Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick

Category: Timberwolves

‘Wally the Beer Man’ Keeps Pouring

Posted on March 30, 2016April 1, 2016 by David Shama

 

“Wally the Beer Man,” 81, has been hawking beer at various Minneapolis and St. Paul venues since 1970, but something is different this winter and spring.  When Wally McNeil returns to his Plymouth home from the Xcel Energy Center after selling beer at Minnesota Wild games, Joyce McNeil, his wife for 28 years, isn’t there to greet him.

Joyce passed away on January 25 at age 85 from heart problems.  An empty house can’t be very welcoming to Minnesota’s favorite beer vendor.  To help deal with sadness Wally has sold beer at almost every Wild game this season.

Wally and Joyce met while employed at Twin City Wholesale Drug.  She worked in city desk sales; he was vice president of operations.  They were married June 23, 1988.

Wally at Canterbury Park
Wally at Canterbury Park

Joyce wasn’t a passionate sports fan but attended games when Wally was selling beer in the stands.  About 16 years ago Joyce and Wally got into horse racing ownership at Canterbury Park.  The couple bought race horses with Canterbury owner Curtis Sampson.  Over the years the McNeils owned more than a dozen horses but none more successful than Wally’s Choice, whose lifetime earnings at the Shakopee racetrack and elsewhere are the second highest ever for a Minnesota bred.

Wally’s Choice was inducted into the Canterbury Park Hall of Fame last year.  Wally attended the ceremony but Joyce’s health kept her away.  The Hall of Fame recognition brightened Joyce’s spirits.  “She was excited,” Wally said.

During baseball season Wally will again be a celebrity beer seller at Sneaky Pete’s downtown and on special event dates at Canterbury Park he will also be selling beer.  What’s his favorite brew?

“A cold one that somebody else pays for,” he answered.

Although he didn’t need the money and still doesn’t, Wally started selling beer at the Minneapolis Auditorium in 1970 for attractions like professional wrestling.  He enjoyed being around people at various events.  Customers liked him, too—drawn to his deep voice and friendly manner.

For decades part of the fun at a Twins game was buying a beer from Wally.  His association with Target Field ended several years ago, though, after he and other beer sellers were targeted in a sting operation involving sales to underage drinkers.  A Hennepin County jury found him not guilty, but Wally has chosen not to work anymore at Target Field.

Wally will turn 82 in August but has no plans to stop selling beer.  He has no health issues after triple bypass heart surgery in 2009.  “My blood pressure is 110 over 66,” he said.

Some Minnesota retirees move to Florida.  Others sit in rocking chairs on their porches.  Wally, a fit 6-2, 210 pounds, just keeps going as the king of Minnesota beer vendors.

“As long as the good Lord lets me,” he said.  “One day at a time.”

Worth Noting

Former Gophers All-American safety Tyrone Carter is working with potential 2016 NFL draft choices including cornerback Rashard Robinson who Carter said is a first round talent but likely to be selected in the third round.  Carter operates the Tyrone Carter Elite Training Schools in the Twin Cities and Robinson is from Carter’s prep alma mater, Ely High School in Pompano Beach, Florida.

Robinson’s playing time at LSU was reduced because of a suspension for violation of team rules.  The 6-3, 177-pound player is gifted but Carter said his pupil will not go in the first round because of his off-field “baggage.”  Carter, who won the Jim Thorpe Award at Minnesota honoring the nation’s best college defensive back, said Robinson had the skills to also win the award.  “He is a talented young kid for his size,” Carter said.

David Cobb
David Cobb

Varmah Sonie, who is from Burnsville and was a senior cornerback for Northern Iowa in 2012, is also receiving instruction from Carter.  Sonie hopes to join an NFL team as a free agent.  Carter is also working with former Gophers David Cobb (Titans running back) and Ra’Shede Hageman (Falcons defensive tackle).

An announcement soon seems likely that the Vikings will name Adrian Peterson, who led the NFL in rushing last season, as their 2015 MVP.  The Vikings will honor team award winners in multiple categories including MVP at the Hilton Minneapolis April 17.  That evening the Minnesota Chapter of the National Football Foundation and College Hall of Fame hosts its 9th annual Minnesota Football Honors event.  See the March 16 Sports Headliners for more about the event that also honors high school scholar-athletes.

