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Santana Flirts with No-Hitter Range

Posted on May 3, 2017May 3, 2017 by David Shama

 

A Wednesday notes column, including items on Twins, Gophers, Vikings and Lynx newsmakers.

Twins starting pitcher Ervin Santana has won almost 40 percent of the team’s games this spring. He won last night against the Athletics and is 5-0 for the Twins, who have a 13-11 record this season.

No pitcher has won more games in the major leagues. Among starting pitchers, Santana’s 0.66 ERA is also the best in both the American and National Leagues.

Santana gave up three hits and no runs in six innings last night, while confusing and striking out seven batters. In two games this season he gave up only two hits, and two other times just four hits.

In his April 15 win over the White Sox, he pitched nine innings and threw a one-hitter, becoming the first Twins starter since 2011 to allow just a single hit. The way Santana is pitching, it’s fair to wonder whether this season he can become only the sixth Twin in club history to throw a no-hitter.  For the season he has allowed 16 hits and three earned runs in 41 innings.

The 34-year-old right hander, who was acquired by the Twins as a free agent in December of 2014, threw a no-hitter for the Angels against the Indians in 2011. Santana allowed one unearned run and struck out 10 batters.

Going into past seasons with Minnesota, Santana has been labeled a No. 2 or 3 caliber starter on a pitching staff in search of a No. 1. That has changed in a big way so far this season with Santana not just looking like a No. 1, but earning a place among baseball’s most dominant starters.

Former Twin Trevor Plouffe is the Athletics’ third baseman, and had one hit in four at bats last night. In his first season with the A’s he is hitting .209 with four home runs and nine RBI.

Another ex-Twin, Danny Valencia, played third for the Athletics last season but now is with the Mariners as a first baseman where he is batting .182 with two home runs and six RBI.

Write this name down: Nik Turley. The 27-year-old journeyman left-hander was signed by the Twins in the off season and is more than impressing at Double A Chattanooga. Turley, who has been in the minors since 2008 and was with the Red Sox organization last year, has a 0.44 ERA while allowing five hits and one run in four games including two starts.

Meanwhile, Turley teammate Kohl Stewart, the Twins’ first round draft choice in 2013, is 0-4 record with a 6.05 ERA.

Mark Coyle

The Athletes Village at the University of Minnesota is part of the “Nothing Short of Greatness” fundraising campaign with a $200 million goal. The Athletes Village project will cost about $166 million and the additional $34 million is targeted at existing facilities including renovation at Mariucci Arena. Fundraising now is over $100 million, with the goal of eventually privately raising the $200 million from individuals and others. “It’s breakfast, lunch, dinner fundraising,” said athletic director Mark Coyle.

About 200,000 construction hours have already gone into the Athletes Village, with facilities opening early next year. Sophie Skarzynski from the Gophers hockey team was among the speakers at a celebration progress event for donors, construction workers and others last week. She had the audience laughing with this remark for the construction crew: “It’s very comforting to know that not only the student-athletes are up at 5:30, but you guys are too.”

Reservations for the CORES program and lunch on Thursday, May 11 need to be made by Monday. Michele Tafoya, the sideline reporter on NBC TV’s Sunday Night Football who lives in suburban Minneapolis, will speak to the CORES crowd at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington, 1114 American Blvd. Dick Jonckowski is the popular emcee at CORES programs. CORES is an acronym for coaches, officials, reporters, educators and sports fans. More information is available by contacting Jim Dotseth, dotseth@comcast.net.

CORES attendees and other friends of Jonckowski will want to attend the Minnesota Minute Men’s roast of “The Polish Eagle,” who for 31 seasons was the Gophers basketball public address. Tickets remain for the event that starts at noon Friday at Jax Café. Scheduled roasters are Vikings executive Lester Bagley, former Gophers football star Jim Carter and WCHA men’s commissioner Bill Robertson. More information is available by calling Terry Sullivan, 952-451-2104, or at Minnesotaminutemen.com.

As the Vikings move through practices this spring and summer preparing for the season, a national storyline off the field will be the recovery progress of quarterback Teddy Bridgewater from his devastating knee injury last year. Bridgewater is passionate about his rehab and has made progress but is far from having full mobility. A leader who is admired by teammates and coaches, it’s not yet clear whether the 24-year-old will ever return to the field—or if he does, when that will be.

