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Worth Noting

Posted on February 20, 2008February 9, 2012 by David Shama

Torii Hunter was featured in the Sunday Los Angeles Times.  Hunter, the former Twin who signed a five year, $90 million off-season deal with the Angels, grew up in poverty and had a father addicted to cocaine, according to the Times.  Hunter now has a home with 11 bathrooms.

Guard Steve Hutchinson, running back Adrian Peterson and defensive tackle Kevin Williams were named to the Sporting News all-pro team.  Peterson was also the publication’s near unanimous choice for Rookie of the Year.  Selections are made through voting by pro personnel directors.

Gopher football coach Tim Brewster said assistant Tim Cross has been selected by rivals.com as the No. 1 recruiting assistant coach in the Big Ten Conference and No. 8 in the country.

Sports Illustrated didn’t include the Wild’s Marian Gaborik among its Western Conference all-star wings, instead choosing Jarome Iginla of the Flames and Henrik Zetterberg of the Red Wings.

Hobey Baker Memorial Award ballots go out to Division I hockey coaches next week and the top 10 candidates for the 2008 award will be announced on March 22. The winner will be announced April 11 during the NCAA Frozen Four championships in Denver and televised live on ESPNU at 7 p.m. Minneapolis time.  The award annually honors college hockey’s top player.  More information is available at www.hobeybaker.com.

Randy Foye started his first game of the season last night as the Timberwolves easily defeated Philadelphia 104-88.  He and regular point guard Sebastian Telfair started at the guard positions. “I wanted to see him (Foye) and Basie together a little bit more,” coach Randy Wittman said. “I can get them together with more minutes starting them together than I can bringing them off the bench. …”  Foye scored 13 points and Witman predicted the two guards will start again tomorrow night (Thursday) against San Antonio at Target Center. The Spurs have won eight of the last nine against the Wolves.

St. Paul is being labeled as “Tournament City USA” with Xcel Energy Center and Roy Wilkins Auditorium playing host to six athletic tournaments over five weeks, starting with last weekend through March 22.

Former pro Tracy Austin is coming to town in early May to help promote tennis, according to a local source.

Sophomore forward Craig Heiman had the third highest scoring game in school history with 36 points on Saturday night, leading Concordia University (St. Paul) to a 79-61 win at Upper Iowa University.  The performance moved him within 94 points of Brian Jamros’ single season school record of 529 points.

Comments Welcome

National Publications Hail U Recruiting

Posted on February 18, 2008February 9, 2012 by David Shama

In the current issues both Sporting News and Sports Illustrated praise the 2008 Gopher football recruiting success.  In unprecedented coverage of the school’s recruiting, the two national publications joined with other news sources in admiring the work of coach Tim Brewster and his staff for a recruiting class acknowledged as among the top 20 in the country despite coming off a 1-11 season and decades of mediocrity and abysmal on-field performance.

Sporting News included the Gophers among its “top 10 signing day stories.”  Under a “Minnesota matters” heading, the publication described Brewster as a “voracious recruiter who is selling his vision.”

SN ranked the Gophers’ recruiting class 16th in the country, placing Minnesota only behind No. 9 Ohio State and No. 10 Michigan among Big Ten schools.  The Gophers were ranked one spot behind No. 15 Texas, another super power among college football programs and a school that signed Brewster’s son Nolan, from Denver Mullen.  Imagine where the Gophers would have ranked if star recruits Nolan Brewster, Michael Floyd of Cretin-Derham Hall and Willie Mobley of Eden Prairie all signed with Minnesota.  That was a possibility last year.

For the Gopher football program to draw attention in Sports Illustrated is almost as rare as a Jesse Ventura sighting.  Years ago quarterback Bobby Cox made the cover as “America’s best quarterback” and more recently extraordinary running backs Laurence Maroney and Marion Barber III were featured.  But coverage of Gopher recruiting in SI?  No memory of that!

Under a “Gophers Strike Gold” heading, SI referred to Minnesota as one of the recruiting season’s surprise success stories and said Brewster produced a “consensus” top 20 class.  In a related article about the college football trend to big, physical quarterbacks like Florida’s Heisman Trophy winner Tim Tebow who can devastate opponents passing and running, SI included Minnesota recruit MarQueis Gray.  The magazine said the 6-4, 220-pound Indianapolis player “had Minnesota coaches envisioning touchdowns through the air and by land.”

The Gophers’ recruiting class success was both anticipated and surprising.  Brewster had a reputation for years while an assistant coach for being among the nation’s best recruiters. Then, too, he hired his staff based on their collective abilities to recruit as well as coach.  But consider, too, no school other than Minnesota that produced a top 20 class was coming off a 1-11 season.  Compare, too, Minnesota’s big time bowl history in the last 50 years with other schools in the Sporting News top 25 recruiting list and see how shabby the Gopher scrapbook looks (you remember the 1962 Rose Bowl, right?).

The Gophers’ recruiting success is no surprise to recruiting analyst Tom Lemming who is among the most quoted of authorities year after year and has admired Brewster for a long time.  On the Gopher Web site, www.gophersports.com, Lemming said,“Tim is one of the top 10 recruiters I’ve ever seen.”

Recruiting rankings and articles are fun.  They are downright uplifting after a winless Big Ten Conference season, but the more important results will come during the next couple of falls.  How much success will the Gophers have on the field?  Right now it appears the class of 2008 provides Brewster and staff a bright future.

Comments Welcome

President’s Call to Fitness Starts March 20

Posted on February 18, 2008February 9, 2012 by David Shama

Former Gopher tennis coach Jerry Noyce retired recently from Health Fitness Corporation as vice chairman of the board.  He is staying busy including consulting for the company and as a member of the President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports, a group started in 1954 by President Dwight Eisenhower.

Noyce is excited about a new initiative by President George Bush and the council called the President’s Challenge.  The challenge begins on March 20 and encourages Americans to exercise 30 minutes a day, five days per week for six weeks. “The goal is to get one million Americans to participate,” said Noyce.

Among those on the 20 member council is New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning.  Noyce said Manning may be a kickoff spokesman for the President’s Challenge that hopes to make exercise a part of daily routines for many more Americans.

The top five states by percentage of participation will be recognized in mid-May, Noyce said.  More information on the challenge is available at www.presidentschallenge.org.

Noyce is a member of the council’s corporate health and wellness sub-committee to encourage employers to promote fitness to employees and their families.  His term on the council will be over at year end.

When Noyce was coaching the Gophers the captain of his first Big Ten Championship team was Gene Sperling, now an economic adviser to Hillary Clinton.  Sperling also advised former president Bill Clinton. 

“He was a great teammate for all the players,” Noyce said. “He was very supportive of them and someone they could count on. He was a brilliant student in political science (at Minnesota) and went to Yale Law School where he was on the law review (he also has an MBA).”

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