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Category: Timberwolves

Vikings Griffen Lauds Zimmer’s Courage

Posted on December 16, 2016December 16, 2016 by David Shama

 

Vikings tough guy Everson Griffen voiced admiration for coach Mike Zimmer yesterday. Griffen, a seven-year pro, has played for a lot of coaches during his high school, college and NFL career. “He’s the most courageous,” the Vikings defensive end told Sports Headliners yesterday. “He’s just a great coach to play for.”

Zimmer’s multiple eye surgeries this fall have stopped him from coaching in only one game, a loss against Dallas on December 1. Zimmer flew to Jacksonville last week and coached the Vikings to a 25-16 victory over the Jaguars. He has been wearing a patch over his right eye in practice this week but will coach against the Colts on Sunday at U.S. Bank Stadium.

“It was hard not to have him on the sidelines for the Cowboys game,” fullback Zach Line told Sports Headliners. “It felt like things were back to normal when he was travelling with us last week.”

What was different when Zimmer didn’t coach in the Dallas game? “I think just having your leader there changes everything,” Line said. “He’s definitely the guy we look to on the sidelines and in the locker room at halftime.”

Griffen, a 2016 Pro Bowler known for his aggressive style, finds Zimmer inspirational. “He’s a tough guy. He loves the game of football. He was going to find any solution to get back on the field with us.” …

Sam Bradford (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Sam Bradford (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

Despite the team’s offensive line being in disarray because of injuries, and a running game that is among the worst in pro football, Vikings quarterback Sam Bradford has a career-best 98.2 passer rating. Bradford, 29, has thrown 14 touchdown passes and just three interceptions.

Bradford ranks eighth in the NFL in passer rating. In six of his 12 games his passer rating has been over 100. He’s given the Vikings their best passing season since Brett Favre’s lights-out 2009 season.

The offensive line didn’t allow a sack in last Sunday’s win over the Jaguars. “Those guys played great last week,” Bradford said. “They went out there and they just blocked their butts off, both in the run game and in the pass game. I thought they did a great job, and I couldn’t be more proud of those guys. …” …

Don’t be surprised if 11-year veteran Chad Greenway waits until spring before deciding whether to retire. Expect a well thought out decision by the Vikings linebacker on whether to play another season. …

When the Vikings play the Colts Sunday it will be a homecoming for Minnesota native Joe Haeg who played high school football in Brainerd. The rookie offensive tackle and guard, a fifth round draft choice, has been a surprise starter for the Colts. …

The Christmas Eve day weather forecast in Green Bay is for a high of 36 and “snow or flurries possible,” according to Accuweather.com. The Vikings-Packers holiday game at Lambeau Field begins at noon. …

Jim Carter, who is a candidate to become a University of Minnesota Board of Regent next year, attended last Friday’s board meeting on the Minneapolis campus. Carter said “about 30” demonstrators wore “Fire Kaler” t-shirts and spoke critically of University president Eric Kaler, including his hire of former athletics director Norwood Teague. The police cleared the room and broke up the demonstration after a short while, according to Carter. …

chasing-dreams1Former Gophers football coach Jerry Kill has a book signing today at Barnes & Noble Nicollet Mall from noon to 2 p.m. Tomorrow he will be at Barnes & Noble Eden Prairie and Sunday at Barnes & Noble Mall of America—1 to 3 p.m. both days. He will be signing copies of his new book Chasing Dreams: Living My Life One Yard at a Time. …

Gophers athletics director Mark Coyle speaks to the CORES lunch group Thursday, January 12 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington, 1114 American Blvd. Vikings executive Lester Bagley talks to the group on March 9. More information is available by contacting Jim Dotseth, dotsethj@comcast.net. …

