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U Must Live with Stadium Decision

Posted on August 1, 2016August 1, 2016 by David Shama

 

While champagne corks pop all over town toasting the opening of U.S. Bank Stadium, there is one group that ought to be biting their collective fingernails.

The new stadium will ensure sellout crowds at gaudy ticket prices for Vikings games this season—inflating both the revenue streams and value of this town’s NFL franchise. The facility will also be used for all kinds of events in the coming months—from small parties to marquee concerts, from college baseball to rollerblading—and adds to the ballyhoo of this being “the people’s stadium.” A near capacity crowd could be present Wednesday night when the stadium hosts its first sports event, the soccer match between Chelsea FC and AC Milan.

The stadium’s design and features are so impressive the public is willing to buy tickets for tours of the building, while setting calendars months in advance for dates that aren’t first choices. Heck, U.S. Bank Stadium is such a success the Star Tribune reported last Friday the arena’s completion is contributing to a construction slowdown in Minneapolis.

There are a lot of winners gathering under the U.S. Bank Stadium big top, but one major loser is the Gophers. The University of Minnesota’s football program has mostly played second fiddle to the Vikings in this market for more than 50 years. The opening of U.S. Bank Stadium only widens the gap between the two entities that compete for the love and financial support of this state’s football fans.

The opinion here is the Gophers are always best positioned to market their product when playing their home games in the same facility as used by the Vikings. The Gophers broke their co-occupancy of the Metrodome with the Vikings awhile ago with the decision to build TCF Bank Stadium. At one time there had been discussion of the Gophers and Vikings sharing a stadium on the University’s Minneapolis campus, but U leaders didn’t want the mega-size required of an NFL facility and the busy traffic brought to campus.

TCF Bank Stadium opened in 2009. It’s a nice stadium, and the facility certainly trumps most of the dinosaur-aged football homes on other college campuses. But the facility is also problematic for the Gophers. Let’s count the ways.

U.S. Bank Stadium
U.S. Bank Stadium

U.S. Bank Stadium is going to be praised for some time as one of the most luxurious and fan-friendly stadiums in the world. TCF Bank Stadium can’t compete with that reality and image. Too bad because word is Gophers’ ticket sales are lagging after last year’s 6-7 season (2-6 in Big Ten games), and the loss of head coach Jerry Kill—the face of the program to Minnesota football fans.

There’s such a buzz about the new stadium it’s likely the Gophers could sell out multiple games this season if playing in that building. It’s probably fair to say every game on the schedule would attract more paying customers downtown than will show up at TCF Bank Stadium.

But it’s not just this fall and the next couple seasons where the Gophers and their fans will lose out for not signing on with the Vikings in a shared stadium. That facility has about 13,000 more seats for football than TCF Bank Stadium. Every game the Gophers play in the future that has high ticket demand will be a reminder of how many more fans could have been accommodated and U Athletic Department revenues generated by making U.S. Bank Stadium home.

Another problem is TCF Bank Stadium is an open-air facility, while U.S. Bank Stadium has a roof. Watching games outdoors is appealing to most fans in September, a little less so in October and then problematic for many ticket buyers and holders in November and beyond. The cold and snow didn’t keep Vikings fans away for late season games when the NFL team played at the Bank while their new palace was being built, but the Gophers don’t command that kind of passion and loyalty.

Look, for example, what happened in November of 2014 when eventual national champion Ohio State came to the Bank. It was a bitterly cold day on November 15, and despite the Ohio State brand name and the Gophers still being in the hunt for the Big Ten’s West Division championship, attendance was 45,778—about 7,000 under stadium capacity. The weather kept a lot of customers away, but in a covered facility the game likely would have attracted 55,000 to 60,000 fans.

Returning football to campus was promoted as a move to boost interest in the program. The results have been mixed. The Gophers didn’t sell out a single game in 2014, but last year—with the promise of Kill having his best team and playing a glitzy home schedule—Minnesota sold out multiple games and averaged a TCF Bank Stadium season-best ever 52,354 fans.

In the Gophers’ last seven seasons in the Metrodome they averaged 47,926 fans per game. During the first seven seasons since returning to campus—supposedly boosted by the honeymoon impact of a new home—the average is 48,980. Of course team success has a major impact on attendance, but during the last seven years in the dome and the first seven on campus Minnesota’s Big Ten records are nearly identical, 21-35 and 20-36. The conclusion is the Gophers didn’t gain much box office sales from being in their new facility.

