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Category: Twins

Temps Nippy but No “Cold Omaha”

Posted on February 4, 2018February 5, 2018 by David Shama

 

For those old enough to remember, there were references in this town in the 1970s about becoming a “cold Omaha” without major league sports. Back then the Twins and Vikings were upset about their revenues at Met Stadium. They were interested in new homes—either in Minnesota or elsewhere.

The powerful Minnesota politician Hubert Humphrey warned that without these teams Minneapolis could become a “cold Omaha.”

Today, as the world watches Super Bowl LII from Minneapolis, we know we have distinguished ourselves from the largest city in Nebraska. Omaha remains without major league teams, but not us. The Twin Cities are one of only nine American markets with franchises in MLB, the NFL, NBA, NHL and MLS. This area has also hosted the World Series, the Stanley Cup Finals, WNBA Finals, all-star games, the NCAA Final Four, top golf tournaments and Super Bowls.

Boston, Buffalo, Denver, Chicago, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Milwaukee, Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and the list goes on of northern cities that have never hosted all the events we can claim. And today’s Super Bowl will be the second in Minneapolis, following the 1992 game that was a big deal, but nothing like this week-long entertainment extravaganza leading up to America’s premier sporting event when more than 100 million people are expected to watch on TV.

What was that line in the Mary Tyler Moore TV song that showed Mary on the Nicollet Mall ?

“Looks like we made it after all!”

U.S. Bank Stadium

Mr. Humphrey, mayor of Minneapolis in the late 1940s and two decades later vice president of the United States, has been dead for many years but he can rest easy about the sports landscape in his adopted home town that replaced the Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome with a palace known as U.S. Bank Stadium and the site of today’s game between the Eagles and Patriots.

In anticipation of angry texts and email threats from Nebraskans, let me state (I am willing to take a lie detector test) that I have no problem or criticism with the fine city of Omaha. There must be a reason the admirable values of their citizens are depicted in American movies (see “Up in the Air” and “About Schmidt”). The town is home to Warren Buffet, and I can’t think of a celebrity neighbor I would rather have.

Omaha is also located in Big Red country. As a college football fanatic I am not so sure I wouldn’t trade the last 60 years of Minnesota pro sports for Cornhuskers football and their five national championships. (I will decline a lie detector test this time.)

Back in the 1950s Minneapolis-St. Paul was without professional baseball and football. Civic leaders wanted this area to be known as more than “flyover country.” Minneapolis Chamber of Commerce and other business leaders led the drive to put us on the same map as similar size cities like Kansas City and Milwaukee who had acquired big league baseball franchises from other towns in the 1950s.

With the bonding authority of the city of Minneapolis, it was possible to build Metropolitan Stadium. The facility opened in 1956 with the intent of attracting major league baseball and pro football. Rumors circulated that baseball’s Indians, Giants or White Sox might relocate here. Chicago’s football Cardinals looked like a possibility for a move to the new stadium in Bloomington.

But it was the Washington Senators in 1960 who decided to move here and provide Minnesota with a major league baseball team. In 1959 Minneapolis had been rumored for a franchise in the proposed Continental League but that entity never materialized. About the same time the American Football League was organizing and Minneapolis was considered a likely member, but the NFL decided to expand and the Vikings began play in 1961.

This town secured big league status in the 1960s when not only the Twins and Vikings arrived, but the expansion North Stars joined the NHL. However, that status was threatened in the 1970s when the Vikings and Twins got restless. There were rumors both franchises could be headed to other cities and warmer climates.

Metropolitan Stadium was a baseball-first facility with sightlines and seating capacity favoring the Twins. The Vikings needed more than 47,000 seats, and management wanted new revenue sources such as private suites. The Twins anticipated the lucrative novelty of not only the honeymoon period in a new facility, but one with a roof guaranteeing games couldn’t be rained (and snowed) out.

