversary.  Shaver opened up to the clinic audience Friday evening and said ending the iconic show that he started, produced and anchored was a decision he “had to make for the sake of the show.”

Then he added: “This last year, our resources, as in every walk of life right now, got cut back. And I have to be honest, I only know one speed for the show. I only know one way of doing it.

“So to ask me to find other ways to fill the show or do the show (won’t work).  I did it last year because I wanted to get it to 40 but I also realized that it’s time for either someone else to do it and do it differently…I don’t know.  But for me to try…and to piece it all together just didn’t work.

“That and the fact that it was time for me to walk away from the news side of what I am doing in my life right now. So, I really do appreciate this (the honor at MFCA).”

Shaver’s passion for high school football is off the charts and has been for decades. No high school sports show in this market has endured like Prep Sports Extra.  “You know it’s just been a labor of love,” Shaver told Sports Headliners.  “I never made a dime more for doing it—for  all the extra time I put in to make it as great as it could be.

“I just loved Friday night. …I loved more being there until 3 in the morning logging all the video that we would shoot.  That to me was the most enjoyable part. To be able to log all that video and to watch all of it.  Stuff that we didn’t use on the air.  I’ll miss that part.”

But the football community likely hasn’t seen the last of Shaver.  He told the clinic audience he’s working “behind the scenes” to stay connected to them and prep football.  Perhaps a podcast is next.

“I don’t want this connection to end because it’s so special for me.  So just know you might hear something in July that I am popping up someplace and hopefully that’s just the beginning of something I can continue. “

Shaver has been approached about coaching football. “I don’t think that’s in the cards,” he said.  “I think it’s going to be something more media related.  I am working on trying to figure out what that looks like and feels like, and hopefully by July I’ll have it all figured out.”

During Shaver’s adult life he has twice been a cancer survivor.  In 2003, he started the Randy Shaver Cancer Research and Community Fund.  That charity has benefited from the MFCA’s Tackle Cancer initiative.

About half the state’s high schools, most of the MIAC and Northern Sun member schools, and the Gophers and Vikings have raised money via Tackle Cancer.  After 12 years almost $3.5 million has been raised. “It’s been amazing,” Shaver said.

Stolski credits another prep coaching icon, Dave Nelson, with extraordinary efforts in making Tackle Cancer so successful.  “My nickname for Dave Nelson is ‘Bulldog’,” Stolski told the clinic audience.  “You get Dave Nelson on a project, on a challenge, on an issue, and I’ll tell you he’ll get it done.”

About a year ago the two men gave a presentation on Tackle Cancer at a national football coaching gathering. Attendees were impressed, with some saying they couldn’t duplicate the initiative back home.  Stolski said Nelson and Minnesota’s prep coaches made it happen and that there is a difference between “can’t and won’t.”

Dave Nelson (left) with Shaver

Nelson told the audience 92 percent of Tackle Cancer fundraising goes for research and patient assistance. “Cancer touches us all and as Randy (has) said doing nothing is not an option,” said Nelson who was a longtime metro area high school football coach and is now an assistant coach at Holy Family.

A symbolic check in the amount of $566,626 was presented to Shaver on Friday night, the latest contribution from the Tackle Cancer initiative.

Nelson implored coaches who aren’t involved to form a committee and get started.  Both he and Shaver emphasized Tackle Cancer isn’t just a Minneapolis-St. Paul initiative.  “It’s never been a metro thing,” Shaver said. “Cancer doesn’t know what that is and it doesn’t care.”

1 comment

J.J. McCarthy Might Give Vikes Second Best QB in Draft

Posted on April 7, 2024April 7, 2024 by David Shama

 

Daniel House studies more film of prospective NFL quarterbacks than any media person I know.  He analyzes game films of college quarterbacks not just from 2023 but dating back in some cases to before the pandemic.

And guess what?  In this 2024 quarterback rich NFL Draft he agrees USC’s Caleb Williams has the most upside, but his No. 2 may surprise you.  Williams, Jayden Daniels and Drake Maye often receive more praise as prospects, but based on what House refers to as “projection” he thinks J.J. McCarthy is No. 2.

“Soley based on the fact that his ceiling is the highest of these quarterbacks. …He really wasn’t able to showcase everything that he could do because of Michigan’s style of play and how they completely dominated teams up front,” said House who offers his football insights on Mnvikingscorner.com and Gophersguru.com.

“When he was asked to do things within the system, to showcase his strengths, he executed those things. And when he gets in an NFL system that builds around what he does best—you put him in a good situation—I think he’s really going to forge and take off based on his talent.

“I don’t think people give him enough credit for his athleticism.  This guy is very, very athletic.  He’s slippery.  He can extend plays but he’s not one of those guys that is going to hold onto the ball too long and back himself into some poor decisions.”

McCarthy has been linked to the Vikings since last fall, with the notion GM Kwesi-Adofo Mensah and head coach Kevin O’Connell were focusing on the former five-star recruit who helped Michigan to the 2023 national championship.  Back then and for a while this winter speculation was McCarthy could be available in the middle of the first round or later.

That seems to have changed, with talk now McCarthy might be selected among the first six picks in the April 25-27 NFL Draft. Four quarterbacks going in the first five or six selections? It’s possible and that scenario would mean the Vikings trading up to be positioned for McCarthy or another high QB prospect.

Trade capital could mean the Vikings offering their No. 11 and No. 23 first round picks, and more, to be in a prime draft spot.  McCarthy could be the target because of his skills and how those physical and mental attributes fit the Viking offense that favors play-action and passes over the middle of the field.