Mark Ritchie said via email the Minnesota World’s Fair bid for 2023 will place emphasis “on all aspects of how we keep ourselves healthy, including sports, fitness, exercise and how we return to fitness if sick or injured.” The president and CEO of the Minnesota Expo 2023 project announced yesterday that his group has met the Bureau of International Expositions bid deadline. He also told Sports Headliners in an email the anticipated site for the fair will be on land between TCF Bank Stadium and Surly Brewing Company. Others competing to host the fair are Argentina, Brazil and Poland. …

Fans wonder about new 33-year-old Twins baseball boss Derek Falvey working with 60-year-old manager Paul Molitor. That’s a 27 year difference in age but when Falvey was in the Cleveland front office he collaborated with 57-year-old manager Terry Francona. Molitor has long been known for his high baseball I.Q. and that was developed because of his willingness to learn. Expect Falvey and Molitor to be curious about each other’s ideas this offseason. …

Until the Timberwolves pull toward a .500 record, legitimate questions will nag at the franchise that hasn’t made the playoffs since 2004. The Wolves have a talented young core of players but management hired a coach who made his reputation handling veteran players. In Chicago as head coach and Boston as a key assistant, highly regarded Tom Thibodeau was known for leading stingy defenses. He also had physical players—enforcer types—but the Wolves are a finesse team with some of their best players being stylish performers like Andrew Wiggins, Zach LaVine and Ricky Rubio. …

Marv Wolfenson and Harvey Ratner, the deceased founders of the Timberwolves and the Northwest health clubs in Minneapolis, were tennis advocates including boosters of the Gophers program. A recognition plaque is on display at the University of Minnesota Baseline Tennis Center, and February 3 at the Gophers-Dartmouth match the contributions of Wolfenson and Ratner will be honored. …

Former Gophers guard Blake Hoffarber, who won a 2005 Best Play ESPY Award for his amazing three-point shot in the state tournament while in high school, is a business insurance risk consultant for Marsh & McLennan in Minneapolis. …

The Minnesota Wild and other sponsors will celebrate Girls Hockey Weekend Saturday and Sunday at Xcel Energy Center. Natalie Darwitz, the Olympic medalist and women’s hockey coach at Hamline, will say “Let’s Play Hockey!” at the start of the Wild-Coyotes game Saturday afternoon. There will be promotion of girls and women’s hockey at the game. Post-game, fans can attend a chalk talk featuring Darwitz and two other hockey authorities, Laura Halldorson and Kristen Wright. Hockey clinics for girls and women will be held on Saturday and Sunday. More at Wild.com/girlshockey. Darwitz also skated with the Wild at practice this morning, becoming the first female to suit up with the team.

Comments Welcome

Vikings Praise Record-Setter Diggs

Posted on November 18, 2016November 18, 2016 by David Shama

 

Stefon Diggs has more than documented his improvement the last two Sundays. The Vikings’ second-year wide receiver caught 13 passes in each of the last two games to become the first player in NFL history to accomplish that.

Teammate Zach Line said Diggs, a fifth round draft choice in 2015, has the ability to find openings in the secondary. “He’s got a nose for the ball,” the Vikings fullback told Sports Headliners.

Veteran quarterback Shaun Hill said Diggs has not only improved since his rookie season but is even better than he was in training camp last summer. Hill was asked for an example of that.

“It’s one thing to know what a play looks like on paper. It’s another thing to know the detail how to run that play—how to run that route, versus everything that a defense can bring,” said Hill who is in his 15th NFL season.

Hill predicts more improvement from Diggs who has become the team’s star receiver and already has 10 more receptions in eight games than he had in 13 games last year. “He comes with a worker’s mentality every day, and that’s what you have to do,” Hill said.

Stefon Diggs (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Stefon Diggs (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

Vikings wide receiver Adam Thielen also praised Diggs’ mental approach to football. “He’s an unbelievable competitor,” Thielen said.

Diggs has 710 yards in receptions after totaling 720 last year. His 710 ranks 11th in the NFL and his 61 receptions are tied for fourth best in the league with the Falcons’ Julio Jones.

Diggs has earned praise from various teammates including another Vikings wide receiver, Cordarrelle Patterson. Patterson said the individual stats are nice but he reminded a reporter the 5-4 Vikings are in a losing streak.

“I know he (Diggs) would take all those catches back for two wins the last two weeks,” Patterson said.

Worth Noting

Fox’s lead broadcast crew of Joe Buck, Troy Aikman and Erin Andrews will be in town to do Sunday’s Vikings game against the Cardinals at U.S. Bank Stadium. The trio is also scheduled to work the February Super Bowl in Houston.

The Vikings, 5-4, are looking for their first win since October 9—week five of the NFL schedule. The Cardinals, 4-4-1, are 3-1-1 dating back to week five.

Injured Vikings quarterback Teddy Bridgewater hasn’t been attending home games, but running back Adrian Peterson, who is also rehabbing, has been on the sidelines.

Tom Moore, 78, is the Cardinals assistant head coach/offense. Moore, from Owatonna, Minnesota, was the Gophers’ offensive coordinator from 1972-73 and 1975-76. Among his best players are Minnesota natives and receivers Larry Fitzgerald, Jr. and Michael Floyd.

The Gophers have 13 seniors/grad students who will be recognized for their final game at TCF Bank Stadium Saturday (2:30 p.m. start against Northwestern). But head coach Tracy Claeys said on his KFAN Radio show Tuesday that another seven—juniors not expected to return in 2017—will be in their final home game, too.

Minnesota’s group of 13 is the third smallest in major college football. Only three of the 13 play on offense, quarterback Mitch Leidner, tackle Jonah Pirsig and wide receiver Drew Wolitarsky. That’s the fewest on any offensive unit in college football.

Leidner is among the winningest senior quarterbacks in the nation with a 22-16 career record. He has an undergraduate degree in kinesiology and is halfway through his master’s in sports management, but he isn’t sure about career plans.

Although he is only 40 years old, Northwestern’s Pat Fitzgerald is the second longest tenured head coach in the Big Ten. Fitzgerald is in his 11th season with the Wildcats, while 61-year-old Kirk Ferentz has 18 seasons as head coach at Iowa.

MarQueis Gray, the former Gophers quarterback, has played in nine games at tight end for the Dolphins. He has started four games, with seven receptions for 109 yards. This is Gray’s fifth NFL season and he’s played with four teams including the Bills, Browns and Vikings.

Glenn Caruso (photo courtesy of University of St. Thomas)
Glenn Caruso (photo courtesy of University of St. Thomas)

Coach Glenn Caruso and the St. Thomas football team has its opening playoff game tomorrow, with the intent of eventually advancing to the Division III national championship game in Salem, Virginia. The 10-0 Tommies lost in the title game last December but get a new start in the postseason Saturday at home against 9-1 Northwestern-St. Paul.

Northwestern, from the Upper Midwest Athletic Conference, and the MIAC’s Tommies had one common opponent during the year. Northwestern defeated Augsburg 14-0, while St. Thomas beat the Auggies, 55-7.

Two Tommie seniors, All-America tackle Will Hilbert and running back-kick returner Nick Waldvogel, have started all 46 games over the last four seasons. The Tommies record is 40-6 during that stretch.

Hilbert, from Milwaukee, has blocked for 28 different 100-yard rushing performances (eight players), and helped St. Thomas achieve 34 games with 200 or more yards passing.

Waldvogel’s older brother, All-America wide receiver Fritz Waldvogel, started all 50 games in his St. Thomas career. In eight years of the nine-season Caruso era, a Waldvogel has been in the St. Thomas lineup every game (all but 2012 season). The two brothers have combined to score 80 touchdowns (Fritz 46, Nick 34).

Nick, a St. Thomas Academy graduate, is averaging 99.5 all-purpose yards per game in his career and has scored 34 touchdowns. He has 177 career receptions for 2,134 yards.