Adding to the drama was Minneapolis power brokers regretted locating the Minnesota home of professional baseball and football on the prairie in Bloomington. The “Big Cigars” envisioned a downtown dome bringing hospitality dollars to the central city and spurring economic development.

The Metrodome opened in 1982 as the home of not only the Twins and Vikings, but also Golden Gophers football. Not only were baseball and football saved for future generations, but the 65,000 seat facility attracted the Final Four, concerts, truck pulls and a long list of other activities including public rollerblading.

This town’s worries about remaining big league surfaced again in the late 1990s and early 2000s when the Twins and Vikings became restless. The Metrodome was built on the cheap and had many flaws including its infamous crowded concourses. With more modern stadiums being built around the country, the blueprint was in place to upgrade the fan experience in both baseball and football with separate facilities for the Vikings and Twins, and generate more revenues for the franchises.

It was no easy task but the Twins, with help from Hennepin County, and the Vikings with backing from the state of Minnesota and city of Minneapolis, got their own homes with the building of Target Field and U.S. Bank Stadium. Target Field, open since in 2010, has regularly been included on lists ranking the top 10 baseball stadiums. U.S. Bank Stadium is mentioned in the first sentence or two about the best enclosed facilities in North America.

The pre-game and in-game TV audiences for today’s Super Bowl will likely hear about many things Minnesotan. This will be the coldest day ever for a Super Bowl and viewers in warmer places (that’s most towns) will chuckle. Viewers will also wince when they hear mention of below zero wind chills and yesterday’s snow fall in the “Bold North.” Those weather reports could cue cameras to show a frozen backyard pond here in the State of Hockey and other activities to document how locals embrace winter.

There will be references to how the Vikings almost made it to Super Bowl LII before losing to the Eagles in the NFC title game. That could make Vikings fans cringe as will the mention of the franchise’s four Super Bowl appearances—all loses. But when the talking heads get done with the stuff that is mundane to us, there will be references to U.S. Bank stadium and the civic pride this town can feel for having that building and hosting this Super Bowl.

The new home of the Vikings is an extraordinary structure of glass and steel that’s been drawing regional and national attention for more than 18 months. When the $1.1 billion facility opened in the summer of 2016 the fact list included the following: More than $60 million spent on technology, seven stadium levels with 430 concession points of sale, 37 escalators, 11 elevators, 979 restrooms, 350 pieces of commissioned art and 250 photographs.

But to many fans the signature features are the 60 percent clear roof bringing natural light into the stadium and the five giant pivoting doors that on warm days are opened. Those features provide an outdoor feel to the stadium experience and have muted second-guessing about how the facility should have a retractable roof.

Since the late 1980s Minneapolis and St. Paul have seen an arena and stadium building boom that no other area in the country probably can claim. Target Center, Xcel Energy Center, TCF Bank Stadium, Target Field, CHS Field, U.S. Bank Stadium and the soon to be opened MLS stadium have become home to the Timberwolves/Lynx, Wild, Gophers, Twins, Saints, Vikings and United. At the cost of over $2 billion in public and private funding, we’ve heeded the warning of becoming a “cold Omaha.”

Those who don’t like the greed and other misbehavior often associated with professional sports can shake their collective heads at what we’ve done. But no one can deny that this town and state do sit front and center on the North American stage today.

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Jim Dutcher Upbeat on Gophers

Posted on January 7, 2018January 7, 2018 by David Shama

 

It’s been a difficult couple of days for the Golden Gophers basketball program after losing two starters indefinitely, but Jim Dutcher is keeping an optimistic perspective for now. News came late last week that senior center Reggie Lynch is suspended from games and sophomore forward Amir Coffey is unable to play because of a shoulder injury.

If Coffey can play again after a short absence Dutcher believes Minnesota could pull off a fourth place final finish in the Big Ten. A return before long by Lynch, too, may result in third place, according to Dutcher who was the Gopher head coach from 1975-1986.

The Gophers struggled last night without Coffey and Lynch, losing to Indiana 75-71. The defeat left Minnesota with a 2-2 Big Ten record, with 14 more games remaining on the conference schedule. “They still got a lot to play for,” Dutcher told Sports Headliners.

Jim Dutcher

Dutcher, though, acknowledges “all bets are off” if the Gophers must play without Lynch and Coffey for several weeks. Lynch is appealing a decision by the University of Minnesota to ban him from campus for more than two years for violating the school’s sexual misconduct policy. Athletic director Mark Coyle announced a suspension of Lynch from playing in games on Friday. Although Lynch is practicing with the Gophers, it might be likely he will never play for Minnesota again. Even if the University reversed itself after appeal, Minnesota head coach Richard Pitino could decide Lynch doesn’t meet his standards for being on the team.

Pitino isn’t creating any specific timeline for the return of either Lynch or Coffey, whose shoulder injury apparently is significant enough to cause speculation he could be out for many weeks. Challenging, too, is the schedule ahead that has the Gophers playing five road games between now and February 4. During that period Minnesota plays twice at home and also has a neutral court game on January 20 in New York City against Ohio State.

Senior Bakary Konate replaced Lynch at center last night, while sophomore Michael Hurt had Coffey’s forward spot. Lynch was the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year last season and entered the Indiana game with about three times more blocked shots than any other Gopher. Coffey, a Big Ten all-freshman last season, is Minnesota’s third leading scorer and perhaps the team’s most versatile and unselfish player.

Konate scored two points against Indiana in 27 minutes. He had four rebounds and blocked three shots. Hurt, in 31 minutes, took one shot and didn’t score. He had four rebounds, all of them in the first half.

Late last summer Minnesota lost its best bench player for the season. Promising sophomore forward-center Eric Curry is sidelined following knee surgery. Now with Lynch and Coffey out, the Gophers are without three of their top six players.

“They went from having a Big Ten championship as a goal, to (now) trying to qualify for the (NCAA) Tournament as a goal,” Dutcher said. “They’re not going to win the Big Ten championship.”

Worth Noting

Dutcher believes Michigan State, Purdue and Michigan will finish one, two and three in the final Big Ten standings. MSU is not only the league favorite but could win the school’s first national championship since 2000.

The Los Angeles Lakers continue to promote the old Minneapolis Lakers jerseys, and the team wore them in a game last week at Target Center against the Timberwolves. The popular MPLS jerseys prompted a telephone call to Bob Stein, the Timberwolves first president, to ask if franchise ownership and management considered naming the team Minneapolis instead of Minnesota back in the late 1980s. Stein didn’t recall serious discussion about using the city’s name, noting the franchise wanted to represent the larger Minnesota market despite the history of the state’s first NBA team being named Minneapolis.

Regarding the choice of Timberwolves as the nickname, Stein said a naming contest open to the public generated many suggestions including the Minnesota Mosquitoes. Others that drew amusement from the team’s front office were:

Minnesota Taxes$; Minnesota Fats; Minnesota Uff Da’s; Minnesota Loona-Ticks; and Minnesota Yumpin’ Yacks.

Timberwolves was a fan favorite but Stein said the organization’s inner circle “winked” on the final tabulation of voting by the public. The outcome, he suggested, was not unlike some “alleged political elections.”

SI.com’s famous NFL writer Peter King, writing last Thursday, predicted the Vikings will win Super Bowl 52 in Minneapolis with a 27-23 victory over the Patriots.

SI.com announced its NFL individual award winners last week including Coach of the Year. Sean McVay from the Rams won the award, while the Vikings’ Mike Zimmer was runner-up finishing 25 points behind in voting.

Patrick Mader

Patrick Mader, the Northfield-based author who wrote the book Minnesota Gold detailing the lives of many Minnesota Olympians, emailed this historical note to Sports Headliners: “In the late 1940s, a young, energetic, and politically ambitious American city mayor was on an Olympic Committee bidding to host the 1952 Summer Games which ended being runner-up to Helsinki, Finland. The mayor was Hubert Humphrey and the runner-up city (tied) was Minneapolis.”

