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Category: Vikings

Thielen, Mahomes Return on Sunday?

Posted on October 29, 2019October 29, 2019 by David Shama

 

Enjoy a Tuesday notes column:

It could be that top playmakers Adam Thielen and Patrick Mahomes return for Sunday’s game in Kansas City between the Vikings and Chiefs.

Wide receiver Thielen, recovering from a right hamstring injury, didn’t play last Thursday in Minnesota’s win over the Redskins. By Sunday he will have both rested and undergone treatment, making a return to the lineup perhaps likely.

Mahomes, the Chiefs’ starting quarterback and 2018 NFL MVP, dislocated his right knee cap more than 10 days ago and he didn’t play Sunday night against the Packers. But that evening NBC TV reporter Michele Tafoya said Mahomes told her that if the Chiefs were facing a playoff game he would have played against the Packers.

The 6-2 Vikings and 5-3 Chiefs have postseason ambitions just like 50 years ago in 1969. Minnesota and Kansas City played in Super Bowl IV on January 11, 1970. The Vikings were about a two touchdown favorite but lost 23-7.

Chiefs coach Hank Stram loved the limelight and was “miked for sound” during the game. He is famous for this quote about a Vikings defensive back: “(Karl) Kassulke: was running around there like it was a Chinese fire drill.”

Vikings defensive end Jim Marshall played in that Super Bowl but many fans remember him for a gaffe 55 years ago this month. Playing against the 49ers, he scooped up a fumble and ran 66 yards the wrong way and into the end zone. The 49ers were rewarded with a safety.

Former Vikings linebacker Ben Leber, now a sideline reporter on the team’s radio broadcasts and TV analyst for college football games, speaks to the CORES lunch group Thursday, November 14 at the Bloomington Event Center, 1114 American Blvd. Reservations are accepted until Monday, November 11 by contacting Jim Dotseth, dotsethj@comcast.net. CORES is an acronym for coaches, officials, reporters, educators and sports fans.

Ben Utecht, the Hastings native and former Gophers star tight end now a brain health advocate, speaker and entertainer, is the latest guest on the “Behind the Game” Twin Cities cable TV showed hosted by Patrick Klinger and Bill Robertson. The Utecht episode is also on YouTube.

In the latest A.P. and Coaches polls the Gophers are ranked No. 13 nationally, while Penn State is No. 5. The last time Minnesota was ranked in the top 25 and played another ranked team was in October of 2004 when the No. 13 ranked Gophers lost to No. 14 Michigan.

If Minnesota defeats Penn State a week from Saturday the Gophers will almost certainly be ranked in the top 10 in polls. The Gophers haven’t finished a season in the top 10 since 1962,

Minnesota connections: An October 19-20 Wall Street Journal article lists the five best sports scandals books ever and includes Foul: The Connie Hawkins Story, and The Last Temptation of Rick Pitino. The Hawkins biography details how the former ABA Minnesota Pipers star was blacklisted for years from the NBA following gambling allegations while in college. Pitino, the former Louisville basketball coach and father of Gophers basketball coach Richard Pitino, fell from grace after two sex scandals.

Jim Dutcher

Willie Burton, the former Gophers basketball player who will have a banner raised in Williams Arena to honor his legacy January 26, was recruited out of high school in Detroit by Minnesota head coach Jim Dutcher who said Burton turned down Michigan and Michigan State. “He could have gone wherever,” Dutcher told Sports Headliners.

Dutcher resigned as Minnesota coach before Burton enrolled in 1986 and he played four seasons for coach Clem Haskins. The third-leading career scorer in program history, Burton played on two NCAA Tournament teams including a group that made the Elite Eight.

Dutcher’s son Brian Dutcher, head coach at San Diego State, has a team that is picked by the media to finish second in the Mountain West Conference behind Utah State.

The 3-0 Timberwolves have shown unity and hustle in their early regular season games, but face their biggest challenge so far Wednesday night in Philadelphia against a 76ers team that could win the NBA title. Give Wolves star center Karl-Anthony Towns credit for organizing a team bonding trip to the Bahamas prior to training camp.

Towns is the Western Conference Player of the Week for NBA games played October 22-27. As of Monday afternoon Towns ranked third in the NBA in scoring (32 points per game), sixth in rebounds (13.3), second in steals (3.00) and second in three-pointers made (5.0).

Gorgui Dieng, the Wolves backup center, speaks five languages.

An S.I. online story last week listing baseball’s top 50 free agents ranked Astros’ starting pitcher Wade Miley at No. 40 and suggested the best fit for him could be the Twins. The October 24 article ranked Twins pitchers Serio Romo No. 44, Kyle Gibson No. 42, Michael Pineda No. 27 and Jake Odorizzi No. 14. S.I. said best fits for them are with other teams.

Comments Welcome

Minnesota Connections & D.C. Baseball

Posted on October 27, 2019October 27, 2019 by David Shama

 

I feel a baseball size tug in pulling for the Washington Nationals to win the World Series. Lord knows it’s not a rush like I felt when Kirby Puckett hit his famous Game 6 home run for the Twins in 1991, but there is a bias for me in hoping the Nats take the Fall Classic.

The Nats have four ex-Twins on the roster in Brian Dozier, Fernando Rodney, Anibal Sanchez and Kurt Suzuki. That’s nice and the Minnesota alumni connection stirs my interest a bit in the Washington lads.

I always liked Dozier, a good old southern boy second baseman who hit home runs for the Twins when hardly anyone else did. When the now 42-year-old Rodney was with Minnesota, he wore his cap so goofy it made me laugh, but his relief pitching was so up and down he could make you scowl. Suzuki was a contributor to the Twins, a brainy catcher, who unfortunately is now injured. Not many favorite Sanchez moments of him pitching in a Twins uniform—he went to spring training in 2018 but didn’t make the final roster.

But what’s got me on the Nationals bandwagon are the historical ties of Washington, D.C. baseball to Minneapolis-St. Paul and the state of Minnesota. This is the first World Series for a Washington baseball club since 1933—so long ago that American women had only been allowed to vote 13 years before. Known as both the Senators and Nationals, the D.C. franchise that lost in the 1933 World Series to the New York Giants mostly had a chokehold on ineptitude for much of the first half of the 20th century.

Famed sportswriter Charles Dryden put it this way: “Washington first in war, first in peace and last in the American League.”

The hapless Senators were even featured in a hit Broadway musical comedy, “Damn Yankees.” A long suffering Senators fan laments if only his favorites had a slugger, they could compete against the Yankees who tormented his team and dominated baseball.

The Senators were owned by the Griffith family and dated back to 1901 when they were one of the founding members of the American League. In the late 1950s attendance in their antiquated ballpark was so bad the franchise was thinking relocation. Minneapolis power brokers had been coveting a major league team for years and the opening of Metropolitan Stadium in 1956 signaled their serious intentions and in the coming years there would reportedly be flirtations with National and American League franchises.

Although the New York Giants had a young superstar in center fielder Willie Mays, they were mostly ignored by the baseball public in New York where the Yankees and Dodgers were much more popular. Mays had played briefly in Minneapolis in 1951 for the Millers who were a Giants farm team in the American Association. He was popular in Minneapolis and so were other Giants who had first played for the Millers. Giants’ owner Horace Stoneham was more than curious about moving to Minneapolis and playing at Metropolitan Stadium but a last minute pitch by Dodgers owner Walter O’Malley convinced him to move to San Francisco after the 1957 season. In California, with the Dodgers in Los Angeles and Giants in San Francisco, the NL two teams could efficiently continue their historic rivalry.

In the late 1950s the Twin Cities were considered fertile ground for a major league team. The Boston Braves had moved from Boston to Milwaukee in 1953 and became a box-office sensation. Major League Baseball, which didn’t have a team west of Missouri until the Giants and Dodgers moved to California in 1958, was learning there were opportunities in fast growing cities that wanted in on having a franchise.

The Cleveland Indians and Chicago White Sox were rumored to be interested in moving to Minnesota but it was Calvin Griffith who made big league baseball a reality here. Griffith not only relocated his team after the 1960 season but also brought along family members to serve as executives in the front office, and employees who had worked in concession operations at his stadium in D.C. They would all be on the payroll for the Minnesota team who some fans wanted to nickname the “Griffs,” not the Twins.

Tony Oliva

The 1960 Senators weren’t much of a team and neither were the 1961 Twins who finished 20 games under .500. But in the late 1950s and early 1960s the “Griffs” were starting to harvest young talent, including Harmon Killebrew and Tony Oliva, players that would form the core of teams that became pennant contenders. The best of the clubs was the 1965 group that won the American League pennant and lost to the Dodgers in the World Series.

While Minnesotans were thanking Griffith for making us big league by moving his team here, MLB didn’t like the idea of not having a team in the nation’s capital so Washington was awarded an expansion franchise that started play in 1961. By the late 1960’s that new team, also called the Senators, had a Minneapolis owner. Bob Short, who had owned and moved the Minneapolis Lakers to Los Angeles after the 1959-1960 season, took control of the Senators in 1969.

If Washingtonians resented us for taking Griffith’s club, their anger must have been off the charts a few years later. Short’s Senators were deeply in debt after the 1971 season and the Minneapolis businessman received permission from his fellow American League owners to move the team to Arlington, Texas where they became and remain the Texas Rangers. This was classic Short who broke the hearts of fans in two towns, and liked to borrow and leverage money.  The guy who put a group together that bought the Lakers for a reported $150,000 and later sold them for $5 million, unloaded the Rangers in 1974 for millions more.

Washington baseball fans got dumped on twice in 11 years and it wouldn’t be until 2005 that they would have another big league club with the Montreal Expos moving to D.C.. During this time it was the Baltimore Orioles who profited from the absence of a major league team in D.C. The cities are less than 50 miles apart and it’s arguable whether there are enough fans to support two franchises unless both are among baseball’s best teams.

So now Washington, the baseball town that has been jilted a couple of times, is riding high. After last night the Nationals and Houston Astros have each won two games in the World Series. If the Nats can win two more games they will be the first D.C. team to win the Fall Classic since 1924. The town has already experienced sports highs of late with the Washington Capitals winning the Stanley Cup in 2018 and the Washington Mystics becoming WNBA champs this fall.

If the Nats don’t win out, at least they can’t blame us.

Comments Welcome

Ageless Peterson Won’t Play at 40

Posted on October 22, 2019October 22, 2019 by David Shama

 

Adrian Peterson, 34, could be playing against his old team, the Vikings, for the last time Thursday night at U.S. Bank Stadium. There was doubt earlier this week about Peterson’s availability for the game because of an ankle injury but Cbssports.com is reporting this afternoon that he will play in Minneapolis.

The future Hall of Famer has been a starter on a bad 1-6 Redskins team. Peterson, filling for injured starter Derrius Guice, has run for 307 rush yards and one touchdown on 83 attempts in six games. His longest run is 25 yards and he is averaging 3.7 yards per carry. Although time and the pounding of the NFL have surely diminished Peterson’s skills, it’s remarkable he is still productive at such an advanced age for a running back.

Peterson, who played for the Vikings from 2007-2016, has long talked about becoming a king of old age ball carriers. Even when Peterson was with the Vikings he speculated about being on the field at age 40. Then last December in an interview posted on NFL.com he revisited the topic.

With one game remaining in the season his Redskins weren’t going to qualify for the playoffs but Peterson claimed to have “fresh legs” and was upbeat while answering questions. “My body feels great,” he said.

Toward the interview’s end Peterson was asked how many more years he might play in the NFL? “God willing, I am thinking about 40 years (old),” he said.

Peterson, who earlier this season set the NFL all-time record for rushing touchdowns with 107, has also played for the Saints and Cardinals since leaving Minnesota. He loves to play football but money is likely a motivation, too. Multiple media sources last summer reported he had serious financial problems.

The Redskins lost 9-0 to the 49ers on Sunday with Peterson gaining 81 yards on 20 carries. Word from a Sports Headliners source is Peterson was less effective in the second half, and that his third quarter fumble, on the team’s best drive, was a turning point in the game. “He still runs hard, but seems to lack the breakaway quickness or agility of earlier times,” the source said via email.

In the competitive world of the NFL, teams are looking to the future as well as the present. Peterson has set records and made remarkable comebacks from injuries but playing to age 40 seems impossible. More likely is that all those Vikings fans who cheered for him so long will say goodbye Thursday evening.

Worth Noting

The Vikings announced this afternoon the release of cornerback and punt returner Marcus Sherels who has played most of his NFL career with the organization.  The Rochester native was a walk-on standout with the Gophers.

Former Vikings quarterback Case Keenum, a featured part of the Redskins’ struggling offense, is expected to be the starter for Thursday night’s game in Minneapolis.

Gophers head football coach P.J. Fleck reiterated today on KFAN Radio that the availability of injured senior linebacker Kamal Martin will be a game-time decision Saturday before taking on Maryland.

Fleck talking on the radio about inspirational four-time cancer survivor Casey O’Brien who is the Big Ten Special Teams Player of the Week, and will visit a hospital to help others this afternoon: “The attitude he has is non-human.”

Fleck’s wife, Heather, will attend Friday’s Goal Line Club lunch at Jax Café where Gophers cornerback coach Rod Chance will speak. Mike Grimm, radio voice of the Gophers, will emcee. More at Goallineclub.org.

It will be interesting to watch the secondary tickets market for Saturday’s showdown game in Brookings between North Dakota State and South Dakota State. Monday StubHub.com was featuring tickets ranging in cost from $ 85.39 to $283.89.

The “coaching tree” is healthy: first year NDSU head coach Matt Entz is 7-0 while Chris Klieman, the mentor he succeeded in Fargo, is 4-2 at Kansas State following a big win over TCU last Saturday. Klieman’s former boss with the Bison, ex-NDSU head coach Craig Bohl, is 5-2 at Wyoming.

Running back Zach Zenner, the former Eagan, Minnesota and South Dakota star, caught a pass for six yards and rushed for a single yard in his debut game for the Saints on Sunday.

Mike Mahlen of Verndale became the first Minnesota prep football coach to achieve 400 career wins when his team defeated Rothsay last week. Mahlen, 400-123-3, is in his 51st season at Verndale (about 150 miles northwest of Minneapolis) where he has spent his entire head coaching career.

The Timberwolves, who open their NBA regular season Wednesday night against the Nets in Brooklyn, are predicted to finish 13th among 15 Western Conference teams by Sports Illustrated. In the magazine’s NBA preview issue the Wolves are ranked No. 22  among the league’s most fun teams to watch.  There are 30 NBA teams.

“The offensive brilliance of Karl-Anthony Towns is basically weighed down by the offensive brickiness of Andrew Wiggins,” the magazine said in the story about the entertainment appeal of all 30 NBA teams.

Glen Taylor

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor on Towns’ whose offensive game is among the NBA’s best: “He’s pretty well got that down.”

Taylor told Sports Headliners last week that coach Ryan Saunders has asked him to travel with the team, something that Ryan’s dad, Flip Saunders, also requested.

Taylor, an investor in the Minnesota United, said the third-year MLS franchise will not be profitable this year and probably won’t be for awhile.

It’s believed Twin Cities winter time teams are finding it a challenge to sell season tickets. A guesstimate is the Wild could be at about 11,000 season tickets, with the Timberwolves and basketball Gophers in the 7,000 to 8,000 range. Sports Headliners reported Sunday that Gophers hockey non-student season tickets are at 4,610 and down from 5,060 in 2018-2019, according to the University of Minnesota.

Budget ticket prices are featured now by the University in multiple sports including a $15 single game ticket for men’s basketball.

Condolences to family and friends of former Gophers volleyball coach Mike Hebert who passed away Monday at age 75.

It was 20 years ago last Sunday that original Twins owner Calvin Griffith died at age 87.

Comments Welcome

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