Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick

Category: NCAA

Mystery Solved on Gophers’ Play Caller?

Posted on August 27, 2023August 27, 2023 by David Shama

 

With esteemed offensive coordinator Kirk Ciarrocca gone to Rutgers since last January, who calls the plays Thursday night when Minnesota opens its season at home against Nebraska?

After Ciarrocca couldn’t refuse an offer for more money, and opportunity to be closer to family back East, Fleck named Greg Harbaugh Jr. and Matt Simon co-coordinators.  Simon held that title last season with Ciarrocca but it was Kirk in charge on game days.

For unknown reasons Fleck has kept his play caller for Nebraska and presumably the entire season secret.  The prediction here, and acknowledged by a trusted source, is Harbaugh makes the play calls this season.

Why?  Because more than anything, Harbaugh coaches the quarterbacks.  With that vital relationship, it will seem odd if Harbaugh doesn’t receive the play calling assignment.  Ciarrocca was quarterbacks coach and offensive coordinator at Minnesota.

Simon, who specializes in coaching wide receivers, has called plays on an interim basis in two bowl games. His input, of course, is valued as the Gophers move forward, as is the contribution of offensive line coach Brian Callahan who is also the run game coordinator.

Callahan has been coaching the offensive line with considerable success since 2018.  The Gophers have rushed with the best teams in the nation and produced an impressive list of All-Big Ten linemen.

Nathan Boe knows Callahan well as a sixth-year offensive lineman.  He said his coach brings out the best in everyone’s potential.  “He’s really a molder and he molds people into being the best version of themselves,” Boe said. “He’s been very demanding but you wouldn’t want anything less from your offensive line coach.  …He’s a masterful mind at creating opportunities, especially short yardage, and goal line.  It’s really fun to learn from him and just understand his knowledge of the game.”

Gophers head coach P.J. Fleck has to hope 2023 will start a run of stability with the play-calling responsibility and coordinator leadership.  Ciarrocca left the Gophers after the 2019 season to accept the same job at Penn State.  Mike Sanford Jr. replaced Ciarrocca, but he lasted just two seasons.  Ciarrocca, who had the Gophers averaging a near school record 34.1 points per game in 2019, came back for 2022.

Harbaugh, who called plays at Western Michigan when he was an assistant coach there, will go through a growth cycle if he is the play caller at Minnesota. The Gophers will hope he is more than good Thursday night and even better when the regular season ends in November against Wisconsin.

A former college coach, who texts with Sports Headliners, said it will be “fun” to watch how play calling works out for the Gophers. He spoke candidly knowing his name would not be published.

“There is no such thing as co-coordinators on game day!  Someone needs total responsibility to make quick and final decisions,” he wrote.  “Co-coordinators are good during the week for practice planning or run/pass breakdown, but on Saturday only one coach can truly call plays to be successful.

“I am not a big fan of ‘on the job’ training for play calling at the power five level. To me (the) experience of calling plays at any level is worth more than gold.  There is nothing like the speed and pace in the (press) box when calling plays in football.  You literally have 4-6 seconds to get the personnel group, formation and play in right after the tackle occurs on the previous play.

“Sometimes the greatest skill of a play caller is the plays they don’t call, meaning they have a feel for what stunt/blitz might be coming and they know not to call certain plays at certain times (turning) into…potentially bad situations.  Ultimately, it comes down to the players’ execution of each play. After all, every play works when you draw it up on the board!

“It will be a lot of pressure on the first-time (Gopher) play caller and will be interesting to see how they react.  More importantly how do they adjust on the fly—as the game does not slow down. …”

The assumption is Fleck will okay more pass plays this season with promising quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis returning with his strong arm, and record setting rusher Mo Ibrahim gone to the NFL.  While the Gophers may approach a 50-50 pass-run ratio, don’t anticipate a wild aerial show.  Fleck’s core coaching philosophy prioritizes an effective running game.

Fleck pointed out that in 2019, when the Gophers had two first team All-Big Ten wide receivers in Rashod Bateman and Tyler Johnson, they threw the ball only 38 percent of the time.  Don’t expect the 2023 offense to deviate too much (no matter who is calling plays) from ball possession football.

“There’s reason why we do hire from within to keep that system very similar,” Fleck said.

