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Category: Timberwolves

Vikings’ Simpson Plans to Stay Humble

Posted on September 19, 2012September 21, 2012 by David Shama

Jerome Simpson told Sports Headliners he’s learned his lesson after pleading guilty earlier this year to a felony drug charge and then being suspended by the NFL for violating league substance abuse policy.

“Just getting back to the old Jerome Simpson, and just being myself and not getting out of character,” Simpson said.  “Just always staying humble and doing the right thing.”

It was reportedly a year ago this month that a marijuana shipment to Simpson’s home in Kentucky led to his problems.  That development would detract from a breakout season while playing for Cincinnati.

The Vikings signed Simpson in the offseason, hoping he will become the deep threat receiver the offense needs.  The 6-foot-2, 189-pound North Carolina native who grew up an only child influenced by his mother’s values will finish his three-game suspension by the NFL after this Sunday’s Vikings-49ers game.

Simpson described the waiting to play as “grueling” but believes he’s circled back to the values he was raised with.  “I’ve grown so much in being able to appreciate the position I am in, and the influence that I have on the community and a lot of youth,  and people back home, and just all around me,” he said.

A second round pick by the Bengals in 2008, Simpson never had more than 20 catches until last season.  In 2011 he had 50 receptions for 725 yards and four touchdowns while averaging 14.5 yards per catch.  Among the highlights was a front flip into the end zone touchdown against the Cardinals that has become YouTube content.

The Vikings have been searching for an elusive big play receiver since Sidney Rice left for Seattle after the 2010 season.  In two games this season the Vikings’ longest pass completion by quarterback Christian Ponder is 29 yards and the team’s average pass reception is 8.3 yards.  With an exceptional slot receiver in Percy Harvin, promising tight end in Kyle Rudolph and All-Pro running back in Adrian Peterson, a speed-blessed wide receiver to stretch the field and the defense is a missing element in the offense.

The wait to learn if Simpson is the answer is almost over.

Notes:

Controversial former Viking Randy Moss will receive attention locally this week and on Sunday when the 49ers come to Mall of America Field.  But at age 35 Moss is no longer the dominating wide receiver he was when he played here from 1998 to 2004.  Moss didn’t start for the 49ers in either of his team’s first two games this month.  He caught four passes for 48 yards and a touchdown in the opening game and one ball for 14 yards last Sunday.

During player introductions on Sunday night Moss said he was from Rand University, a school that doesn’t exist. The reference was to his hometown while growing up, Rand, West Virginia.

Gophers football coach Jerry Kill said yesterday he isn’t sure when MarQueis Gray’s high ankle sprain will allow him to play again but didn’t rule out the senior quarterback’s participation in Saturday’s home game against Syracuse.  The guess here is Gray will be able to play against Iowa on September 29, or following Minnesota’s bye week in early October.

As of yesterday afternoon the Gophers had about 1,500 tickets at $40 each available to the public for Saturday’s game.  A spokesman said all 5,300 tickets on sale earlier in the week at a special discount price of $10 are gone.

Friends and family of John Williams will feel joy and sorrow tomorrow night at the M Club Hall of Fame induction ceremonies in TCF Bank Stadium’s DQ Club Room.  John passed away this summer and I know how pleased he would have been to attend the ceremonies along with eight other honorees including volleyball’s Lindsey Berg, football’s Tyrone Carter, hockey’s Butsy Erickson and wrestling’s J Robinson.  John was a Time Magazine All-American offensive tackle on the Gophers 1967 Big Ten championship team.  He was admired for his football accomplishments, including playing in the NFL, but family and friends know what made him special was his devotion to helping others.

John was a good friend who was quietly proud of the Gophers and his many achievements including his dental practice in north Minneapolis.  I can’t give John a higher compliment than to say “I can’t replace him in my life.”

St. Thomas confirmed what most MIAC observers thought last week when the Tommies defeated Saint John’s 43-21 in their famous rivalry game.  The Tommies are among the best Division III teams in the country and have impressed with a 3-0 start that includes a defense holding opponents to 98 total yards rushing for the season.  The Tommies have a schedule bye this Saturday.

Former Vikings wide receiver Leo Lewis and ex-Stillwater head football coach George Thole will be among the speakers for the MVP event on Tuesday, September 25 from 6 to 8 p.m. at Trinity Lutheran Church in Stillwater.  MVP is an abbreviation for Men, Value and Purpose.  MVP gatherings celebrate sports with “food, fellowship and inspiration.”  The public is welcome to attend next Tuesday’s event and more information is available by emailing Todd Fultz, toddfultz@me.com.

