Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Tommies Locker Room

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

Category: Twins

Addison’s Drive May Ensure NFL Success

Posted on April 30, 2023 by David Shama

 

Jordan Addison, the Vikings’ first round draft selection in 2023, is gifted with the physical abilities to play in the NFL but enhancing his likelihood of becoming a dynamic receiver is his work ethic.

Initial references to Addison typically include mentions such as his ability to get separation from defensive backs.  His foot work, route running and speed, including quick bursts, have all drawn praise, but there’s more that has contributed to his achievements and recognition that include winning the 2021 Biletnikoff Award honoring him as the best receiver in college football.

Addison won the award while at Pittsburgh, before transferring to USC and playing there last fall.  A football source texted Sports Headliners that while playing for Pitt, Addison showed he was a “grinder,” and described the 5-11, 173-pound Addison as a “lunch bucket guy.”

Jordan Addison photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings

When Addison arrived in Los Angeles he found his preferred jersey number, 3, had been retired to honor former USC Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Carson Palmer.  Addison promised “to work his tail off” at USC and Palmer graciously told the transfer he could wear the number.

Vikings head coach Kevin O’Connell said his franchise was attracted to Addison’s “drive to be great.”  At the Friday news conference where O’Connell spoke to the media, Addison said he has wanted to play football since he was three years old, but his mom wouldn’t okay participation until he was five.

Addison made it known in the media session he’s ready to play his rookie season.  What’s his thought process?  “Because just my confidence and I’m willing to come in here and work every day. I’m happy coming into the building, studying extra tape and just being around the guys.”

Addison has college experience as a slot receiver and could fit there for the Vikings who need to replace the departed Adam Thielen on their wide receivers roster.  Schematically and physically Addison should be a great fit for the Vikings’ already superb passing game led by quarterback Kirk Cousins, wide receivers Justin Jefferson, K.J. Osborn and tight end T.J. Hockenson.

Because of his smallish size for a pro receiver Addison will probably need to get stronger in his body and hands.  But with his other skills at the young age of 21, and reputation for willingness to work, the expectation is he will be up for the assignment.

Worth Noting

It was 25 years ago this month the Vikings drafted wide receiver Randy Moss at No. 21 of the first round.  Other teams knew he was talented, but character concerns made them back away from Moss who went on to a Hall of Fame career.

Zach Evans, the redshirt freshman named one of the MVPs of the Gophers’ spring game, was ranked the No. 10 running back in the nation by Rivals after his senior season in Heath, Texas where he rushed for 26 touchdowns and 1,957 yards.

Early predictions have Iowa, Wisconsin and Minnesota as favorites to win the Big Ten West Division this fall.

It’s fair to speculate about Dean Evason’s future as the Wild’s coach.  After Friday night’s playoff loss to the Stars, Evason coached teams have lost four consecutive opening playoff series dating back to 2020, including this spring with Dallas eliminating Minnesota in six games.  His decision to start goalie Marc Andre-Fleury in Game Two was a disaster, with Minnesota losing 7-3 after opening the series with a win in Dallas behind Filip Gustavsson.

Evason changed up his lines Friday night to spark more scoring but the Wild produced just one goal after being shut out in Game 5.  The Wild, trailing 1-0 after the first period Friday, were inexplicably flat in the second period as Dallas took a 3-0 lead into intermission.  And Evason will tell you he wasn’t satisfied with the play of his special teams in the series.

Wild GM Bill Guerin isn’t the most patient of leaders and fans may wonder if sooner or later he might be tempted to change coaches in an effort to get a franchise that hasn’t advanced beyond the first round since 2015 to go deeper into the playoffs. This is the second consecutive year the Wild led 2-1 in a best of seven series only to lose, with the Blues being the nemesis in 2022.

Evason is an intense leader, and a solid coach, and a change might not be fair to him, but when expectations aren’t met for a long time shake ups can happen.

Don’t be too sure the Timberwolves can’t find a trade partner for controversial center Rudy Gobert.  The Mavericks, for example, need rebounding and interior defense to complement high-scoring guards Luka Doncic and Kyrie Irving.

MLB teams are now allowed to have jersey sponsors, but most clubs still don’t have deals including the Twins.  It will require big money for any sponsors to have their patches on uniforms.

Christian Encarnacion-Strand, the former Twins prospect who was sent to the Reds last August as part of a deal to acquire pitcher Tyler Mahle, is hitting .464 in 28 at bats for AAA Louisville.  The 23-year-old third baseman-first baseman turned heads with his .577 batting average in spring training.

Yennier Cano, the ex-Twins pitching prospect sent to the Orioles last year as part of the transaction to acquire Jorge Lopez, has yet to allow a hit in 9.2 innings after being recalled from Norfolk April 14.  Now 29, Cano signed with the Twins at 25 and made a name for himself in Cuba.

Long time Twin Cities newspaper columnist Patrick Reusse celebrated 42 years of sobriety April 27. “There was no risk to my job or anything like that,” Reusse told Sports Headliners years ago about the decision to enter recovery for alcoholism.  “I got sick of being hung over. I was single, (and) my first wife had divorced me in ‘79.  I was running around with a younger crowd and acting goofy. …”

The annual Twin Cities Dunkers Fund dinner and auction is Tuesday night at Interlachen Country Club.  The fund assists the under financed athletic programs of the Minneapolis and St. Paul public schools.  Last year’s event raised $161,350 and since 2011 has generated $1,107,588.

Jon Cherney, executive director of the Herb Brooks Foundation for five years, is leaving the organization.

3 comments

Vikings QB Process: No Need to Panic

Posted on April 19, 2023April 19, 2023 by David Shama

 

There is endless speculation about when and how the Vikings will find their next quarterback to replace 34-year-old Kirk Cousins.  No need to overthink the process.

The Vikings are highly likely to find their guy sometime in the next 12 months or so.  They may acquire a quarterback via trade or free agency within that period. Of course, next week’s NFL Draft will be an opportunity, too, and so will the 2024 draft.

To find a coveted prospect in the opening round of the 2023 draft, the Vikings will have to move up from their No. 23 position in the first round.  While that could happen, chances are more likely the Vikings will move down from No. 23, trading that selection to acquire more picks in draft.  Minnesota has just two draft spots in the top 100 and only five total in the seven round draft that starts April 27 and continues through April 29.

GM Kwesi Adofo-Mensah, head coach Kevin O’Connell and others in the organization have spent a lot of time looking at quarterback prospects who will be in the draft, including those who will go in the later rounds.  While Minnesota has been linked to likely first rounders Will Levis (Kentucky) and Hendon Hooker (Tennessee), the Vikings seem more likely to end up with second or third round quarterbacks.  Possibilities could include Tanner McKee (Stanford) and Dorian Thompson-Robinson (UCLA), prospects the Vikings could develop during the coming season and not rush into game action.

Kirk Cousins

Cousins, who turns 35 in August, is in the last year of his contract.  If he and the Vikings push far into the playoffs, O’Connell and the front office are all but certain to want Cousins to return for the 2024 season. The Vikings, though, need a major upgrade to their defensive personnel to be a team that gets deep into the postseason.

The possibility is Minnesota could have a losing season and for next year’s draft have a top 15 or better draft position in the first round.  Next year’s draft looks quarterback friendly, too, starting with big names Caleb Williams (USC) and Drake Maye (North Carolina)

Clearly there is time and options for the Viking quarterback scenario to play out.

Worth Noting

Minnesota sports hero Joe Mauer’s 40th birthday is today.  It’s a noteworthy year for the three-time American League batting champion who retired in 2018 and will be inducted into the Twins Hall of Fame August 5.

The Wild might be on a run of good fortune after winning Monday night’s two-overtime thriller in Dallas against the Stars, 3-2.  The Wild haven’t won an opening round playoff series since 2015 and that was the last time Minnesota was victorious in the first game.

Hot goalies always weigh heavily in determining postseason success and Minnesota’s Filip Gustavsson was superb Monday night and entered the game with an impressive regular season goals against average of 2.10 and 22-9-7 record. Marc-Andre Fleury, the Wild’s 38-year-old backup goalie, struggled as the starter in the team’s opening playoff series a year ago when the Blues eliminated Minnesota in six games, but Gustavsson was brilliant Monday night with a franchise record 51 saves.

The Wild likely caught a break, too, in facing the Stars instead of the defending Stanley Cup champion Avalanche.  Colorado struggled with injuries and performance much of the season but came on late to win the Central Division, with the Stars finishing second and the Wild third.  The Avalanche are gritty and talented.

Word is Wild GM Bill Guerin has a new contract, with an established hockey source telling Sports Headliners it’s probably worth $1.5 to $2 million per year.

The Wild announced this morning the club has recalled forward Sammy Walker from Iowa.  The former Gopher led the Iowa Wild in goals with 27.

The Athletics’ poll results of NBA players have Wolves’ forward Jaden McDaniels voted the fifth most underrated player in the league, with teammate and guard Anthony Edwards No. 8.  McDaniels is also No. 7 as the league’s best defender.

The poll, asking players questions in various categories while providing anonymity, has Wolves center Rudy Gobert ranked as the fifth most overrated player (tied with Jarren Jackson Jr. from the Grizzlies). Former Wolves’ head coach Tom Thibodeau, now leading the Knicks, is the No. 1 coach players don’t want to play for.

The Minnetonka girls’ basketball team could be the best girls prep team in the state next season.  The Skippers will take on another power, Providence Academy, in a January 27 game at St. Michael-Albertville.  Players to watch include Minnetonka guard Tori McKinney and Providence Academy’s Maddyn Greenway, daughter of former Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway, who as a freshman last winter gave notice she will be a special player.

McKinney, a senior next school year, is likely a recruiting target of new Gopher women’s head coach Dawn Plitzuweit. Word is the new coach has made a more than favorable impression on her players, displaying basketball leadership and likeability.

Minneapolis-based attorney and journalist Marshall Tanick wrote an informative article about Minnesota baseball-related litigation for Minnesota Lawyer. https://minnlawyer.com/2023/04/06/perspectives-new-saints-recall-old-

Congratulations to Ron Stolski, Jim Dotseth and other leaders of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association on the success of their recent clinic that registered 1,542 attendees.  That’s the most ever for the popular annual clinic.

The MFCA will sponsor both a recruiting fair and combine for players May 6 at the Vikings’ complex in Eagan.  High school coaches will meet with college coaches to discuss prospects at the fair.  Players in eighth through 11th grades will be tested for skills in a variety of categories.  https://www.mnfootballcoaches.com/recruit

Comments Welcome

Wolves & Denver Looks Like Mismatch

Posted on April 17, 2023April 17, 2023 by David Shama

There was a significant discrepancy in talent, scrap and performance between the Nuggets and Timberwolves last night.  It’s just one game in a potential seven game series, but based on what happened in Denver late Sunday night and the season long reputation of the two teams it appears this playoff matchup could end soon.

Denver, the No. 1 seed in the NBA Western Conference, encountered little resistance from No. 8 seed Minnesota in winning 109-80.  The Nuggets, led by two-time NBA MVP Nikola Jokic, finished with a regular season record of 53-29.  The Wolves, who prompt a lot of head scratching to figure out their team MVP, were 42-40.

The Wolves look like a team that has regressed from a year ago when they opened the playoffs by defeating a solid Grizzlies team in Memphis after finishing the regular season with a 46-36 record.  The 2023 team looks dysfunctional too much of the time including in last night’s game that saw the Wolves out scored 32-14 in the third quarter after trailing 55-44 at halftime.

Even at the intermission the Wolves were drawing criticism from TNT analyst Charles Barkley.  Targeting the Wolves’ Twin Towers of 7-foot Karl-Anthony Towns and 7-1 Rudy Gobert, Barkley said “Minnesota’s biggest problem” is the combo isn’t effective enough on offense to justify playing them together.

Gobert, acquired in a controversial trade last summer with the Jazz, scored eight points, while Towns, picking up some late points in the meaningless fourth quarter, had 11.  And it wasn’t just scoring where the Wolves’ bigs were lacking.  In plus-minus stats that measure a player’s contribution on the floor, Gobert was a team-high -28 while Towns was -11.

The Wolves used 13 players last night and Wendell Moore Jr., who played for two minutes, was the only individual with a plus rating (two).

Denver coach Mike Malone wanted his team to be more aggressive and disciplined than the Wolves for the playoff opener.  Combine those elements with better talent, the result is what happened last night.

Worth Noting

Because of national TV scheduling the game had an absurd start time of 10:51 p.m. Eastern, 9:51 Central. The next game is Wednesday (also in Denver) with a scheduled tipoff at about 9 p.m. Central.

Walker Kessler, among five players and multiple draft choices the Timberwolves gave up in the trade to obtain Gobert, is one of three finalists for NBA Rookie of the Year.  The 7-foot Jazz center averaged 9.2 points and 8.4 rebounds in his first professional season.

Only three other NBA players bettered Kessler’s 2.3 blocks per game. The other finalists for Rookie of the Year are Paolo Banchero of the Magic and Jalen Williams of the Thunder.