Fleck is 44-27 in six seasons at Minnesota. The win total is fifth in program history and his 26 Big Ten wins are sixth best. His winning percentage of .619 is third best among 11 coaches with 45 games or more leading programs at Minnesota.

Much of the success has been because of superb defenses led by coordinator Joe Rossi. Since 2019 when Rossi became the full-time coordinator the Gophers are 32-14 overall and 21-13 in the Big Ten. In 2022 the 9-4 Gophers had the No. 4 scoring defense (13.85 points) nationally and No. 9 total defense giving up 295.1 yards per game.

Tyler Nubin photo courtesy of University of Minnesota

Gopher preseason All-American safety Tyler Nubin has taken note of Rossi’s wisdom.  “That’s a guru, man. He knows it all. We have a check, a call for everything.  He’s one of those guys that will sit in his office until 3 o clock in the morning and just game plan cause that’s the type of guy he is. …The things that you can do extra in order to put yourself ahead of the game, he’s a perfect emulation of that, and that’s what we try to accomplish every single day.”

Worth Noting

Jerry Kill, who turned 62 last Thursday, saw his New Mexico State Aggies lose 41-30  Saturday to UMass. A peerless rebuilder of programs, he led the once hapless Aggies to a surprising 7-6 record last season during his first year in Las Cruces. The former Gophers’ football boss is a ball coach through and through.  He may try to coach forever.

The Vikings have the leverage in contract talks dragging out with tight end T.J. Hockenson.  He is under contract this season and although he’s undoubtedly seeking a lot more than $12 million in 2024, the club knows it can franchise tag him for about that amount.  His camp can argue the going rate for the better tight ends in the NFL is more and to keep him happy a richer deal is deserved but that negotiating approach isn’t that formidable.

The Vikings have one of the better tight end rosters in the league, with Josh Oliver and Johnny Mundt backing up Hockenson.  That quality depth is assured if Hockenson is injured or for any reason unavailable.

The Vikings must reduce their roster to 53 players on Tuesday. Here is a guess at rookies who make the team: WR Jordan Addison, CB Mekhi Blackmon, OLB Andre Carter, LB Ivan Pace, CB/special teams NaJee Thompson.

The Twins decision makers are all-in on position-less baseball as they continue to show.  Joey Gallo started in center field Friday night, and it wouldn’t be surprising to see rookie second baseman/DH Edouard Julien play at first base.

MLB.com points out the AL Central Division leading Twins and second place Guardians have decided every game they’ve played against each other this season by one or two runs.  There are six remaining games between the two this season, with a three-game series starting Monday at Target Field.

Comments Welcome

Receiver Jalen Reagor Targets Breakout Year with Vikings

Posted on August 22, 2023August 22, 2023 by David Shama

 

Jalen Reagor, the reserve wide receiver who the Vikings acquired almost a year ago in a trade with the Eagles, is on the spot as he prepares in training camp for his fourth NFL season.  There is no guarantee he will make the final roster and even if he does this is the final year of his contract, with free agency ahead in 2024.

Reagor is receiving opportunities in the preseason.  He is tied with tight end Nick Muse for most receptions on the team with six.  His 65 yards in catches is tops on the Vikings.

August is the time for the 24-year-old former first round draft choice to prove his value and set the stage for what he hopes will be a breakout season even though it will likely be as a sub behind starters Justin Jefferson, K.J. Osborn and Jordan Addison.

“Last year I got here the week of the first game, so it was kind of hard to adjust but having a full offseason, you know, (with) K.O. and the guys helping me I feel pretty good,” Reagor told Sports Headliners.

K.O, head coach Kevin O’Connell, is an offensive guru with a talented group of playmakers including the peerless Jefferson, veteran Osborn and promising rookie Addison.  The wide receiver roster includes four former first round draft choices in Jefferson, Addison, Reagor and N’Keal Harry.

The talent in the WR room is a plus to Reagor. “It just breeds competition,” he said.

Reagor’s value to the Vikings includes his speed.  He can “take the top off defenses” and he said there might not be anyone on the roster who could motor faster in the 40-yard dash. “There’s not many receivers (in the NFL) that can run like I can,” he said. “I feel like that’s what I bring to the game, and then being able to do the in between stuff, the reverses, the tosses, the little trick stuff and be a complete receiver. So I feel like all around (talent).”