NBA Hall of Famer Chris Mullin, now in his second season as St. John’s basketball coach, leads the Red Storm (2-0) against the Gophers (3-0) tonight at Williams Arena. The game is part of the Gavitt Tipoff series this fall between the Big East and Big Ten. Minnesota and St. John’s played once previously, a 70-61 Red Storm win in 2014.

Former Gopher forward Rodney Williams is playing for the Greensboro Swarm in the NBA Development League. The North Carolina-based team is starting its first season and is an affiliate of the NBA Hornets.

Timberwolves forward/center Karl-Anthony Towns is featured on the cover of ESPN The Magazine’s “Tall Ball” issue. The magazine arrived in subscriber’s mailboxes earlier in the week, went online yesterday and is available at newsstands starting today. The article reviews how height has impacted NBA and college basketball.

Towns helped the Wolves to a 110-86 win over the 76ers last night. He scored 25 points and had 10 rebounds. It was his fourth 20 point, 10 rebound game in the last five.

Timberwolves executive Chris Wright is finishing his year as “head coach” of the Twin Cities Dunkers. In that volunteer role, Wright has arranged speakers for the Dunkers organization that dates back to the 1940s.

Comments Welcome

Gap Widens with Gophers & Pro Rivals

Posted on November 3, 2016November 3, 2016 by David Shama

 

With two home dates remaining, it looks like average Gophers attendance per game could be the lowest since the team began playing at TCF Bank Stadium in 2009.

For five games the average attendance is 45,140. The lowest average for a season at TCF is 46,637 for seven games in 2012.

Last month the athletic department reported a decline of about 19 percent in the sale of nonstudent football season tickets from 2015, and a fall off in student sales too. Obviously single game sales have been slow as well. The Gophers didn’t even sell out their rivalry game with Iowa, announcing an attendance of 49,145.

Not only have their been no sellouts this season in the 50,805 seat stadium, but many of the best seats have been unoccupied for all games—even though customers paid premium prices for them.

The TCF Bank Stadium attendance problem highlights the lack of fan interest regarding the high profile programs of football, basketball and hockey at the University of Minnesota. Those three sports have been trending down in public popularity. They are positioned less favorably when compared to their professional counterparts than at any time in memory—certainly dating back to the start of the millennium when the NHL expansion Minnesota Wild joined the Timberwolves, Twins and Vikings as pro franchises in Minneapolis-St. Paul.

This fall the Vikings, Timberwolves and Wild are far outdistancing the Gophers in ticket buyers and general interest from Minnesota sports fans. The gap between the Vikings and Gophers has been in place for decades but a 5-0 start to the season and the opening of spectacular U.S. Bank Stadium widened the difference between the two products. The perception of the Gophers is that they have both an unproven coach and team that is playing a soft schedule following last year’s disappointing 2-6 Big Ten record.

Back in the 1980s Gophers basketball had TV ratings rivaling or surpass any team in town except for the Vikings. The Gophers were riding high with the public through much of the 1990s, too, until the academic fraud scandal eroded confidence and interest by the public. The program and attendance have been in decline for years. Minnesota has finished better than .500 in Big Ten games only twice since 2000 and earned just four trips to the NCAA Tournament during that period. Minnesota was 2-16 in Big Ten games last season, the worst record in program history. Sellout crowds used to be the norm for Big Ten games but now are rare at 14,625 seat Williams Arena.

The media is predicting the Gophers will finish toward the bottom of the Big Ten standings again, while the Timberwolves are forecast to be the NBA’s most improved team. The Wolves have a roster of exciting young talent led by Tom Thibodeau, a first-year coach here but long considered one of the best in pro basketball.

Bruce Boudreau
Bruce Boudreau

The Wild is off to a fast start after years of playoff disappointments. New coach Bruce Boudreau is an experienced NHL leader, and hockey insiders think he could be the franchise’s best coach since Jacques Lemaire. A deep playoff run next spring might send the Wild’s popularity to second place in this town behind only the Vikings.