Next month’s Winter Olympics will be in South Korea. Mader predicted Jessie Diggins, a graduate of Stillwater High School who is from Afton, has “a good chance” to win the first Olympic medal in cross-country skiing ever by an American woman. A 2014 Olympian who has an outstanding World Cup record, the 26-year-old is expected to be named to the 2018 Olympic team later this month.

When the Twins go to spring training it will be interesting to see if Brian Dozier is finally moved out of the leadoff spot in the batting order. The team’s power hitting second baseman has led the club in home runs (76) the last two seasons but has batted leadoff because Minnesota didn’t have anyone more suited for the spot that requires foot speed and consistency at the plate. With center fielder Byron Buxton hitting around .300 for part of last season and showing extraordinary speed, it appears the fourth-year Twin could be the new leadoff man, with Dozier moving down to third or fourth in the batting order.

Carl Pohlad, the deceased Twins owner who passed away in early January of 2009, would be pleased his farm system developed most of the franchise’s promising core of position players that includes Buxton, Dozier, third baseman Miguel Sano, left fielder Eddie Rosario, right fielder Max Kepler and shortstop Jorge Polanco.

Comments Welcome

Fleck Talks Up New Wide Receiver

Posted on December 21, 2017December 21, 2017 by David Shama

 

The 26-man Gophers football class announced yesterday on National Signing Day is ranked the best in the Big Ten West Division but that doesn’t mean the majority of players will be ready to make an impression on the field next fall.

The surest contributor could be four-star wide receiver Rashod Bateman from Tifton, Georgia. “I think he can make the biggest impact for us right now because we need some speed, some explosiveness, some playmaking ability on the outside, and I think he does that,” Gophers coach P.J. Fleck told the Big Ten Network yesterday.

Minnesota had one of the more unproductive passing offenses in major college football last season. The issue wasn’t just the quarterbacks, it was the inability of receivers to get open.

Playing for Tift County High School this year, Bateman had 83 receptions for 1,539 yards and 21 touchdowns. He was good enough that national power Georgia tried to persuade him to change the verbal commitment he made to the Gophers in June.

Allen Trieu from 247Sports, the recruiting authority that gives the Gophers 2018 class a composite No. 30 national rankingy, talked about the 6-2, 185-pound Bateman on the Big Ten Network yesterday. “Rashod Bateman is one of the best athletes in this class,” Trieu said. “A kid that Minnesota got on early, got him committed after one of their satellite camps, and had to hold off Georgia, Texas A&M, a bunch of schools…late.

“…Really athletic kid. He was a high school basketball prospect. Penn State, Virginia Tech, both offered him. His basketball (team) won a state title. I think you’ll see him out there on the field next year.”

Bateman is one of 10 candidates for the American Family All-USA Offensive Player of the Year award reported on this fall in USA Today. Ryan Burns, publisher of GopherIllustrated website affiliated with 247Sports, refers to Bateman as the “crown jewel” of Minnesota’s 2018 class.

Fleck photo courtesy of Minnesota Athletic Communications

After being hired in January of this year, Fleck and his assistants had to scramble in signing their 2017 recruiting class last February which had a No. 59 composite ranking from 247Sports. From that 25-man group, only a few earned significant minutes including wide receiver Demetrius Douglas and safety Ken Holly-Handy.

But more players are likely to emerge from the 2018 class to help next fall. Minnesota has needs not only at receiver but in the offensive line and at quarterback, and a number of recruits are intriguing at those positions.  Names include junior college tackle Jason Dickson and four-star prep guard Curtis Dunlap. Vic Viramontes, labeled by 247Sports as the best dual-threat junior college quarterback in the country, could emerge from spring practices as Minnesota’s No. 1 quarterback.