Spring football continues this week for the Gophers with two practices open to the public scheduled at the Gibson-Nagurski Football Complex.  Practice tomorrow (Thursday) begins at 3:45 p.m. and activities Saturday start at 11 a.m.  (A Gophers spokesman e-mailed that practice locations can be switched to TCF Bank Stadium.  Fans can check for updates on Twitter @GopherFootball.)

The Wild, with five games remaining to make the playoffs, may catch a weary opponent tomorrow night at Xcel Energy Center when playing the Senators.  Ottawa plays at Winnipeg tonight before travelling to St. Paul.  The Wild have won six consecutive games after last night’s victory over the Blackhawks.

Minneapolis native Larry Fitzgerald Jr. will again honor his mom, the late Carol Fitzgerald, at an April 8 fundraising dinner and celebration at the Minneapolis Event Center (St. Anthony Main).  His mom passed away in 2003 and the Carol Fitzgerald Memorial Fund was established to assist charitable causes important to her.  Guests at next month’s Carol’s Night will include Fitzgerald and ESPN’s Josina Anderson.  VIP ticket guests receive photo opportunities with Fitzgerald, the nine-time Cardinals NFL pro bowler.  More information is available by calling 612-770-4575.

Monday’s announcement the Lynx will play a preseason game in Rochester on May 8 prompts speculation the WNBA team might play more exhibitions at the Mayo Civic Center in 2017 and beyond.  The Lynx have a multi-year partnership with the Rochester-based Mayo Clinic.  The Lynx haven’t played a game in Rochester since 2003 and no doubt will be interested in gauging fan response this spring.  The defending WNBA champion team will play the Mystics in a Sunday game beginning at 4 p.m.

Lindsay Whalen
Lindsay Whalen

Lynx guard Lindsay Whalen joins commentators Dave Benz and Jim Petersen tonight on the Fox Sports North telecast of the Timberwolves-Clippers game from Target Center.  Whalen is the Lynx franchise record holder in assists (1,072), and ranks third all-time in the WNBA for career assists (2,033).  She is one of six players in WNBA history with 3,000 points, 1,000 rebounds and 1,000 assists.  The Minnesota native starts her 12th WNBA season this spring, seventh with the Lynx.

The St. Thomas men’s basketball team will be honored for their NCAA Division III national championship prior to the Timberwolves game.  Earlier this month the Tommies won their second national title in the past six years.

Bill Robertson, WCHA commissioner, e-mailed his league is represented by 33 current or former players at the women’s International Ice Hockey Federation World Championships that started Monday and continues through April 4 in Kamloops, British Columbia.  Annie Pankowski from the Badgers and Lee Stecklein of the Gophers will compete for the United States and are among 11 student-athletes who played during the 2015-2016 college season.  Pankowski will be a junior at Wisconsin next season, while Stecklein will be a senior at Minnesota.

Author Patrick Mader’s official book launch is tomorrow (Thursday) for “Minnesota Gold: Conversations with Northland Athletes Competing on the World Stage.”  Mader’s book profiles 57 Minnesotans, including past Olympians, and details their lives and accomplishments.  His event will be from 6 to 9 p.m. at Braemar Golf Club in Edina, with a program at 7 p.m.  Seven of the Minnesota athletes from the book are expected to attend:  Trina Radke (swimming), Tami and Toni Jameson (team handball), Jim Mastro (wrestling), Mark Lutz (track), Van Nelson (track), and Janet Gerhauser (pairs figure skating).  More at Patrickmader.com.

Comments Welcome

Confidence No Problem for Miguel Sano

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

 

What to know about Miguel Sano, the late Flip Saunders, and national championship pursuits tonight by the St. Thomas men’s basketball team and the University of Minnesota’s women’s hockey team. …

Sano has yet to play a full season in the majors but writers are learning the 22-year-old hitting phenom from the Dominican Republic is full of confidence.  In July of last year he told Sports Headliners future Hall of Famer Miguel Cabrera is the best hitter he’s seen, and also said, “I can be better than Cabrera, I think.”