Reagor’s versatility could work in his favor in being able to make the team.  He has 18 career rushes for 83 yards.  He also returned both punts and kickoffs for the Eagles.  With the Vikings last season, he returned 26 punts for 167 yards in 17 games.

Critics have said the 5-11, 197-pound former TCU star is slowed in his routes by physical defenders and that he doesn’t block effectively.  The Eagles, who drafted him in 2020 ahead of Minnesota selecting Jefferson, gave up on him when they made the August 31 trade to the Vikings in return for draft choices.

Jalen Reagor photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

This summer Jefferson was voted by his NFL peers as the No. 2 player in the league behind only quarterback Patrick Mahomes from the Chiefs.  Although Jefferson is 24 also and entering his fourth NFL season, Reagor said he can learn from the team’s superstar receiver.

“Being No. 2 (ranked) as a receiver, that’s just like a receiver winning the Heisman (Trophy),” Reagor said.  “He’s doing what he’s supposed to be doing.  I am proud of him.  It’s good to be on the team with him and watch and learn from him every day.”

The Vikings could have an explosive offense, just like last season.  With a wide receiver group that wants to be the best in the NFL, a deep tight end roster, five returnees in the offensive line, a quality quarterback in Kirk Cousins and veteran running back in Alexander Mattison, the Vikings will score impressively like they did in 2022 when they won 11 one-score games and averaged 24.9 points per game.

Minnesota seemingly took a page from the NBA with a “if we have the ball last, we’ll win” approach while pulling out six fourth quarter wins.  No wonder Reagor said if his offense has the last possession in a tight game “it’s going to be a problem.”

And he hopes to be part of the solution this fall.

Worth Noting

The Athletic asked its NFL writers to vote on the best stadiums in the league and U.S. Bank Stadium is No. 1. “This wasn’t even close,” Jon Machota wrote in an article posted yesterday by the Athletic.  “Half of the voters placed it No. 1 in their rankings.”

SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles ranked second, with Green Bay’s Lambeau Field, third. AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas and Lumen Field in Seattle rounded out the top five.

Gopher senior safety Tyler Nubin is receiving a lot of preseason hype. Publicity includes second team (The Athletic) and third team (Phil Steele) All-American recognition, and listings on watch lists for three prestigious national awards honoring defensive players: Chuck Bednarik, Jim Thorpe and Bronko Nagurski.

Nubin admits the attention “is cool” but tempers his enthusiasm.  “It doesn’t really matter because like you said it’s preseason so it’s just a guess.  I have to go out there and perform. …”

Nubin will be a playmaker and leader for the Gophers’ defense.  So, too, will redshirt junior linebacker Cody Lindenberg.  “It’s great to see his growth for sure,” Nubin said.

Lindenberg brings the “juice” to practices.  “His energy, you can really feel it,” Nubin said.

Gophers’ multi-positional offensive lineman Nathan Boe, now in his sixth year with the program, comes from a family that has long followed Minnesota football including during its glory days.  When coach P.J. Fleck was recruiting Boe out of Lakeville North the coach told him the Gophers were a “sleeping giant.”

That resonated with Boe whose grandfather and great grandfather listened to the Gophers on the radio.  Boe said: “We have a long tradition here and it’s really fun to be part of it. …”

North Carolina quarterback Drake Maye, who the Gophers face in Chapel Hill September 16, is the No. 5 player in college football, per ESPN.com who rated the top 100.   Notre Dame tackle Joe Alt, the Totino-Grace alum and North Oaks resident, is No. 11 on the list.  Former Gopher running back Bucky Irving, who gained over 1,000 yards last season for Oregon, is No. 77.

The Twins open a two-game series in Milwaukee tonight against a Brewers team that is No. 10 in the MLB.com power rankings.  The Twins are No. 13 in the latest rankings.

Trevor May, who pitched for the Twins from 2014-2020, has 12 saves while holding opponents to a .220 batting average this season with the Athletics.  Will the Twins have interest in signing the 33-year-old right hander as a free agent in the offseason?  He makes $7 million with Oakland, per Spotrac.com and is the highest paid player on the budget conscious team’s roster.