More than 35 years ago the Gophers were struggling to draw fans when playing outdoors in Memorial Stadium but attendance jumped playing indoors at the Metrodome, their shared home with the Vikings. The first six seasons at the dome saw the Gophers averaging 54,898 fans. In the six prior years at Memorial Stadium the average was 40,872.

It’s all but certain the Gophers could earn a big growth in attendance in the immediate seasons ahead if their home was downtown, only a few miles from campus. Public season ticket sales for 2016, likely to finish behind last year, no doubt would be a higher number in U.S. Bank Stadium. Student season ticket sales have been a disappointment at TCF Bank Stadium, despite the hype that an on-campus stadium would bring more undergraduates to games from nearby dorms, fraternities and sororities. Truth is the Gophers drew as many or more students to games at the beer-friendly Metrodome.

The Athletic Department is reportedly still working on paying down the debt of the $288.5 million cost of TCF Bank Stadium. At the dome the Gophers paid no rent and you can be sure the U would have been given a sweetheart deal to play in the $1.1 billion people’s stadium that includes large subsidies from the state of Minnesota and city of Minneapolis.

I didn’t favor a return to campus for outdoor football. I thought the U could put $288 million to better use while trying to build an elite Big Ten football program. Like how? Oh, maybe for a $190 million Athletes Village that the U is struggling to finance now. Or, paying $6 million or more annually to the best head football coach money could buy—plus dramatically expanding the budget for assistant coaches. The right coaches have far more to do with attracting the best players and building winning teams than bricks and mortar for stadiums, or practice facilities.

The long-term benefits of an on-campus, small capacity open-air stadium were over sold as a benefit to Gophers football. Yes, the Gophers have their own home and can retain all the revenues, but they receive all the expenses too. Yes, it’s nice to walk across campus to see a game but how many folks buy tickets to soak up that part of the college atmosphere? Yes, the Bank is used to host events like banquets, commencements, concerts and soccer but the stadium also sits on valuable land that the ever expanding Minneapolis campus could put to full-time academic use.

This season the Gophers have home games against (in order) Oregon State, Indiana State, Colorado State, Iowa, Rutgers, Purdue and Northwestern. Iowa fans are riding high after last year’s Big Ten West Division title and trip to the Rose Bowl. Our friends from the south will make sure the Bank has at least one sellout next fall.

Too bad because it didn’t have to be that way. U.S. Bank Stadium has the image, the amenities and the roof, plus one mega tenant in the Vikings. The Gophers, trying to compete against pro sports with a fragile product and small fanbase, can see the new building from campus but they’re on the outside looking in.

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Vikes Get Strong 2017 Super Bowl ‘Vote’

Posted on July 21, 2016July 21, 2016 by David Shama

 

Next winter Bob Lurtsema could wear a hat with this message:  “I told you so.”

The former Vikings defensive lineman from the 1970s thinks his old team has better than a 50 percent chance of playing in the 2017 Super Bowl.  “I really sincerely believe, that they’re going to win 11, 12 (games),” Lurtsema told Sports Headliners.  “They have a great opportunity—legitimate opportunity for the Super Bowl.”

Lurtsema, who played on Vikings Super Bowl teams during the 1970s, is close to the organization.  He attends practices not open to the media, and he talks with players and coaches.

Lurtsema’s past predictions have been impressive.  Prior to the 2014 season he forecast an 8-8 record.  The Vikings finished 7-9.  Before last season, when talk was the Vikings wouldn’t make the playoffs, Lurtsema predicted a 10-6 record and participation in the postseason.   The Vikings finished 11-5 during the regular season, won their first division championship since 2009 and hosted a home playoff game against the Seahawks, losing 10-9.

Mike Zimmer
Mike Zimmer

Almost any conversation with Lurtsema about the Vikings starts with his admiration for head coach Mike Zimmer who he likens to Bud Grant, the legendary coach who led the Purple to four Super Bowls.  “I can’t say enough good things about coach Zimmer, because he has so much Bud in him,” Lurtsema said. “If a player makes a mental mistake, he’ll cut him.  He’ll give a second chance, but you make mental mistakes, you’re gone.”

Lurtsema believes coaching is about “65 percent” of the formula for success in the NFL.  He not only likes Zimmer but also the staff of assistants that includes three former head NFL coaches.

