Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Blaze Credit Union

Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick

Category: RICHARD PITINO

Tyus Jones Supporters in Indy Tonight

Posted on April 6, 2015April 6, 2015 by David Shama

 

Tyus Jones will have plenty of Minnesota support tonight when he and his Duke teammates play Wisconsin for the NCCA championship in Indianapolis.

The Blue Devils freshman point guard can look into the stands at Lucas Oil Stadium and see his mom, dad, brothers and other family and friends he has known while growing up in the Minneapolis area. Family is important to Jones and he earned many admirers while becoming a high school All-American at Apple Valley High School.  Tonight he will be hoping the Blue Devils can defeat the Badgers just like they did in early December in Madison when folks from his Minnesota constituency were also in the stands cheering for him.

Jones enjoyed a Midwestern homecoming in Madison on December 3, leading then No. 4 ranked Duke to an 80-70 win over No. 2 Wisconsin.  Jones scored 22 points, driving to the basket with success and making outside shots (2 of 3 three point attempts).  The 6-foot-1 Jones also had a team-tying high of six rebounds and the most Duke assists with 4 during 37 minutes on the floor.

In the past the Badgers have shown vulnerability to guards like Jones who can penetrate the lane and score, or pass to teammates for easy shots.  But teams make adjustments and tonight will show what answers the Badgers have for Jones.

There’s no doubt both the Blue Devils and Badgers are better than when they played in December.  Duke starts Jones and two other freshmen, center Jahlil Okafor and forward Justise Winslow.  Those players are not only exceptionally talented but have progressed since early December as they gained more experience.  That’s a plus for Duke but Badgers fans remember that when the two teams played in Madison star forward Sam Dekker was recovering from an injured ankle.

Dekker is a junior and often shares scoring honors with Associated Press Player of the Year Frank Kaminsky, the 7-foot center.  Kaminsky is a senior, as is starting guard Josh Gasser.  Those three are joined in the starting lineup by two sophomores, guard Bronson Koenig and forward Nigel Hayes.  All five played last year when the Badgers lost to Kentucky in a semifinals Final Four game.

All that past playing time might give the Badgers an edge tonight, just like it did in the closing minutes of last Saturday evening’s game when Wisconsin defeated a more inexperienced Kentucky team (71-64) by playing with better precision and poise.  But the Blue Devils also looked like a potential national champion on Saturday night, easily defeating Michigan State 81-61.

Win or lose, Jones has proven he can play with college basketball’s best point guards.  Al Nuness, the former Gopher guard and cousin to Tyus, has been impressed.  “Early in the season no one knew how a freshman point guard would play,” he told Sports Headliners.  “But he hasn’t played like a freshman point guard.  He’s so cool, calm and collected.  He sees the court as good as anybody I’ve ever seen.  He doesn’t get anxious.  He doesn’t try to take over the game.

“No one expects him to score a lot but he can.  Everybody says he passes.  He (also) penetrates.  He shoots the three as good as anyone.  His whole thing is getting everyone else in the game. …”

Nuness predicted it will be a “great game” tonight.  As a long time Gophers booster, he has loyalties to the Big Ten but when he sorts out his emotions it’s clear he wants Duke to win.  “Family always comes first,” he said.

Tonight Jones will see family and friends from Minnesota make him a priority by being in Indianapolis.

Worth Noting 

Richard Pitino
Richard Pitino

Gophers basketball coach Richard Pitino, whose name has been linked in the last couple weeks with openings at St. John’s and Alabama, must pay the University of Minnesota $1.5 million if he decides to leave prior to April 30, 2016, according to his contract.  Anthony Grant, the Alabama coach who was fired last month, was once head coach at VCU where Minnesota athletic director Norwood Teague hired Grant when he was AD there.  Grant’s name was mentioned with the Minnesota job before Pitino was hired by Teague two years ago.

Internet reports now are that former NBA coach Avery Johnson will take the Alabama job.

Two players the Gophers reportedly are recruiting, Chris Boucher and Mychal Mulder, were included on the All-American National Junior College Athletic Association first team announced recently. Ten players were named first team All-Americans.  Boucher is a 6-10 sophomore center at Northwest Florida State College and Mulder is a 6-4 sophomore forward from Vincennes University.

Eric Musselman, the son of former Gophers and Timberwolves head coach Bill Musselman, was an assistant coach at LSU last season before recently being hired as head coach at Nevada.  Eric is friends with Wolves coach Flip Saunders and it wouldn’t have been surprising if Musselman had been added to the NBA team’s coaching staff last year.

Bolder Options, the youth mentoring nonprofit headed by former Gophers running back Darrell Thompson, celebrates its 21st anniversary with a gala on Thursday evening May 28 at TCF Bank Stadium.  NBC Sunday Night Football reporter and long time Minneapolis area resident Michelle Tafoya will be the keynote speaker.

The Twins open the regular season today with an afternoon game in Detroit against the Tigers, and Minnesota’s 25-man roster has changed a lot from one year ago.  Twelve players weren’t with the Twins when they opened the 2014 season.  Here is a listing by position of the 12: pitchers – Blaine Boyer, J.R. Graham, Tommy Milone, Tim Stauffer and Aaron Thompson; catcher Chris Herrmann; infielders – Eduardo Nunez, Danny Santana and Kennys Vargas; outfielders – Torii Hunter, Shane Robinson and Jordan Schafer.  Graham is the only player without previous major league experience.

The Wild plays its final regular season home game tonight against the Jets and with a win in regulation can clinch a playoff spot for the third straight year.  The club has sold out its previous 40 home games this season and is working on a stretch of 71 consecutive sellouts at Xcel Energy Center dating back to 2013-14.

Goalie Devan Dubnyk started his 37th consecutive game for the Wild in last Saturday night’s 3-2 loss to the Red Wings.  That’s the most in the NHL since Evgeni Nabokov made 43 straight starts for the Sharks (in 2007-2008), according to Elias Sports Bureau.  Dubnyk has given up only 62 total goals for a 26-7-2 record in 36 straight starts since joining the Wild January 15.  He has allowed two goals or less in 27 of those 36 games.

The 2015 Gophers women’s hockey national championship team has 17 of 21 players returning for next season.  A year from now 12 of those 17 are expected back for the 2016-2017 season, so the likelihood for continued success is considerable.

Brad Frost
Brad Frost

UMD is the only women’s program that has won three consecutive NCAA hockey titles.  Can the Gophers win two or three in a row?

“That would certainly be the goal,” coach Brad Frost told Sports Headliners.  “In 2012 and 2013 we went back to back (titles) and then lost last year in the championship game, and then won it this year.  So to be in the national championship game three of the last four years and win three of those I think is remarkable.  People probably think it’s pretty easy but I can promise you it’s not.”

The Gophers begin their off-ice spring conditioning work this week.  Part of their endurance building in the weeks ahead will include running the steps at Mariucci Arena.  Frost said players laugh about the challenge but also cry because the task is so demanding.  “They love it and hate it at the same time,” he said.

Frost, who earns $170,000 from the athletic department in salary and other compensation, left town to recruit after the Gophers won the national title on March 22.  He knows prospective players and their parents look at the Gophers with more interest coming off a national title.  “I think we’re building something pretty special here at the University,” he said.

1 comment

No Bonuses for Gophers Coach Pitino

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

 

This season Gophers basketball coach Richard Pitino won’t earn any incentive bonuses tied to his team’s on-court performances.  The coach’s contract with the University of Minnesota includes many potential bonuses including $25,000 for winning the Big Ten Conference Tournament, but the Gophers were eliminated from the tourney in Chicago last night.  Minnesota defeated Rutgers on Wednesday but lost to Ohio State last evening.

The Gophers had a disappointing season after winning last year’s NIT championship and returning four starters.  Expectations in 2015 were for an NCAA Tournament invitation and winning record in the Big Ten.  Instead the Gophers finished 6-12 in regular season league games and won’t be considered for an NCAA invite with their 18-15 overall record.  Pitino’s contract guarantees him a $50,000 bonus for a winning record in the Big Ten and the same amount if the Gophers are regular season conference champs.

Richard Pitino
Richard Pitino

There are no bonuses for postseason tournaments other than the NCAA tourney.  Pitino can earn $50,000 for getting his team into the NCAA tourney, $50,000 for making the Sweet 16, $50,000 for the Final Four, and $100,000 for winning the national championship.

Contract incentives also include $25,000 for being honored as Big Ten Coach of the Year and $50,000 for National Coach of the Year.

Pitino didn’t earn any of the above mentioned bonuses this year or last.  Pitino’s 2013-2014 team, his first at Minnesota, finished with an 8-10 record in the Big Ten.  That group was considered an overachieving team that won seven of its last eight games including five straight to win the NIT title.

This season’s team, led by five seniors, has lost six of the last eight games.  Among gloomy experiences were road and away losses to Penn State, and a home loss to Northwestern—two of the Big Ten’s historically worst programs.

The Gophers lost eight conference games by six points or less.  Pitino has said the team hasn’t been lucky at times and he is correct, but the Gophers’ defensive failures have been a cause of misfortune.  Minnesota hasn’t been able to correct its season long weakness in defending three point shooting, has been in ineffective at making key defensive stops, and sometimes been overmatched in defensive rebounding.

With the seniors leaving the program, the Gophers’ starting lineup, and certainly the roster, is somewhat of a mystery for next season.  Pitino has scholarships to work with this spring and one source close to the program predicted at least two new players will be added, perhaps a small and power forward.

Pitino, 32, was hired by athletic director Norwood Teague in the spring of 2013.   The contract he and University representatives signed in May of that year stated a base salary of $500,000 per year and supplemental compensation (for media, fundraising, community involvement and more) of $700,000.  Annual salary increases are subject to evaluation by the University.

Worth Noting 

Andre Hollins
Andre Hollins

Gophers leading scorer Andre Hollins made five of nine field goal attempts in the first half of last Sunday’s final regular season game against Penn State, then went 0-5 for in the second half.  In Wednesday night’s opening Big Ten Tournament win over Rutgers he was 0-5 from the floor, and then last evening made four of 14 field goal attempts.  That’s a four of 24 shooting slump for the senior guard who has been one of Minnesota’s best players for four years.

Despite a career low batting average of .277 last season, Joe Mauer still compares favorably with other hitters past and present.  Among active players, Mauer’s .319 lifetime average is second only to Albert Pujols at .320.  For career batting averages since 1950 among major leaguers, Mauer ranks seventh.  His on-base percentage of .402 is third among today’s players, trailing Joey Votto at .427 and Miguel Cabrera, .411.

Ervin Santana, the right-handed veteran pitcher who the Twins signed as a free agent last December, could be the staff ace and is capable of being dominant.  Twelve times during his 10 season MLB career he has produced double-digit strikeouts in a game.  In seven starts for the Braves last season from July 18-August 18 he had a six-game win streak, going 6-0 with a 2.98 ERA.

Don Lucia
Don Lucia

Coach Don Lucia’s Gophers hockey team plays its last two regular season games tonight and Saturday evening at Mariucci Arena with second place Minnesota one point behind first place Michigan State in the Big Ten standings.  The Gophers are defending conference champions, and in 2012 and 2013 Minnesota won WCHA regular season titles.

This weekend’s series will be the final two games at Mariucci Arena for six seniors.  Seth Ambroz, Travis Boyd, Christian Isackson, Ben Marshall, Kyle Rau and Sam Warning comprise one of the most successful classes in program history with three straight regular season conference titles (a Gophers men’s record) and two trips to the NCAA Frozen Four.  A second consecutive Big Ten title would make the senior class the only group at Minnesota to win regular season titles in each of four years together.  Their record is 101-42-15 (.687), including 60-13-7 (.812) at Mariucci Arena.

Bemidji State, Bowling Green, Lake Superior State, Minnesota State, Michigan Tech and Northern Michigan are teams participating in this weekend’s opening round of the WCHA men’s hockey playoffs.  Rosters include many Minnesotans such as Bemidji State freshman Michael Bitzer (Moorhead High School) who leads WCHA goalies in save percentage (.932) and is tied for second in goals against average (1.76).  Bitzer was honored yesterday as the WCHA Rookie of the Year.  Bowling Green junior goalie Tommy Burke (Academy of Holy Angels) is seventh in both save percentage (.919) and goals against average (2.19).

Minnesota State forward C.J. Franklin (Forest Lake) is second among freshmen scorers with 24 points.  Senior teammate Zach Palmquist (South St. Paul) is second in scoring among WCHA defensemen with 26 points.

Former Gophers basketball assistant coach Dan Kosmoski has his St. Olaf men’s team (23-5) in the Division III Sweet 16 with a game tonight against Marietta in Rock Island, Illinois.  The Oles have won a school record number of games for one season and can play Saturday against either Augustana or Mount Union if they win tonight.  A Saturday win sends the Oles to the Division III Final Four.

Automated telephone calls were made to the public this week urging recipients to contact state legislators regarding a bill to reverse Minnesota State High School League transgender policy.  League officials voted in December for transgender athletes to play on the school teams best aligned with their gender identity.

Comments Welcome

Pitino: Bo Ryan ‘Teaches You a Lot’

Posted on March 6, 2015March 6, 2015 by David Shama

 

Gophers basketball notes following last night’s 76-63 loss to Wisconsin which used the win to clinch the Big Ten championship:

Minnesota never recovered from a slow first half start, trailing the Badgers 17-6 with about eight minutes gone in the game.  The Badgers mostly cruised with a double-digit lead during the game.

“We let them score too easily,” said Gophers senior guard Andre Hollins. “They set the tone (early).  We got down big.  When you get down big on a team like Wisconsin, it’s hard to come back.”

The Badgers are 15-2 in league play and coach Bo Ryan has now won four Big Ten titles at Wisconsin in 14 seasons.  He teaches his players fundamentals like few coaches ever have and part of the success is minimizing mistakes.  In last night’s game the Badgers committed only 11 fouls and nine turnovers.

Richard Pitino
Richard Pitino

“He teaches you a lot as a coach about not fouling and not turning it over,” Gophers second year coach Richard Pitino said after the game.  “It’s almost like their program is built on that.  Don’t turn it over.  Don’t foul. …

“They make use of it every single possession and they make you pay when you make a mistake.  They really do.  We turned them over nine times.  He may make them walk back to Madison because of that.  I thought we lost to a great team.”

The Gophers, 6-11 in the Big Ten, have their last regular season conference game on Sunday at noon against Penn State at Williams Arena.  Minnesota’s Big Ten record has been a disappointment for a team that closed last season by winning the NIT and returned most of the key players.

But Pitino was upbeat last night.  “I don’t think the year is weighing on anybody.  I think we lost to one of the best teams in the country.  We hate losing but we’ll be ready to roll on Sunday.”

Sunday’s game will be the last scheduled game at Williams Arena for several seniors including center Elliott Eliason who for much of his career has either been a starter or among the first players off the bench for the Gophers.  Eliason, though, hasn’t played a minute in the last two games and just two minutes in the game before that.  The Chadron, Nebraska native’s parents came to town for last night’s game and will attend the Penn State game, too.

Among the sports celebrities at the game was golf authority Andy North, the avid Badger fan who sees Wisconsin play about 30 times per year.  “Bo and I have been friends for 40 years,” North told Sports Headliners.

The two men play golf together.  North, who twice won the U.S. Open, said the coach is “very competitive” in attitude on the course and has a 16 or 17 handicap.  North has blocked out his schedule so that if the Badgers qualify for the Final Four in Indianapolis he can attend.

Vikings general manager Rick Spielman, just back from a meeting with Adrian Peterson in Houston, was at Williams Arena with club colleagues.

Worth Noting 

Adrian Peterson
Adrian Peterson

Peterson’s contract for 2015 reportedly calls for him to earn $12,750,000 but that puts him pretty far down the list of the NFL’s top paid players.  The highest earners in the league are no longer running backs.  There’s no question rushing is less important in the NFL than it once was.  The last team to lead the league in rushing and win the Super bowl was the 1985 Bears, according to Tuesday’s Mike & Mike show on ESPN.

Ryan Galindo is the new head football coach at Washburn.  Galindo, a Washburn alum, has been the offensive coordinator for the Millers.  He succeeds Giovan Jenkins as head coach.  Jenkins started this week as a volunteer coach at Minnesota.

Jeff Jones, the Gophers running back who didn’t qualify academically last season to play as a freshman after graduating from Washburn High School, continues to excel in the classroom at Minnesota and may soon have consecutive semesters with GPA’s over 3.0.

Jones, the Gophers’ only Rivals.com four-star player in the recruiting class of 2014, could perhaps play next fall as both a running back and slot receiver.  With exceptional burst, he might be used in the slot and run the jet sweep similar to how Wisconsin’s Melvin Gordon made his early reputation for the Badgers.

Playing in the slot as a potential receiver, Jones has the hands to effectively catch the ball.  Jones, 6-0, 198, has added strength since joining the program last summer and will be among the team’s most intriguing prospects to watch during spring practice.

Ex-Gophers safety Cedric Thompson was one of the defenders making Minnesota’s secondary among the best in the Big Ten last year.  Although Thompson has used up his eligibility, he remains optimistic about the secondary including because of redshirt sophomore (next season) Daletavious McGhee who he believes can become a “great” player.  McGhee, 6-1, 208, saw limited time in nine games last season.

Former Gophers wide receiver Derrick Engel said he’s fully recovered from the ACL injury he sustained in late 2013.  Engel worked out at the Gophers Pro Day this week and hopes to be selected in the NFL Draft.  If not, the Canadian Football League could be an alternative.

Engel’s brother Sean, a 6-5 receiver who will be a senior at Chaska High School next season, has drawn interest from the Gophers.  Sean made an unofficial visit to Boise State last month and the Broncos are expected to continue following him.

The Gophers, Iowa, North Dakota State and Wisconsin have offered football scholarships to North High athlete Tyler Johnson, according to Rivals.com.  A quarterback for the Polars, Johnson projects as a defensive back in college.  Johnson, likely the best senior football player in the City Conference next fall, is also a shooting guard on the North basketball team.

Former Gopher Ra’Shede Hageman learned a lot about being a professional player in his rookie year of 2014 with the Falcons.  His defensive line physical skills have been compared to the Lions Ndamukong Suh who drew a suspension last year for stepping on Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers.  Would Hageman do something similar?

Hageman laughed and answered, “No. That’s a great question.”

The Gophers men’s hockey team was the No. 1 team in national polls last fall but later dropped out of the top 20.  Minnesota, though, has won six of its last eight games and is ranked No. 15 in two national polls.

Lou Nanne
Lou Nanne

Lou Nanne, the former Gophers and North Stars player, has observed the team’s improvement and despite earlier disappointment with Minnesota playing below its talent level he remains optimistic about the postseason.  “If they’re playing up to their ability, I expect they could win the national championship,” he told Sports Headliners.

Nanne sees the Gophers playing smarter, with more intensity and cohesiveness now.  Although Adam Wilcox has experienced some inconsistency, the junior from South St. Paul remains one of college hockey’s best goalies.  “I have no problem him being my goaltender in big games,” Nanne said.  “If I gotta win a game in college, I’ll be happy to go with Wilcox day in and day out.”

Nanne will have knee replacement surgery next week.  This week he is completing his 51st season of providing TV analysis for the state boys hockey tournament.

Jordan Leopold, the Robbinsdale Armstrong High School alum, became the 21st Minnesota native to play for the Wild when acquired in a trade this week with the Blue Jackets.  Leopold played on the Gophers 2002 national title team and won the Hobey Baker Award the same year.

Every college recruiter and pro sports executive responsible for attracting free agent talent to this city should read Atlantic Magazine’s “The Miracle of Minneapolis” story.  The February article by Derek Thompson says, “No other place mixes affordability, opportunity, and wealth so well.”

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 28
  • 29
  • 30
  • 31
  • 32
  • 33
  • 34
  • …
  • 41
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law   Iron Horse  

Recent Posts

  • U AD: Golden Gophers in Good Spot in Rev Share, NIL
  • Gopher Men’s Hoops Not Starting Series with Tommies
  • U AD Talking Niko Medved & Dawn Plitzuweit Contracts
  • Don’t Expect Solo Act from New Vikings General Manager
  • Poor Arizona Defenses Did QB Kyler Murray No Favors
  • Twins Nix Royce Lewis June 6 Jersey Giveaway
  • Can Baseball Save Memorial Day?
  • U 2027 Recruiting Class Ranks High But Linemen Hold Key
  • Kyler Murray Mystery Maybe Decided Prior to Training Camp
  • Wolves Anthony Edwards Shows His Grit as Playoff Hero

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
Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Blaze Credit Union

Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick
© 2026 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.