Morris Area High School has been named the Minnesota Football Program of the year. The award is sponsored by the Minnesota Vikings, Innovative Office Solutions, the Minnesota Chapter of the National Football Foundation and KFAN 100.3 FM. A check for $10,000 will be presented to the school today, and on Sunday the award will be recognized as part of the Minnesota Football Honors Event at U.S. Bank Stadium. (See April 6 Sports Headliners).

While Target Center undergoes renovation this year, the Lynx are looking to make a marketing opportunity out of the franchise’s one season at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. Chris Wright, president of the WNBA team and NBA Timberwolves, said about 20 percent of the team’s season ticket holders are from the St. Paul area, with most of the balance from Minneapolis and suburbs. “We’re going to grow our business in St. Paul,” Wright told Sports Headliners.

The Lynx has sold approximately 700 new “full season ticket equivalents” and expects to total around 3,600 or more.  Equivalents are full and partial season ticket packages. The Lynx, who play a opening exhibition game in St. Paul on Friday night, averaged almost 8,000 in attendance last season, tops in the WNBA, according to Wright. He expects corporate revenues to increase this year also.

There’s no consensus favorite to win Saturday’s 143rd running of the Kentucky Derby. Smart handicappers will be looking at experienced jockeys in predicting the winning horse. Canterbury Park will offer live racing on Saturday and wagering on the Derby. The Shakopee racetrack opens the 2017 meet on Friday night.

Comments Welcome

U Nears 1,000 New Season Tickets

Posted on May 1, 2017May 1, 2017 by David Shama

 

As of Friday, the Gophers had sold 861 new football season tickets since January 6 when P.J. Fleck was announced as head coach. The total was obtained from an athletic department spokesman and is for nonstudent season tickets (a student season tickets total will be available later in the year).

P.J. Fleck

Fleck’s outgoing personality, and the reputation he earned at Western Michigan for being one of America’s most promising young coaches has prompted some renewed interest in football at the U. The athletic department sold 253 season tickets in less than 30 days after the 36-year-old Fleck took over as coach.

Fan interest declined last year under head coach Tracy Claeys and the Gophers sold about 5,100 fewer nonstudent season tickets in 2016 than in 2015. The Gophers didn’t sell out a single home game in 50,805 seat TCF Bank Stadium and many sold seats weren’t occupied. Last year the athletic department sold about 23,000 nonstudent season tickets and student season ticket sales were around 7,000.

The new season tickets sold this winter and spring is being accomplished without a marketing campaign. Promotional efforts are expected to start soon and will likely play off of Fleck’s “Row The Boat” mantra to create excitement. The phrase refers to a never give up attitude, and Fleck paid Western Michigan $50,000 for the rights to “Row The Boat.”

Fleck has big ambitions for attendance at TCF Bank Stadium, a venue that ranks near the bottom in seating capacity among Big Ten schools. Sports Headliners reported last month that in three years Fleck wants to expand seating capacity to 85,000. (See April 2, 2017 column).

Worth Noting

Race Thompson told Sports Headliners he hears the encouraging words from Minnesotans to become a Gopher and he appreciates the hometown interest but he won’t be influenced by others in choosing a college destination.

Thompson, the junior power forward from Armstrong High School, has offers from more than 10 schools including the Gophers. The Rivals four-star player said he probably will choose a school next fall and is looking for the place he will feel most comfortable, including a “family atmosphere.”

Thompson will make some college visits after July 1 and could sign a National Letter of Intent in November, the first signing opportunity for class of 2018 players to officially commit to their colleges. While schools like Minnesota and Marquette have been recruiting Thompson for some time, Indiana is now showing interest, too. Thompson said he isn’t sure, though, if he will visit Bloomington.

Race Thompson

Darrell Thompson, the Gophers all-time leading rusher in football, has said throughout the recruiting process that he and wife Stephanie won’t direct their son to play for the U, even though their suburban Minneapolis home would make travelling to watch him in college much easier than any other place.

Darrell leads Minneapolis-based Bolder Options, the nonprofit helping kids and teens learn life skills. The organization’s annual gala in Minneapolis last Thursday night raised over $160,000, a record for the event which is the nonprofit’s largest fundraiser of the year.

Another fundraising highlight for the organization is the WCCO Radio Gutter Bowl bowling event that most recently generated about $40,000. Morning show host Dave Lee is among those who have led the event.

The Twins have the first pick in the June MLB Draft and could select Hunter Greene from southern California. Greene throws fast balls over 100 miles per hour, plays with MLB range at shortstop, excels at the plate, and is the subject of considerable hype including from Sports Illustrated. The magazine’s latest issue has him on the cover and gushed the following:

“Baseball’s LeBron, or the new Babe? He’s 17. He mashes. He throws 102. Hunter Greene is the star baseball needs. (First he has to finish high school).”

Dalvin Cook, the former Florida State running back who the Vikings were excited to find available in the second round of Friday’s NFL Draft, was projected in last week’s Sports Illustrated to be the No. 23 pick in the first round by the Giants.

Vikings defensive end Brian Robison, who turned 34 last week, expects to do something with his “big-time passion” for fishing after he retires from football. He told Sports Headliners pro fishing could be his next career, or TV commentary about the sport. He has fished in pro-am tournaments in recent off seasons, and competed in the Texas Team Trail Bass Championships.

Doesn’t seem that long ago but it will be 17 years on Friday that former Gophers and Timberwolves coach Bill Musselman died. In Musselman’s first season at Minnesota, 1971-72, he coached the Gophers to their first Big Ten basketball title since 1937. In 1989-1990 he coached the expansion Timberwolves in their initial NBA season.

Mark Sheffert, the former Gophers football player who founded and leads Minneapolis-based Manchester Companies that provides management consulting, discussed corporate ethics and behavior yesterday on WCCO Radio’s News and Views program.

Comments Welcome

Eric Curry Great Fit for 2019 Final Four

Posted on April 28, 2017April 28, 2017 by David Shama

 

In April of 2019 Eric Curry hopes to walk from his downtown condo to U.S. Bank Stadium and fulfill a dream. The 2019 NCAA Men’s Final Four will be played in Minneapolis on April 6 and 8, and Curry will be wrapping up 22 years as a college basketball referee.

Curry, 53, told Sports Headliners his goal is to work on the biggest college basketball stage in his hometown. “I would be lying to you if I said it wasn’t,” he said this week at Sun Country Airlines’ corporate offices in Eagan, where he is an executive vice president for customer experience and sales.

Curry flew over 100,000 miles from November through March officiating college games, mostly out West but also in the Big Ten Conference. He worked more than 60 games including his first NCAA Sweet 16 Tournament. It was a year that Curry describes as his best for high profile games that also included earlier rounds of NCAA Tournament games and before that the Mountain West Conference title game.

There were also prominent regular season games at marquee basketball schools like UCLA and Arizona in the Pac-12 Conference. Curry is grateful for all those opportunities including the NCAA Tournament. While a hoped-for first Final Four assignment is on his radar, he also keeps the goal in perspective. “I don’t think that defines me as my success in my officiating,” he said.

There is another goal regarding the NCAA Tournament that’s important to Curry. He’s the only referee from Minnesota working games during “March Madness.”

“We’ve got some guys right on the doorstep to getting in the tournament,” Curry said. “I hope the heck they do because they deserve that and the state deserves it.”

When Curry was in college at Trinity International University in Illinois he had an assignment that led him to refereeing intramural basketball. He liked the experience and after college started refereeing high school games back in his home state of Florida. By 1996 his resume and connections were good enough to be earning $500 per game working for a startup women’s pro league—the American Basketball League.

Eric Curry

The league eventually folded and owed Curry a few thousand dollars but a woman executive with the ABL became the supervisor of officials for the Big Sky Conference. Curry worked nine games for the conference during the 1999-2000 season. The next season his assignments expanded and he’s been busy on the men’s college basketball officiating scene ever since.

Curry is exhaling now after five months of balancing his life of refereeing, responsibilities at Sun Country, and sharing a family life with Kelly Roysland, his wife of three years who also is the women’s basketball coach at Macalester College. Curry loves the officiating but said, “I am glad the season ends when the season ends.”

Priorities in order are family, Sun Country and officiating. He and Kelly are expecting their first child in two weeks. It will be a boy and Kelly is choosing the child’s first name (that’s a secret) and Curry has selected the middle name of Harmon. Harmon is for the late Harmon Killebrew, the ex-Twins slugger and Cooperstown Hall of Famer.

Before joining Sun Country, Curry was an executive in sponsorship sales for the Twins and he became acquainted with Killebrew who was a mentor. “He knew how to make everybody he talked to feel important,” Curry said. “He was kind and gentle. He made you feel like giving you his autograph was his privilege.”