When the Vikings open training camp later this month, Zimmer and most of his assistants will be preparing for their third season with Minnesota.  Their experience working with each other and the players is part of why Lurtsema is so optimistic about the Vikings.  “The coaches have enough history on the players to know their strengths and weaknesses,” he said.

Lurtsema said there is “no reason” why the Vikings won’t win the NFC North for a second consecutive season.  He believes the Packers are Minnesota’s main rival for the title, dismissing the likelihood of a championship from the two other teams in the division, the Bears and Lions.

Worth Noting

Vikings quarterback Teddy Bridgewater will draw focus from fans during training camp and in early season games.  Entering his third NFL season, Bridgewater boosters believe he is among the NFL’s most underrated quarterbacks.  Count Lurtsema as an admirer.  “Teddy has all the talent in the world,” Lurtsema said.

Tickets for the Vikings’ first-ever regular season game in U.S. Bank Stadium on September 18 range in price today from $270 to $2,600 on Stubhub.com.

The Vikings play the Packers in that game, and then play the Pack starting at noon December 24 (Christmas Eve) in Green Bay’s outdoor stadium.  From a weather perspective that kind of scheduling is a head-scratcher but the TV ratings for the holiday game figure to be extraordinary.

As of Monday, approximately 700 of the original 49,700 seat licenses in U.S. Bank Stadium for Vikings season tickets were available.

Radio play-by-play announcer Paul Allen will call his 300th Vikings game when Minnesota plays the Lions November 6 in Minneapolis.   Allen became the voice of the Vikings in 2002.

The Big Ten Network will televise the news conferences from Chicago next Monday and Tuesday of all 14 Big Ten Conference football coaches.  Gophers coach Tracy Claeys will be among seven coaches making comments and answering questions about his team between noon and 2 p.m. CDT Monday.

Rick Pizzo and former Gophers head coach Glen Mason will be in the BTN studio offering analysis of the news conferences.

Tyus Jones
Tyus Jones

Minnesota native Tyus Jones reinforced his fan-friendly image last week in Las Vegas when he signed autographs in the arena concourse following an NBA summer league game.  The Timberwolves point guard made a statement with his play, too, being named the Samsung NBA Summer League MVP.

A guess is the Lynx will play its games at Xcel Energy Center next year while Target Center is renovated.  The WNBA franchise has scheduled a news conference this afternoon at Xcel but hasn’t announced the topic.  The Gophers’ Williams Arena isn’t air conditioned and Mariucci Arena is a hockey-first building.

The Western Collegiate Hockey Association will announce its new women’s commissioner to the media this afternoon at the league’s Edina office.  The WCHA, an eight team league that includes the Gophers, has won a record 16 national championships in 17 years since its inception in 1999.  During that span the WCHA has six Patty Kazmaier Award winners, 86 All-Americans and numerous Olympic and international team participants.

Connor Nord, the former St. Thomas two-time All-MIAC basketball player who played professionally in Germany last season, left for Las Vegas Tuesday with the Minnesota Heat 17 and under AAU team he is coaching.  Nord has decided to end his basketball playing career and pursue coaching, including assisting Guy Kalland at Carleton.  Nord told Sports Headliners he will live in Eden Prairie with his parents and commute to Northfield for his new job at Carleton.

Former Gopher Cory Laylin is the head coach of USA Hockey’s Under 17 team that will compete in the Five Nations Cup tournament.   The Hamline men’s head coach will lead USA in a round robin tournament in Frisco, Texas from August 9-13.   Other tournament teams are the Czech Republic, Germany, Slovakia and Switzerland.

Comments Welcome

Twins Prez Not Settling for .500%

Posted on July 18, 2016July 18, 2016 by David Shama

 

Before baseball’s All-Star break last week the Twins’ record was 32-56, a winning percentage of .363.  Since their schedule resumed last Friday the Twins earned one victory in a three-game series at home against the Central Division leading Indians.

But even though the club has an awful record, Twins president Dave St. Peter has ambitious expectations for wins and losses before the season ends on October 2.  Asked about a hypothetical guarantee by the baseball gods that the Twins will win half their remaining games, St. Peter didn’t buy in.  “No, I would never take .500,” he told Sports Headliners last week.  “I think we’re capable of being better than that. I am not ready to settle for .500 baseball.”

At least .500 was what the Twins were expected to do with their 2016 schedule after last season’s 83-79 record.  What happened?  St. Peter listed multiple reasons including lack of offense at the beginning of the season, injuries to key players like All-Star closer Glen Perkins, and also inconsistent bullpen and starting pitching.

