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Category: NCAA

Paige Bueckers Comes Home in Glory

Posted on March 30, 2022 by David Shama

 

It took two overtimes Monday night for Paige Bueckers to lead UConn to a 91-87 basketball win over North Carolina State, and set up a storybook opportunity to win the Women’s NCAA Final Four in her home state of Minnesota.

The former Hopkins High School All-American scored 15 points in overtime in an NCAA Tournament game for the ages. The sophomore point guard, the national Player of the Year in 2021, was at her best when it mattered most. For the game she scored 27 points, making 10 of 15 shots and six of seven free throws.

The fact she was brilliant in the game’s biggest moments was no surprise to her former high school coach. Brian Cosgriff said: “You could see how Paige was like we’re not going to lose this game. Get on my back. I am going to do what I’ve always done. I am going to carry this team to victory. And that’s what she does.”

During a telephone interview with Sports Headliners yesterday, Cosgriff recalled when Bueckers was a gangly eighth grader and made her Hopkins varsity debut against a powerhouse Elk River team. The Royals fell behind early but Bueckers came off the bench to make seven consecutive three-point shots. “It was an amazing performance by this little, skinny eighth grader,” Cosgriff said.

The coach had seen Bueckers’ extraordinary skills and ability to impact games a season earlier. As a seventh grader she played on both the sophomore and junior varsity teams. On the same day she would lead each to victories.

Cosgriff said what many fans don’t realize is how unselfish Bueckers is. She loves her teammates and wants to do anything she can to make them better. Her timely passing can be as valuable to the Huskies as her clutch scoring.

“She is a huge team player and you could see it last night after the game,” Cosgriff said Tuesday. “She was in tears for her teammate (Dorka Juhasz) who hurt her wrist.”

“Paige Buckets” as she is known, is athletically gifted with an energy, passion, work ethic and will to win that sets her apart from peers. So, too, does her almost mystical feel for the game. Bueckers once told Sports Headliners she has a “God-given ability that I know what I am doing, and I see…plays two steps ahead.”

Bueckers seemed to see those kinds of opportunities Monday night including when she buried shot after shot and orchestrated the UConn offense in the biggest of moments. After the game teammate Christyn Williams had the quote of the night: “We have Paige Bueckers and they don’t.”

Paige Bueckers

A traumatic left knee injury forced Bueckers to miss 19 games this season. Four of the team’s five losses (29-5 record) came with its phenom unavailable. Cosgriff believes his former superstar is 85 to 90 percent recovered, with part of the issue regaining trust in her body. “But I definitely think last night really helped her confidence,” he said.

Target Center will be bonkers Friday night when the Huskies play defending national champion Stanford as part of a Final Four lineup that also includes South Carolina and Louisville. Bueckers will be a huge crowd favorite in a homecoming Minnesotans have been anticipating for months, if not years.

Bueckers has a pop culture following dating back to high school. Cosgriff recalled that when the Royals played a game in Grand Rapids, Minnesota there were fans from Chicago in attendance. It wasn’t uncommon to see 200-300 fans waiting after games to see Bueckers.

This will be Bueckers’ second Final Four and she is looking for her first NCAA championship. She has talented teammates and coach Geno Auriemma who has taken the Huskies to 14 consecutive Final Fours. Guess who Cosgriff is predicting to emerge as 2022 national champs after Sunday night’s title game?

“Of course I am biased, but I also see Paige taking this thing home. … My money is on U-Conn. That’s for sure.”

Worth Noting

A Front Office Sports article yesterday said Bueckers has business deals with Gatorade, StockX and Cash App. Arguably the face of women’s college basketball, the Wall Street Journal speculated last summer when Name, Image and Likeness opportunities were approved by the NCAA that Bueckers had $1 million per year potential.

Cosgriff, who won seven state titles at Hopkins, will be inducted April 7 into the Minnesota High School Basketball Hall of Fame.

Mike Nowakowski from Ticket King said “action is very minor” for Friday night’s Final Four games. Upper level seats are going for $100 to $250; lower level $200 to $1,250.

He also told Sports Headliners this morning his website “went crazy” after the Twins signed free agent shortstop Carlos Correa. Interest seems similar to before Target Field opened in 2010, he added.

Rebecca Lobo, the ESPN basketball analyst here for the Final Four, is married to famous sportswriter Steve Rushin, a Bloomington native.

Jeff McCarron

The reunion last week recognizing individuals involved with boys’ state tournament basketball teams from the last decade of the one-class tournament format (1960-1970) was an emotional affair. In organizing the reunion Jeff McCarron (Sherburn) and Drew Kindseth (Marshall) heard from individuals representing high schools from Ada to Walnut Grove, from Bemidji to Thief River Falls. Attendees included former Gophers Jay Kiedrowski, Tom Masterson, Greg Troland and McCarron. Star Tribune columnist Patrick Reusse was the featured speaker.

