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Category: Recruiting

Caitlin Clark Stayed Home, Paige Bueckers Did Not

Posted on March 5, 2024March 5, 2024 by David Shama

 

Caitlin Clark is playing basketball in Minneapolis in consecutive weeks. How lucky can we be that the phenom who has become an American household name is back in town for the Big Ten Women’s Basketball Tournament after playing last Wednesday night at a sold-out Williams Arena against the Golden Gophers?

Well, darn lucky if you care about seeing the player recognized by many as the GOAT in the women’s college game and recognize the legacy of the Iowa native whose popularity transcends her sport.  The Iowa Hawkeyes’ scoring machine is a record setter and trailblazer whose status and achievements enhance Women’s History Month which just happens to be in March.

Iowa is the No. 2 seed in the tournament and will play at 5:30 p.m. Friday at Target Center against the winner of Thursday’s Penn State and Wisconsin game.  Clark has led the Hawkeyes to the last two Big Ten Tournament titles.

Over 109,000 fans are expected to watch the five-day tournament that for the first time in 31 years is sold out.  The demand for tickets is no coincidence with Clark making her final tournament appearance before turning pro later in the year.

Clark’s appearances in Minneapolis are a reminder this town and state could have lined up in adoration at Williams Arena for our own phenom, Paige Bueckers.  Clark, a Des Moines area native, came out of high school at Dowling Catholic in 2020 and headed for the University of Iowa.  A five-star prospect, she said no to Notre Dame and other out of state schools.

Paige Bueckers

Bueckers was the No. 1 national recruit in the high school class of 2020, ranked ahead of Clark and everyone else.  She came out of Hopkins High School and said no to the hometown Gophers and seemingly never looked back in choosing the blue-blood Connecticut Huskies whose 11 national championships are the most ever in women’s hoops.  In Bueckers’ freshman season of 2020-2021 she was the most honored female college basketball player in the country, winning five national Player of the Year awards including the Wooden and Naismith.

The purpose in this space isn’t to criticize Bueckers for not choosing her home state school as Clark did.  But she is part of a long line of superb basketball and football players whose college destinations were elsewhere  Basketball’s Khalid El-Amin, Cole Aldrich, Chet Holmgren, Jalen Suggs, Matthew Hurt, Gary Trent and the Jones brothers turned down Minnesota.  Football can count prep superstars who left the state, too, including Joe Alt, Michael Floyd, Seantrel Henderson, Frank Ragnow, Jaxon Howard, James Laurinaitis, Larry Fitzgerald Jr., Steve Walsh and others.

Talent born, raised and nurtured in the state has too often moved on.  A number of factors figure into decision making, but how refreshing if a Minnesota prep phenom said something like this while committing to the Gophers: “You know what? I owe the people in this state something.  Think about the support I received that made me who I am.

“That support goes beyond my parents and coaches.  I am thankful that communities in the state, including mine, invest in the facilities and programs to help young people reach their potential. I know it takes a lot of time, perseverance, and money to build and maintain the kind of culture we have in our state. I am choosing to be a Gopher because I can grow my career and education at the U, and say thank you Minnesota for making me who I am.”

Kids and their parents are going to make decisions based on what they think is best.  This happens all over the country, of course, not just with uber talented Minnesota preps being wooed by a who’s who of college programs.  But it’s admirable when home state loyalty plays a prominent role in making a college choice.  (See last fall’s decision by Esko’s Koi Perich to play football for the Gophers and the buzz it has created).

Loyalty was important to Clark who also counted Iowa State among her final college choices.  At Iowa her dynamic skills have brought national attention unlike any other player in the history of the women’s college game.  Is there anyone on American soil who doesn’t know that Sunday she surpassed Pistol Pete Maravich as college basketball’s all-time leading scorer?  “She is a pistol in pigtails,” Fox’s Gus Johnson raved on national TV Sunday.

Iowans would have loved Clark even if she chose Notre Dame, UConn or some other destination away from the cornfields.  Be assured, though, there is more affection in their hearts because Caitlin stayed home. In an August 2019 story in the Des Moines Register Clark was still undecided about her college choice but said, “…Just staying home and playing in your home state would be a big deal.”

Bueckers grew up a Lindsay Whalen fan, knowing about the former point guard’s accomplishments lifting both the hometown Gophers and Lynx to national glory.  Bueckers had a Whalen poster in her bedroom growing up but said no to Whalen after she became the Gophers head coach in 2018.

Who knows what kind of impact Bueckers in a Gopher uniform might have had on the program?  She had a pop culture following even in high school, with fans coming to watch her play from not just Minnesota but elsewhere.

Almost assuredly her commitment and presence with the Gophers would have attracted talented teammates.  Whalen, who was fired after the 2022-23 season, would likely still be leading the program.

Both Bueckers and Clark are 22-year-old guards who can carry their teams. Clark has shooting range and accuracy never seen before by a woman in the college game.  Bueckers can score but throughout her career at Hopkins and UConn she has often preferred to set up others with timely playmaking.

Bueckers once told Sports Headliners that she has a “God-given ability that I know what I am doing, and I see…plays two steps ahead.”

The two superstars have played collegiately in different conferences but met in 2021 in a Sweet 16 tournament game.  The Huskies defeated the Hawkeyes, 92-72, as Clark was held to 21 points, about six points below her average.  Bueckers had 18 points, nine rebounds and eight assists for UConn.

Their basketball journeys over the years, including being teammates on the US Under-19 national team, have allowed them to become friends. Despite their extraordinary skills and similarities, neither Clark nor Bueckers has won a NCAA championship yet but their teams have been and remain contenders as top 10 teams in March of 2024.

Bueckers was in Minneapolis two years ago this month playing for the NCAA Tournament title. The Huskies lost the title game to South Carolina, 64-49, after a stellar performance by Bueckers led UConn to a double overtime semifinal win over North Carolina State.  In a game for the ages, she scored 27 points including 15 in overtime.

Brian Cosgriff, her high school coach, offered this praise after the semifinal classic: “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.”

Playing in her hometown, Bueckers reminded us how special she could have been for the Gophers. As if we didn’t know.

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Coach Ben Johnson’s Job Security Looks Like a Lock

Posted on March 3, 2024March 3, 2024 by David Shama

 

If there was any doubt about Ben Johnson returning as the University of Minnesota head men’s basketball coach, it was erased yesterday with the team’s ninth Big Ten win of the season.  The Gophers overcame a 23-point first half deficit to defeat Penn State, 75-70, at Williams Arena.

The victory left Minnesota with a 9-9 league record with two games remaining in the regular season.  The Gophers are tied with Michigan State for fifth place in the Big Ten standings, and have an opportunity to finish 11-9 if they defeat Indiana at home Wednesday night and win at Northwestern next Saturday.  The overall record is 18-11, with a 20-win season possible for the first time since 2019.

Pretty upbeat status for a team that was a popular pick before the season to finish last in the Big Ten.  That outlook last fall only added to the gloom from at the bottom conference finishes the prior two years (6-33 record).  Those were discouraging starts to Johnson’s head coaching career and caused loud grumbling about him heading into the season five months ago.

Johnson could currently be bought out of his contract for $6,519,340.  Other media have reported a lower figure but the above is the correct number.   A disastrous season this winter presumably would have caused athletic director Mark Coyle to think hard about staying with the Minneapolis native, former Gopher guard and the Big Ten’s youngest head coach at 43.

Many years of mediocre and sometimes bad basketball at the U has lowered expectations inside the school and decreased pressure from fans, many of whom have become disinterested in the program.  Even a month of March that includes a 9-11 final regular season record, with perhaps no wins in the Big Ten Tournament and a postseason invite to the NIT will almost assuredly be enough to continue Coyle’s confidence in Johnson.

The elephant in the room for the Gophers is men’s basketball once was a huge money maker for the financially self-supporting athletic department.  Ticket sales for years have generally been in free-fall and revenues aren’t close to their potential.  A Big Ten contending team in this market could command among the higher ticket prices in college hoops and those revenues would shoulder a big load in a department where the only programs making money are football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey.

Ben Johnson

Johnson and his staff improved the roster during the last off-season.  All the key players are potentially back for next year except senior forward Parker Fox.  Potentially is the operative word in the wild world of college basketball where players change schools on a dime.  And sometimes for a bigger dime because of Name, Image and Likeness money.

Contrary to some voices, Johnson has NIL money to work with, so the cupboard isn’t bare.  Resources don’t match the blue blood programs but there has been success by the Dinkytown Athletes collective, and the potential is significant if the Gophers can take over the town like they did in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s.

Johnson and his staff have coaching chops and can motivate players.  Their Xs and Os can be interesting, and it’s been impressive to see how often Minnesota comes out of a timeout with a savvy play to score a bucket.  The coach’s judgment on personnel has usually worked although it’s still annoying to recall how in November the ball was put in freshman guard Cam Christie’s inexperienced hands to make the winning play in a 70-68 home court key nonconference loss to Missouri.

And Fox, who had 11 points, six rebounds and four blocks on Senior Day against Penn State, probably should have received more playing time this season.  His inside scoring, rebounding, shot blocking, unselfishness and energy merited more.  Yesterday he not only started a game for the first time this season but played a rare 28 minutes and was on the floor at the end when Minnesota finished its gutsy comeback.

Johnson, a high character guy, made a classy move in the closing seconds by taking Fox out to receive recognition from the fans.  Those same patrons want their hometown coach to be deserving of their applause in the future, and he will if he can add talent in future off-seasons like he did in the last one.

Worth Noting

The Gophers trailed by 12 points at halftime against Penn State. “The first 20 minutes was just flat, for whatever reason,” Johnson said at his news conference where he added the second half strategy was to tighten up on defense and “chip away” at the deficit.

If the Gophers can win their yet to be determined opening game in the Big Ten Tournament at Target Center next week, the town could get amped.  In game two the Gophers would feel the adrenaline and maybe make a tournament run. Minnesota’s talent is similar or better than most of the Big Ten except Purdue and Illinois.

John Anderson

An overflow crowd of more than 300 heard from Paul Molitor, Glen Perkins and John Anderson at the recent Minnesota Breakfast Club gathering in Naples, Florida, per an email from event attendee Marshall Tanick.  Molitor, the former Twin and Hall of Famer, is excited about the potential of 2023 first round draft choice and outfielder Walker Jenkins. Perkins, who played for Anderson with the Gophers before joining the Twins, lamented the pitch counts in MLB that limit innings by quality starters and strain bullpens.

Perkins praised Anderson as a “molder of men,” according to Tanick. He noted the coach’s emphasis on academics and graduating players.  Anderson is in his final season as Gopher coach after taking over in 1982.  The program has struggled of late but the Big Ten’s all-time winningest baseball coach told the gathering he sees improvement in 2024 with a “deeper and more talented pitching staff.”

Former Twins TV broadcasting icon Dick Bremer turned 68 last Friday.

Lou Nanne, the 82-year-old Mr. Minnesota Hockey icon who retires this month after 60 years of TV commentary at the boys’ state hockey tournament, speaks to the Twin Cities Dunkers at Interlachen Country Club Wednesday morning—the same day the Timberwolves Chris Finch, among candidates for NBA Coach of the Year, talks to the Capital Club at Mendakota Country Club.

Prep football coaching legend Ron Stolski emailed a note that registration for the annual MFCA Football Clinic April 4-6 in St. Louis Park is on a “record pace.”

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Golden Gophers Get Tournament Resume-Building Win

Posted on February 4, 2024February 4, 2024 by David Shama

 

The Gophers earned a resume-building win yesterday defeating Northwestern 75-66 in overtime at Williams Arena.  Minnesota, 14-7 overall and 5-5 in Big Ten games, enhanced its goal of receiving the school’s first NCAA Tournament invite since 2019 with the victory. “That was a significant win for the program,” former Gophers head coach Jim Dutcher told Sports Headliners.

Northwestern, 15-7 overall and 6-5 in conference games, went into Saturday as part of the projected 68-team tournament field posted on ESPN.com by bracketologist Joe Lunardi.  He had the Wildcats, who hold one win and an overtime loss against national title favorite Purdue, as a No. 7 seed.

The Gophers have won two straight games to reach the halfway mark of the Big Ten schedule.  They outscored Penn State by 23 points in the second half to win on the road last weekend.  Yesterday the Gophers trailed most of the second half but were clearly the better team than the Wildcats who turned over the ball an uncharacteristic 17 times.

Ben Johnson

Coach Ben Johnson, talking on the KFAN  postgame radio show, said his team is improving and growing more confident.  “We’re really good (in) second halves. We just have like a calmness to us.  We have a belief. …They don’t get rattled.  They don’t get flustered. …When it’s on the line and we gotta get a win they found ways to win games, and that’s a great sign of a team that’s maturing as the season progresses.”

The Gophers also have a win over Nebraska who Lunardi has as one of his last four teams making the tournament field that will be announced March 17.  Minnesota can keep the resume building Tuesday night at Williams Arena against Michigan State. Lunardi has the Spartans, who defeated the Gophers 76-66 in East Lansing last month, as a No. 8 seed.  They are 14-8 overall, 6-5 in league games.

Dutcher is clearly on board with how the Gophers helped themselves yesterday beating the Wildcats.  “Yeah, absolutely.  You know if you beat some of the lower teams it doesn’t mean as much. But when you beat a team as good as they are—not only this game but they had a really good shot at winning the Wisconsin game (lost 61-59 to the Big Ten’s second best team). …They played them (the Badgers) even pretty much all night.”

Wolves Could Trade for PG They Should Have Kept

Gersson Rosas made savvy moves when he was the Timberwolves president of basketball operations.  It was a mistake, though, during the 2019 offseason when the club let hometown hero Tyus Jones move on via free agency to the Grizzlies.

The Rosas regime hired Chris Finch as head coach and his 2024 Wolves have a 34-15 record, tied with the Thunder for best in the NBA Western Conference.  Personnel acquired by Rosas includes multiple contributors to the current Wolves starting with NBA All-Star shooting guard Anthony Edwards and another talented lineup regular in small forward Jaden McDaniels.  Also, still with the Wolves and contributing off the bench are power forward Naz Reid and playmaking guard Jordan McLaughlin.

But oh, how the Wolves could use Jones, now playing point guard for the Wizards and a possible Minnesota target before the NBA tradeline of Thursday afternoon.  Rosas, who parted ways with the Wolves in September of 2021, apparently didn’t believe Jones, then a reserve, fit in his personnel and pay roll plan.

The Wolves are a talented bunch but need help off the bench including for scoring and decision making.  Jones is an exceptional offensive leader able to help others score and is averaging a career high 12.1 points per game.  His presence with the Wolves would significantly help a roster short on basketball IQ and ability to make the best decisions in clutch situations.

Tyus Jones

When the Wolves face some of the biggest moments in the playoffs this spring, they will need basketball smarts to do important and subtle things on the court.  Mike Conley Jr., the team’s 36-year-old starting point guard, aces the role but help is needed.  If Jones were on the team, he could even play clutch moments with Conley and help direct the team.  If Conley needs rest, is in foul trouble or not able to play because of injury, Jones becomes even more valuable.

Some players just know how to play the game and that’s been the profile on Jones dating back to Apple Valley High School, Duke and the NBA.  The 27-year-old has led the NBA in assist-to-turnover ratio in each of the past three seasons, including a league-record 6.96-to-1 figure in 2018-19.

To make the salary cap numbers work, Wolves president of basketball operations Tim Connelly will likely have to send a player like guard Shake Milton to the Wizards.  But what will be of more interest to the Wizards is having the Wolves offer a high future draft choice—perhaps multiple picks.

That’s giving up a lot but it’s likely a safe assumption Connelly and ownership see a window now to contend for an NBA title.  They have to aggressively sort out possibilities this week as the trade deadline nears.

Minnesota’s options could also include Tyus’ brother Tre from the Spurs.  Like the Wizards, the Spurs are building for future seasons and presumably interested in draft choices.  Tre, at reported salary of almost $9 million, earns an estimated $5 million less than his older brother.  Tre has that Jones DNA of playing with intelligence and poise.  The 24-year-old might be a lesser offensive point guard than Tyus but he’s probably better defensively.

Worth Noting

Right now, it looks like Finch is in a two-man race for NBA Coach of the Year with the Thunder’s Mark Daigneault whose roster includes Minneapolis native Chet Holmgren.  The former Minnehaha Academy superstar is in his own two-man race, vying with the Spurs’ Victor Wembanyama for Rookie of the Year.

The Wolves are the No. 1 NBA team defensively, giving up the fewest points per game.  A lot of that success is because of center Rudy Gobert who looks like a favorite to be the league’s Defensive Player of the Year.

Connelly will draw major interest for NBA Executive of the Year.  Sam Presti of the Thunder and Brad Stevens from the Celtics look like Connelly’s major rivals.

It wouldn’t be surprising if the Twins also make trade news this week.  Starting pitching help seems likely between now and the start of the season.

Veteran right fielder Max Kepler, rumored to be an offseason roster casualty, is a favorite of Twins management but might have been part of trade talks with the Mariners before a deal was finalized last week sending second baseman Jorge Polanco to Seattle.

Burnsville native Shawn Schlechter will be the St. Paul Saints hitting coach in 2024. He had that role for High-A Cedar Rapids in 2022 and Double-A Wichita in 2023 but now returns to Minnesota to work for the Twins’ Triple-A farm team.

Toby Gardenhire, son of Twins Hall of Fame manager Ron Gardenhire, returns for his fourth consecutive season leading the Saints.

Jonathan Mekonnen from Eastview, and Kyle Jorgensen from Washburn, plan to be roommates at Colorado State next summer when they start their college basketball careers.  They are two of four scholarship Rams in the class of 2024 and have formed a friendship after being recruited by Colorado State head coach Niko Medved, the Roseville native and former Gopher student manager.

Mekonnen, a wing averaging 23 points and 13 rebounds as of late last week, is expected to be a top 10 candidate for Minnesota’s Mr. Basketball Award.  Jorgensen entered this season as a lower profile college prospect, but the Washburn center has been impressive.  Eastview coach Danny Olsen, whose team lost to the Millers in December, told Sports Headliners Jorgensen has skills and a playing style that reminds him of NBA superstar center Nikola Nikola Jokić.  Olsen said Jorgensen can “score on anyone” and is a “great passer.”

Norwood Teague’s tenure as Gopher athletic director didn’t end well but it’s interesting that two administrators who he hired at Minnesota are now athletic directors at prominent schools: David Benedict, Connecticut; and Beth Goetz, Iowa.

Remember when Nevada (the site of this year’s Super Bowl) was the only state where you could legally wager on the outcome of sports events?  Now such gambling is legal in 38 states, with others including Minnesota likely to soon join the ranks.  With the gambling fun comes financial setbacks and addiction but who would wager sports betting will be in decline anytime soon?

Because of a labor agreement signed years ago between the NHL and its players, salaries pale in comparison to other major sports leagues.  Wild star Kirill Kaprizov, the team’s lone representative in Saturday’s NHL All-Star Game, is compensated at an annual value of $9 million while so-so Vikings cornerback Byron Murphy reportedly earns nearly as much.

Mark Whicker, writing for The Morning After, detailed the NHL compensation situation in a recent article.  He pointed out NBA Heat head coach Erik Spoelstra reportedly makes $15 million, a figure that exceeds many NHL players including Kaprizov.

Word from a valued hockey source is if the Wild don’t start fast after the All-Star break, there will be personnel changes by GM Bill Guerin that include parting ways with Marc-André Fleury.  Near untouchables, the source said, are Karprizov, Joel Eriksson Ek and Brock Faber.

A former NFL team executive, asking that his name not be published, predicts the Chiefs will beat the 49ers in Sunday’s Super Bowl.  He told Sports Headliners the Chiefs’ defense has been consistent and effective, and quarterback Patrick Mahomes is “so good on that big stage.”

One in six American service veterans and their families are hungry and not receiving minimum nutritional requirements to live healthy, contributive lives, according to promoters of the “Chefs for Vets” initiative going on now through Super Bowl Sunday February 11.  Edina-based Heritage Gear is stepping up to help. During the campaign every purchase of a bag, accessory or any item found at the Heritage Gear website (http://heritagegear.com) raises money to feed veterans and their families.

Minnesota hockey icon Natalie Darwitz, general manager of the Minnesota team in the startup Professional Women’s Hockey League, speaks to the Twin Cities Dunkers February 15.  Minnesota drew a record professional women’s hockey crowd of over 13,000 at its first game in early January and the league has been averaging close to 5,000 fans per game, according to a recent online report by The Hockey News.

The eighth annual Guns-N-Hoses game benefiting the Front Line Foundation will be February 23 at the Blaine Super Rink, with doors opening at 5:30 p.m. The hockey game matches Minnesota police and firefighters who entertain to help the Foundation that monetarily supports dependents of fallen heroes from law enforcement, fire departments, EMS and the National Guard.  Admission is free but sponsorships, donations and other support is welcome, with more information available at the Guns-N-Hoses website.

 

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