Worth Noting

Fleck signed five state of Minnesota players yesterday and signed the same number last February. Big Ten recruiting has become such a national hunt for talent that signing a small number of Minnesotans isn’t unusual. Ohio State has signed four Ohioans in a state long known for its high school football excellence, according to a listing by 247Sports which also ranked the Buckeyes class No 2 in the nation.

Among Fleck’s five Minnesotans, Josh Aune is the first player from the St. Paul public schools to sign a National Letter of Intent with the Gophers in 15 years. The athletic Aune may become a safety at Minnesota.

Jerry Kill, who announced his resignation this week as Rutgers offensive coordinator because of health concerns, told Sports Headliners he will take some time off to decide about future plans. The 56-year-old former Gophers coach and his wife Rebecca are returning to their home in Illinois. They recently became grandparents for the first time.

Fleck announced today that defensive backfield coach Maurice Lindguist, known for his teaching skills and ability to recruit players in Texas and Georgia, will now have the title of assistant head coach.

Anthony Barr has to be a focus of security protection when the Vikings are in Wisconsin for Saturday night’s game with the Packers. Barr has been threatened by fans since he tackled quarterback Aaron Rodgers, resulting in a broken collarbone in the Vikings-Packers game in Minneapolis October 15.

Accuweather.com forecasts a Green Bay temperature of 16 degrees and wind gusts of 14 MPH nearing kickoff at 7:30 p.m. Saturday night.

There’s fond reminiscing about cold weather Vikings games in the 1960s and 1970s at the old Met Stadium but because of shorter NFL seasons and earlier playoff dates, only one game was ever played in January. That was the January 4, 1970 NFL championship game.

Vikings coach Mike Zimmer responding yesterday to a question if there is a difference in playing a team like the Packers that is eliminated from qualifying for the playoffs, and if he talks to his players about it: “…It’s a division game. We have a lot to play for. What I talked to them about was two weeks ago we lost. We had a new sense of urgency and a new focus, and that’s what we need to do again.

“Just because we won this last week doesn’t mean, ‘Ok, we can go back to how we were,’ and end up getting beat. We just try to stay on point with everything we do, and continue to move forward and continue to try to get wins.”

A factor in the Twins’ reported willingness to spend big money in pursuit of free agent pitcher Yu Darvish could be that Joe Mauer’s $184 million contract expires after the 2018 season. It wouldn’t be surprising if Mauer, who will be 35 by then and is a committed family man, retires in the fall of 2018. But if he decides to play a 16th season with the Twins he will be taking a “haircut” in compensation.

Mauer’s grandfather, Jake Mauer, was friends with the late Ralph Jon Fritz, the former WCCO TV sportscaster who passed away earlier this month. After Fritz moved to Florida years ago, he and Jake played golf together.

FOX Sports North will televise “Twins Town Hall” live from the Target Field Champions Club tonight starting at 7 p.m. A discussion will include Joe Mauer, manager Paul Molitor, and team executives Derek Falvey and Thad Levine. The group will be in front of a live studio audience consisting of season ticket holders and select fans. Fans may submit questions for the panel via Twitter: @fsnorth, #TwinsTownHall.

The basketball Gophers are 3-0 historically against Oral Roberts, the team they play tonight at Williams Arena. The Tulsa-based school is named after the late Oral Roberts who was known as a TV faith healer.

The Golden Eagles are 4-10 this season, including a 104-69 loss to Arkansas Tuesday night. The Razorbacks defeated Minnesota 95-79 earlier this month.

ESPN NBA analyst Jeff Van Gundy said during last week’s Minneapolis telecast of the Timberwolves-Sixers game he was surprised about local concerns regarding the Wolves’ performance this season. His take is positive, noting this is a franchise that hasn’t had a team in the playoffs since 2004. The Wolves, who are 19-13 and in first place in the Northwest Division, have the fourth best record in the Western Conference.

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