The Northwoods League, that includes teams from Minnesota and showcases college baseball players in the summer, set a new attendance record with a total of 1,313,916.  The old record was 1, 262, 610 set in 2019.

Wild preseason and regular season tickets go on sale Thursday, with availability via Wild.com/tickets and Ticketmaster.com.

Comments Welcome

Vikings O-Line? Experience Prompts Optimism

Posted on August 15, 2023August 15, 2023 by David Shama

 

Ezra Cleveland knows that in the competitive NFL there is no guarantee of having the same teammate beyond one season.  The Vikings’ left guard is thinking the return of all five starters in 2023 will translate into the team’s best offensive line in years.

“It’s the same (group),” Cleveland told Sports Headliners.  “Each one of us has been getting better every year.  I feel like offensive linemen get better as they progress in their career.  We’re all getting older.  I am excited.”

Cleveland, center Garrett Bradbury and right tackle Brian O’Neill are all about to start their fourth NFL seasons. Right guard Ed Ingram is a second-year lineman, left tackle Christian Darrisaw, a third.

Those five players started much of last season until injuries hit.  Ingram played well enough to be a rookie starter, O’Neill and Darrisaw looked like the Vikings’ best pair of tackles in a long time, Bradbury drew praise for his improvement and Cleveland was a solid run blocker.

“Continuity is big, having everyone back,” Cleveland said.  “(The) relationships we all have is big. We’re able to coach each other out on the field and stuff like that.

“I feel like we all kind of have our own lingo. The (number) one offensive line is different than the two offensive line just cause how close we all are and how long we’ve been playing together.

“We’re going on four years with Garrett and Brian.  Yeah, it’s big and it’s going to help us a lot this season.”

Ezra Cleveland photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

Cleveland and Bradbury are particularly close, spending time together almost every day the last two years, including the offseason. That gives the two veterans, playing next to each other on the line of scrimmage, a special connection.

“We know each other like the back of our hand and it helps out on the field,” Cleveland said.  “I know what he’s going to do and he knows what I am going to do.  The o-line is the only spot where five people have to mesh together to make other people’s jobs work, and having that connection is big.”

This will be a second consecutive season under head coach Kevin O’Connell, offensive coordinator Wes Phillips and line coach Chris Kuper.  That adds to Cleveland’s optimism about the coming season.

Among offensive linemen, there was some hesitation in a new system last season. “Hemming and hawing” is the way Cleveland described the learning curve and uncertainty. “We always ended up on the right guys but it might have been right at the last second where we figured out what to do. ….When you’re playing fast and not really thinking, that’s when the best football is played I think.”

Cleveland sees another factor that makes him upbeat about the coming season and it’s the presence of new defensive coordinator Brian Flores. The new defense is aggressive and it’s a challenge to figure out what’s coming. “Flo’s defense is very, very difficult,” Cleveland said.

Dealing with last second adjustments in practice should help during the season as well as seeing different schemes in joint practices with the Titans and Cardinals this summer.

Quarterback Kirk Cousins, who threw 29 touchdown passes in 17 games last season, was sacked a career high 46 times. His total passing attempts of 643 was also third highest in the NFL as the Vikings became a more pass-focused offense.  So that contributed to the 46 sacks but it’s no secret the Vikings must improve at pass blocking.

“…The whole line is like, okay, we gotta protect this guy,” Cleveland said.  “Be firm and he’ll make stuff happen.”

Cleveland’s reputation is that of a better run blocker than pass protector.  Does he agree? “Not necessarily.  Run blocking is easy because there’s not really that much stress.  You just have to go to the guy that is ID’d (to block). And in pass blocking these guys are paid a lot of money to beat us, but, no, I don’t think so.”

Cleveland has played left tackle and right guard for the Vikings.  Because he played left tackle at Boise State he feels comfortable playing on the left side of the line and prefers his present position.  He said fans don’t understand the difficulty switching from one side of the line to the other, comparing it to “like writing with your other hand.”

Worth Noting

Cleveland, listed by the Vikings at 6-6 and 312 pounds, was born three weeks prematurely but weighed 11 pounds.

Former Vikings defensive end Everson Griffen, 35, is retired, living in a Minneapolis suburb and working on his golf game.