Sano spoke about what kind of batting numbers he could achieve in a full season in a March 8, 2016 article by Tom Verducci of Si.com.  He told Verducci, “I don’t know, but if I stay healthy I feel like I have a chance to be something like the MVP and win the Triple Crown, and I can be on the All-Star team.”

Miguel Sano (photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins).
Miguel Sano (photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins).

In 80 games and 279 at bats last season Sano had a .269 average, with 18 home runs and 52 RBI.  Sano obviously believes those are numbers he can build on this season and during his career.

Twins president Dave St. Peter views the young slugger’s confidence as a positive.  “He obviously has a long way to go to get to his full potential but he’s a talented player,” St. Peter told Sports Headliners.  “He has all the attributes on the field that you would expect out of some of the better players in the game, in terms of being able to hit for power and command of the strike zone.

“I think getting back on the field defensively is going to be important for him in terms of his career.  We certainly thought that was a critical thing in the offseason to move him into a position (on the field). …We’re counting on him to take that next step.  We’re hopeful he’s going to be a positive force for our club for a long, long time.”

Sano, a third baseman and shortstop in the minor leagues, was mostly a designated hitter for the Twins last season.  In spring training he’s learning to play right field and that’s a process.  “The best thing is he’s had a great attitude about it and he’s attacked it,” St. Peter said. “He’s been a good student, asking questions, learning from mistakes.  I think having Torii Hunter (retired Twins right fielder and now an instructor) in camp the first couple weeks was a huge benefit to Miguel.”

Sano is 6-4, 262-pounds but St. Peter said there are no concerns about running down balls in the outfield.  “He runs fine.  Running isn’t going to be the issue for him.  It’s going to be how long it’s going to take for him to master (outfield) routes and play those balls that are hit right at him.  We want to make sure that we give him time for the transition, but we’re optimistic that he is going to be fine in right field.”

St. Peter believes Sano can become exceptional in the field.  “We think the athleticism is there for him to be a very good outfielder.  The only thing holding him back is inexperience.” …

Saunders died a few days before the Timberwolves started the 2015-2016 season but the impact of his personnel decisions is evident this winter.  Owner Glen Taylor hired Saunders about three years ago to turn around a franchise that hasn’t made the playoffs since 2004.  In a short time Saunders rebuilt the roster with young talent that has yet to win consistently, but the club shows promise of eventually making deep runs in the NBA playoffs.

Only point guard Ricky Rubio and center Nikola Pekovic remain from the team’s 20-man training camp roster in the fall of 2012.  Six players remain from the 15-man roster the Wolves had opening the 2014-2015 season.  In addition to Rubio and Pekovic, those players are Gorgui Dieng, Zach LaVine, Shabazz Muhammad and Andrew Wiggins.

As president of basketball operations in May of 2013, Saunders inherited Rubio and Pekovic.  This season the Wolves’ starting lineup has often consisted of Rubio and LaVine at guards, Dieng and Wiggins at forwards, and Karl-Anthony Towns (drafted last June) at center.  Muhammad, a forward, plays major minutes off the bench.

Jim Dutcher said Saunders, who played and coached for him with the Gophers, could see potential in players that others missed.  “…His ability to foresee what a player could be, not what he was necessarily at the time,” Dutcher said.

Flip Saunders (Photo courtesy of Timberwolves).
Flip Saunders (Photo courtesy of Timberwolves).

In Saunders’ first NBA draft he made a trade with the Jazz that allowed the Wolves to acquire both Dieng and Muhammad.  He got two No. 1 draft choices by sending his initial first round pick, Trey Burke of Michigan, to Utah.  Dieng didn’t have eye-catching scoring numbers in college but at power forward for the Wolves he makes contributions the subtle observer doesn’t always see.  Muhammad’s flashy talent was obvious at UCLA but some experts doubted his character. Dutcher said Saunders believed with maturity and the right coaching Muhammad could help the Wolves.

LaVine was a one-and-done freshman at UCLA in 2013-2014 and Saunders liked what he saw.  “Probably biggest one (of Saunders’ personnel moves) was LaVine, a nonstarter in college and he takes him with their No. 1 choice because he could see his athletic ability,” Dutcher said. “He could say, ‘Hey, if we can refine his game, this kid is going to be a player.’ ”

After Saunders’ first year or so with the Wolves it became apparent All-Star forward Kevin Love didn’t want to be part of the franchise long-term.  Saunders negotiated a deal in the summer of 2014 with the Cavs sending Love to Cleveland and bringing Wiggins to Minneapolis.  Wiggins had been the overall No. 1 NBA draft choice earlier in 2014 and in his first season with the Wolves became NBA Rookie of the Year.

Dutcher believes Saunders’ easiest move was acquiring Towns.  Known for their awful luck in the draft lottery, the Wolves finally won the NBA’s No. 1 overall pick last year.  Dutcher believes it was “pretty easy” to take Towns instead of Jahlil Okafor, another big man hyped before the draft and eventually taken third overall by the Sixers.  He refers to Towns as the “cornerstone” of Minnesota’s youthful team.  “He is a high character kid who is only going to get better,” Dutcher said.

The Wolves’ record is a dismal 22-46 but there is too much young talent not to dramatically improve that record during the next couple of seasons.  Saunders, who was diagnosed with cancer last year and saw his health quickly deteriorate, died at age 60.  Dutcher said his friend’s efforts with the Wolves “were finally about to be rewarded.”

More importantly, Dutcher said, Saunders’ death is for the many people who loved him a “tragedy that is hard to deal with.” …

John Tauer
John Tauer

Salem, Virginia is about a three hour drive from the campus of Christopher Newport in Newport News, Virginia.  St. Thomas coach John Tauer knows CNU will have a supportive crowd when the two teams play in a Division III Final Four semifinal game tonight in Salem.

Tauer, though, didn’t seem concerned earlier this week when talking to Sports Headliners.  The Tommies advanced to the Final Four last Saturday in Rock Island, Illinois where Augustana, a physically imposing team and ranked No. 1 in Division III, had a home court advantage.

“Their crowd was as wild as any one that I’ve ever seen,” Tauer said.  “Our guys certainly rose to the challenge.  You can worry about all those factors in a national tournament.  The reality is I am much more concerned trying to get our guys ready, and prepared to play an outstanding team.  The crowd is the crowd.  That’s fun for everybody but the reality is what’s going on inside the court is what we try to focus on.”

The Tommies (28-3) and CNU (30-1) play tonight at 6:30 p.m. (central daylight) after the semifinal game between Benedictine (31-0) and Amherst (25-6).  The winners play for the national championship Saturday night.  Tonight’s games are streamed live on NCCA.com.  The championship game will be televised on CBS Sports Network.

Tauer, who has a 126-22 record in five years as the Tommies’ head coach, is now in his fourth Final Four.  He played in one final, was an assistant coach on the UST national title team of 2011 and was head coach for the Tommies in the 2013 Final Four.

Last year’s team was 24-4 and its wins included a victory over eventual national champion UW-Stevens Point.  With four of his top six players returning, Tauer knew his team could have another high success season.  The Tommies not only have talent but experience with four of their major contributors being seniors.

This week Tauer was named West Region Coach of the Year by D3Hoops.com.  Senior center Ryan Saarela (second team) and senior forward Taylor Montero (third team) were named All-Region.

Both players are Minnesotans, as are all but one of the 17 players on the roster.  Tauer said the talent pool of Minnesota high school basketball is impressive and that’s a reason why he stays close to home in recruiting.  Logistics and budget are factors too.  “I don’t have a private jet (for recruiting),” he said. …

The Gophers women’s hockey team (33-4-1) plays the Badgers (35-3-1) for a sixth time this season when the two teams meet tonight starting at 6 p.m. (central daylight) in a national semifinal Frozen Four game in Durham, N.H.  The Badgers have won three games, the Gophers two this season, and the winner tonight advances to the NCAA national title game Sunday that begins at 1 p.m.

The defending national champion Gophers are in their fourth consecutive Frozen Four.  Minnesota is trying to win its seventh national championship and third back-to-back title.

The other Frozen Four teams are Boston College (39-0) and Clarkson (30-4-5).  The two semifinal games and Sunday’s title game will be streamed live on NCAA.com.

Comments Welcome

A Different Spring for Tyus Jones

Posted on March 9, 2016March 9, 2016 by David Shama

 

If Tyus Jones ever writes an autobiography the first chapter might be titled “March.”  The third month of the year has been special for Jones—at least for the last few years including when his interest picked up about playing for the Gophers.

Three years ago Jones was a junior point guard leading Apple Valley High School to the 2013 Class 4A championship.  During that same March the late Flip Saunders, who had become friends with Jones, talked with Minnesota athletic director Norwood Teague about becoming the Gophers’ coach.  The two men met in Indianapolis but couldn’t agree on a deal.

Jones told Sports Headliners a Saunders hire would have placed the Gophers among his final choices for college.  “It would have,” he said.

Tyus Jones
Tyus Jones

Saunders was out of coaching in 2013 but wanted to get back in at either Minnesota, his alma mater, or returning to the NBA where his stops included the Timberwolves.  When Jones was a sophomore in high school he first met the dynamic coach.  “I got to know him pretty well throughout my high school days,” Jones said.  “Just built a relationship with him, and he was a very humble, down to earth guy.

“What I remember him most for is how he wanted the best for me—and always looked out for me…giving me advice and being there for me.”

Two years ago this month Jones was a senior at Apple Valley when his team couldn’t defend its 2013 state title, losing the championship game in double overtime to Cretin-Derham Hall.  During the month he received numerous national and local honors including prep All-American and invitations to the best postseason high school all-star games, while Duke fans anticipated the fall arrival of the school’s next great point guard.

Jones, part of a stellar freshman class at Duke, had the Blue Devils advancing through the NCAA Tournament last March.  In early April, just about a month out from Jones’ 19th birthday, the Dukies celebrated an unexpected NCAA championship.  The kid from suburban Minneapolis, who had flirted with the thought of playing for Saunders and the hometown Gophers, was named the Most Outstanding Player of the Final Four.

Jones decided last spring to leave Duke and enter the NBA Draft.  It seemed most improbable that he could end up playing in Minneapolis for the Timberwolves.  But Saunders had joined the Timberwolves during the spring of 2013 and he wanted his young friend on the roster.  A draft night trade by Saunders, the franchise’s president and coach, brought Jones home.

Jones’ first NBA season has been a trial, with minimal playing time off the bench and even a demotion to the Development League, but he doesn’t regret leaving Duke to become a pro and fulfill a lifelong dream.  “That’s my job now and to be able to say this is a blessing,” he said.  “The cherry on the top is I am playing for the Minnesota Timberwolves.”

Jones, of course, wishes Saunders, who died unexpectedly last fall from cancer, was around to see him living his dream and to offer mentoring.  Instead, other coaches and players like point guards Ricky Rubio and Andre Miller helped the rookie adjust to the pros where he has played in only 20 games while averaging 4.4 points and 2.6 assists.

Jones said he is a superior player to what he was at the beginning of the season, able to manage the game better and is more knowledgeable about his personnel.  “At the beginning of the year I wasn’t quite as aware as I am now,” he said.

When Jones thinks back about the last couple of years and reviews how much has happened, he is grateful.  “It seems like it was a blur and everything.  I feel like it has just gone my way and so many doors have been opened up for me, and I am extremely blessed and fortunate.”

This March, instead of competing for championships, Jones is playing for a Timberwolves team with a 20-45 record.  What has he learned about losing?

“That I don’t like it,” he answered.  “But you can always learn from it and let it make you a better player and person.  There’s a lot of lessons that can be brought and taught to you through this game of basketball.”

Worth Noting

Jones’ brother Tre Jones is a sophomore point guard at Apple Valley High School whose college scholarship offers reportedly include Duke, but Tyus said there is no favorite yet.  “He’s pretty wide open.  His recruiting process is just getting started.”

The Gopher baseball team’s first ever game in the new U.S. Bank Stadium will be Tuesday February 28, 2017, against North Dakota.  Minnesota will play North Dakota in the evening, and then again the next night at the covered stadium which can be converted from a football configuration to a baseball setup.