Curry counts himself as “very fortunate” to have a wife who understands his busy schedule. He also keeps a promise to Sun Country owner Marty Davis that doing his work for the airlines comes before refereeing assignments that sometimes have him out of town a few days per week. “If I am going to be out (of Minneapolis) three days one week, I try to make it just one day the next week,” Curry said.

Curry is efficient in doing a lot of his Sun Country duties while riding in an airplane to an out of town game. He also tries to book early morning flights so he can quickly head to a hotel room and spend the better part of the day doing his Sun Country work. Then, too, there are cities Curry goes to referee a game that also are home to Sun Country clients or airline personnel he needs to see.

Wearing that striped shirt and blowing the whistle has become a big part of who Curry is. Stepping on the court and feeling the excitement of the college basketball experience is something he cherishes. When he got the call this year to work his first Sweet 16 he was honored, “The last thing in my mind was how much we were going to make (money),” Curry remembered. “It was just what time do you need me to be there? I was so thrilled to be invited.”

Referees working major colleges are independent contractors who are paid a fee to not only cover their services working games, but also travel expenses. Curry didn’t say how much per game he typically earns but he did offer that lesser experienced officials are in the range of $1,500 to $2,500. At 60 games or more, the money can add up and Curry estimated about 25 percent of Power Five conference officials don’t have other jobs and make their livelihood refereeing.

For some people, though, the money wouldn’t be worth the verbal abuse that officials endure. Curry hears the typical comments like “you suck,” or “go back to refereeing high school games.” One irate fan wrote him a particularly painful email this season.

“He had some nasty things to say,” Curry said. “It was hurtful but at the end of the day it wasn’t a death threat or anything like that.”

Curry’s friend and referee John Higgins did receive death threats in March from Kentucky fans after controversial calls in the Wildcats-North Carolina Elite Eight game that sent the Tar Heels on to the Final Four. “What happened to him was unconscionable,” Curry said about his colleague who had private security and the FBI monitoring him at the Final Four.

Do referees have bad games? Nights when their work is less than stellar?

“Absolutely,” Curry answered. “Every once in awhile you will have a game that for whatever reason your mind is not there.”

There are games when not only the officiating is poor, but the play of the two teams isn’t sharp either. “They’ll be nights we (the three referees) go in the locker room and say, ‘Boys, we weren’t very good tonight,’ Curry admitted. “Or, ‘Boys, the game was terrible, we were a little bit better than them.’ ”

Then there are games like the first half of the Michigan-UCLA game last season that are truly special. Curry remembered only about 12 fouls being called, and the players put on a spectacular offensive show leading to a 50-50 halftime tie. “We just sat in the locker room (at halftime) and nobody said anything for about three minutes. Then I said, ‘Boys, I don’t think we will see that again. Ever.’ That was as good a 20 minutes of college basketball from a scoring perspective as you’ve ever seen.”

Curry said referees who consistently grade out well by their supervisors, and who are experienced officials, don’t favor home teams with their whistle blowing. “But I’ve worked with some young fellas that it’s their first time at Arizona, or their first time at Michigan State—and between the head coach and the crowd—it can be very, very intimidating. You have to learn that if you’re going to be successful, you…shut that out. Just take care of your business.”

Taking care of business can mean calling technical fouls. When does Curry know it’s time to “T” somebody up?

“I am not going to let you do something that embarrasses me or embarrasses the game,” Curry said. “There’s some guidelines in there for what that means. …Not going to be out there yelling at officials.”

Curry respects the responsibilities of coaches who are under enormous pressure to both win and set an example of sportsmanship for their players and fans. “I have less tolerance for players than coaches,” he said. “That’s not their job.

“We talk to them (the players) before the game. …I say, ‘Don’t yell at me, it hurts my feelings. You want to ask me a question? I am your guy all night.’ And I say, ‘By the way, you better be my guy when somebody from your team steps out of line.’ ”

Several years ago Curry was officiating a game at New Mexico in the Lobos’ raucous arena known as “The Pit.” New Mexico coach Steve Alford was upset with Curry and the fans were feeling hostile toward him because they thought visiting team UNLV was being favored. Alford stomped his feet and yelled unfriendly words. Curry answered back with a reply about objectivity that let Alford know if the Lobos were on the road they too would be treated fairly. Alford bought in. “My goal as an official is to be the guy they (visiting teams) want to see on the road,” Curry told Alford.

“The Pit” and most of the other places Curry frequents are a long way from Minneapolis but maybe the best “trip” of his officiating career will come in 2019 in his hometown at the Final Four.

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