The Gophers play five teams ranked in the Associated Press preseason college football top 25 poll:  No. 2 Michigan, No. 3 Ohio State, No. 19 Wisconsin, No. 21 North Carolina and No. 25 Iowa.

Chris Autman-Bell, coming off a knee injury that caused him to miss the last 10 games of the 2022 season, was running fluidly in practice today and made a challenging touchdown catch.

Gophers coach P.J. Fleck said after practice he likes the depth and complimentary skills of his running backs roster, and multiple personnel will be used in games.  “It’s definitely going to be a committee approach,” Fleck said.

Fleck talking about redshirt defensive lineman Anthony Smith who has been turning heads in practice: “NFL scouts come up (and go), ‘Hey, who is that guy?’ You can’t touch him just yet.”

The 247Sports ranking of the Gophers Athan Kaliakmanis as the worst quarterback in the Big Ten and a ranking of No. 67 out of 69 Power Five at the position is ridiculous.  His performance in late season wins over Wisconsin and Syracuse were impressive.  BTW, Lindy’s Big Ten preview rates the Gophers’ QB unit as No. 8 in the 14-team league.

The Athletic yesterday named its preseason All-American teams and included Gophers’ safety Tyler Nubin on the second defensive unit.  Joe Alt, the Totino-Grace alum and North Oaks resident, is a first-team offensive tackle.  In 2022 Alt was named first-team All-American by five organizations.

Casey O’Brien, the former Gopher football player who has courageously battled cancer for years, had clean scans today and is cancer free for the last nine months, according to a post today on X from his father Dan O’Brien.  Casey is coaching quarterbacks at Holy Family Catholic High School where his dad is preparing for his first season as head coach.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette’s Noah Hills recently reported that each of the 85 scholarship players on the Pittsburgh football team will receive Name, Image and Likeness money through the Alliance 412 collective.  Each player, on average, will receive five figures of compensation for performing charity work, per the story. Former Gophers quarterback Tim Salem is the tight ends coach for the Panthers.

Mike Grimm is approaching his 13th season as the radio voice of Gophers football and 18th for men’s basketball. No word yet on who will replace Spencer Tollackson as color commentator on basketball games.

Infielder Royce Lewis, who missed the last 36 Twins games with an oblique strain, was reinstated by the club today and to make room on the 26-man roster put utility player Willi Castro on the 10-day disabled list with a mild oblique strain.

MLB.com’s top 100 prospects, posted last Friday, includes three Twins talents in No. 16 Walter Jenkins, No. 18 Brooks Lee and No. 53 Emmanuel Rodriguez.  Jenkins and Rodriguez, both outfielders, are projected to arrive in the bigs in 2026 and 2025 respectively. Lee, already in AAA with the Saints, is predicted to play for the Twins next season.

Former Twins World Series champion manager Tom Kelly turns 73 today.

Weather advisory for the more optimistic of Twins fans planning to attend postseason games at Target Field: the World Series starts October 27 and potentially goes through November 4, so prepare your fall-winter wardrobe.

In a recent YouTube interview with Graham Bensinger, former Minnesota governor and pro wrestler Jesse Ventura said Muhammad Ali was his idol and among his prize possessions are autographed boxing gloves from Ali presented to him years ago by prominent Minneapolis businessman and author Harvey Mackay.  Ali and Mackay were close friends for decades until the champ passed away in 2016.

The St. Thomas men’s basketball team will be in Italy August 20-30 to play three games against professional teams. This will be the Tommies’ first international trip as a Division I program.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • 31
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • …
  • 153
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Most Pressure to Win in This Town? It’s not the WNBA Lynx
  • Vikings & Rodgers Meet Sunday After Off-Season Flirtation
  • J.J. McCarthy Start Prompts Recollection of Bud Grant Wisdom
  • Reactionary Vikings Fans Turn on Team at Home Opener
  • Gophers Football Season Ticket Sales Down Slightly from 2024
  • Vikings Grind But Show They’re Who We Thought They Were
  • U Record Setter Morgan Gushes about New QB Drake Lindsey
  • McCarthy’s Missed Season May Pay Dividends for him in 2025
  • Changing Football Landscape Gives the Gophers a New Spark
  • Wild Contract Sit Down with Kaprizov Coming in September

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
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

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