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

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

Category: Preps

Team More ‘Upbeat’ with Peterson Back

Posted on June 5, 2015June 5, 2015 by David Shama

 

Covering various topics in today’s column including Adrian Peterson’s first week back with the Vikings, news about the Gophers and prep basketball, and a lot more.

Peterson returned to the team this week and Vikings tight end Kyle Rudolph believes the impact of the All-Pro running back is evident.  Rudolph said Peterson’s work ethic can make others more dedicated.  “It always seems to make guys around him work harder.  Just in the three days that he’s been here our practices have been pretty crisp, a little bit more upbeat, and that’s what great players do.  Great players come in and they elevate the game of not only themselves but the guys around him.”

Peterson, 30, didn’t play at all in the team’s four preseason games last year.  Head coach Mike Zimmer decided not to risk injury to the veteran running back.  Offensive coordinator Norv Turner was asked if he sees more of the same in 2015.

“That’s coach Zimmer’s call,” Turner said.  “To me, if you’re getting everything you need to get done in practices, then you’d probably shy away from doing that.  If you feel like you haven’t gotten done what you need to get in practice, I am sure coach Zimmer would consider giving him a few carries.  But based on what we did a year ago, I would think that’s probably more of what we do (not using him in preseason).”

Blake Weber
Blake Weber

Blake Weber, an outstanding football player at Prior Lake High School in 2013 and at Rochester Community and Technical College last fall, is enrolled at Minnesota and will participate next week in the Gophers’ strength and conditioning program as a preferred walk-on playing linebacker.  Weber played multiple positions for RCTC including safety and outside linebacker.  He wanted to join the Gophers as a preferred walk-on out of high school but had to improve his academic work.  He will be a sophomore in eligibility next season.

Jim Dutcher said former Gophers basketball player Tommy Davis needs 19 credits to graduate from Minnesota and is enrolled in summer school.  Davis, who played for Dutcher from 1981-1985, is utilizing a program by the Gophers Athletic Department that pays tuition for former athletes who want to complete their school work and earn degrees.

Davis, a shooting guard, still holds the Gophers’ record for consecutive field goals made in one game with 15.  He played and coached in France for many years but now is living here.  The former All-Big Ten player speaks six languages including French, Dutcher said.

Both Davis and Darryl Mitchell, another former Gophers All-Big Ten guard, have recently relocated to the Minneapolis-St. Paul area. Dutcher now has 10 former players from his 1982 Big Ten championship living in this community.  “We could have a reunion of the ’82 championship team and make all local (phone) calls,” Dutcher said.

Minnesota prep basketball made history this week with the announcement Apple Valley High School players Gary Trent Jr. and Tre Jones are on the USA Basketball Men’s Under-16 roster.  It’s the first time two Minnesotans have been selected for the team at the same time, and with Trent and Jones being from the same high school the achievement is more distinct.

Trent, the son of former Timberwolves player Gary Trent, is a shooting guard or wing who will be a junior at Apple Valley next season.  He’s a key recruiting target of the Gophers but the competition will be intense with Trent’s long list of offers including national power Kansas, according to Rivals.com.

Jones, the younger brother of former Duke star Tyus Jones, is a point guard who will be a sophomore at Apple Valley next season where the Eagles return the key players from their 2015 Class 4A title team.  Jones, at 6-2, is already taller than 6-1 Tyus and like his older brother is on a clear path to be nationally coveted by colleges.  His skills include exceptional on-ball defense.

The Under-16 roster includes players from various parts of the country but Trent and Jones are the only twosome from the same high school.  The team is practicing this week in Colorado Springs before playing next week in the FIBA Americas U16 Championship tournament in Argentina.  USA’s first game is next Wednesday against Puerto Rico.

Prior to this year Tyus Jones was the only Minnesotan to play for the Under-16 team.  He played in 2011.

Darrell Thompson
Darrell Thompson

Former Gophers Nick Bjugstad, Ricky Foggie, Seth Helgeson and Darrell Thompson will be among those participating in the Bruce Smith Golf Classic at Faribault Golf Club on June 15.  The fundraising event benefits three Faribault schools and honors Bruce Smith who won the 1941 Heisman Trophy playing for the Gophers.  More information about participating in the golf event and attending the dinner is available by e-mailing Bruce Krinke, contact@fctv10.org.

The opening of the new St. Paul Saints ballpark this spring prompts discussion about an ongoing topic involving the Twins.  Local baseball fans have long wondered if the Saints could some day be a Twins minor league affiliate.  It’s an attractive possibility to die-hard fans from the metro area who like the idea of being able to “scout” Twins prospects without driving long distances.

The Saints have been an ongoing popular attraction in the Twin Cities and perhaps more so now with their state-of-the-art minor league ballpark seating about 7,000 fans.  The Saints’ independent league status, though, is an obstacle to something happening with the Twins.  The Saints are members of the American Association of Independent Professional Baseball and those teams have no affiliation with major league franchises.  MLB teams operate affiliated clubs at various levels of competition in towns throughout the minor leagues.

Establishing an affiliated team in St. Paul at CHS Field isn’t on the Twins to-do list right now.  “It’s not something we’re working on,” Twins president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners.  “It’s not something that there is a master plan for.  Could it happen some day? Yes, I think it probably could.  But it’s many, many years down the road.”

While St. Peter sees the possibility of a Twins team in St. Paul as “intriguing” (including from a marketing perspective), the only way it could happen, he said, would be for an affiliated minor league team (like a Triple-A or Class A club) to move to St. Paul and for the Saints’ independent league franchise to relocate.  There are challenges with that scenario including determination of what class of baseball the club would be in and how expensive travel costs would be.

“The other thing is, I can’t imagine the Twins would ever pursue that without ownership of the team,” St. Peter said.  “At the end of the day the Twins would need to own the team in St. Paul.  I can’t imagine that we would provide affiliation to another group of owners.”

With this being boom times for the Saints owners in their new ballpark, it’s also difficult to foresee them having interest in selling or operating the ballclub elsewhere.

The Lynx, who open the WNBA regular season tonight at home against Tulsa, are the most likely team to win the league championship.  That is according to a survey of the WNBA’s general managers who also voted Maya Moore of the Lynx most likely to be the 2015 league MVP.  The Lynx’s Cheryl Reeve received the most votes as best coach and Target Center was the winner of “best home-court advantage.”

Comments Welcome

Source Says Jahlil Okafor Prefers Lakers

Posted on June 3, 2015June 3, 2015 by David Shama

 

It appears Jahlil Okafor wants to play for the Lakers, not the Timberwolves, but he won’t cause problems if Minnesota drafts him, a basketball source told Sports Headliners.

“Based on what I am hearing, Okafor would rather not be drafted by Minnesota,” the person said.  “He would prefer to go to L.A.  I don’t know if that is because of more glamour—the glamour franchise, the history or whatever.  But that seems to be what people that are close to him are saying.”

The source, who asked that his name not be used, has college basketball connections and has been around Okafor in the past.  He doesn’t know if Okafor or his agent, former Gophers basketball player Bill Duffy, have communicated the desire to play with the Lakers but it seems likely they have.

The Timberwolves have the No. 1 pick in the first round of the June 25 NBA Draft while the Lakers have the No. 2 selection.  Duke’s Okafor and Kentucky’s Karl-Anthony Towns, who are expected to be the first two players chosen in the draft, have no control over which NBA teams choose them but they aren’t without options.  However, the alternatives—including choosing to play in Europe, or publicly and privately raising hell about being on a certain NBA team—aren’t that attractive.

Okafor isn’t expected to choose either of those options if the Wolves select him.  The source said the 19-year-old is a “great kid” and the Wolves won’t have to worry about his attitude.

So Okafor won’t mope if he lands in Minneapolis and not Los Angeles?

“Oh, no, he’s not that kind of player,” the source said.  “Not that kind of person.  He just wants players around him that want to play, that know how to play, that will pass the ball.”

As a freshman this spring the 6-11, 270-pound center helped lead Duke to the national championship.  His large hands and powerful body make him a special talent in the low post. He is also a willing passer who could complement any NBA offense.  Okafor’s defense and foul shooting are sometimes criticized but he has the work ethic and athleticism to improve in those areas.

Towns, 6-11, 250, can’t match Okafor’s offensive abilities but he’s the superior defender.  He is a force blocking shots, and his athleticism also allows him to effectively defend pick and rolls—a staple of NBA offenses.

Flip Saunders
Flip Saunders

Who will the Timberwolves choose?  How will they decide?  And in a close debate might Okafor’s speculated preference in not playing for Minnesota impact who Wolves president and coach Flip Saunders ultimately decides to select?

Former professional coach Bill Fitch was asked his opinion.  “You draft on your weakness,” said Bill Fitch, the ex-Gophers and NBA coach. “Best player available at your weakness.”

It’s unanimous inside and outside the Wolves’ organization the roster is much in need of defensive improvement.  That certainly could tip the organization’s preference toward Towns.

Fitch was coaching the Rockets in 1984 when they had the first overall pick.  A guy named Michael Jordan from North Carolina was available but the Rockets chose Hakeem Olajuwon.  Carolina coach Dean Smith, a longtime friend of Fitch, told him it must be uncomfortable to pass on the best guy in the draft, his phenom Jordan.

“I said, well, I think I am getting the best player in the draft for my club,” Fitch recalled in an interview with Sports Headliners.  “In other words we needed that hometown guy.  We needed a guy that could block shots and rebound.  He (Smith) was very high on Jordan.”

Fitch defends the Olajuwon selection to this day.  Olajuwon had played at the University of Houston and the athletic center was so popular the Rockets knew he would be instant box office.  The club needed Olajuwon’s defense and other skills including his dazzling scoring moves.

He eventually led the Rockets to two NBA titles and Fitch suspects there would have been more had Ralph Sampson stayed healthy.  Sampson, the former 7-4 center from Virginia, was Houston’s No. 1 selection in 1983 and formed the famous “Twin Towers” with Olajuwon.

Fitch said if he was running the Wolves he would value talking to Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski about Okafor.  “In other words, he’s not going to lie to you.  There’s nobody that knows that kid at this stage of his career better than coach K.”

Talking to Okafor and Towns, and others who have been around them, can provide value, too, but Fitch doesn’t give a strong nod to the agents representing players in the draft.  “You can talk to the agents all you want but you gotta remember you gotta walk in that stuff after you get done talking with them,” said Fitch who won 944 games with five different teams as an NBA coach.  “It’s more important to talk with the kids.”

There are numerous mock drafts projecting first round selections including Bleacherreport.com and Draftexpress.com.  Both predict the Wolves will select Towns with the Lakers then choosing Okafor.

The two websites agreed earlier in the week the Rockets will select former Apple Valley High School point guard Tyus Jones with the No. 18 selection.  But today Bleacherreport.com has Jones going to the Cavs at No. 24 while Draftexpress.com predicts the Mavericks will take him at No. 21.

Okafor and Jones have been friends for years, played together at Duke as freshmen, and no doubt would love to some day wear the same NBA uniform.  If the Wolves ended up with both former Dukies it might be a factor in keeping Okafor here beyond his rookie contract that can bind him to Minnesota for four years.

Draftexpress.com predicts former Robbinsdale Cooper High School star Rashad Vaughn, a shooting guard, will be selected 26th in the first round by the Spurs.  Bleacherreport.com projects Vaughn, who was a freshman last season at UNLV, will be selected at No. 28 by the Celtics.

Comments Welcome

Lottery Luck May Change for Wolves

Posted on May 13, 2015May 13, 2015 by David Shama

 

News and notes from Glen Taylor and other newsmakers including new high school coaching hires.

The NBA Draft Lottery has not been kind to the Timberwolves.  Despite a long list of losing seasons over more than two decades, the franchise has never had the No. 1 pick in the draft.  This year the Wolves are sending a woman to see if their luck changes.

And not just any woman.

Glen Taylor
Glen Taylor

Glen Taylor, the Wolves owner, broke the news to Sports Headliners his wife Becky will represent the franchise on national TV May 19 when the NBA’s 14 draft lottery teams assemble in New York City.  The Wolves, of course, are hoping the lottery rewards them with the first selection in the June 25 NBA Draft.

Wolves president and coach Flip Saunders let Taylor know he wanted Becky to represent the club at the draft lottery and she accepted the invitation.  NBA teams send various representatives to the lottery, often front office executives.  Cavs owner Dan Gilbert has dispatched his teenage son Nick multiple times and won the lottery in both 2013 and 2014.

Saunders has represented the Wolves in the past at the lottery announcement but this will be Becky’s first turn.  Will she wear something lucky like a special piece of jewelry?  No, but she will be wearing a new dress.  “That will be her lucky outfit,” Taylor said with a laugh.

The lottery chances of the 14 teams favor franchises with the worst regular season records.  Because the Wolves had the league’s worst record in 2014-2015, they have 250 chances at winning the No. 1 selection in the lottery, while the clubs closest to them are the Knicks, 199 chances; Sixers, 156; and Lakers, 119.  The Wolves have a 25 percent likelihood of winning the lottery and securing the No. 1 draft choice.  Lottery policy guarantees Minnesota will draft no lower than fourth in the first round.

Taylor will accompany Becky to New York.  Although he is chairman of the NBA Board of Directors, he has never personally observed the draft lottery.  He made it clear, though, his wife will be the one on TV.  “Becky is going to be the front person,” he said.

Taylor said the Wolves must improve defensively next season.  He wouldn’t be surprised to see Saunders make defense a priority on June 25 when the club uses its three draft choices—one first round pick and two selections during the second round.

Although Taylor doesn’t have final figures, he expects the Wolves to lose about $1 million to $2 million this past season.  The franchise has frequently sustained major annual financial losses.  “I would guess in our worst year we probably lost $10 million, but I don’t have that in front of me,” Taylor said.

The NBA has a revenue sharing policy where the more financially successful teams assist others.  Taylor didn’t reveal figures but said this past season the amount of revenue received by franchises like his was “much larger” than in the past.

Next season the Wolves could break even or even be profitable if the on-court performance improves.  A dramatic improvement landing the Wolves in the playoffs means making money “for sure,” Taylor said.

Greg Boone, who played basketball at Minneapolis Central High School and Augsburg College, is the new Minneapolis Southwest High School boys head coach.  Boone is an accountant and won’t have a classroom teaching position at Southwest.

James Ware, the new basketball coach at Park Center, is an assistant principal in the Hopkins school system.  Ware’s basketball resume includes assisting Hopkins High School head coach Ken Novak Jr. and working for Dan Monson when he was the Gophers head coach.

Trent Klatt, the former North Star, Gopher and 1989 Minnesota Mr. Hockey, is the new head hockey coach at Grand Rapids High School.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

For $2,000 each a maximum of 25 individuals can participate in the Gophers second annual Boys of Fall Elite Camp in August. The three-day experience (August 7-9) will coincide with Minnesota’s preseason football training camp.  Attendees become acquainted with the team and staff, and will have an in-depth look at coach Jerry Kill’s offensive, defensive and special team’s philosophies.  Participants will attend all team, position and special teams meetings with players and coaches, plus on the field practices.  More at Coachkillfbcamps.com.

After a disappointing performance in the playoffs against the Blackhawks, Wild goalie Devan Dubnyk, who is an unrestricted free agent this offseason, has lost some bargaining power on his next contract.  The second round playoffs were the biggest stage this year for the Wild and Dubnyk.  He didn’t play his best and teams now have to decide how much importance to give the Blackhawks series versus Dubnyk’s superb play last winter and in the first round of the playoffs.  Best guess is he re-signs with the Wild and perhaps triples his reported $800,000 annual salary.

Vikings coach Mike Zimmer meets with the media this week for a special session where he will share thoughts on how he coaches and his expectations of players.

Vikings first round draft choice cornerback Trae Waynes after being asked if he sets goals:  “No.  My whole mindset is play as hard as I can as fast as I can.  Just try to make an impact.  I’m competing against myself and…against other players but I have got to push myself at this level (NFL), and my big thing is just go out and compete.”

The Twins moved up from No. 21 to No.12 in Espn.com’s latest MLB power rankings of teams.  The Cardinals are No. 1 while Twins’ Central Division rivals the Royals and Tigers are 2 and 4.

Twins shortstop Danny Santana has nine errors in 30 games this season.  The club record for fewest errors by a shortstop is Leo Cardenas’ 11 in 1971.

While the Saints don’t open the season in their new ballpark until May 18, Hamline’s baseball team has already played nine games there.  Among early descriptions of the new facility is it’s “definitely a pitcher’s ballpark” with long distances to the fences.

 

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 92
  • 93
  • 94
  • 95
  • 96
  • 97
  • 98
  • …
  • 139
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Tommies Locker Room   Iron Horse   Meyer Law   KLN Family Brands  

Recent Posts

  • NFL Authority: J.J. McCarthy Will Be ‘Pro Bowl Quarterback’
  • Vikings Miss Ex-GM Rick Spielman’s Drafts, Roster Building
  • U Football Recruiting Class Emphasizes Speed, Athleticism
  • Keeping QB Drake Lindsey in 2026: Job 1 for Fleck, Gophers
  • Advantage & Disadvantages: Vikes Face former QB Darnold
  • Time for Vikings to Try Rookie Max Brosmer at Quarterback?
  • Mike Grant’s Season: 400th Win & Another State Tourney Run
  • Vikings Head Coach O’Connell Calls Boo-Birds ‘Justified’
  • Why It Could be Wait Until 2026 for Vikings J.J. McCarthy
  • Fingers Crossed Golden Gophers Can Retain Drake Lindsey

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

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