Former Gustavus tennis coach Steve Wilkinson received the Iowa Varsity Club Lifetime Achievement award last Friday.  On Saturday the former Hawkeyes’ tennis player and assistant coach was introduced at Kinnick Stadium prior to the start of the Iowa-Northern Iowa football game.  Wilkinson has the most coaching victories (929) in the history of college tennis, was five times national tennis coach of the year and is a member of six tennis halls of fame, according to the Varsity Club.

Twins’ Target Field attendance for the 2012 season is 2,580,329 with two home stands remaining.  Attendance totals the first two seasons at Target Field (2010 and 2011) were 3,223,640 and 3,168,107.

Stubhub.com listed tickets on Monday starting at $5 to $7 for next week’s Yankees series at Target Field.

The Twins, tied for last place in the Central Division with a 61-87 record, have been swept 11 times this season.

Scott Diamond, the team’s leading pitcher in wins with 11, has only one victory since August 6.  He has an ERA of 7.33 in his last four starts. 

Zack Greinke, known for not liking a lot of media attention, will be a free agent during the off-season.  This market seems like a comfortable fit for Greinke who is pitching for the Angels.

St. Paul native Ken Mauer starts his 27th season as an NBA referee this fall.  He may officiate for another five to six years.  Mauer said salaries for NBA officials range from $90,000 to $400,000.  He will work 70 to 75 games per season and be on the road about 25 days per month.

Close friends know Mauer has a 1989 Rolls Royce convertible.  He acquired the car after making a successful investment.  “It’s not as fancy as everybody thinks it is but I take good care of it because I probably won’t be able to get another one,” he said.

Bleacherreport.com puts the Timberwolves at No. 17 in its new NBA power rankings out this week.  The website said “on paper” the Wolves are better than last season but won’t make the playoffs.  Too many ifs including point guard Ricky Rubio’s recovery from ACL surgery, and how effectively new but aging acquisitions Brandon Roy (shooting guard) and Andrei Kirilenko (small forward) perform.

Coach Kevin McHale’s Rockets receive a No. 29 ranking.  Coach Randy Wittman’s Wizards are No. 24.  Both are former Wolves head coaches.

Comments Welcome

DiNardo: U Done Losing to NDSU’s

Posted on August 14, 2012August 14, 2012 by David Shama

 

The Big Ten Network football crew including commentators Gerry DiNardo and Howard Griffith was in Minneapolis last weekend to evaluate the Gophers as part of a 12-campus tour of Big Ten football programs.  DiNardo and Griffith are impressed with coach Jerry Kill and the improvement of the Minnesota team.

“I think we’re all gonna see (in 2012) why Minnesota hired Jerry Kill,” DiNardo said on the network’s Gophers preview show.  “He’s a guy that maximizes his (player) personnel.  We’ll see him do that.  He maximizes his staff because they’ve been with him so long.

“The biggest surprise to me a year ago is when Minnesota lost to New Mexico State and North Dakota State.  That won’t happen again.  Minnesota will win every matchup opponent.  Matchup opponent is someone that’s a little better or a little less personnel than you do (have).  He’ll win every one of those games. …It’s taken him maybe a little bit longer here than some of the other places he’s been.”

The Gophers were 3-9 last season including those surprise nonconference losses to the Aggies and Bison.  If DiNardo is correct, the Gophers will sweep their 2012 nonconference games against UNLV, New Hampshire, Western Michigan and Syracuse.  Then Minnesota has to find two wins among eight conference opponents to reach the qualifying six victories to be eligible for a bowl game.

Minnesota is a second-year rebuilding program under Kill, and Griffith thinks the Gophers are still going to “take their lumps.” Griffith likes the direction of the program with Kill and said the players “have bought into the message that he’s talking about from the front of the room.”

No Gopher discussed on the preview show received higher praise than junior defensive tackle Ra’Shede Hageman.  Griffith doesn’t believe any center in the Big Ten can block Hageman who was outstanding in Minnesota’s final game last season against Illinois and has continued to progress.  “In my mind he’s going to be tough to block for anybody,” Griffith said.

Defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys told the Big Ten Network that Hageman, a former tight end, is now understanding the demands of his position.  “There’s not a better athlete in the United States playing d-tackle than what Ra’Shede Hageman is,” Claeys said.  “The more he continues to learn the game, the better off I think he will be.”