Daniel House

“I think he fits Kevin O’Connell’s offense the best (compared to Daniels and Maye) and he’s got the highest ceiling overall when he gets into an offense that fits his strengths—the play fake, the ability to suck defenders up, doesn’t get frustrated when things aren’t available.  He’s a great improv, off-schedule quarterback when he needs to be,” House said about the 21-year-old who is the youngest among the four quarterbacks ballyhooed in the draft.

“The thing I notice is how he loves to give receivers hand signals, and then just redirects them and knows where to put the ball to give them a chance or draw a flag. Flashes the ability to move defenders with his eyes, and pump fakes, and really shines throwing over the middle of the field which I think is something Kevin O’Connell really is looking for in his next quarterback. …”

If the Vikings stay at No. 11 in the first round, McCarthy is unlikely to be available, but Bo Nix from Oregon and Michael Penix Jr. of Washington could be. In a league where successful quarterbacks have been found not only in the first round but even as free agents, the Vikings might find their man at No. 11 or later.

House refers to Nix as “a great athlete,” praises him for his throwing accuracy and pump fake that fools defenders, and for having a high football IQ.  He said Nix’s pro success will depend on the system he plays in. “If he ends up with someone like Kevin O’Connell, I think he could do quite well.”

House praises Penix’s improvement during his college career and likes the quarterback’s ability to find openings in the secondary. “He’s more of a gunslinging type of quarterback where he’ll drive it into the tight window because he’s got such a strong arm and the ball really jumps out of his hands differently.”

House said Penix can make all the throws, his processing is better than he is given credit for and he thinks “someone is going to really fall in love with him as their quarterback.”

Of course, every prospect has elements like processing that evaluators are uncertain about.  For a detailed look at the top quarterbacks in this month’s draft google their name and the NFL.com/prospects.

Worth Noting

Good guy Dalton Risner, the Vikings left guard who signed a one-year deal with the club last year but now is a free agent, switched agents recently in what seems to be a slow-moving contract process.  Could Blake Brandel, who the Vikings re-signed last month, change from a utility backup role to a starter at left guard?

A controversial call in the closing seconds of Friday night’s Women’s Final Four cost UConn an opportunity to tie or win their semifinal game against Iowa but afterward former Hopkins superstar Paige Bueckers said one play doesn’t determine the outcome and she could have played better. Her former high school coach, Brian Cosgriff, texted this last night:

”No excuses. Even after one of the toughest losses ever. It’s what makes Paige special off the court, too!”

Quote on X last week from Robbinsdale Cooper LB Emmanuel Karmo —the top-rated class of 2025 state of Minnesota prep football prospect by 247Sports —after visiting Ohio State: “Had a great time in Columbus yesterday (April 1). Love the facility and the people and can’t wait to get back down on campus.”

A timely program on NIL’s impact on college sports featuring Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle will be the topic for the Capital Club’s April 24 breakfast at Mendakota Country Club.  More information about the club is available from Patrick Klinger, patrick@agilemarketingco.com

With the Timberwolves facing salary cap challenges in the next offseason, forward-center Karl-Anthony Towns could be traded.  If so, his absence may create a bigger role for center Luka Garza who recently saw his two-way contract converted into a standard NBA contract. Now in his third NBA season, Garza scored a season-high 16 points last week against the Raptors in just under 10 minutes.  A skilled offensive player, Garza averaged 36.7 points in three G League games this season with the Iowa Wolves.

Anthony Edwards has at least one steal in 17 consecutive road games and can continue the streak in Los Angeles tonight against the Lakers.  The club record is 24 set by Terrell Brandon in 2000.

That was Nebraska head basketball coach Fred Hoiberg, presumably in town for recruiting last week, seen at the Original Pancake House in Eden Prairie.

Jim Carter

7 Vines Vineyard and Winery in Dellwood will be the site on Monday, June 10 for a tribute by friends and former teammates of the late Jim Carter who passed away in California last November.  The celebration of life for the former Gopher football captain (1969) is being organized by former teammate Jim Brunzell.

The Wild, looking at missing the playoffs for the first time since 2019, seem likely to use minimal time in deciding whether to bring back 39-year-old goalie Marc-Andre Fleury.

The Twin Cities chapter of the Professional Hockey Writers Association is nominating Wild center Marco Rossi for the Bill Masterton Memorial Trophy presented annually to the player best exemplifying perseverance, sportsmanship and dedication to hockey.

1 comment

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 19
  • 20
  • 21
  • 22
  • 23
  • 24
  • 25
  • …
  • 155
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Tommies Locker Room   Iron Horse   Meyer Law   KLN Family Brands   Culvers

Recent Posts

  • Why It Could be Wait Until 2026 for Vikings J.J. McCarthy
  • Fingers Crossed Golden Gophers Can Retain Drake Lindsey
  • Undrafted Brosmer Wins Confidence of Coach, Teammates
  • J.J. McCarthy and Teammates Pull Off a Stunner in Motown
  • Revenue Increase Projected for Gopher Men’s Basketball
  • Scattergun Column Talking Mimosas, Vikes, Gophers & More
  • Harbaugh or KOC? Who Would Have Been Better for Vikings?
  • Eagles & QB Jalen Hurts Fly in Costly Vikings Home Loss
  • 2025 Hoops Game Failed but Gophers-Tommies Still Teases
  • Impatience with McCarthy by Fans, Media Wrong Approach

Newsmakers

  • KEVIN O’CONNELL
  • BYRON BUXTON
  • P.J. FLECK
  • KIRILL KAPRIZOV
  • ANTHONY EDWARDS
  • CHERYL REEVE
  • NIKO MEDVED

Archives

Read More…

  • STADIUMS
  • MEDIA
  • NCAA
  • RECRUITING
  • SPORTS DRAFTS

Get in Touch

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme