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Category: Recruiting

Big Names Chasing U 4-Star RB Commit

Posted on December 20, 2022December 20, 2022 by David Shama

 

In less than 24 hours the frenzy of National Signing Day for football players will be happening. The Golden Gophers have 20 verbal commitments from high school football players (per 247Sports) and they can’t be sure all will “row the boat” until signing their National Letters of Intent.

Among players worth fretting about today is four-star running back Darius Taylor from Walled Lake, Michigan.  He committed verbally to Minnesota last spring but he’s receiving last minute pressure to flip his commitment.

Ryan Burns, the recruiting authority aligned with GopherIllustrated and 247Sports, told Sports Headliners this is a “whirlwind” time for Taylor who could be the successor to Minnesota All-American tailback Mo Ibrahim next fall.  Gophers’ running backs coach Kenni Burns was instrumental in recruiting Taylor but he has departed for the head coaching job at Kent State.  Michigan, Wisconsin and Iowa have been pushing for Taylor to decommit. In the last week Notre Dame has been in pursuit, too.

Burns said Gophers coaches, including P.J. Fleck, saw Taylor several days ago and indications are Taylor will keep his commitment.  But big brands are chasing Taylor who is known for his power and balance (like Ibrahim). “So, if Minnesota is able to hold on to Darius Taylor over Notre Dame, Wisconsin, Iowa and Michigan that it’d be a heck of a get for Minnesota,” Burns said.

The 247Sports national composite team rankings today have Minnesota at No. 39.  The Gophers’ recruiting classes typically have a final ranking in the high 30s or in the 40s.  That’s not flashy but is characteristic of developmental programs that usually have only a couple of four-star recruits at best and usually no five-stars.

P.J. Fleck

Fleck, hired in January of 2017, has found talent mostly in three-star players. This year’s team has two All-Americans in former three-star recruits Ibrahim and center John Michael Schmitz.  Other programs in the Big Ten West, including Iowa, also follow the developing talent model and sometimes with great success.

Burns said recruits who prioritize money won’t be choosing Minnesota.  Name, Image and Likeness compensation is being offered at some programs as part of the inducement process.  “…Minnesota is a school that will not promise NIL up front,” Burns said. “It’s just not the way they’re going to do it.  No. 1, it’s not legal.  No. 2 (the) compliance (department) here at the University of Minnesota would never allow that.”

As for the Gophers ranking at No. 39, Burns has an optimistic take. “I think there’s more ceiling in this class than maybe the rankings would dictate,” he said.

To illustrate the point Burns talked about Greg Johnson who 247 ranks a four-star in its evaluation but when factoring in other recruiting outlets gives the Prior Lake lineman a composite three-star ranking.  “I think he’s the best offensive line prospect since Joe Alt to come out of this state (two years ago). I mean I think the world of him. …I can see him being a multi-year starter for Minnesota, being an All-Big Ten type of guy that becomes drafted. I am very bullish on him.”

Burns is “bullish” too about safety Garrison Monroe from Shakopee. Seventeen Minnesota verbal commits have higher composite evaluations than Monroe, a three-star athlete with good length and speed.  “…He’s someone I just banged the table for at 247Sports, and now at 247 he’s the No. 4 prospect in the state,” Burns said.

When Burns spoke to Sports Headliners Monday morning, Decatur, Georgia wide receiver Kenric Lanier was one of three potential recruits he thought might verbally commit before Signing Day.  Later in the day 247 announced Lanier, a three-star who will play in the Army All-American Bowl in January, has flipped his Vanderbilt commitment for Minnesota after visiting the Gophers last weekend.

Burns said two others to watch are Iowa native Asa Newsom and Ohio prep Phillip Daniels. Newsom is a linebacker and Burns said the “Hawkeyes want him tremendously bad.” Daniels decommitted from Pitt awhile ago and is coveted by highly regarded Minnesota offensive line coach Brian Callahan (had five Gophers in the last two seasons who earned Big Ten recognition).

Verbally committing yesterday, too, was three-star wide receiver TJ McWilliams from Indianapolis.  He flipped his commitment from Purdue where the Boilers have lost offensive guru head coach Jeff Brohm.

The 2023 Gophers’ recruiting class also includes players from the transfer portal who Burns believes will help fill defensive and receiver needs. “I really like this transfer portal class,” he said.

Committing yesterday was former North Carolina defensive end Chris Collins who could give the pass rush a boost and certainly adds depth.  Two other transfer players on defense are Jack Henderson from Southeastern Louisiana and Ryan Selig from Western Michigan.  When Michael Dixon transferred from Minnesota after the season, that left a hole at safety that Henderson could fill.  Burns said Henderson was the highest graded player for three years in the Southland Conference, per Pro Football Focus. Selig will compete to replace graduating middle linebacker Mariano Sori-Marin.

The Gophers have placed an emphasis on receivers, with commitments from three high school players and two transfers. The most immediate help is likely to come from transfers Corey Crooms and Elijah Spencer.  Burns expects Crooms, from Western Michigan, to make an impact as a slot receiver who will be a threat on deep patterns and across the field.  Spencer, from Charlotte, was the 2021 Conference USA Freshman of the Year, and his presence on the outside will create a competitive situation for playing time with Gopher returnees.

Dylan Wright

Burns said the influx of receivers “speaks volumes” about Minnesota’s intention to pass the ball more and with more success than in the past under Fleck.  Those incoming receivers in the class of 2023 join Chris Autman-Bell, Dylan Wright, Daniel Jackson and possibly tight end Brevyn Spann-Ford if he decides to play another season at Minnesota.  It’s expected Minnesota will still be a run-focused offense next season—led by talented quarterback Nathan Kaliakmanis—but considerably more balanced than in the past.

“There is no more excuse for you not to throw the football if you’re P.J.Fleck,” Burns said.  “You have as much talent as you’ve had since that 2019 season (star wide receivers Rashod Bateman and Tyler Johnson).”

Burns believes the Gophers might not be done with adding transfers.  Additional players could include a cornerback, and offensive and defensive linemen.

Comments Welcome

Vikings’ ‘D’ May Revive vs. Inept Colts

Posted on December 15, 2022December 15, 2022 by David Shama

 

It will be a bad look if the Vikings’ defense struggles again Saturday. The defensive unit and coordinator Ed Donatell will be scrutinized for their performance at U.S. Bank Stadium against a Colts offense that has been mostly inept this season.

The 4-8-1 Colts average just 16.1 points per game, ranking No. 31 among 32 teams.  They have the most turnovers in the NFL at 26. Quarterback Matt Ryan has a passer rating of 84 after throwing 13 touchdown passes and 13 interceptions.

The Colts should be a welcome site to Donatell and his unit after their recent five-game nosedive. In that stretch the Vikings have given up 30.4 points per game and an average of  460.6 yards.  Worse news is that the 10-3 Vikings are 3-2 in those last five games.  Ryan rarely throws for 400 yards but if he does Saturday the Vikings could lose again.

At least among the public there is a lack of confidence in Donatell.  Head coach Kevin O’Connell said Donatell will call plays tomorrow. Asked earlier in the week if he would consider changing coaching assignments and play callers on gameday, O’Connell said, “You’re always looking at things that you think might be a possible answer to help the guys play better and be more consistent, but as of right now, no, not something I’m considering.”

The “as of right now” comment draws attention. It raises questions about Donatell, particularly with another defensive veteran on the staff in Mike Pettine, assistant head coach. Last year as a senior defensive assistant he helped the Bears improve to an overall No. 6 ranking in total defense.  Before that he had success as the Packers’ defensive coordinator. He has 28 years of high school, college and professional experience.

Donatell and the defense are definitely on the collective hot seat for the Vikings who have scored 312 points this season and given up 313.  Maybe facing Ryan can help get things turned around but in the last five games the Vikings have allowed the likes of Mike White (369) and Mac Jones (382) to pass for over 300 yards each.

Worth Noting

Did you know Vikings’ quarterback Kirk Cousins is the only NFL QB with 3,000-plus passing yards and 20-plus touchdown passes in each of the past eight seasons?

Former Vikings wide receiver Nate Burleson will provide analysis on Saturday’s NFL Network game between Minnesota and the Colts. The game will also be seen locally on KSTP.

Nate is the younger brother of Kevin Burleson, the former Gopher basketball guard and ex-Timberwolves assistant coach.  Kevin is head coach of the Rio Grande Valley Vipers of the NBA G League.

The Vikings-Patriots game and two other NFL games televised on Thanksgiving had an average minute audience of 44.1 million viewers, per NFL Communications.

Evans with Gopher fan Arnie Tietz.

There’s a lot of deserved hype about Gophers’ basketball recruit Dennis Evans from Riverside, California because of his defensive prowess but he is very raw offensively, a reality that may have given other college programs pause in pursuing the 7-foot-1 center.

This year’s Gophers, 5-6 and 0-2 in Big Ten games, have myriad issues including guard play.  Tre Holloman, the freshman point guard at Michigan State from Minneapolis, could have helped.  Holloman isn’t starting but has played in all 11 games, totaling 111 minutes and has made just two turnovers.

Second-year coach Ben Johnson’s team is struggling, looking dysfunctional at times and right now Minnesota is a favorite to finish last in the Big Ten for a second consecutive season. The Gophers are No. 244 in the NCAA net rankings of men’s Division I NCAA teams.

At least publicly, it seems like the buzz around the program is looking toward the 2023-2024 season when another hyped recruit, guard Cameron Christie from Rolling Hills, Illinois, shows up—but there are too many things that can happen between now and next fall to forecast a big turnaround for the program.

Sending best wishes to Jimmy Williams, the former Gophers basketball assistant coach and ace recruiter for Bill Musselman and Jim Dutcher, who has advanced Parkinson’s and is living in Tampa.

For a Name, Image and Likeness deal, men’s basketball players from Baylor and Gonzaga were paid by event organizers to promote their neutral site game in Sioux Falls earlier this month. Players received $8,000 each, per a Sports Headliners source.

Not saying it’s certain but don’t be surprised if Karl-Anthony Towns‘ calf injury doesn’t allow a return to Timberwolves game action until February.

It looks like a modest number of Gophers fans will attend the December 29 Pinstripe Bowl in New York City at Yankee Stadium. Reporters will be stationed in the open-air press box.  Accuweather.com forecasts a cloudy day with a high of 36 on December 29.

Lou Nanne has been watching Sammy Walker since the now Wild forward was a pre-teenager.  He told KFAN’s Dan Barreiro this week that Walker might be the fastest player on the team and he likes the former Gopher’s future but wants to see checking improvement.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman said next year’s salary cap may rise by only $1 million per year next year. If so, that could put a player like the Wild’s Matt Dumba, reportedly at about $6 million next year, on the spot regarding his future in Minnesota.

The Gopher wrestling team, with no matches now until January 1 at the Southern Scuffle, is 7-0 and has moved up to No. 9 nationally in the NCAA Division I Wrestling Coaches Poll. The top five ranked teams are Penn State, Iowa, Ohio State, Arizona State and Michigan.

Comments Welcome

Fleck Contract Extension Seems Likely

Posted on November 29, 2022December 2, 2022 by David Shama

 

Emptying out the University of Minnesota and college football notebook in today’s column.

Does P.J. Fleck soon receive a contract extension? The Minnesota head coach has been rewarded with additional years on his contract every year except the COVID- shortened season of 2020.

Fleck, named head coach at Minnesota in January of 2017, received his most recent extension about a year ago. The deal reportedly not only gives him security through 2028 but raised his compensation to $5 million annually.

Athletic director Mark Coyle, who hired Fleck and initiated the multiple extensions and raises, must make the call about a revised contract. On the one hand, Coyle might view the past season as disappointing because of preseason expectations the Gophers could win their first ever Big Ten West Division title, but they came up short despite a very favorable schedule. Minnesota’s strength of schedule ranked No. 126 out of 131 FBS teams, per NCAA statistics.

On the other hand, the Gophers finished 8-4 overall and 5-4 in league play. The winning record in Big Ten games is the third straight for Fleck in a full season (2019, 2021 and 2022). A win in the upcoming bowl game will give Minnesota a nine win year, equaling last year’s record and following the 11-2 mark in 2019.

P.J. Fleck

The Gophers have defeated Wisconsin in consecutive seasons for the first time since 1993-1994. Last Saturday’s win left Fleck with a 28-10 overall record in the three last full seasons. The last four years his conference record is 21-13, the best such run by a Gopher coach since Murray Warmath in the 1960s.

Contract extensions are frequently made as a gesture of faith in the coach, sending an important message about job security that gets out into the recruiting world. Not giving Fleck an extension now, even if it doesn’t include a raise, will raise eyebrows a bit.

It’s not like the Gophers, as a member of the TV revenue rich Big Ten, don’t have money in the athletic department. While Fleck’s compensation could remain the same next year, raises for at least some assistants will be appropriate.

Deserving contract adjustments are defensive coordinator Joe Rossi and running backs coach Kenni Burns. Word is Rossi almost left Minnesota for Notre Dame last offseason. His defenses consistently rank among the best in the Big Ten and statistically stand out nationally. Burns also excels as a coach and his recruiting would be missed if he were to go elsewhere. If either is offered a head coaching job, they likely would be gone from Fleck’s staff.

With the regular season over, meetings with players are being held to evaluate future plans. Fans think about recruiting high school players and players from the transfer portal but in today’s college football it’s necessary to recruit players on the existing roster.

“You always have to constantly be recruiting your own players in a day and age that tampering is rampant,” GopherIllustrated.com recruiting authority Ryan Burns told Sports Headliners. “The NCAA doesn’t do anything about it (tampering) and so that’s the most important job. P.J. is well aware of that, his staff is well aware of that, but it’s incredibly important in the NIL (and transfer) era where it’s legal to an extent to pay players.”

The transfer portal opens next Monday and don’t think there isn’t backchanneling already from schools and players. “You’re going to see some eye-opening moves in those first 48 hours when the portal opens,” Burns predicted.

The transfer portal, allowing athletes to switch schools and have immediate eligibility, debuted four years ago. The upcoming period is predicted to have more action than ever. The portal period starts December 5 and closes January 18, before opening again for a couple of weeks in May.

“…It will be more wild than it’s ever been, I promise you that,” Fleck said last week. “Not just here, just around the country.”

The Gophers could use talent and experience from the portal at most positions. “We have a general idea of what we want to do and how we want to attack that (the portal),” Fleck said. “We’re still going to be a mixture of high school kids and the portal. ..”

Eventually impacting recruiting in a big way could be Dinkytown Athletes, the new collective that facilitates Name, Image and Likeness opportunities and financial compensation for Gopher athletes including football players. Fans, boosters and businesses can benefit athletes through activities such as endorsements and personal appearances. Gophers’ All-American running back Mo Ibrahim has a NIL deal with Gushers, the fruit-flavored snack from General Mills.

Dinkytown Athletes launched earlier this fall. “They’re off to a good start but if they’re going to sustain (success)…there’s not going to be a big booster that’s going to save them like at Michigan State, like the Rocket Mortgage folks,” Burns said. “It’s got to be the common fan (giving money) that’s got to be able to save them.”

Co-founders of Dinkytown Athletes are Rob Gag and former U offensive lineman Derek Burns. The two are guests on the latest Behind the Game show and talk in-depth about their collective with co-hosts Patrick Klinger and Bill Robertson. https://youtu.be/jneDiCjYCkY

The Gophers will need to upgrade their talent to be competitive in the near and more distant future. Next season Minnesota will play two of the best teams in the nation, hosting Michigan in Minneapolis and playing Ohio State in Columbus. The Gophers also play ACC power North Carolina in Chapel Hill.

It’s likely next year will be the last for two divisions in the Big Ten. The West has been inferior for years and expectation is that in 2024, with west coast powers USC and UCLA joining the Big Ten, the conference will eliminate divisions and have a 16-team race for the league championship. The Big Ten has the potential to seriously rival the SEC as college football’s best conference.

Right now the best thing the Gophers have going for with personnel is redshirt freshman quarterback Athan Kaliakmanis. At the game’s most important position, Kaliakmanis could be the best QB talent at Minnesota since All-American Sandy Stephens played his last game in the 1962 Rose Bowl.

Without Kaliakmanis’ arm, legs and poise last Saturday, the Gophers likely wouldn’t have defeated the Badgers who were superior in line play on offense and defense. Kaliakmanis won the day against Wisconsin junior Graham Mertz, setting career highs in completions (19), attempts (29), yards (319) and touchdowns (2). Kaliakmanis completed nine passes of 15 yards or more and averaged 16.8 yards per completion.

With the college football regular season over for many teams, multiple national stats stand out for Minnesota. Ibrahim is second nationally in average rushing yards per game at 144.9, third in points per game at 10.4 and fourth in total rushing yards with 1,594.

Minnesota is No. 2 in the country in time of possession, with an average of 35.14 minutes per game. The Gophers’ defense is No. 5 in scoring defense, allowing 13.3 points per game. Minnesota is No. 3 in fewest penalties per game, allowing 3.67.

The Gophers averaged 45,019 fans per home game, compared to 46,159 in 2021.

The Vikings, BTW, might want to draft Michigan placekicker Jake Moody to replace Greg Joseph. Moody is second in the country in scoring per game at 10.9, converted 26 of 32 field goals and is a perfect 53 of 53 on extra points.

The Minnesota High School All-Star Football Game will be played December 10 at U.S. Bank Stadium. Eight players headed for the Gophers’ program have been announced as participants: Ethan Carrier, Detroit Lakes; Alex Elliott, Hutchinson; Greg Johnson, Prior Lake; Garrison Monroe, Shakopee; Martin Owusu, Prior Lake; Max Shikenjanski, Stillwater; Reese Tripp, Kasson-Mantorville; Jerome Williams, Osseo.

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