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P.J. Fleck Makes Case for Better Gopher Pass Game in 2024

Posted on July 25, 2024 by David Shama

 

In 13 games last season the Golden Gophers football team averaged 20.3 points per game, ranking 12th in the 14-team Big Ten.  Minnesota was mediocre running the football and had a dismal passing game, adding up to an offense averaging 300.9 yards per game—again 12th in the league.

“When you have the Big Ten kicker of the Year, you’re probably not very good on offense,” head coach P.J. Fleck said today at Big Ten media days in Indianapolis.  Fleck is a big fan of returning kicker Dragan Kesich and his proficiency for kicking field goals but knows his offense must produce in 2024 to improve on last season’s 6-7 record.

Fleck said personnel limitations and injuries dictated what the offense could do last season.   “We want that to be better.  We want that (offense) to be way more balanced,” Fleck told reporters in Indy at a news conference televised on BTN.  “We also have to have the personnel to do that, which I think we have.

“We’re deeper at wideout, we’re deeper at tight end.  We’ve basically got our whole line coming back.  We’ve got a really good quarterback who is really consistent. …We’ve got a running back room that’s really deep.  And if we can stay healthy, we can be balanced and be consistent on a daily basis on the offensive side of the ball.”

Max Brosmer

At the most important position in football, Minnesota has newcomer Max Brosmer.  The transfer from New Hampshire was a second team FCS All-American last season.

Fleck said the Gophers were committed to finding a portal quarterback for 2024 who would be the starter. Someone with talent and a match for the program’s culture that stresses teamwork, academics and citizenship. Fleck tells his players to work at being better people than players, believing if you’re a better person you will become a better player.

Brosmer will have just one season of eligibility with the Gophers, but his leadership has already been so apparent to the coaches and players.  “He’s a meticulous ‘why’ seeker and he’s a very, curious, curious individual.  And anytime you have a curious leader, you can accomplish a lot.

“The quote that he is a coach on the field gets thrown around a lot, but he truly is. He could be a doctor and a surgeon which he probably will be, but he’ll be a phenomenal coach if he decides (to be)  that one day after he’s done playing.”

Adam Weber, the former Gopher quarterback who still holds school records for career passing yards and career touchdown passes, has spent time with Brosmer.  “He’s very impressive,” Weber told Sports Headliners Tuesday.

Worth Noting

Fleck, entering his eighth season with the Gophers, said he and athletic director Mark Coyle have worked together longer than any head football coach-athletic director duo in the Big Ten.  Fleck emphasizes the importance of sustainability in a program’s culture that comes about when leadership is in place for a long time.  Minnesota had four different head coaches between 1997 and 2016.

An example, he said, of how culture translates into sustainability is the Gophers return 16 of 17 eligible starters from last season’s team.

None of those starters has received more preseason hype than offensive tackle Aireontae Ersery.  Ersery is a member of the latest EA Sports College Football 25.  Not only ranked at No. 24, but he is also the highest rated offensive lineman in the Big Ten.

Fleck reiterated he “loves Minnesota” and said he and wife Heather have been building a new home for more than two years and it will be completed in two weeks.

Thirteen Golden Gophers have been named as candidates to play in the January 30, 2025 East-West Shrine Bowl in Arlington, Texas.  That’s more than defending national champion Michigan has with nine on the watch list for the postseason all-star game.

Gophers are: Max Brosmer, Quinn Carroll, Tyler Cooper, Aireontae Ersery, Jack Henderson, Daniel Jackson, Jah Joyner, Dragan Kesich, Cody Lindenberg, Jalen Logan-Redding, Elijah Spencer, Danny Striggow, Justin Walley.  https://shrinebowl.com/shrine-bowl-1000/

Former Gophers defensive back Brock Vereen, along with Rick Pizzo, Gerry DiNardo and Howard Griffith, will host a new 30-minute B1G Countdown to Kickoff show on BTN this summer and fall to prepare fans for the Big Ten games of the day.

Condolences to family and friends of Rochester native and Gophers’ swimming great Steve Jackman, 83, who died last month.  Once referred to as “the fastest man in the world” after twice winning the NCAA 50-yard free style races, Jackman was an 11-time All-American at Minnesota.  Jackman graduated in 1968 from the University of Minnesota Medical school and practiced radiology at the Mayo Clinic and Memorial Medical Center in Springfield, Illinois, according to the Springfield-based State Journal Register website.

Timberwolves superstar Anthony Edwards is the youngest player at age 22 on the men’s Olympic basketball roster.  Wolves coach Chris Finch sees another opportunity for Edwards to grow from the opportunity, watching how some of the world’s greatest players prepare and handle themselves as professionals.

Edwards has predicted he can contribute in big moments for the U.S. team.  “His confidence is something that fuels him, to be quite honest with you,” Finch told Sports Headliners earlier this month.

The team’s opening game in the Paris Olympics is Sunday against Serbia.  Start time is 10:15 a.m. CDT with NBC televising.

The Summer Olympics begin tomorrow and cybersecurity company AVG has a warning: phishing and scam attacks rise during the summer and winter games.  Attacks were up 280 percent during the 2021 summer Olympics and 238 percent for the 2022 winter games, per AVG.

Hollis Cavner has been a golf trailblazer here for more than 30 years.  His efforts began with the Burnet Senior Classic in 1993, then the Coldwell Banker Burnet Classic and 3M Championship and now the 3M Open, Minnesota’s PGA Tour stop in its sixth year and going on this week at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine.

Cavner, his employees and volunteers have put high quality golf on the map in Minnesota while raising millions of dollars for local charities and boosting the economy.  With the objective of growing interest in the game, kids 16 and under are admitted free to the tournament.

Cavner excels in building relationships including with young golfers such as Sahith Theegala who turned pro in 2020 and is now ranked No. 11 in the world.  He will be at the 3M Open as will young players granted an exemption to participate including former Gopher Ben Warian.

Comments Welcome

Vacation Leaves Your Correspondent in Good Spirits

Posted on March 1, 2024March 1, 2024 by David Shama

 

Loyal readers may have noticed much of February was without dispatches from this columnist. You may wonder, “How was your vacation?”

Well, since you asked, here are some musings:

Grateful our luggage didn’t end up in North Korea. With checked bags, you never know what to expect.

A couple years ago my wife mistakenly took someone else’s travel bag off the luggage carousel. While waiting in a long car rental line she received a call from a stranger who had her bag.  Jeanne’s luggage and that of the stranger were identical including Viking Cruises tags.

In case you are curious, I can report the pickleball rage has reached Southwest Florida.  I have long been a tennis advocate, but “the sport of a lifetime” is giving way to the “pickle.”  The picklers are taking over tennis courts and even small empty stores from Florida to California.

The easy to learn, easy to play game isn’t appreciated by all.  In San Francisco there have been complaints about the annoying “ping, ping, ping” from dawn to dusk. Hard plastic against hard paddles isn’t so soothing to noise-sensitive residents.

Not that downtrodden San Francisco doesn’t have more serious issues.  Some wealthy Californians have had enough crime and dirty streets.  They are in motion to elect city supervisors to restore the sanity.

Where is the “cavalry” for Minneapolis?

Word reached me that Anthony Edwards thought it was cute to shoot left-handed in the NBA All-Star game.  Next year, why not bounce the basketball off his head?  That would be most intriguing on three-point shots.

Time in the Florida sun boosted optimism for improving my golf game. I found “therapy” on the putting green near our rental condo (adjacent to the pickleball courts).  It was there I refined my trademark approach of striking the golf ball with the toe of the putter.

Will I consistently two-putt next summer?  Will the Vikings give Kirk Cousins a guaranteed three-year deal?  Will Ant Edwards stop doing dumb stuff?  Will the boys’ state high school hockey tournament be played in front of empty seats?

We enjoyed dinner at a popular Peruvian restaurant with another couple from back home. Mr. Minnesotan reminded me of a restaurant quip from baseball humorist and Hall of Fame catcher Yogi Berra who reportedly once said of a dining establishment, “No, I don’t go to that restaurant anymore.  Nobody goes there. It’s too crowded.”

We talked about shopping while at dinner.  Mr. Minnesotan is still (“tongue in cheek”) upset about the Dollar Store raising prices from a buck to a $1.25.  A few days later, I was pining for something like a Dollar Store when $750 shoes sent me scurrying out of Saks Fifth Avenue with no purchases in hand.

Uncle John sans cap

I had the other couple laughing with stories about my thrifty (but charitably generous) Uncle John.  We lived together years ago and one day I trashed a winter cap that had seen better days.  Awhile after that I was dispatched to the downtown bus station to pick up John and his cousin.  Sauntering out of the station door was thrifty Uncle John wearing my old winter cap.

Perhaps you’re curious whether I keep up with emails while out of town for extended times. The answer is yes. I can report there was nothing found in my private email account more curious than repeated donation requests addressed to “Janet” from Biden-Harris.

Although the solicitors don’t seem to know my gender or correct name, I draw no harsh conclusions about their campaign.  Heck, even our own Amy Klobuchar has it wrong.

Signing off for now.  Your amused and humble correspondent, “Janet.”

Comments Welcome

Football Gophers Make Merry with 2024 Recruiting Class

Posted on December 20, 2023December 25, 2023 by David Shama

 

The Golden Gophers football program today announced what could turn out to be the best recruiting class of the P.J. Fleck era that began in 2017.  The 24-man class has that potential and breathes positivity into a program that experienced a disappointing 5-7 record last fall and saw the December departure of elite defensive coordinator Joe Rossi for Michigan State.

Minnesota signed to National Letters of Intent the No. 1 rated players in the states of Minnesota, North Dakota and Wisconsin—a program rarity.  Safety Koi Perich from Esko, Minnesota got a heavy recruiting rush from Ohio State this month but the state’s top ranked player by the 247Sports composite rankings chose the Gophers.

P.J. Fleck

Perich is a superb athlete with a fluid running style and other skills that raise expectations he could follow in the steps of Minnesota All-American safeties Antoine Winfield Jr. (2019) and Tyler Nubin (2023).  Fleck and assistant coach Danny Collins prioritized Perich for a couple of years.  Fleck and previous Gopher coaches have been spurned too many times in the past by the state’s No. 1 recruit so today was a win worth celebrating.

Perich may have the potential to one day make a living playing football on Sundays.  The same may work out for Wisconsin’s No. 1 player, offensive tackle Nathan Roy, and North Dakota’s No. 1, defensive lineman Riley Sunram. All three are four-stars, per 247Sports.

Perich, Roy and Sunram, along with Kansas offensive lineman Brett Carroll, have invitations to the prestigious All-American Bowl in San Antonio January 6.  That’s the first time in the Fleck era four Gopher recruits have been invited to the game formerly known as the Army All-American Bowl, which showcases many of the best prep seniors in the country.

High school recruits who signed today include six Minnesota natives. None may have as much maroon and gold DNA as Detroit Lakes linebacker Mason Carrier. His brother Ethan, a defensive back, is already on the roster and Mason posted this on X a few days ago:

“…We would rather MAKE a better team than FIND a better team. Thanks coaches and those loving and loyal to MN.  I am Mason Carrier.  Get used to the name.”

The 2024 recruiting class is vital to future success and could prove historic to Gopher football. Minnesota was coming off nine wins or more in 2019, 2021 and 2022 before this season’s fall.  Fleck wants a return to the norm and even better results in the future where rewards could include entry into the 12-team college football playoff coming in 2024-2025.

This class and the ones that follow need to provide talent and depth.  The Gophers struggled last season when they ran out of both, including at linebacker and running back.  Inconsistent quarterback play from Athan Kaliakmanis was a problem, too, and he left the program recently. Don’t be surprised if his transfer process leads him to Rutgers.

QB is the most important position for Big Ten football teams.  Fleck’s signings aimed at delivering results this fall and into the future.  It all starts with New Hampshire transfer Max Brosmer, probably one of the top 10 quarterbacks available in the transfer portal.  Brosmer was nearly flawless at times playing for the FCS Wildcats. The Gophers expect big things from him in accuracy, pocket presence, decision making and leadership.

Fresno State transfer Logan Fife is an experienced quarterback who has been both a key reserve and starter.  He will have two seasons of eligibility and his presence will be reassuring if Brosmer misses time because of injury.

Freshman quarterback Drake Lindsey comes from a family with Arkansas Razorback roots. At about 6-6, the three-star Lindsey, whose grandfather Jim Lindsey played for the Vikings, will have no issues seeing receivers from the pocket and he could be the starter in two years.

It might be that the Gophers have more work to do in the recruitment of pass catchers between now and next summer, particularly targeting a wide out. Dropped passes and failure to get open bugged the wide receivers and tight ends last season.  It’s been an issue for wide receivers dating back to 2019 when Rashod Bateman and Tyler Johnson were both named first team All-Big Ten.

The 2024 class includes two wide receivers and two tight ends.  Among the promising preps is Mankato West’s Jalen Smith.  He only had one other Power Five offer (Iowa State), per 247Sports, but he could be a sleeper in this class.

With 19 high school players and five college transfers, the Gophers rank No. 37 among recruiting classes across the country, according to 247. For a program that still doesn’t have the Name, Image and Likeness money of many other programs, and doesn’t cheat in recruiting like the blue-bloods and others allegedly do, that’s impressive.

The Gophers leave for Detroit and the Quick Lane Bowl on Friday in preparation for their day after Christmas game.  After losing their final regular season game against Wisconsin, there is a want among the players to get a W for the seniors in their last go round.

Among the seniors is quarterback Cole Kramer who will make his first college career start.  He is the ultimate loyalist who has stayed with the program through minimal playing time and changes in offensive coordinators.

Gopher linebacker Cody Lindenberg said Kramer never complained, just “put his head down and worked.”  Lindenberg described it as “awesome” to see the former Eden Prairie star get his opportunity.

Kramer said “it means the world” to be leading the Gophers in the bowl game.  He is an ultimate legacy player with his grandfather Tom Moe, uncle Bob Coughlin and cousin Carter Coughlin all being former Gophers.

Grandpa Moe began the legacy playing for the Gophers in the 1950s and was named team MVP in 1959, but he likely won’t be attending the bowl game. “I don’t think he’s going to make it,” Cole said.  “He’s going through some things right now. But my dad’s side…my grandma and grandpa will be there.  My fiancé and her family will be there, and my mom and my dad and my brother will be there as well.”

The Gophers are about a 4-point favorite to defeat Bowling Green, a team with a 7-5 record that closed fast winning five of its last six games.  Fleck is 4-0 in bowl games but his struggling offense (averaged 20.2 points) and defense (uncharacteristic 26.2 points) need to show up with improved play.

The optics are such that the Gophers, playing against a non-Power Five team, must not only win but be impressive doing it.  That will add to the juice of positivity created by today’s signing day and maybe ease the sting of losing coordinator Joe Rossi.

Rossi had more credibility than any assistant coach in the Fleck era.  Fans and players had watched him turn Minnesota’s defense around in 2019 and beyond, with his units excelling in top 10 categories nationally. Last fall wasn’t Rossi-like but no one questioned his coaching chops even then.

The players referred to Rossi as a “guru” and it’s a painful departure that surprised them.  Lindenberg and others felt they were blessed to play for a man with so much wisdom who also cared deeply about them. “…Yeah, just a lot to be grateful for that he’s been able to teach me,” Lindenberg said.

Why did Rossi leave?  Maybe he thought Michigan State, with superior Name, Image and Likeness resources, offered the opportunity to coach for a bigger winner.  For now his shadow hangs over the program but today’s recruiting class, a bowl win next week and the announcement of a high quality replacement in the days ahead can sooth the loss.

BTW: Stillwater-based Creative Charters is in the holiday spirit donating 20 airline seats for Bolder Options mentors and youth to attend the Quick Lane Bowl in Detroit between the Gophers and Bowling Green on December 26.  Creative has a sold-out plane doing a same day trip for the game and company owners Steve and Dorothy Erban are taking care of the game tickets, too!

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