Former Wolves star Jimmy Butler, now with the Heat, is a finalist, along with De’Aaron Fox of the Kings and DeMar DeRozan of the Bulls, for NBA Clutch Player of the Year.

The Wild-Stars playoff series opens tonight in Dallas with possibly seven games needed to decide the winner.  The two teams played a combined 55 overtime games during the regular season.  Both franchises have recent histories of scoring droughts in the playoffs.  The Wild hasn’t advanced out of the first round since 2015.

Kirill Kaprizov

The Wild was 7-2-3 when star scorer Kirill Kaprizov was injured and unable to play late in the season. Minnesota had balanced scoring during that stretch and must continue that with forwards Matt Boldy, Ryan Hartman and Mats Zuccarello needed to step up on the playoffs.

The Stars franchise, known as the Minnesota North Stars until relocating to Dallas in 1993, might never have moved if the Metropolitan Sports Facilities Commission had funded a major renovation of Met Center in the late 1980s.

The Frozen Four championship game April 8 on ESPN 2 between the Gophers and Quinnipiac averaged 808,000 viewers, a 100 percent increase over the 2022 title game, per Front Office Sports.

St. Paul native Bill Robertson, commissioner of the USHL, said there were 80 alums of his league playing in the Frozen Four that also included Boston University and Michigan.  Twenty-three of those players were from the state of Michigan and 22 from Minnesota.

Since 2017 the Twins are 4-18 at Yankee Stadium in regular season games.  That record includes wins Thursday and Friday that ended up giving Minnesota a series split over the weekend.

Minnesota’s Sonny Gray, 2-0 with a gaudy 0.53 ERA, will start Tuesday night in Boston when the Twins open a three-game series against the Red Sox.  The Twins’ starting staff, all of whom were acquired from other teams, has been leading MLB in multiple statistical categories including ERA and batting average against.

Jim Dutcher

Happy 90th Birthday today to former Gophers’ head basketball coach Jim Dutcher. Articulate and sharp as ever, Dutcher has always been a great family man and travelled to Houston this spring to watch son Brian’s San Diego State men’s team finish second in the Final Four.

Joe Salem, who was the Gophers’ head football coach when Jim Dutcher’s 1982 team won the Big Ten title, will be 85 on May 1.  He told Sports Headliners via email his health is “okay,” but wife Sue has dementia and is in memory care in Sioux Falls. He spends much of his time following football and literally has a family coaching tree.

Sons Tim (a former Gopher quarterback) and Brad coach tight ends at Pittsburgh and Memphis State respectively. Both programs won their most recent bowl games. Brad’s son Eli is a reserve quarterback at North Central College in Naperville, Illinois and the team won the Division III national championship Stagg Bowl last year.  Jeremiah is a freshman quarterback at Eastern Michigan, 2022 winners of the Famous Idaho Potato Bowl.

“The family was 4-0 in bowl games last fall,” Joe Salem wrote.  “Not bad.”

Son Wade sells motivational programs to school athletic teams while son Brent, a former college football coach, is an insurance executive in the Twin Cities.

The Capital Club’s next breakfast program at Mendakota Country Club is April 27. Charles Adams III, head coach of the North Community High School Polars football team and a recently retired Minneapolis police officer, will help lead an “important conversation about life, death, humanity and how sports can bring people and communities together,” according to an email from club organizer Patrick Klinger. Former Gopher football star Darrell Thompson, president of the Bolder Options mentoring program, will be the program moderator. More information about the Capital Club is available from Klinger, patrick@agilemarketingco.com

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 37
  • 38
  • 39
  • 40
  • 41
  • 42
  • 43
  • …
  • 207
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Culvers   Iron Horse   KLN Family Brands   Meyer Law

Recent Posts

  • Harbaugh or KOC? Who Would Have Been Better for Vikings?
  • Eagles & QB Jalen Hurts Fly in Costly Vikings Home Loss
  • 2025 Hoops Game Failed but Gophers-Tommies Still Teases
  • Impatience with McCarthy by Fans, Media Wrong Approach
  • Glen Mason Speaks Out about Honoring U Football Players
  • Win or Lose, U Can Make Positive Impression at No. 1 OSU
  • At 24 Anthony Edwards Can Build Off Superstar Status
  • Twins Surprise by Firing Veteran Manager Rocco Baldelli
  • Most Pressure to Win in This Town? It’s not the WNBA Lynx
  • Vikings & Rodgers Meet Sunday After Off-Season Flirtation

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
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Tommies Locker Room

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