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Category: Preps

Top QB Favors Ducks But Gophers in Mix

Posted on September 3, 2014September 3, 2014 by David Shama

 

Seth Green, the junior quarterback from East Ridge High School in Woodbury, who could become a consensus all-state player within a couple of months, told Sports Headliners he ranks Oregon ahead of the many other colleges pursuing him.

Green has heard from a lot of schools and has offers from Oregon, Illinois, Iowa, Louisville, Minnesota, Pittsburgh, Toledo and Wisconsin.  Asked if he leans toward one day playing for Oregon, he answered, “Yes, sir.”  He plans to announce his college choice by early next summer—at the latest.

The 6-4, 210-pound Green, who runs a 4.6 40-yard dash, has been a starter for the Raptors since his freshman season.  He impressed college recruiters last season, and also during the offseason with both his quarterbacking and overall athletic skills.

Seth Green
Seth Green

Green is almost certain to become one of the most highly recruited quarterbacks ever from the state of Minnesota.  After Oregon, he quickly mentioned Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin as schools that have more of his interest than others.  What might cause him to one day commit to the Gophers?

“I don’t know—just sort of seeing how they keep building their program,” Green said.  “They’re on a really great track right now and I like what they’re doing.  They’re headed in the right direction with (head) coach (Jerry) Kill and (quarterbacks) coach (Jim) Zebrowski.  So just seeing them continue to grow.”

The Gophers have increased their win totals every season since Kill became head coach in 2011.  Minnesota has program connections to Green who was born in Minneapolis.  His father, Bryan Green, was a running back via Birmingham, Alabama for the Gophers in the early 1990s.  East Ridge coach Mike Pendino was a Gophers assistant in 1990 and 1991.

“I do know Minnesota is still in the mix,” Pendino told Sports Headliners. “His dad is a Minnesota guy.  He’s a Minnesota kid (Seth).  I know he likes the Gophers.”

But Pendino isn’t going to dictate a college choice to Green or any of his players. “I try to help them (his players) through the process.  I am not going to ever tell anyone where they should or shouldn’t go.  That’s their choice.  They’ve got to go there for the next five years.”

Pendino coached eight time NFL Pro Bowl wide receiver Larry Fitzgerald when the two were at the Academy of Holy Angels in Richfield.  Although Green and Fitzgerald play different positions, there are similarities.

“Yeah, he reminds me of Fitzgerald in the way he carries himself and the way he handles himself,” Pendino said.  “The confidence that he oozes and the way the kids react to him.”

Green took over as the East Ridge starting quarterback after one game as a freshman. “He’s learning and growing every day,” Pendino said.  “He’s come so far from his freshman year to now, and he’s got a lot of room to grow.  I think the potential is unlimited with Seth.”

Last year Green threw for 1,322 yards in 10 games and had 13 touchdown passes.  Those numbers and others are almost certain to expand but Pendino also wants to see Green become more of a team leader and take charge in helping teammates focus.  “Once he’s on the field his athleticism, his smarts take over.”

Mike Pendino
Mike Pendino

During past seasons Green has had more opportunities to pass than run but Pendino said his quarterback is a special dual-threat talent. “He’s got a gun for an arm.  He can make every throw.  Once we let him start running he can be a tailback, too.”

The coach doesn’t question his quarterback’s dedication to learning including willingness to watch game films. “He’s a film junkie,” Pendino said.

Green received his offer from Oregon earlier this summer after attending a Ducks camp.  “They called me and said he did absolutely awesome out there, and they just wanted to do a little character check on his background,” Pendino said.  “Great character kid.  Didn’t take very long and they just called me and said, ‘Hey, we’re gonna offer Seth.’

“He deserves it.  He worked hard and he’s a good player.”

Every passionate college football fan knows Oregon successfully recruits elite and athletic players.  Marcus Mariota, the Ducks dual-threat quarterback this season, is a Heisman Trophy favorite.  Green has watched film of the Ducks and sees similarities with himself and Oregon’s 6-4, 219 pound junior quarterback.

Mariota threw 31 touchdown passes last season and just four interceptions while rushing for 731 yards. “Yes, I am a big fan of his because he’s sort of like the perfect dual-threat quarterback,” Green said.

Green will see Mariota and the Ducks this Saturday when Associated Press No. 3 ranked Oregon plays No. 7 Michigan State in Eugene.  His trip to Oregon’s campus is likely to reinforce all the excitement and positive feelings he already has from his visit earlier this summer.

The Ducks are not only one of college football’s powers but their videogame-like offense is captivating to watch.  With revenue sources that include Nike founder and Oregon alum Phil Knight, the football department’s facilities are the envy of other Division I schools and so spectacular Sports Illustrated published a photo spread showing off the luxurious and high tech features.

Green described the football facilities as a mini-campus. “You have Autzen (Stadium) right there, you have the practice field, the football complex and it’s all right there. ….I thought that was really cool—how it’s all with each other so you’re not distracted.”

Green said Oregon hasn’t promised he will be the only quarterback in the Ducks’ class of 2016 but he was the first offered a scholarship.  He was honored by the offer. “I feel like I fit there the best.  With their team, style, offense, facilities, location—it (Oregon) benefits me the most and I’ll get the most out of it.”

Green, who is one of the East Ridge football captains, will have a busy week.  Before catching a 7 a.m. flight on Saturday morning, he and the Raptors play their second game of the season on Friday night at Cretin-Derham Hall against the Raiders.

The Raptors defeated Park of Cottage Grove in their 2014 opening game last week. Green completed 17 of 30 passes in that game and threw three touchdown passes.

Before choosing a college he would like to help East Ridge to a state championship. “I feel like we can be as good as we want to be if we put in the work and time and effort—and focus and execute, then we can be really good,” he said.

Comments Welcome

U Defense, Special Teams Impress But…

Posted on August 29, 2014August 29, 2014 by David Shama

 

In today’s column analysis of last night’s Gophers-Eastern Illinois game, high school football tales from long ago, and a few notes including about the Lynx, prep basketball rankings and (surprise) wiener dog races.

Well two out of three isn’t bad for an opening game.  The Gophers impressed on defense and with special teams but the offense struggled in the 42-20 win over Eastern Illinois.

The defense tackled with authority and the secondary was as athletic as advertised.  The Gophers, leading 42-0 in the fourth quarter, gave up late touchdowns when reserves couldn’t stop the Panthers from getting in the end zone, including the closing seconds as time expired.

Former Gophers coach Glen Mason, doing game analysis on the Big Ten Network last night, gave the defense a B+ grade.  He credited the Gophers with not allowing any big plays when the game was yet to be decided.  He also said the Gophers were effective in containing an offense with varied looks led by a new Panthers coaching staff that had the Gophers coaches wondering what to expect before the game.

The Gophers stopped drives by the Panthers with efforts by defensive end Alex Keith who recovered two fumbles, and an interception by safety Antonio Johnson.  But they weren’t the only Minnesota players making dramatic plays.  Early in the third quarter, with the Gophers leading 14-0, Eric Murray blocked a punt and Logan Hutton recovered the ball for a touchdown.

High level special teams play like that characterized Jerry Kill’s teams when he coached at Southern Illinois and Northern Illinois.  With the Gophers, Kill is doing the same and there was more to applaud last night than the efforts by Murray and Hutton.  Placekicker Ryan Santoso, playing in his first college game, sent ball after ball into the end zone on kickoffs, preventing the Panthers from even thinking about a return.  Punter Peter Mortell, who averaged 43.3 yards last season, had a gaudy average of 51.2 last night.

Minnesota knows it has to make more explosive plays offensively and Berkley Edwards made a significant contribution last night in his first game as a Gopher.  In the fourth quarter his second touchdown of the period was a 42 yard run down the sidelines where he showed the speed that makes him nearly the fastest player on the team.

Mitch Leidner
Mitch Leidner

Quarterback Mitch Leidner threw a big play 35-yard touchdown pass late in the second quarter to wide receiver Donovahn Jones, another guy the Gophers are counting on to change their reputation as a sputtering offense against elite teams.  Leidner, though, struggled with his passing and the offensive line sometimes didn’t give him enough time to throw and at other times was ineffective at opening holes for runners.  Plenty of room for improvement and fans are advised to show patience with the offense for awhile.

Mason told the TV audience Leidner played only limited minutes last year and can’t be viewed as an experienced returning starter.  “It’s going to be a work in progress,” Mason said.

Leidner completed nine of 17 passes for one touchdown and also ran for two scores. Mason gave Leidner a C grade for his work last night.  “I expected more out of him.  His decision making…at times he got away with a couple of passes that were dangerous that he threw into a crowd of people.  I know that he can run.

“He depended on the supporting cast.  I would think that it was just a very, very average performance against Eastern Illinois.” …

Ron Stolski
Ron Stolski

Ron Stolski, 75, is the state’s all-time winningest prep football coach and he will lead the Brainerd High School Warriors into their opening game tonight at home against FergusFalls.  Just for a moment today Stolski—with a career record of 355 wins, 156 losses and five ties—might watch his mind wander back to his first game as a high school coach.

