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

Deal in Works to Reward Jerry Kill

Posted on February 3, 2014February 4, 2014 by David Shama

 

Multiple sources have told Sports Headliners a deal is in the works to increase coach Jerry Kill’s compensation.  An increase in salary could be from $1.2 million to $2.2 million annually.

The new agreement is believed to have other elements beyond salary but those details haven’t been identified by sources.  An announcement appears likely between recruiting Signing Day on Wednesday and the team’s spring game April 12.

Kill was the lowest paid head coach in the Big Ten Conference last fall, according to a November 7 USA Today article listing the earnings of major college football coaches throughout the country. The story said the average compensation for a Big Ten head football coach was $2.6 million.

Kill has been Minnesota’s coach for three seasons, leading a rebuilding of the program.  The 2013 Gophers won eight games, the most since 2003.  They also had four conference wins, the most since 2005.

University of Minnesota president Eric Kaler and other decision makers are admirers of Kill and want to see him remain with the Gophers.  Athletic director Norwood Teague gave more than a nod of support toward Kill when he recently promoted Dan O’Brien from Kill’s staff to the position of senior associate athletics director.  In that role O’Brien, a Kill ally and former college football coach, will oversee Gophers football operations and be very supportive of Kill’s needs for the program.

Because of struggles with epilepsy, Kill coached from the press box and not the sidelines for much of last season.  But Kill has made changes in his daily life and appears to be in good spirits as he closes in on announcing his 2014 recruiting class Wednesday.  He has let it be known how excited he is about soon driving a car or truck again, another indication of improved health.

In addition to Kill’s change in contract, expect his assistant coaches to receive compensation increases before next season.

Worth Noting

The Signing Day Central blog on Gophersports.com will activate at 6 a.m. Wednesday and announce signees and include their bios.  Recruiting coordinator Billy Glasscock, defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys and offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover will answer questions on the blog about recruits who sign National Letters of Intent to play for the Gophers.

Kill’s 4 p.m. Signing Day news conference from TCF Bank Stadium will be streamed online at Gophersports.com.

The Signing Day Social program for fans begins at 6 p.m. at TCF Bank Stadium.  Doors open at 5 p.m.  The cost is $25 per person and some Gophers signees are expected to attend.  Registration is available at GoalLineClub.com.

Kill was inducted into the Saluki Hall of Fame on Friday night.  He revived a collapsing football program at Southern Illinois, going 50-18 in his final five seasons in Carbondale before moving to Northern Illinois and then Minnesota.

Kill said on WCCO Radio’s “Sports Huddle” yesterday that if the Gophers can hold the verbal commitments they have received from recruits this will be a “very, very good signing class.”

Recognition and honors are coming to Mike Grant, the Eden Prairie High School football coach who has led the Eagles to nine state championships including three consecutive titles. Grant will be inducted into the Minnesota Football Coaches Association Hall of Fame March 29 along with several others (more details in Wednesday’s column), and he is also the Don Shula NFL High School Coach of the Year award winner. Grant receives $25,000.00 for the national award, with $15,000.00 dedicated to the Eden Prairie program.

Former Gophers quarterback Rickey Foggie, who played for Lou Holtz at Minnesota, is the new head coach at Red Wing High School and takes over a program that was 1-17 during the last two seasons, according to a January 30 online story by the Red Wing Republican Eagle.

Vikings Hall of Fame quarterback Fran Tarkenton is 74 today.

After losing to Northwestern 55-54 on Saturday, the Gophers are now 1-2 without Andre Hollins, their leading scorer and star guard who has an injured left ankle.  When will Hollins return?  “Hoping for Purdue (game on Wednesday) but highly doubt it,” Gophers coach Richard Pitino said on Saturday.

The Gophers locker room was filled with disappointed players after the Northwestern game and a loss that left Minnesota 4-5 in the Big Ten.  Center Mo Walker sat with his face covered, hiding tears and unwilling to answer questions.

Walker had an opportunity to rebound a shot attempt and score the winning basket as time expired but may have been fouled.  Pitino said “no comment” when asked about the play.

Dan Kornbaum, the Augsburg center who after transferring from UMD has become one of the MIAC’s best scorers, rebounders and shot blockers, is the grandson of former Gophers All-American center Ron Johnson.  Kornbaum’s mother, Jenni, ranks fifth in total career points for women at South Dakota State.  The Timberwolves’ Robbie Hummel is a first cousin of Kornbaum.

The Wild has home games against the Lightning and Predators tomorrow and Thursday evenings.  Then the NHL takes a schedule break because of the Winter Olympics with the Wild not playing again until February 27.

Zach Parise and Ryan Suter from the Wild will play for the U.S. Olympic team. Mikael Granlund will represent Finland and Mikko Koivu, too, if he is recovered from right ankle surgery. Nino Niederreiter will play for Switzerland.  Parise, who is an alternate captain for the Wild, will be captain of the U.S. team.  Suter is an alternate captain for the U.S. team.

Comments Welcome

Dutcher Predicts U NCAA Tourney Invite

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

 

Jim Dutcher told Sports Headliners he expects the Gophers — a team predicted to finish near the bottom of the Big Ten standings — to make the NCAA Tournament in March.

The Gophers, 4-4, have been a surprise team in the Big Ten even though they let a bull’s-eye opportunity for a win get away on Sunday when the Cornhuskers, now 2-5, defeated Minnesota 82-78 in Lincoln.  Dutcher didn’t see that coming but he still believes the Gophers will win enough games to make the tournament, even without injured leading scorer Andre Hollins who is out indefinitely with an ankle injury.

The Big Ten will likely have the highest (or near highest) RPI of any conference and Dutcher said that means the tournament selection committee will be looking for six Big Ten teams.  “There’s enough winnable games left that they can still get to 10 games (wins),” the Gophers former head coach said.  “Even if they get to nine they’re going to make the tournament because they’re going to want to take a minimum of six Big Ten teams. …The Gophers would have to fall flat on their faces not to finish in the top six (in the conference).”

The Gophers play Northwestern, 3-5, at home on Saturday.  Then go to Purdue, 3-4, February 5 before playing Indiana, 3-4, in Minneapolis on February 8.

“They should be favored in all three of them (those games),” Dutcher said.  “Then they got a home game coming with Penn State (1-6).  They got a home game with Illinois coming (2-6).  You gotta think that they can win those games.  So they wouldn’t have to really come out (and) upset a bunch of people to get into the tournament.”

Dutcher said the Gophers, now with an overall record of 15-6, can win the next three games without Hollins.  He knows, however, the value of a player he describes as the team’s best offensively.  “They probably would love to have him available on the fifth of February at Purdue,“ Dutcher said.

Dutcher believes the Gophers have “much better personnel” than Northwestern.  He also said Purdue “struggles to score points” but Indiana will be a more difficult game and one that could go either way.

“I think 10 (wins) still is a reasonable number but they’re going to have to guard somebody,” Dutcher said.  “They can’t give a guy like Petteway 35 points.”

Terran Petteway led Nebraska in scoring with a career high on Sunday night.  The Cornhuskers made 50 percent of their field goal attempts in the game.  And in Minnesota’s previous road loss, Iowa converted 49.2 percent of its field goal attempts during a high scoring 94-73 game.

Dutcher, who coached the Gophers to the 1982 Big Ten title, pointed out that in the Nebraska game point guard DeAndre Mathieu had nine turnovers.  “He didn’t make good decisions,” Dutcher said.

Last year’s Gophers were 8-10 in the Big Ten during the regular season and finished seventh in the conference.  That club was 20-12 overall after the Big Ten Tournament and received an NCAA Tournament invitation.

Worth Noting

Isaiah Gentry, the 6-4 wide receiver from Cincinnati Moeller High School, verbally committed to the Gophers last night.  He is expected to sign his National Letter of Intent on February 5.

Iowa State hired former Kansas head coach Mark Mangino as offensive coordinator earlier this month.  Mangino, who once was offensive coordinator at Oklahoma and made Kansas a top 10 team, will be Jeff Jones’ coordinator if the Washburn High School Rivals.com four-star player decides to attend school in Ames and not Minneapolis. 

Nikola Pekovic scored 22 points when the Wolves defeated the Pelicans earlier this month.   That was one of 17 times this season he has totaled more than 20 points but with bursitis in his right ankle sidelining him indefinitely he won’t be on the court tonight when the Wolves and Pelicans play at Target Center.

The DeLaSalle High School basketball team has high profile players in Reid Travis and Jarvis Johnson but Sacar Anim has been leading the team in scoring average.  Ryan James, reporting for Gopherillustrated.com, wrote on Monday the Islanders’ wing is averaging a team best 15.9 points per game and being recruited by Creighton, Iowa, Nebraska, Northern Iowa and Wisconsin.

Taste of the NFL, a Twin Cities-based non-profit organization dedicated to reducing hunger in America, has raised more than $14 million dollars for local and national food banks, providing more than 112 million meals.  This year’s event will take place Saturday, on the eve of the Super Bowl, at Pier 12 of the Brooklyn Cruise Terminal.  Taste of the NFL was created in 1992 by Cuisine Concepts co-owners Wayne Kostroski and Mark Haugen, the restaurateurs from Goodfellow’s, Tejas, Bar Abilene and the Franklin Street Bakery.

In recognition of the Taste of the NFL, Kostroski rang the closing bell yesterday for the New York Stock Exchange.

Twins president Dave St. Peter said the estimated local economic impact from next July’s MLB All-Star Game is about $85 million.

A hockey source told Sports Headliners he expects Minneapolis-St. Paul to host an outdoor NHL game in the “next couple of years.”  The Red Wings used Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor for their game with the Maple Leafs while Comerica Park in Detroit was the site of other hockey events as part of the NHL Winter Classic promotion.  A similar setup could be done here using both TCF Bank Stadium and Target Field.

The WCHA hopes to have a new commissioner by the end of March to replace retiring Bruce McLeod.

Not sure if the thought warms you but the “World’s Toughest Rodeo” will be indoors at Xcel Energy Center Friday and Saturday nights.

KSTP TV sports director Joe Schmit has written a book, Sudden Impact: Stories of Influence through Purpose, Persistence & Passion.  The book includes stories about Larry Fitzgerald, Joe Mauer and Paul Molitor.  More at Joeschmit.com.

Comments Welcome

Give Teague Credit for Pitino Hire

Posted on January 24, 2014January 25, 2014 by David Shama

 

It took courage for first-year athletic director Norwood Teague to dismiss Tubby Smith as Gophers basketball coach last March.  Then Teague stuck his neck out further by hiring 30-year-old Richard Pitino as Smith’s successor.

Smith faltered at Minnesota, unable to win even half of his Big Ten games, but because of his stature as a basketball icon the firing was criticized locally and nationally.  Teague, though, believed he could find individuals more capable of leading the Gophers’ program.

When Teague seemed to whiff on a number of rumored candidates to succeed Smith, Gophers fans wondered who would end up with the job.  And when Gophers alum and Dinkytown hero Flip Saunders couldn’t strike a deal with Teague there were plenty of passionate fans ticked off.

After 10 months on the job Pitino has the program flirting with 2014 success and teasing with what might develop in future seasons.  The Gophers are a surprising 4-3 in the Big Ten and 15-5 overall.  In the last nine days Minnesota has rocked Williams Arena and made national news with upset wins over early season basketball powers Ohio State and Wisconsin.

Gophers deputy athletic director David Benedict, who starts a new job on Monday as Auburn athletics chief operating officer, was part of the administrative team involved with interviewing candidates to replace Smith.  The group also included Teague and senior associate athletic director Mike Ellis who oversees basketball.

“I am not going to take a lot of credit for Richard’s hiring,” said Benedict.  “Norwood has done that before and Mike Ellis has been involved with those hires.”

Benedict referred to the hiring of Anthony Grant and Shaka Smart.  Grant was hired by Teague at VCU and after making his reputation there accepted the head coaching job at Alabama.  Smart succeeded him at VCU and his fiery defensive teams have emerged as part of college basketball’s culture.  “There’s no reason to believe Richard is not another young superstar in college basketball,” Benedict said.

Pitino and staff have impressed with their teaching.  They spend considerable time with the players working on individual skills.  Then at team practices they blend those skills into the group concept.

The result has been players, who once looked like they couldn’t play competitively in the Big Ten, are contributing to the success of a team that observers believed last fall had only minimal talent in guards Andre Hollins and Austin Hollins.  Players like centers Elliott Eliason and Mo Walker have become difference-makers and so, too, have two players Pitino added to the roster, point guard DeAndre Mathieu and shooting guard Malik Smith.

A Big Ten TV commentator said this week Eliason is the most improved player in the Big Ten.  Walker has lost 65 pounds since last season and without his 18 points off the bench the Gophers wouldn’t have won against Wisconsin on Wednesday night.  Mathieu had been a walk-on at another college and Smith was lightly recruited out of high school.

Whether Pitino can ultimately make the Gophers a conference and national power will be determined by recruiting.  But Benedict said the “recruiting piece” is probably his least area of concern.  Pitino polished his recruiting as an assistant coach working for two former national championship coaches, his father Rick Pitino at Louisville and Billy Donovan at Florida.

Benedict said Pitino’s recruiting network, relationships, experience and work ethic will result in success.  Identifying Mathieu and Smith as potential contributors and bringing them to Minnesota are early indicators of Pitino’s promise as a recruiter. “We didn’t have any question whether Richard was going to be able to recruit,” Benedict said.

Benedict also said Pitino’s success in taking a Gophers team that before the season was predicted to finish near the bottom of the Big Ten and having Minnesota in fourth place today and perhaps on its way to a NCAA tournament invitation hasn’t surprised him.  But he knows the reality of Big Ten coaching is Pitino must prove a lot more in the months and years ahead.

Still, the Pitino hire looks impressive today.  “He’s been around big time basketball all his life,” Benedict said.  “He’s seen what success looks like.”

Worth Noting

The Gophers are at Nebraska on Sunday (5 p.m. start) where the Cornhuskers are averaging more than 15,000 fans per game in the new Pinnacle Bank Arena and selling out their games.  “It’s (the atmosphere) supposed to be electric is what everyone down there tells me,” said Gophers center Elliott Eliason.  “Should be a lot of fun.”

Eliason is from Chadron, Nebraska and his parents, brother and friends from high school will attend the game.

Gophers center Mo Walker, who came off the bench to not only score 18 points but grab nine rebounds against Wisconsin, said he plans to stay humble and “hungry.”  Walker had 14 points in the first half after the Gophers lost their best player, Andre Hollins, with an ankle injury.  “Without Mo tonight, I don’t think we win that game,” said Malik Smith.

Dan O’Brien is succeeding Benedict and will be in Benedict’s former office starting on Monday.  O’Brien, a St. Thomas graduate and former athletic director at Hamline and Concordia of St. Paul, has been involved with Gophers football operations since 2008.  As part of athletic director Norwood Teague’s group of top administrators, O’Brien will oversee the football and men’s golf programs, and be involved with facilities and the M Club.

O’Brien, whose new title will be senior associate athletics director, has a strong relationship with football coach Jerry Kill.  Teague’s promotion of O’Brien is another indication of the athletic director’s support for Kill.

Former Ohio State football coach Jim Tressel and Kill will headline the Hamline Football Coaches Clinic tomorrow.  The Tressell-Kill session will be moderated by Jim’s brother and former Hamline coach Dick Tressel. Clinic speakers will also include Minnesota high school coaches such as Givoan Jenkins from Washburn, Jeff Ferguson of Totino Grace and Andy Rostberg from Hutchinson.  More information is available from Hamline football coach Chad Rogosheske, 651-523-2595.

Cretin-Derham Hall defensive end Jashon Cornell, who has been ranked by ESPN as the No. 1 recruit nationally in the prep class of 2015, has been elected a Raiders captain for next fall.  A source told Sports Headliners Cornell has about 20 college offers including Michigan and Notre Dame but the Gophers remain a favorite.

Cornell, who weighed 225 pounds as a freshman, is now at about 275 and has rejoined the basketball team after not playing earlier in the season, according to the source.

Jeff Jones, the highly recruited Washburn running back, has cancelled visits to Florida and Michigan after both schools told him they made commitments to other backs.  Jones has a home visit with the Gophers on Sunday, according to Jenkins, his Washburn coach.

Prior Lake senior linebacker Blake Weber has a scholarship offer from Northern Iowa, and Iowa is recruiting him as a preferred walk-on.  The Gophers have also recruited him as a preferred walk-on.

Isaiah Gentry, a 6-4 wide receiver from Moeller High School in Cincinnati, is being recruited by the Gophers and is scheduled to be in Minneapolis this weekend.  Considered a late developer with Big Ten potential, Gentry’s receivers coach is Pete Hopewell, brother of former Gopher Paul Hopewell.

Twins president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners he’s expecting total attendance of about 15,000 at Target Field for TwinsFest today through Sunday.  He said the total will compare favorably with the top drawing winter fanfests staged by other major league teams.

The Metrodome attracted TwinsFest crowds of more than 30,000 but with that site no longer available St. Peter said the organization will be surveying fans for their opinions about the new venue.  With adult tickets priced at $20, he described the event as a “great value” and reminds fans TwinsFest is a fundraiser for the Twins Community Fund.

Approximately 73 former, current and future Twins will participate in TwinsFest.  They donate their time with the organization paying for travel, lodging and meal costs.

Among those players will be new pitcher Ricky Nolasco.  St. Peter said this is Norlasco’s third time ever in Minneapolis.  The first was last year when he and his Marlins teammates were snowed out of a game.  The second time was late last year when a blizzard hit town and the third visit came earlier this week when cold temps hit Minneapolis.  “We’re trying to convince him it will (eventually) warm up in Minnesota,” St. Peter said.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 34
  • 35
  • 36
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 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.