Griffith thinks senior quarterback MarQueis Gray can have a “tremendous year.”  DiNardo said proven running skills and improved passing could make Gray the best “dual-threat” quarterback in the conference.

Asked to identify “newcomers” of note this season, Griffith selected redshirt freshman defensive end Theiren Cockran, a promising pass rusher whom Kill has praised in the off-season.  DiNardo chose true freshmen Jamel Harbison, a wide receiver that has shown athleticism in practice this month, and converted quarterback KJ Maye, an exceptionally quick athlete who could play both receiver and running back for the Gophers.

Olympic Basketball & Other Notes:

Minnesotans may never again see an Olympics where men and women with ties to this state played such significant roles in the gold medal success of USA basketball teams. Kevin Love, the Timberwolves’ best player and an NBA All-Star, ranked down the list of premiere players on the men’s roster but he was Team USA’s best rebounder despite limited minutes, while Lynx players Seimone Augustus, Maya Moore and Lindsay Whalen were contributors to the USA women’s team championship run in London.

On a team lacking size and rebounding, it was Love who consistently came off the bench to lead the USA in rebounding at 7.6 per game and he was fifth in team scoring with an average of 11.6.  Balls that he couldn’t control he would tap to teammates.  With the USA only ahead by one point at the end of three quarters in the championship game against Spain on Sunday, Love was asked to play major fourth quarter minutes surrounded by his all-world teammates including LeBron James and Kobe Bryant.

Love showed his usual basketball IQ in the gold medal game, not only positioning himself effectively for rebounds but in the fourth quarter, despite playing with four fouls, he effectively defended Spain’s best player, Pau Gasol.  Despite being undersized against Gasol, he made it difficult for the Spanish center to score, including in the low post.

Love demonstrated something else in the Olympics, too.  He’s a great player but he will never be an alpha dog scorer, the kind that can carry a team to an NBA championship. If the Wolves are ever to dream about a title, they will have to find a James, Bryant, Kevin Durant or Carmelo Anthony to team with Love.

It’s highly doubtful if a healthy Rick Rubio, playing forSpain, could have been the difference in the title game.  The Wolves point guard is not yet a dominant enough all-around player, nor the kind of defensive force that the Spanish team needed.

While the USA men had to struggle in a 107-100 title game win over Spain on Sunday, the women defeated France 86-50 in their title game Saturday.   The Lynx Olympians combined for 17 points. Moore averaged 9 points and 5.6 points per game during the Olympics while Whalen made 56.4 percent of her shots and averaged 8 points.  Augustus averaged 7.8 points.

Augustus, Moore and Whalen will hold a news conference in Minneapolis tomorrow.

The 12-members of the USAmen’s team weren’t paid to play in the Olympics but Kurt Badenhausen writing on August 6 for Forbes.com said those players earned $230 million in NBA salaries and outside endorsements during the last 12 months.  Their Olympic experience will be a further boost to their commercial appeal.

Working for the Big Ten Network on football coverage this fall will be former Gophers Derek Rackley and Justin Conzemius, and ex-Minnesota coach Glen Mason.

Are the Twins moving their metro area radio broadcasts of games to KTWN-FM starting in 2013?

Twins first baseman Justin Morneau is hitting .400 in his last 10 games and moved his average up to .276.  Morneau’s contract expires after next season.  He reportedly earns $14 million this season, according to online information from Cot’s Baseball Contracts.

There have been 126 home runs hit at Target Field this season, the same total as in all of 2011.  In 2010, the opening season of Target Field, only 116 total home runs were hit.

The Twins have drawn over 2 million fans at home this season, the eighth consecutive year they have done so.

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Class A Likely Again for Miguel Sano

Posted on August 6, 2012August 6, 2012 by David Shama

 

Twins phenom Miguel Sano is likely to play in Class A baseball again next season – just at a higher level.  Twins farm system executive Jim Rantz told Sports Headliners the 19-year-old slugger, now with Beloit in the Midwest League, is probably headed to Fort Myers in the Florida State League.

Sano is the most publicized prospect in the Twins organization.  Signed in the Dominican Republic for a reported $3.15 million bonus when he was 16, Sano is featured in the recently released movie Pelotero.  He’s been ranked as the Twins top prospect and power hitter by Baseball America.

Sano leads the Midwest League in home runs at 22 and RBI with 84.  He’s struggled, though, with his batting average, .254, and fielding at third base.