Max Kepler (photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins).
Max Kepler (photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins).

St. Peter said the club “dug ourselves a mighty hole” but he is encouraged by the “high quality young players in our system.”  Although he didn’t list names, those players surely include the likes of outfield prospects Byron Buxton and Max Kepler, both already with the Twins, and pitcher Jose Berrios at AAA Rochester.

For the Twins to perform a lot better the rest of this season—and beyond—the organization will need to focus on improving the pitching.  Not only is the roster of pitchers and position players being scrutinized, but St. Peter also said the organization’s decision makers will soon be reviewed.

The baseball department is led by Terry Ryan, a longtime favorite of management and ownership.  He has been working for the Twins identifying and developing personnel since 1986.  He is in his second assignment as general manager after coming back as personnel boss in 2011.

Ryan has fought off cancer in the past and baseball insiders may wonder how much longer he wants the demanding job of rebuilding the Twins who had four consecutive years of 90-plus loss seasons from 2011-2014.  St. Peter said a mutual evaluation of Ryan’s future will be made near season’s end.

In talking to St. Peter the message is that everything and everyone will be analyzed.  “It’s an ongoing evaluation.  I can assure you that,” he said.

No final decision for 2017 has been made about manager Paul Molitor.  The Minnesota native and Hall of Fame player managed for the first time last season.  His efforts were applauded but with such an awful record this season Molitor and his coaches are on the spot like others in the organization.

St. Peter said he’s “very pleased” with Molitor’s overall work as Twins manager but that’s “not to say he and his coaches don’t accept some responsibility” for the club’s record this season.  “There is no doubt in our minds we continue to be big believers in Paul Molitor,” St. Peter said.

The manager and coaches have helped lead the team through a difficult start but the club has won eight of its last 12 games.  The Twins also made some progress in June, going 5-5 in the last 10 games.

Molitor didn’t panic when the season nosedived.  Molitor is known for his high baseball I.Q. and St. Peter said his manager is also a leader with “tremendous poise every single day.”

One change that for sure won’t happen in the organization in 2017, according to St. Peter, is the return of Joe Mauer to catching.  Because of concussion symptoms, the former All-Star catcher moved to first base starting with the 2014 season.  Mauer admitted last winter to at times having difficulty seeing the baseball while batting and the results at the plate of the last few seasons substantiate that.

Mauer, a three-time batting champion, hit .277 and .265 during the 2014 and 2015 season.  A career .313 hitter going into this season, Mauer is batting .268 this year.

With a contract that pays him $23 million per season, Mauer is giving the Twins a poor return on the club’s investment.  First basemen are expected to offer better numbers than seven home runs and 28 RBI if their batting average is .268—particularly if they are among the best paid players in baseball.

Mauer, now 33, would be more valuable to the Twins if he could play part-time behind the plate.  The team needs catching help this season and beyond.  With Mauer’s present offensive limitations, an ideal assignment might have him catching 50 games, playing 50 at first base, and being the designated hitter at other times.

“Joe Mauer will not catch,” St. Peter said.

Why?  “His health and his ability to continue at a high level as a dad, as a husband, trumps everything else in our minds.  I think we’ve covered this ground many, many times.  Joe Mauer is not going to return to the position of catcher based on his history there with his concussions.”

St. Peter said he isn’t aware of Mauer having vision problems now. Mauer is hitting .333 in his last seven games and that provides encouragement that the St. Paul native can continue to raise his average.

Can he become a .300 hitter again?   “I am not putting numbers on things, you are, but we just think he can be a more effective hitter than what his average shows at this point,” St. Peter said.

Twins Notes

After yesterday’s loss to the Indians, the Twins are 7-27 against Central Division rivals.  The Twins start a three-game series in Detroit against the Tigers tonight.

In yesterday’s game Kepler hit his ninth home run.  The rookie right fielder has hit nine homers and driven in 32 runs since June 12.

First baseman and designated hitter Kennys Vargas has hit safely in seven of nine games since being recalled from Rochester on July 4.  He is batting .379 with the Twins.

Announced attendance at yesterday’s game was 25,692.  If the Twins were contending for a division title the game could have been a sellout.  When football is dominating local sports interest in August and September, attendance will be a challenge for the Twins who are headed toward their lowest customer total in Target Field history.

St. Peter said former Twins great Rod Carew has been cleared to be on a list for a heart transplant.  Carew almost lost his life last year after a heart attack.

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