“The room was so full of heart and history as veterans of the glory days of the state tournament gathered in the same room to share memories and also recognize many who had passed or could not attend,” McCarron said via email. “We also share the realization that our healthiest days are behind us—and that all days and relationships should be cherished and nurtured. …

“Dick Jonckowski (reunion emcee) probably said it best when he departed that afternoon. First, his voice cracked again. Then he said, ‘I think I just spent the best six hours of my life.’ ”

Organizer Ron Stolski reports over 1,600 attendees are expected at the Minnesota Football Coaches Association’s Clinic Thursday-Saturday. The highly anticipated annual clinic will have a lineup of high school coaches from Minnesota and other states speaking. Gophers’ coaches including P.J. Fleck, Kirk Ciarrocca and Joe Rossi, plus Glenn Caruso from St. Thomas, are also part of the clinic program at the DoubleTree Hotel in St. Louis Park. Legendary Alabama coach Nick Saban will speak via Zoom. https://www.mnfootballcoaches.com/page/show/2279758-mfca-clinic-information

The MFCA will announce its Coach of the Year Saturday night at its Hall of Fame Banquet.

Comments Welcome

Final Four to Spotlight City Safety

Posted on March 28, 2022March 28, 2022 by David Shama

 

The coming days offer the opportunity for Minneapolis to brighten its image locally, regionally and nationally. The NCAA Women’s Final Four starts Friday and the event can help the city rebound, even if it’s only an incremental improvement that chips away at Minneapolis’ infamous reputation for crime.

Celebration graphic at Mall of America

After Friday night’s two semi-final basketball games at Target Center, the national championship game will be played Sunday evening. While the games are the centerpiece, event organizers are serving up a lot more to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the Women’s Division I Final Four and 50th anniversary of Title IX.

There will be free interactive events and attractions for the public to enjoy, and in place are partnerships with community organizations for social initiatives such as honoring Native Americans. Buildings will light up the skyline in the colors of the Final Four logo, helping to create further awareness the Final Four is in town.

The games will be televised nationally by ESPN, with over 350 radio stations broadcasting too. Over the weekend there will be continual Final Four coverage and commentary on various platforms ranging from newspapers to social media. And about 30,000 visitors are expected from out of town, with many staying in downtown hotels.

Wendy Blackshaw and Debbie Estes, co-chairs of the Minnesota Local Organizing Committee, have said “all eyes” will be on Minnesota in coming days. They and others involved with the Final Four, including hundreds of local volunteers, have worked diligently to make the event a success in every way. Positive expectations are this latest venture will fall in line with the many other highly lauded events the city and region have hosted over the years including Super Bowls, All-Star games, elite golf tournaments and Final Fours.

There will be extensively planned security and safety protocols that hopefully allow the 2022 Final Four to go on without major incidents. But fairly or not, it only takes one or two incidents to prompt main stream media headlines, or at least start a chain of negative comments on social media.

The city’s longstanding image of being a safe place to live, work or visit has taken a beating the last couple of years. The latest headlines include carjackings, a crime trend sweeping the metro area. Just last week Fox was reporting on Minneapolis and its carjacking problem that flies in the face of “Minnesota nice.”

Twin Cities sports anchor and reporter Mike Max in February referred to Minneapolis “as a hellhole.” His remarks on WCCO Radio were in part prompted by the cold weather and pandemic, but more to the point he referenced the crime downtown and unpleasant encounters he has experienced.

In late January Lance Morrow wrote a poignant article for the Wall Street Journal. In August of 1973 Morrow had authored a cover story for Time magazine praising how Minnesota is “the state that works.”

The headline for his WSJ story: “How Minnesota Went from Tom Sawyer to Huck Finn.”

In Morrow’s 2022 story he quoted a friend who lives in Minneapolis. “It would be difficult to exaggerate the extent of violent crime throughout the city. Everyone now knows someone who’s a victim.”

Morrow wrote about how the Twin Cities have become part of the rank-and-file urban mess characterizing big cities throughout the country—crime (often violent), drugs and unemployment. The once idyllic state of Minnesota and its largest city have “become a microcosm of an America in crisis,” the WSJ opinion piece said.

This writer is alert in the city like never before. When my car stops at intersections, I am aware of who is near my vehicle and what their intentions may be. I am more likely to park at a meter or in a ramp close to my destination, rather than opt for the exercise of a healthy walk. When on foot I am almost as likely to look behind me as ahead. The city’s reputation puts me on edge and has altered or cancelled plans to go places.

Those words are painful to report. Although I live in a suburb, I spent 30 years in Minneapolis and was raised to be proud of a city that once offered a school system and quality of life rivaling the great urban centers of the world.

Keep your head up, though. Things will improve.

People are returning to downtown. They are also not abandoning Uptown, an upscale area for decades and another place of past city pride. Larger numbers of people on city streets, whether shopping, attending events or going to work, are a major deterrent to the low-lifes who act without regard for authority, life and property.

The thugs that have bullied Minneapolis will not take it over and neither will the so-called leaders and authorities with cockeyed ideas and policies. Minneapolis remains a city with good people and intentions. And amenities that have long made it special remain in place, including the beautiful lakes and parks, and the world-class arts, theatre, sports and shopping.

It will take a couple of years but the city police force is being increased in numbers and will have improved training. There are worthwhile ideas to be considered in lessening burdens on police and making other authorities responsible. The last election brought needed change on the city council including the leadership of Michael Rainville who represents the Third Ward and part of downtown.

Positive change can spiral in city hall, on the streets, in the schools and in court rooms. And how inspiring if responsible changes started in homes where too many households have no fathers, and or any parents at all. Accountability starts at home with adult supervision.

The Women’s Final Four will return to Minneapolis and Target Center for the first time since 1995. While times have changed, this is still a place with much to offer and “Minnesota Nice” cemented into the DNA.

It’s time to “rebound.”

Comments Welcome

20 Years Ago Twins Almost Kaput

Posted on March 15, 2022March 22, 2022 by David Shama

 

Think Minnesota Twins fans were worried about a 2022 Major League Baseball season happening because of stalled labor negotiations that weren’t resolved until last week?

For sure, but the angst was nowhere near as dramatic as a couple of decades ago.

After the 2001 season MLB owners voted to contract two franchises, the Twins and Montreal Expos. It looked like there would be no 2002 season—or any beyond that—for these clubs. They were struggling financially and other MLB franchises were weary of financial subsidies for bottom feeders Minnesota and Montreal.

Twins owner Carl Pohlad and MLB commissioner Bud Selig were close friends. Conjecture is Pohlad would have received up to $250 million for folding up his franchise. He had purchased the team in 1984 for a reported $34 to $36 million. Pohlad liked making money and contraction looked like a profitable escape route.

Pohlad and his brain trust were frustrated in 2001 after years of failed efforts to earn support for a new ballpark to replace the outdated Metrodome. Opposition to public funding was intense. Phone lines to the state capitol once shut down because of so many calls coming into legislators from stadium opponents.

A source close to the Twins franchise back then remembers the stadium squabble that went on for years. “The organization had been trying for a decade or so to get a new ballpark. It just wasn’t getting any traction,” he told Sports Headliners.

In 1997 Pohlad threatened to sell the team, with the new owner relocating the franchise to North Carolina. To this day the threat is regarded as contrived and a strategy to get the Twins out of the Metrodome and into a new stadium. “…All of the information that came out afterwards, there wasn’t a lot of substance to the threat to move,” the source said.

The Twins won the 1991 World Series and had drawn almost 2.5 million fans in 1992. The club went into decline starting with the 1993 season and played losing baseball through 2000, with the Twins struggling to draw over 1 million fans that year.

Still, the Twins had shown improvement on the field in the first half of 2001 and looked like a team trending upward after finishing 85-77. That improvement was part of the reason those passionate about the team were stunned in the fall of 2001 when contraction was near reality.

“It was really traumatic,” the source said. “First of all, it was our livelihood, but even more so…this was an institution. This was the Minnesota Twins. This wasn’t some corner pizza shop. People over the five-state region followed the Minnesota Twins and grew up with the team. (They) created many special memories. You felt that. You knew what it meant if this were to go away.”

Opponents of MLB contraction included the players’ union and the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission whose leaders filed a lawsuit in Hennepin County asking that the Twins fulfill their Metrodome lease. Judge Harry Crump ruled the Twins had to honor their lease and play the 2002 season in the dome. Selig, Pohlad and others had to backtrack on contraction.

The 2002 Twins won the American League Central Division and saw home attendance total nearly 2 million customers, the best year at the gate since 1993. In 2010 the club moved into outdoor Target Field, funded by Hennepin County and the Twins.

Worth Noting

The men’s basketball Golden Gophers aren’t in the NCAA Tournament, and neither are coach Ben Johnson’s three most recent predecessors. Dan Monson’s Long Beach State team is in the NIT, Tubby Smith is retiring after his High Point Panthers went 14-18 and Richard Pitino also had a losing season, 13-19, at New Mexico.

Colorado State coach Niko Medved, a student manager under Clem Haskins in the 1990s, has his Rams in the tournament with an opening game Thursday against Michigan. Minneapolis native David Roddy, the Mountain West Player of the Year, is the Rams’ best player.

Dave Wright

Good guy Dave Wright, a familiar public address voice at Twin Cities hockey and basketball games for decades, started doing P.A. work in high school. This is year 53 for him, with commitments next week to work seven games at the boys’ basketball tournament. “It is still a big thrill,” Wright said via email. “I am always nervous 5-10 minutes before the first game. Once we start, however, the adrenalin starts to flow; you kick into automatic pilot and just do it.”

Timberwolves minority owners Marc Lore and Alex Rodriguez are investing in a new company that will allow fans to wager on athletes like football players based on their on-field performance. Mojo will launch an app that could be out by year’s end, per Front Office Sports.

If Minneapolis media legend Sid Hartman was still alive, he would be 102 today.

The Twin Cities Dunkers, the sports-focused group Hartman helped lead for decades, is moving its meetings from the Minneapolis Club to Interlachen Country Club.

College football players, with 50.6 percent, have earned the most compensation from Name, Image and Likeness since the July 2021 startup, according to Opendorse and Axios Sports. Next in NIL money are women’s basketball players at 18.5 percent, with male counterparts third at 15 percent.

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