When the Gophers played the first ever baseball game at Target Field in March of 2010, attendance was 36,065.  That was a Saturday afternoon, so the Gophers’ week night games against North Dakota are expected to draw smaller crowds.

The next Twins telecast from spring training will be Sunday starting at 12:05 p.m. on Fox Sports North.  The Twins will play the Orioles from Fort Myers.

Speculation is three former Gophers from the 2015 team will be chosen in this spring’s NFL Draft.  Defensive back Eric Murray might be selected in the third or fourth rounds.  Defensive back Briean Boddy-Calhoun and linebacker De’Vondre Campbell seem likely for later rounds.

Murray pointed out after the Gophers Pro Day Monday that prospects can’t demonstrate tackling abilities in tryouts because it’s not allowed.  Murray, who had no college offers other than the Gophers, said the NFL was a goal coming out of high school in Milwaukee.  “It was definitely a dream.  You gotta set a goal somehow.  Once you set that, it’s something to reach.”

Maxx Williams
Maxx Williams

The Gophers had four players drafted last year, the most since 2006.  The four were tight end Maxx Williams, Ravens (second round); linebacker Damien Wilson, Cowboys (fourth round); running back David Cobb, Titans (fifth round); and safety Cedric Thompson, Dolphins (fifth round). The 1950 NFL Draft was the last time Minnesota had four players selected in the first five rounds.

It’s been a rewarding week for former Gophers basketball coach Tubby Smith now in his third season at Texas Tech.  Smith was named Big 12 Coach of the Week Sunday and yesterday he was announced as Sporting News National Coach of the Year.  It was the eighth time he has won a national coach of the year award.  He coached the Red Raiders to a surprising 9-9 record in the Big 12 this season (19-11 overall).

Quoting a Sports Headliners reader who will remain anonymous but marveled at this column’s high praise for former Gophers coach Jerry Kill:  “I want you to write my obituary.”

Retired Hall of Fame jockey Chris McCarron will be in town in late April to help Canterbury Park promote the May 7 Kentucky Derby and the return of live racing to the Shakopee racetrack May 20.  McCarron, who twice won the Derby, will host a fund raiser for the Leg Up Fund at Canterbury April 26.  The fund assists recuperating jockeys injured at Canterbury.  The Derby attracts the largest amount of wagering at Canterbury each year.

Bill Davis, the former Gopher baseball and basketball star, played on the Richfield High School team that lost the classic 1960 overtime game to Edgerton in the boys state basketball tournament.  Davis will speak to the “Breakfast with Leroy” group Saturday at the Bloomington Knights of Columbus, 1114 American Blvd West.  Part of Davis’ presentation will include audio from WCCO Radio describing the final minutes of the game, plus postgame interviews.  More information about the presentation including how to attend is available by contacting Pat Rickert at 612-861-3981.  Attendees are mostly athletes from the Minneapolis public schools in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, many of whom went on to college and professional careers.

Former Midwest Sports Channel and Twins executive Kevin Cattoor is Chief Operating Officer for Foodsby, the nation’s largest food logistics delivery service.  The Minneapolis-based company partners with office buildings and restaurants to efficiently provide lunchtime meals delivered by the restaurants.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 79
  • 80
  • 81
  • 82
  • 83
  • 84
  • 85
  • …
  • 121
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Most Pressure to Win in This Town? It’s not the WNBA Lynx
  • Vikings & Rodgers Meet Sunday After Off-Season Flirtation
  • J.J. McCarthy Start Prompts Recollection of Bud Grant Wisdom
  • Reactionary Vikings Fans Turn on Team at Home Opener
  • Gophers Football Season Ticket Sales Down Slightly from 2024
  • Vikings Grind But Show They’re Who We Thought They Were
  • U Record Setter Morgan Gushes about New QB Drake Lindsey
  • McCarthy’s Missed Season May Pay Dividends for him in 2025
  • Changing Football Landscape Gives the Gophers a New Spark
  • Wild Contract Sit Down with Kaprizov Coming in September

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
Meadows at Mystic Lake

B's Chocolates

Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Gold Country

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme