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Category: Vikings

U Center’s Bond with Jerry Kill Special

Posted on November 13, 2015November 13, 2015 by David Shama

 

Gophers freshman center Tyler Moore received the kind of news he didn’t expect and want on his 19th birthday last month.

Tyler’s father, Samson Moore, told Sports Headliners about how the first hours of October 28 developed involving his son and Jerry Kill.  “He was waking up happy about his birthday, and then he gets called into a 7:30 a.m. meeting, (and) his coach is telling him he’s got to retire due to his health,” Sam said in a telephone interview last week.  “That hit them (all the players) hard.  I know it hit Tyler especially hard…because of that bond they had (Tyler and Kill).  I know it still bothers him to now.  He’s just trying to focus on football as much as he can.  Keep that out of his mind.”

Tyler Moore
Tyler Moore

Mary Moore, Tyler’s mom, had a traumatic brain injury as a child.  She has struggled with seizures—just like Kill who resigned because of his battles with epilepsy and seizures.  When Kill was recruiting Tyler last year in Texas a connection was created between the coach and the Moore family.

“Tyler had been through and seen a lot of things that his mom had dealt with—and knowing what coach Kill was living with as well—I think they had that extra connection between them,” Sam said.

Kill has dealt with seizures for years.  As he got to know the Moores he expressed a willingness to help Mary.  “He always told her if there is anything that we can do, or any procedure, or a doctor you need to see, you just let me know,” Sam recalled.  “(He said) we’ve got great facilities up here and everything.  I can get you to the right people.”

October had begun with excitement and promise for the Moores.  Tyler, only a true freshman and 18 years old, made his first start for the Gophers at Purdue on October 10.  Prior to that start Sam reminded his nervous son he had been playing football with success since he was seven years old.  He also told him how unusual it is for a freshman offensive lineman to start for a Big Ten team.  “That’s a badge of honor,” Sam said.

Tyler, 6-4, 311 pounds, was ranked among the top 10 high school center prospects in the country while playing for North Shore High School in Houston.  He’s started at center for the Gophers in their last four games.

North Shore High School coach John Kay told Sports Headliners “the sky’s the limit” on Tyler’s potential.  Tyler was a three-year starter at North Shore, playing both guard and center.

Kay praised Tyler’s work ethic and “physical stature.”  The coach hadn’t predicted Tyler would start as a true freshman, but he’s not that surprised either.

Gophers offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover said that as expected with a player so young and inexperienced there are “ups and downs” in game day performances.  But Limegrover also used the “sky’s the limit” tag for Tyler. “Overall, I’ve been really pleased with what he’s been able to do this year,” Limegrover said.

In high school Tyler’s offensive line coach was Ben Wilkerson who was co-winner of the 2004 Rimington Trophy as the nation’s outstanding center while playing for LSU.  Wilkerson is now an assistant coach with the Bears in the NFL.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

If Tyler—who Limegrover noted has yet to have a bad snap in a game—is to one day be considered for the Remington, he will have to prove himself without Kill.  He will have to succeed when confronted with problems like the morning of his birthday when he heard the news about the coach.  “He took it really hard,” his dad said.  “He’s a big guy; he’s got a soft heart.  Coach Kill was the one that really put it over the top for him as far as committing to Minnesota.  They used to talk quite a bit before his commitment. …”

Sam remembered Tyler told him in the days leading up to Kill’s resignation the coach’s physical appearance was different.  “He said he (Kill) just didn’t look right.  He just didn’t seem himself—(and Tyler) came to find out he’d had some seizures that week already.”

Like so many people, the Moores were admirers of both Kill and his wife Rebecca.  During the last several years in Minneapolis-St. Paul, the Kills have bettered the community including establishment of the Chasing Dreams Fund through the Epilepsy Foundation.

“They’re regular people,” Sam said about Kill and his wife.  “What you see is what they really are.  It’s a tough loss for everybody, and the University.  I hope the University can bring him back in some fashion so that he can be around the game that he loves. …I think that will make him feel some kind of normalcy.”

Worth Noting

An injury to starting center Brian Bobek, a redshirt senior, gave Moore the opportunity to play with the No. 1 offense.  Moore is backed up by redshirt sophomore Matt Leidner, the younger brother of Gophers redshirt junior quarterback Mitch Leidner.  At 21 years old, Mitch is just 16 months older than 20 year old Matt.