Rantz said the batting average is predictable because Sano is “very aggressive at the plate and still trying to learn the strike zone.”  He is seeing a lot of breaking balls and changeups from pitchers.

“It’s pretty awesome with his home runs and RBI,” Rantz said. “He still has work to do defensively.”

Rantz said Sano’s Beloit teammate Eddie Rosario, among the organization’s better prospects, has made a successful transition this season from the outfield to second base. Rosario was injured in mid-June and was out of the lineup until the end of last month.  He’s another promising hitter and has a .310 average, with seven home runs in 259 at bats.

Twins & Other Notes:

Max Kepler, also drafted by the Twins at age 16 three years ago, is maturing playing for Elizabethton, Rantz said.  Rantz said the native of Germany has “grown into his body.”  Kepler is hitting .275 with seven home runs in 145 at bats.

Tsuyoshi Nishioka, who was a bust as a rookie last season with the Twins hitting .226, “has made a lot of improvement with the bat” playing for AAA Rochester, Rantz said. Nishioka was playing both second base and shortstop for the Red Wings before being recalled yesterday by the Twins.  Instead of media throngs from Japan following Nishioka as they did last year in Minneapolis, Rantz said one or two reporters might have followed him in Rochester.

Rantz watched Twins leading pitcher Scott Diamond in the minor leagues and said he isn’t that surprised to see Diamond’s success in his first full season of major league baseball.  “He’s improved on his breaking ball and his command has been very good,” Rantz said.

New Timberwolves forward Andrei Kirilenko, 31, will be one of the franchise’s better defenders ever if healthy.  Kirilenko has three times been an all-NBA first or second team defender playing for Utah.  At 6-9, with long arms and athleticism, Kirilenko is a potential stopper for a Wolves team that lacks exceptional defenders among its top players.  Physical problems have kept Kirilenko from playing full seasons in recent years.

David Kahn, the Wolves president of basketball operations, talked to Sports Headliners about Kirilenko’s potential impact on defense.  “I am hopeful it will be really good.  We didn’t have anybody who we could really put on some of these wing players, and in our conference especially there are some really big threes.  There’s (Kevin) Durant, there’s Rudy Gay.  There’s several of those. (Nicolas) Batum in Portland.

“So this allows us to have a really long, athletic guy to match up with them.  Not that he can necessarily stop them but I think at least with Andrei’s experience and with his characteristics we can maybe at least slow them down.”

Apple Valley junior point guard Tyus Jones now has a scholarship offer fromNorth Carolina.  That gives him offers that include national powerhouses Duke, Kentucky and the Tar Heels.  In the last 12 months I haven’t talked to any sources who are convinced Jones will play for the Gophers.

Prep basketball authority Ken Lien emailed that Minnesota native Kyle Washington, a high school senior next season, has recent offers from Illinois, North Carolina State and Ohio State.

Brian Bobek, the Ohio State center transfer, hasn’t arrived on campus at Minnesota.  He will be eligible in 2013 and have three seasons to play for the Gophers.  Minnesota coach Jerry Kill recruited Bobek when Kill was head coach at Northern Illinois. “He’s a kid that grew up in Chicago and wanted to stay in the Midwest,” Kill said.

Bobek is a former Parade, Rivals and Scout high school All-American and his father played linebacker at Iowa.

The Big Ten Network sends a crew to cover all the Big Ten football programs during August.  The group will be in Minneapolis on August 11 and BTN’s Gophers coverage will air beginning at 9 a.m. August 12.

Vikings owner Zygi Wilf after being asked about his team expectations:  “I expect to be division champs. I want to be able to fight for the division as we always do every year, and get better for years to come. That’s always been our goal. That’s been the goal since the first day I came here.”

Bethel’s Erik Smith, Saint John’s Stephen Johnson and St. Thomas’ Michael Valesano are nominees for the 2012 Allstate American Football Coaches Association (AFCA) Good Works Team. Nominees are players who have made a difference for their communities in off-field activities.

Compughterratings.com’s Division III preseason rankings include three MIAC teams in the top 20: Bethel, No. 12; St. Thomas, No. 13 and Saint John’s No. 19.  MIAC schools begin nonconference games on September 1 and league games start September 15.

World Golf Hall of Famer Lanny Wadkins, 62, asked about all the advisors used by many PGA golfers these days including sports psychologists:  “…My sports psychologist is the bartender every week.  They’re a lot more reliable.  You know where they’re going to be.”

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