The year was 1962 and Stolski was coaching eight-man football at Kensington High School, located near Alexandria, Minnesota.  To say there was apathy in Kensington regarding football was an understatement.  The team hadn’t scored a point at a home game in five years and at Stolski’s first practice only three boys came out for the team.

Stolski remembers the three lads. “One became a pilot for American Airlines.  One sadly died of a heart attack, and the third ended up teaching here at Brainerd.  He’s retired now.”

Contrast the player turnout at Kensington with Brainerd where the Warriors welcomed 90 to 100 players this month.  Brainerd has been in the state semi-finals four of the last seven years and was 12-1 last year.  “Not bad for a country school,” Stolski told Sports Headliners.

In that first year at Kensington Stolski was able to boost the roster to 13 players before the first game—or so he thought.  “We had 11 for the opener because two (players) got a job mowing hay and didn’t show up,” the coach said.

Marietta High School defeated Kensington on its home field in that opening game.  A year later Kensington travelled to Marietta for another opening game and that memory made Stolski chuckle.  He not only coached but drove the team bus, and en route to the game got lost.

“Pretty soon I realize we’re going to be late so I tell the kids to dress in the bus.  ‘You gotta change while I am driving,’ ” Stolski instructed.  “We finally get there and we’re like 10, 15 minutes late.”

The Kensington players were now in their uniforms but when they arrived in Marietta there was no time for preparations.  The Marietta coach insisted that “we gotta play right now.”

Kensington got its revenge, though, from the 1962 loss to Marietta. “We ended up kicking the living hell out of them,” Stolski said. …

The Lynx has its opening Western Conference Finals game tonight in Phoenix against the Mercury beginning at 9 p.m. (NBA TV).  In franchise history the defending WNBA champion Lynx are 22-9 overall and 15-2 for home postseason games—winning percentages of .709 and .882, and the best in league history. …

Grand Rapids native Alex Illikainen, a forward who will play his senior season at Brewster Academy in New Hampshire, is ranked No. 130 in the Rivals.com top 150 list of best high school basketball prospects for 2015 released on Wednesday.  DeLaSalle point guard Jarvis Johnson, a top 100 player earlier in the year, wasn’t ranked on Wednesday. …

Canterbury Park holds its annual Minnesota Festival of Champions on Sunday—a day devoted to races involving only Minnesota born and bred thoroughbreds and quarter horses.  This is a racing calendar highlight as Canterbury celebrates the state breeding industry.

Among the promotional highlights of the summer at the Shakopee racetrack are the “Wiener Dog Wars” scheduled for Monday.  In the biggest Dachshund race day of the year at Canterbury, 72 dogs are expected to compete in multiple races to determine a champion.

The fifth annual Camden’s Concert at the Hopkins Center for the Arts last month—featuring The Wright Brothers—generated over $52,000 for the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation.  The record amount increased the five year total from the event to more than $200,000.  A record crowd of 471 attended the concert named after Dave and Linda Mona’s six-year-old grandson Camden Mona.

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Bet the House: Vikings to Go 8-8 in 2014

Posted on August 8, 2014August 8, 2014 by David Shama

 

A summer tradition in this column is Bob Lurtsema’s annual prediction of the Vikings’ season record.  This week the ex-Viking defensive lineman was prepared to talk about wins and losses including his off target forecast from last year—after nailing the Purple’s record in 2012.

Earlier this year Las Vegas odds-makers had the Vikings winning 5.5 games in 2014 and now the number has moved up slightly to 6, Lurtsema said.  Even at 6 he believes the Vikings aren’t given proper respect.

“Take your mortgage, car and every nickel, and bet the over (to win more than 6 games),” Lurtsema said.  “I really feel very comfortable they (the Vikings) will win 8 or 9 games.”

Lurtsema’s official forecast is for an 8-8 Vikings record in 2014.

About this time last year Lurtsema was feeling even better about the Vikings and predicted an 11-5 finish.  That optimism at least partially came from the 2012 season when he forecast a 10-6 record including the playoffs.  Sure enough that’s what his old team achieved two years ago while surprising most NFL authorities.

So what happened in 2013 as the Vikings stumbled to a 5-10-1 record?  Well, the Purple lost five games in the closing minutes while making fans endure one of the most disappointing seasons in franchise history.  Those collapses prompted Lurtsema to offer a minimal explanation about his off target 11-5 prediction:  “I was right…if the games had been 58 minutes (not 60),” he quipped.

Lurtsema is a close observer of the Vikings and it isn’t just the usual fan optimism of having a new coaching staff that has him smiling about Mike Zimmer and his assistants.  Lurtsema has preached that a team’s success is “65 percent” determined by the staff.  He believes Zimmer and his staff are exceptional and will lead a Purple revival.

The Vikings open their preseason schedule tonight and Lurtsema said there are several things to watch for including how defensive players pursue ball carriers.  As defensive coordinator of the Bengals, Zimmer’s players ranked high among NFL teams in total assisted tackles.  “That tells you players are pursuing,” Lurtsema said.  “It’s a good habit to have.”

Lurtsema will watch tonight to see how the Vikings use linebacker Anthony Barr, their No. 9 first round draft choice in last spring’s NFL Draft.  It will be interesting to see if the Vikings sometimes position the gifted athlete on the line of scrimmage as part of a five-man group.  The normal set is four defensive linemen but Barr could sometimes make it five, lining up as an end and pass rushing specialist.

Lurtsema admires offensive coordinator Norv Turner.  During the preseason Lurtsema expects an emphasis on long passes, with the offense using “vertical routes” to loosen defenses.  “They’re really gonna make it exciting for the average fan,” Lurtsema said.

He has another message for fans regarding tonight and the preseason.  Don’t get too upset when a favorite player—perhaps a star—is cut from the roster.  Zimmer and staff, Lurtsema said, are creating work habits in training camp with a goal of playing up to expectations.  “He wants athletes with heart and something between the ears,” Lurtsema said.

With 40 new players on the roster since last season, including 10 draft choices, there will be lots of competition to make the final 53-man roster.  Watch the special teams tonight to see which unknown players are impressing.

Worth Noting

Tonight’s game at TCF Bank Stadium will be the only one on the Vikings’ home schedule played on a weekday night.  Traffic and parking comments could enliven social media late this afternoon and in the early evening.  Last year traffic was awful for the Gophers-UNLV game played on a Thursday night in late August at TCF Bank Stadium.  On Tuesday of this week, 80 minutes before the Twins game at Target Field, traffic was moving at 10 miles per hour on east-bound I-394 between highways 169 and 100.

Kickoff is at 7 p.m. and the game will be simulcast on KARE 11 and KFAN-FM.  Commentators will be Paul Allen, Pete Bercich, Greg Coleman and Ben Leber.

The Raiders, 4-12 last season, have long been a controversial franchise, and stirring things up now are reports the team may move to San Antonio.  In an Internet story yesterday from the San Antonio Express-News, former Vikings owner and San Antonio businessman Red McCombs said last month’s visit to the Texas city by Raiders owner Mark Davis was “sincere.”  McCombs also said he is willing to become a local investor if the Raiders relocated.

There were 33 Minnesota high school football programs scheduled to start practice last Monday in preparation for opening games on August 22 or 23.  The other prep football programs in the state begin practice next Monday.

Among the notable early games will be Minnetonka at Hudson High School (Wisconsin) on August 22.  Another Wisconsin high school, Superior, plays the same night at Hopkins.

David Cobb
David Cobb

David Cobb told reporters after practice this week he expects the Gophers to emphasize short passes this season including screens and swing passes.  Cobb, who led the Gophers in rushing last season with 1,202 yards, had only seven pass receptions.  He is on the Doak Walker watch list for the nation’s best running back.

Former Gophers basketball players Al Nuness and Jim Brewer will be part of the Proviso East High School inaugural hall of fame class on August 30. The Maywood, Illinois school is known for its basketball alumni including Nuness who was all-Big Ten second team for the Gophers in 1969 and Brewer who was an All-American in 1973.

Next season expect the Gophers to hold a ceremony to retire the jersey of Randy Breuer.  The former Lake City High School star is No. 3 in all-time scoring for the Gophers with 1,777 career points.  Breuer, a 7-3 center, played four seasons with the Gophers starting in 1979-80 and averaged 16.6 points per game on the 1982 Big Ten championship team.

The Gophers athletic department and its multimedia rights holder, Learfield Sports’ Gopher Sports Properties, announced yesterday a three-year agreement with 1500 ESPN Twin Cities to broadcast Gopher men’s hockey and men’s and women’s basketball games.  The agreement starts with the coming seasons and runs through 2016-17.

The Northwoods League became the first summer college baseball league to go over 1 million in attendance for one season after games played on Wednesday of this week.  Madison (Wisconsin) leads the 18-team league with an average of 6,139 per game.

Dave Tentis, 52, is the only Minnesotan playing in this week’s PGA Championship in Louisville.  The Woodbury resident shot an eight over 79 yesterday and tied for 144th in the field.  He is the PGA head professional at Troy Burne Golf Club in Hudson, Wisconsin.

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