KJ Maye
KJ Maye

Gophers senior wide receiver KJ Maye had a personal-best 116 yards in receptions last Saturday against then No. 1 ranked Ohio State.  Maye has improved his route running in the last couple of weeks.  “Yeah, you should see that guy in practice,” Mitch Leidner said.  “He goes constantly.  He doesn’t take reps off because he doesn’t want to.  Just how competitive he is.  That’s why it pays off on the field on game day.  He’s a heck of a player.”

Leidner talking about running the read-option against Ohio State All-American defensive end Joey Bosa who could be the first player chosen in next year’s NFL Draft:  “As far as pulling it on a guy like Bosa, good luck with that.  He plays the zone-read best out of anyone I’ve ever seen.”

The Gophers and Iowa renew their rivalry and possession of Floyd of Rosedale tomorrow night in Iowa City.  Gophers senior redshirt punter Peter Mortell is from Green Bay and he’s learned about the rivalry’s intensity and keeping possession of the bronze pig.  “I didn’t know about it as much before I got here but no one likes Iowa,” Mortell said.  “No one in the locker room and (no one) outside it. …”

Mortell is on the Ray Guy watch list to possibly win the award for the nation’s best punter.  He led the Big Ten in punting last season averaging 45.1 yards per kick.  The former walk-on had minor knee surgery earlier this fall but is still averaging 43.7 yards per punt—third best in the Big Ten.  He has been disappointed in “maybe” three of his punts this season.

“I try to look forward and not backward,” Mortell said.  “The fact of the matter is that when I am healthy I think I am one of the best punters in the country—and I think my teammates and coaches would echo that. …”

The Gophers have lost three consecutive Big Ten games including the last two against nationally-ranked Michigan and Ohio State.  Minnesota, though, played competitively in those games and had opportunities to win in the fourth quarter.

“Before that (Michigan and Ohio State) we weren’t playing up to our potential, and if we were playing like that against Michigan and Ohio State we probably would have got…run off the field,” said Gophers sophomore defensive end Gaelin Elmore.   “I think we feel like we’re starting to play a little bit more like we’re capable of.  We’re starting to catch the momentum and the ball will fall our way here eventually.”

Elmore was initially a tight end with the Gophers but was quickly switched to defense where his athleticism was needed.  His roommate at Minnesota is former Wayzata High School tight end Brandon Lingen who is developing into a playmaker as a sophomore starter.  Elmore was asked if he could catch the ball as well as his roomie.

“Oh yeah,” he answered.  “People forget that I can catch the ball.  Especially the D-linemen, they try to say I got moved (to defense) because I can’t catch the ball but it’s quite the opposite.”

At his Tuesday news conference Iowa head coach Kirk Ferentz was full of praise for Kill.  He talked about what a special person Kill is, and lauded the lifetime coach’s ability to build programs including at places he coached before coming to Minnesota.

“They got on our radar at Southern Illinois, really got on it at Northern Illinois,” Ferentz said.  “We’d see them on film playing very well, and…I was hopeful Minnesota wouldn’t hire him.  I was hoping nobody in the Big Ten would, but Minnesota figured it out.  They hired a great coach and a great staff.  The work that they’ve done up there, the improvement they’ve made is really clear to see.  You don’t have to be an expert to figure that out.”

Teddy Bridgewater is expected to make his ninth start of the season on Sunday in Oakland against the Raiders.  The second-year quarterback only has six touchdown passes and the same number of interceptions but the Vikings do have a surprise 6-2 record after going 7-9 last season.  With the first half of the schedule completed, offensive coordinator Norv Turner was asked yesterday for his evaluation of Bridgewater.

Teddy Bridgewater (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)
Teddy Bridgewater (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)

“We’re 6-2 and that’s to me the evaluation that matters,” Turner said.  “I think Teddy has had a lot to do with that record.  I think he’s an opportunistic guy.  I think he’s making very few negative plays.  He’s not making plays that cost us games, and obviously in the most critical situations when we’ve been behind, whether it be early in the fourth quarter, or late in the fourth quarter, he’s put together drives.  He’s put together plays that have given us a chance to win.

“As coach (Mike Zimmer) says, we’re still growing in the passing game, and when you’re not having the kind of success that you want, or having the kind of numbers that you want, obviously it always goes back to the quarterback.  But for us to continue to get better in the passing game…we’ve got to do all of the little things in all areas—whether it be protection, route running, getting the right plays called at the right time, all of those things.”

Comments Welcome

U Hires Quiet & Strong Coach in Claeys

Posted on November 11, 2015November 11, 2015 by David Shama

 

A news conference this morning to announce Tracy Claeys as the Gophers new head football coach isn’t surprising.  Multiple sources indicated his interim tag was to be removed last week or this week, and that the 46-year-old Claeys met with University of Minnesota president Eric Kaler on Monday.

Claeys worked for former Gophers head coach Jerry Kill as an assistant for 21 seasons including five at Minnesota as defensive coordinator.  During that time Claeys demonstrated his football intelligence and ability as a teacher.  He comes across as analytical and authentic.  He can figure out schemes and game plans, but he is also personable.  He deserves much of the credit for turning the Minnesota defense into the pride of the team.

Former Gophers captain Jim Carter told Sports Headliners this morning he thinks the hire is the “right choice” and the news likely is well received by most ex-players from the U.  “I’d be really surprised if it’s not,” Carter said.  “There maybe a couple naysayers.”

Tracy Claeys
Tracy Claeys

Carter was close to Kill and the program during the last several years.  He’s been impressed with the ability of Claeys as a teacher, not just a coach.   He sees a studious teacher in Claeys who watches things on both the field and film room, then instructs.

“They coach them up that way rather than hollering and screaming,” Carter said.  “He’s an introvert, quiet but strong.  I like him.  I admire the way he works.”

Claeys might turn out to be a better head coach than Kill—and that’s saying a lot.

Here is the point:  Claeys has never been a head coach before.  Beware of anyone who tells you he will be a disappointment, or guarantees he will be a success.

No one can predict with certainty Claeys will shine as Minnesota’s coach.  There are indications, though, this is a good hire.  Although Kill gave Claeys the team’s better athletes, he got results as defensive coordinator.  The Gophers were often an embarrassment defensively before Kill and Claeys arrived.  In the last couple years highly ranked opponents like TCU and Ohio State have come to know Minnesota’s defense was going to challenge them.

He took over as interim coach for Kill in 2013 and impressed leading the Gophers to wins.  Since Kill resigned on October 28 the Gophers have played with effort in losses to Michigan and Ohio State.

Claeys admits his mistakes and a lot of coaches aren’t willing to do that.  He took responsibility for Minnesota’s out of position defense in a 48-25 loss to Nebraska last month.  He blamed himself for the poor clock management at the end of the Michigan game.

What Claeys knows going forward is he will have the support of a staff already in place.  New head coaches often have to assemble a staff of assistants but Claeys takes over a group that generally won praise working for Kill.  Claeys also has the advantage of dialing up Kill any time he needs support or advice.  No doubt he will.

Because Kill rebuilt the Gophers program and left Claeys all his assistants he will be compared to his mentor.  It’s a fair comparison.  Claeys needs to put his own mark on the program and there are a couple of areas that deserve to be at the head of the line.

Recruiting has to continue to improve at Minnesota.  The Gophers will never become an annual threat to win the Big Ten title and play in New Year’s Day bowl games without better personnel than what this program has known for decades.

Claeys has the momentum of a program that nationally has a much better reputation than five years ago when Kill arrived.  He has to show he and his staff can keep the promising 2016 recruiting class in place and make the 2017 class even better.

Carter doesn’t know a lot about Claeys as a recruiter but is optimistic  he can be effective.  “To me a good recruiter is a person that is sincere and tells the kids the truth and shows them how they can improve their lives by going to his school,” Carter said.  “I think Tracy is very capable of doing that.”

The other area that needs major work is the offense.  In five years Kill never stabilized the quarterback position to the point where the Gophers had a top performer who was on the roster for awhile and had a quality backup or two.  The offense has also been characterized by inconsistent offensive lines.  Those lines quickly became the heart of Wisconsin’s offensive success in the 1990s and continue to this day.  The Gophers so far haven’t found that same success.

Hiring Claeys was the easy choice for interim athletic director Beth Goetz and Kaler.  Finding a replacement outside the staff would have required more homework and perhaps more risk than promoting Claeys whose character is already vetted.  Waiting a few or several weeks likely would have resulted in losing high school recruits who made verbal commitments for 2016.

Sometimes the simple way is the better one.  The University chose to go with Claeys who will be compared in the seasons ahead with other Big Ten coaches and Kill.  I suspect Kill is not only smiling but hoping that his former D-coordinator turns out to be a better head coach than he was.

Gophers & Vikings Notes

Gophers senior running back Rodrick Williams carried the ball five times for nine yards against Ohio State last Saturday.  He also caught two passes for 44 yards.  It was his first game appearance since Purdue on October 14.  When Williams was in high school in Lewisville, Texas his college choices came down to the Gophers and Iowa.  When a Hawkeyes recruiter was critical of the Gophers, it tipped his decision to attend Minnesota.

The Gophers, 4-5 overall and 1-4 in the Big Ten, play at Iowa, 9-0 and 5-0, on Saturday night.  Despite both being in the Big Ten West Division, the teams so far have only one common opponent.  Minnesota lost to Northwestern 27-0, while Iowa defeated the Wildcats 40-10.

With a win over the Gophers, Iowa can be 10-0 for the first time in school history, but head coach Kirk Ferentz was the target of criticism from Hawkeyes fans going into this season after his past four teams had records of 7-6, 8-5, 4-8 and 7-6.

On their two-deep offensive and defensive listings the Hawkeyes have 18 players from the state of Iowa.  Seven of them are starters, with 11 others reserves among the 44 players on the two-deep roster.  The Gophers don’t list two-deeps but of their 22 starters seven are Minnesota natives.  It’s an interesting comparison since Iowa’s state population is about three million while Minnesota’s is over five million.  Also, the Gophers are the only Division I school playing football in Minnesota while Iowa has to compete with Iowa State and Northern Iowa for high school players.

The Vikings haven’t played the Raiders since 2011 and the two franchises last met in Oakland in 2003.  This Sunday in Oakland the Vikings will have to contend with second-year quarterback Derek Carr who ranks among NFL leaders in touchdown passes with 19 and QB rating at 104.3.

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

Vikings coach Mike Zimmer evaluated Carr prior to the 2014 NFL Draft, but Minnesota opted to use a first round pick on Teddy Bridgewater while the Raiders chose Carr in the second round. “I’ve watched three games on him (Carr) so far,” Zimmer said on Monday.  “I think he’s playing very well—gets the ball out quick, seems like he has a good understanding of where the ball needs to go and how to get it out quickly. (Has a) strong arm, accurate.  We did a lot of work on him when he came out.”

Adrian Peterson has rushed for 326 yards in his last three games.  He leads the NFL in rushing with 758 yards.  Zimmer said Peterson and the offensive line have made improvements lately.

“We’ve worked on some of the things with his footwork a little bit, but I think the offensive line is doing a better job of handling some of these run blitzes that we’ve been getting, and coming off and seeing things better,” Zimmer said.  “Just something we’ve been working on. …”

The Vikings are the only team in the NFL to hold opponents to 23 points or fewer every game this season.

Comments Welcome

Potential QB Battle in Oakland Intrigues

Posted on November 9, 2015November 9, 2015 by David Shama

 

If Teddy Bridgewater is recovered from a concussion and can play next Sunday in Oakland there will be an interesting matchup between two of the NFL’s promising young quarterbacks.  Derek Carr, 24, was taken in the second round by the Raiders in 2014 while the Vikings selected Bridgewater, 22, in the first round of the same NFL Draft.

Teddy Bridgewater (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)
Teddy Bridgewater (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings)

Vikings head coach Mike Zimmer said this afternoon at his press conference that Bridgewater has passed his first concussion clearance test but as the week progresses it will be determined whether his quarterback is recovered from the blow he took in yesterday’s win over the Rams.  “I think he’ll be good to go (Sunday),” Zimmer said.

Six NFL.com writers gave their opinions last month about top quarterback prospects 25 and younger.  In addition to Carr and Bridgewater (he turns 23 tomorrow), the list included Blake Bortles, 23, Marcus Mariota, 21, and Jameis Winston, 21.  In the October 20 article Bucky Brooks, Nate Burleson, Maurice Jones-Drew, Steve Mariucci, Deion Sanders and Ike Taylor were asked to identify the quarterback they would choose to build a franchise around.

Four of the six chose Carr, with two others picking Bridgewater. “Derek Carr reminds me a little of Brett Favre,” Mariucci wrote.  “He’s got a little grit to him and a certain toughness. He’s a natural-born leader and has all the intangibles. …”

“Teddy Bridgewater is my choice for a franchise quarterback,” Brooks wrote.  “He’s the one with the most complete skill set, and he has the intelligence, confidence and leadership you look for in a young QB.  From a physical standpoint, he can make all the throws at the short and intermediate range, but he can be a little spotty on deep throws. …”

Carr and Bridgewater had comparable seasons as rookies.  Carr had more passing yards, 3,270, and touchdowns, 21, than any other first-year quarterback in 2014.

Bridgewater’s numbers were 2,919 yards and 14 TDs.  Carr had a passer rating of 76.6 while Bridgewater’s number was 85.2.

Bridgewater was voted by fans as the Pepsi NFL Rookie of the Year.  He started 12 games to Carr’s eight and had a slightly better passing completion percentage, 64.4 versus 58.1.  The Vikings also had a 7-9 record while the Raiders were 3-12.

After week nine of this season Bridgewater is way behind Carr in stats including passer rating, 83.4 versus 104.3.  Carr has 19 touchdown passes and only four interceptions while Bridgewater’s numbers are six and six.  Carr has led an improving Raiders team that is playing .500 football at 4-4.  The Vikings are a surprise team too with a 6-2 record.

No doubt Bridgewater’s priority for next Sunday is just to get on the filed.  Then it’s helping the Vikings win another game but if he plays you can be sure fans and media will be comparing him with Carr.

Worth Noting

Adrian Peterson, who rushed for 125 yards yesterday in the Vikings win against the Rams, now leads the NFL in rushing with 758 yards.

It’s a sad legacy that former Vikings defensive players Wally Hilgenberg (2008 death), Orlando Thomas (2014) and Fred McNeill (several days ago) all died from ALS.  Hilgenberg died at 66 years old, Thomas at 42 and McNeill was 63.

Although Gophers head coach Jerry Kill said he had seizures prior to the days before announcing his resignation last month, a Sports Headliners source wasn’t aware that any of the seizures were witnessed by his players.  Another source said Kill and his wife Rebecca were in Florida last week.

Do a Google entry typing the name Tracy Claeys and among the first search words that come up is “wife.”  Claeys, the Gophers interim head football coach who turns 47 on Christmas Day, is single.

A lot has been written about next year’s Gophers schedule with East Division powers Michigan and Ohio State going off the schedule, but what’s not noted much is the Big Ten will have each team playing nine conference games instead of eight and Minnesota will be on the road for five of them.  East Division bottom feeders Maryland and Rutgers replace Michigan and Ohio State on Minnesota’s schedule.

The Gophers will play Illinois, Maryland, Nebraska, Penn State and Wisconsin on the road.  Coming to Minneapolis will be Iowa, Northwestern, Purdue and Rutgers, plus home nonleague games with Colorado State, Indiana State and Oregon State.

Glenn Caruso
Glenn Caruso

St. Thomas (9-0, 7-0 MIAC) secured an automatic bid to the NCAA playoffs and share of the conference championship by crushing Carleton (1-8, 0-7 MIAC) 80-3 last Saturday.  Coach Glenn Caruso told Sports Headliners he doesn’t talk about wins and losses with his players, but instead emphasizes best effort and execution.  That’s chapter-and-verse coaching philosophy from the approach of legendary UCLA basketball coach John Wooden.

Caruso is a Wooden admirer and refers to him as the “greatest coach of the last century”—a master teacher who understood human nature and motivation.  Among Caruso’s favorite resources is Wooden’s classic book They Call Me Coach.  “I’ve read it seven or eight times,” he said.

Caruso dialogues almost daily with St. Thomas men’s basketball coach John Tauer who has a doctorate degree in social psychology.  He refers to Tauer as “one of the smartest men I know.”  The two coaches live within 10 houses of each other in St. Paul.  “I draw a lot of vision from our conversations,” Caruso said.

Despite fan speculation, there appears no possibility the Twins will ask first baseman Joe Mauer to become a catcher again.  The club needs catching help and there is a logjam of players who can play first base, third base and the outfield.  Manager Paul Molitor, talking on KFAN Radio with “The Common Man” and Mark Rosen last Wednesday, said he is interested in having slugger Miguel Sano do less designated hitting next season and instead play a position in the field, perhaps in the outfield.

While some preseason listings have placed several Big Ten teams in their top 25 rankings, the November 9 Sports Illustrated college basketball issue included only three league teams—No. 5 Maryland, No. 14 Indiana and No. 15 Michigan State.  The ACC had four schools in the top six with No. 1 North Carolina, No. 4 Duke and No. 6 Virginia.

Ironically, coach Richard Pitino’s Gophers (2-0 in exhibition games) open their regular season at home on Friday night against UMKC, the program whose coaching staff included Andre McGee until he resigned late last month.  McGee has been a focal point in allegations about a sex scandal involving the Louisville men’s basketball program where Pitino’s father Rick Pitino is head coach. The Kansas City, Missouri based school and team opens its schedule with a home exhibition game tonight against Hawaii Pacific.

The 3-2 Timberwolves, who play the Hawks in Atlanta tonight, are 3-0 in road games—the first time in 13 years the franchise has done that. The 2001-2002 team won its first four games of the season away from home.  The Wolves didn’t win their third road game last season until January 13.

Wolves point guard Ricky Rubio is averaging 9.2 assists per game—second best in the NBA behind the Thunder’s Russell Westbrook at 10.9.

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