“Pride on Ice” was the Gophers hockey mantra for years. If you hear those words now they might be mostly whispered. The Gophers didn’t qualify for the NCAA Tournament last season and haven’t won a national championship since 2003. NCAA titles have long been the expectation at Minnesota but now the Gophers even have difficulty beating instate rivals like St. Cloud State who swept them last month.

Fans don’t like seeing the hockey Gophers in the Big Ten after fashioning a glory-filled past in the WCHA. This weekend old rival North Dakota comes to town for nonconference games and that will put some sparkle back in Gophers hockey. Seats that often go unused at Mariucci Arena are likely to be filled. Perhaps there is a possibility of selling standing-room only tickets for the games Friday and Saturday night in 10,000 capacity Mariucci Arena.

ND is among the top ranked teams in the country and a Gophers sweep would put momentum back in the program. Such a scenario could be a step in narrowing the gap a bit between the Wild and Gophers. That would be good news for an athletic department with plenty of work to do with its football, basketball and hockey programs.

Worth Noting

The nationally ranked Gophers volleyball program has sold about 900 more nonstudent season tickets this year than last. At a $100 per season ticket, the total this year is 1,977 versus 1,074 in 2015.

The Gophers sold out their match last week against Penn State, attracting a crowd of more than 5,000 to the Sports Pavilion. Additional home sellouts are expected against Nebraska and Wisconsin. The Gophers (18-4 overall, 10-3 in Big Ten games) drew 4,883 fans last night in a home win over Indiana.

With a 3-2 conference record and four games remaining, the football Gophers are a contender for the Big Ten’s West Division title. To be competitive later this month in games against Nebraska, Northwestern and Wisconsin, head coach Tracy Claeys may need to use quarterback Mitch Leidner more as a ball carrier. “…If that means Mitch runs it more, then that’s what we’ll do,” Claeys said.

The senior quarterback has rushed only 55 times in seven games—an average of 7.9 carries per game.

Tracy Claeys
Tracy Claeys

Claeys after being asked about the possible impact on recruiting for next year after winning three consecutive games this fall: “I don’t think recruits ever judge anybody on three games. It all comes down to the end of the season and relationships.”

Jerick McKinnon, the Vikings running back who missed Monday night’s game with the Bears because of an ankle injury, told Sports Headliners yesterday he will play Sunday against the Lions. He expressed frustration with his longest run this season being only for 25 yards and wants to target 50 yards or more.

McKinnon said he has “nothing but great things” to say about departing offensive coordinator Norv Turner who taught him the importance of “attention to detail” involving route running, pass protection and other aspects of football.

Vikings power running back Matt Asiata has these words tattooed on his chest: “Wherever you go, whatever you do, just be the best. Dad.”

Left tackle Jake Long, 31, who played his second game for the Vikings against the Bears after signing as a free agent, didn’t want to comment on playing next season if he is asked to return. He said, though, “I love this game.”

Vikings management decided not to sell standing-room tickets for any games during the first season at U.S. Bank Stadium. A team spokesman said the intent is to let fans and management become accustomed to the new facility, and that the standing-room ticket subject will be reviewed after this season. There are no unsold tickets for Sunday’s game with the Lions.

The Vikings and Lions play in Detroit on Thanksgiving Day. The Vikings are 5-1 in Thanksgiving Day games, and haven’t played in once since 2000 when they defeated the Cowboys. The Vikings have played all their Thanksgiving games on the road.

The Prep Bowl later this month, playing in U.S. Bank Stadium for the first time, could have total attendance of 40,000 or more. About 9,000 tickets had been sold as of earlier this week. Attendance was 24,917 last year at TCF Bank Stadium, while three years ago at the Metrodome it was 34,404.

Saint John’s head football coach Gary Fasching speaks to the CORES lunch group Thursday, November 10 at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington, 1114 American Blvd. Gophers athletic director Mark Coyle is the scheduled speaker for Thursday, January 12. More information is available by contacting Jim Dotseth, dotsethj@comcast.net.

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