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Vikings Answer Skeptics in Defeat

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

 

The Vikings and their fans can feel additional confidence after last night’s 23-20 loss to the Cardinals in Arizona.  Predictions earlier this week were the Vikings would not only lose but by a big score.

It was known during the week the Vikings would play without three of their best defensive players and that unit would be reshuffled with lesser personnel.  Teddy Bridgewater was coming off a disappointing performance last Sunday in a 38-7 loss against the Seahawks, and Seattle linebacker Bruce Ervin said the second-year quarterback played scared.

The Vikings showed a character check last night, playing the Cardinals to a 10-10 halftime tie before losing by a field goal in the fourth quarter.  With the win the Cardinals, now 11-2, further positioned themselves among elite teams in the NFL.  The Vikings, 8-5, are no longer in first place in the NFC North but still are having a season that is surprising critics who didn’t see them as a serious threat to unseat the Packers as division champions, and thought even less of Minnesota after an opening game 20-3 loss to the mediocre 49ers.

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

Bridgewater threw for a career high 335 yards and had a passer rating of 108 last night.  That kind of work will be needed the rest of the season when the Vikings play the Bears and Giants at home, before closing out at Green Bay.  No one, including critics, should be surprised if the Vikings win two or three of those games against the Bears and Giants, both with 5-7 records, and the 8-4 Packers.

If the Vikings follow the lead of head coach Mike Zimmer and his staff, good things should continue to develop in their march to the playoffs.  After last Sunday afternoon’s game in Minneapolis against the Seahawks, Zimmer let it be known he expected his players to prepare their bodies for a short week of practice and Thursday’s game in Arizona.  The majority of them headed for Winter Park before nightfall on Sunday.  “We followed suit,” said placekicker Blair Walsh on Tuesday.

Three days of rest and rehab is different than the typical Sunday to Sunday game schedule.  “You don’t come in Sunday after the game usually, unless you’re severely hurt or you need treatment,” Walsh said.

Defensive tackle Sharrif Floyd arrived at about 4:30 p.m. and stayed for more than one hour.  Massages, foam rollers and cold tubs are used by players to revitalize worn bodies targeted since training camp last summer.

“It’s just hard work,” Floyd said about the rehab.  “You can’t complain about it, you just gotta do it…nowadays.”

Key defensive players Anthony Barr, Linval Joseph and Harrison Smith were unable to play last night because of injuries.  But Floyd said earlier in the week it does no good for the team to worry about the injured and absent.

“Never worry.  If you worry you’re setting yourself up for failure,” he said.  “No need to worry.  Just come in with a game plan and fight as hard as possible.  That’s all we ask for.  We’re not asking you to do something out of the ordinary, just come do your job and be prepared to play tough.”

Even the critics can’t knock the Vikings’ effort last night.

Worth Noting

Tom Moore, who turned 77 last month and was an assistant coach for the Gophers in the 1970s and Vikings in the 1990s, is assistant head coach of the Cardinals.  This is his 51st season of coaching, 37th in the NFL.  Moore attended high school in Rochester, Minnesota and played college football at Iowa.

The Cardinals have sold out every game at University of Phoenix Stadium since the retractable roof facility opened in 2006, and noisy crowds provide the team with a home field advantage.  Dating back to 2006 and going into last night’s game against the Vikings, Cardinals’ opponents had 132 false start penalties, the most in any NFL stadium during that period.

Both Sports Illustrated and the National Football League Players Association have ranked the playing surface at University of Phoenix Stadium best in the NFL.  The playing surface is natural grass that can be moved outside in one giant tray to grow and be effectively maintained, and then put in place for Cardinals games.

It’s an oddity having the Vikings last night, then the Wild tonight and the Timberwolves on Sunday all playing games in the Phoenix area over a four-day period.

Andy Dalton, the Bengals quarterback who the Vikings could have drafted, has thrown for 3,000 yards in all five of his first NFL seasons.  Only Peyton Manning has done that.  In the 2011 NFL Draft the Vikings chose Christian Ponder with the No. 12 selection in the first round.  The Bengals selected Dalton with the third pick in the second round.

Glenn Caruso
Glenn Caruso

More than half of the St. Thomas football roster could play Division II football, according to Tommies head coach Glenn Caruso.  The talented Tommies, 13-0, host 12-0 Linfield tomorrow in a 2:30 p.m. Division III semifinals game.  The Tommies have reached the semifinals for the third time in five years.

Caruso said Linfield has been a favorite since week one of the season to win the national title.  “They are supremely loaded with talent,” he said.

Linfield will need to not only match the Tommies’ talent but also Caruso’s willingness to take risks.  A trick play or surprise move like an onside kick is who the Tommies are.  Caruso believes too many coaches are “risk averse.”

Would Caruso welcome moving indoors to U.S. Bank Stadium if the Tommies are playing home December playoff games in future years?   “I don’t want to give away home field advantage (outdoors and on campus),” he said.

The Tommies, though, would consider a regular season game in the new Minneapolis stadium—perhaps against legendary rival Saint John’s.

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor has heard the rumors Prince and Jimmy Jam Harris have interest in buying the team but said no one representing them has approached him.

Among the highlights of the Minnesota prep basketball season will be tomorrow’s annual Breakdown Sports Tip Off Classics at Minnetonka High School involving boys and girls teams.  Class 4-A boys powers Apple Valley and Hopkins play at 3:45 p.m. in the most anticipated game.  The schedule of games throughout the day and into the evening will showcase nationally ranked prep players including two seniors who are Gophers recruits, Amir Coffey from Hopkins and Michael Hurt whose Rochester John Marshall team plays an 8 p.m. game against Shakopee.

Hurt’s brother and teammate Matthew is a Rivals.com five-star recruit in the class of 2019.  Other players in the tournament being followed nationally include Tre Jones and Gary Trent Jr. from Apple Valley, and Theo John and McKinley Wright from Champlin Park.  Class 4-A Champlin Park plays 3-A DeLaSalle at 7 p.m. in another anticipated game.

Two of the winningest college hockey coaches face each other tonight and tomorrow evening in Ann Arbor.  Michigan coach Red Berenson has won 818 games while the Gophers Don Lucia has 680 victories.  The two rank second and third for most wins, with Boston College’s Jerry York first with 997.

Comments Welcome

Timberwolves Not Pursuing Kevin McHale

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

 

Quoting Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor in today’s column, and also Twins president Dave St. Peter.

Kevin McHale was fired as coach of the Rockets last month after leading the team to the NBA’s Western Conference Finals in the spring.  McHale hasn’t announced his future plans but Minnesota basketball fans who watched him play for the Gophers and later hold both executive and coaching positions with the Wolves wonder if the Hibbing native might work again for Taylor.

The Wolves owner remains friends with McHale but the two haven’t spoken since he was let go in Houston.  Taylor has no plans to pick up the telephone right now and call McHale who after his playing career with the Celtics was named one of the NBA’S 50 greatest players ever.

Taylor doesn’t want to send the wrong messages to his Timberwolves basketball employees including interim coach Sam Mitchell.  “I’ve made a point of not doing it (calling McHale) just because I want to be careful,” Taylor said.

Glen Taylor (Photo courtesy of Timberwolves)
Glen Taylor (Photo courtesy of Timberwolves)

Mitchell, a former NBA Coach of the Year with the Raptors, has been told his status will be evaluated at season’s end.  Taylor has no plans to change that timeline.

The Wolves haven’t made the playoffs since 2004 and last season their record was 16-66.  This season the team is 8-12 heading into tonight’s home game against the Lakers.  Taylor likes the talent and promise of a young roster whose core is built around a pair of 20-year-olds—second-season guard-forward Andrew Wiggins and rookie center Karl-Anthony Towns.

How will Taylor evaluate Mitchell at season’s end and decide about the veteran coach’s future?  “We’ve never really put up goals exactly that I was going to measure him on, but I think what I would measure him on is seeing how far the team has progressed,” Taylor said.

The owner’s goal is to see his club eventually become an “elite team for quite some time.”  Taylor isn’t overly concerned about seeing his team make the playoffs this season, although he would certainly welcome that achievement.  He’s most interested in seeing how the players develop and how Mitchell contributes to their improvement.

Mitchell has shown a commitment to use young players and go deep into his bench, even at the expense of having veterans on the floor late in games.  Sometimes that has not worked but Taylor is supportive.  “I don’t get into that (who he plays),” Taylor said.  “I want to win, he wants to win.  I am not going to second-guess him.”

The late Flip Saunders rebuilt the Timberwolves roster in two years with savvy personnel moves.  He and Taylor were close friends.  The unexpected death of Saunders this fall dramatically changed the franchise’s leadership because he was the coach, top player personnel executive and part-time owner.

“When I see us play, and we do really well, it just breaks my heart that he’s not at least on the floor here watching them, rather than from heaven watching them, because he put so much effort into it and he was so enthused about what was going to happen,” Taylor said.

Tonight Lakers legend Kobe Bryant, who has announced this will be his final NBA season, plays in Minneapolis for the last time.  Taylor hopes to reach out to the 37-year-old superstar shooting guard who has secured a place among the NBA’s top players ever.  What will Taylor say?

“Basically, thanks for sharing your career with us.  We really appreciate the opportunity to watch somebody like you that worked so hard to do so well.  All of us either got to either yell for you or against you, but either way we appreciated it.  Something like that.”…

St. Peter said Rod Carew is improving by the week following his open heart surgery earlier this fall.  He talks on a regular basis to the Twins legend who had a massive heart attack in September.

“His spirits are good,” St. Peter told Sports Headliners.  “He’s been (buoyed) by the outpouring of support from a variety of people both inside and outside of baseball.  He’s really enjoying spending time with family right now, and hopes to get back to his home in Orange County I think soon.  (He) has not given up on coming to Minnesota at some point during this offseason but also may be coming to Fort Myers for spring training.”

Carew is convalescing in a private home in the San Diego area.  He suffered his heart attack while on a golf course and twice was near death before medical professionals saved his life.  “We’re lucky he’s still here,” St. Peter said.

Carew, 70, had thought he was in good health and was feeling well prior to his heart attack.  “He didn’t see this one coming,” St. Peter said.  “That’s part of his motivation toward really trying to get engaged with the American Heart Association to tell his story and ultimately build awareness of heart health, and get incremental checkups.”

A career.328 hitter, Carew played 19 seasons in the major leagues including 12 with the Twins.  He won all seven of his American League batting championships in Minnesota.  He is a special assistant to the Twins along with other franchise legends such as Kent Hrbek and Tony Oliva.

Miguel Sano (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins)
Miguel Sano (Photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins)

St. Peter said Miguel Sano, the 2015 Twins rookie sensation who hit 18 home runs in 279 at bats, is practicing in the outfield this fall while playing in the Dominican Winter League.  In games, however, Sano is playing at third base, his longtime position.  The Twins plan to have Sano play the outfield next season but St. Peter said the club sees Sano’s long-term position as third base.

The Twins had a surprise season in 2015, finishing with a winning record for the first time in four years.  St. Peter likes the club’s core of players who led the team to an 83-79 record, and moves have been made to strengthen the roster this offseason.  “We’re not afraid to make trades,” he said.

St. Peter said “ideally” the team wants to improve its bullpen.  Starting pitching could be a trade target too, of course.  While the Twins don’t want to “shake up” their roster after last season’s success, he said the club doesn’t have a “lot of untouchables” that would be excluded from trade talks.

St. Peter recently vacationed in London.  He expects MLB games could be played in the U.K. as soon as next year or in 2017.  Commissioner Rob Manfred has international ambitions for his sport and future games might also be played in Germany and Latin America.

Tickets went on sale yesterday for TwinsFest, scheduled January 29-31 at Target Field.  St. Peter said most of the 40-man roster will attend the event.  Fans can also meet top prospects Jose Berrios (pitcher) and Nick Gordon (shortstop) who aren’t part of the 40-man group.  Tickets could sell out in advance and total attendance is projected at 15,000 to 17,000.

Comments Welcome

Bud Grant Survives Airport Landing

Posted on December 7, 2015December 7, 2015 by David Shama

 

Bud Grant has lived through 88 autumns here in the North Country.  During his professional sports career and also as an avid outdoorsman he probably has travelled more miles than a feature writer for National Geographic, but this fall he had an experience he doesn’t care to relive.

During a recent telephone conversation I told the former Vikings head coach I heard that he had a little unexpected adventure.  “Well, yes.  I am glad you mentioned little adventure,” Grant replied.  “It could have been a great adventure if things hadn’t gone the way they did.”

Grant is a longtime Bloomington resident, and is a hunting buddy of Jim Hanson from Albert Lea.  Hanson is a pilot and has access to a couple of airplanes.  He and Grant were in a Beechcraft twin engine plane on a nice weather day when they approached the international airport in Regina, Saskatchewan.

There are buttons on the Beechcraft’s instrument panel indicating whether the landing gear is engaged or not.  Prior to landing, Hanson pushed the button for the landing gear and as normal a green light went on.  Hanson and Grant soon realized, though, there was a malfunction regarding the wheels moving into place.

Bud Grant (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)
Bud Grant (photo courtesy of Minnesota Vikings.)

“To our surprise, when we went to touch down, we came down on our (airplane’s) belly,” Grant said.  “Slid down the runway, sparks flying, propellers breaking and came to a stop.  Within a minute and a half, the ambulances, the trucks were all on the runway.  But fortunately the sparks did not ignite anything and we walked away (safe).”

In just a few seconds the sliding airplane had come to a stop.  “It could have been a lot worse,” said the legendary coach known for his stoic personality.

Hanson and Grant planned to return to Minneapolis after the incident at the airport but knew they wouldn’t be flying that Beechcraft.  Grant said they inquired about a car or minivan rental, but learned that driving one-way from Canada to the U.S. without returning the rental vehicle back across the border wasn’t allowed.  The policy, though, didn’t apply to a U-Haul truck rental.   So for 17-hours the two Minnesotans made their way back to Minneapolis in a truck.

Grant played professional basketball for the Minneapolis Lakers and pro football for the Philadelphia Eagles.  He was head coach of the Winnipeg Blue Bombers before taking the Vikings to four Super Bowls during a career that lasted 18 seasons.  His adventures as an outdoorsman have taken him to various parts of the world including the Arctic Ocean where once his group had to consolidate into a single pontoon after a hole damaged the other pontoon.  But Grant had never experienced a “life threatening” incident like this fall in Canada.

“Flying does not bother me,” Grant said before telling a story about travelling with the Lakers in the 1950s.  The Lakers had played the Celtics in Boston and were in a hurry to get back to Minneapolis.  The team boarded a DC-3 aircraft at Boston’s airport and was in the sky for a few minutes when one of the plane’s engines burst into flames.  The engine stopped working and the pilot immediately turned the aircraft around and landed in Boston.

“John Kundla, our coach, did not like flying, as did a couple of the other players,” Grant said.  “It’s a scary thing to look out the window and see one of your engines on fire and…(land back) in the airport.”

The aircraft was taken into a hangar and the Lakers were told that it could be fixed.  Back in Minneapolis, Lakers general manager Sid Hartman was anxious for the team to return home.

Grant recalled overhearing a phone conversation between Hartman and Kundla when the Lakers were still in Boston. “Sid said, ‘Well, you gotta get here, we play on Sunday afternoon.’ I remember they were arguing whether John was going to get on that airplane again to fly back all night to Minneapolis and play on Sunday afternoon.”

If Grant—who said the Lakers did return in time for the Sunday game—was ever going to develop a fear of flying, that incident in Boston would have been an opportune start.  But even while nearing his 90th birthday, Grant has no fear and appreciates how air travel not only delivers him quickly to various places but also provides access to destinations that otherwise can be difficult or impossible to reach by car.

Grant is a waterfowl, turkey hunter and deer hunter.  “I do it all, but I am an expert at nothing,” said Grant who retired from the Vikings in 1985 but is a consultant for the franchise.

Lately, he has been hunting in Manitoba, Minnesota, North Dakota, Saskatchewan and Wisconsin.  Before Christmas he will head to Nebraska, and maybe sometime soon to Texas.   “Chasing critters and birds…’have gun will travel’ kind of philosophy,” he said.

The travel itinerary is usually during the week.  “Come home on the weekends, and go to a Viking game, high school game, even a college game, and be with family, and then head off on Sunday night or Monday,” Grant said.  “It’s hard work having fun.”

The last few years Grant’s name was as likely to pop up in local media for his annual garage sale as anything else.  He is planning to have another one at his home next May, the same month he turns 89.  All of Grant’s family is nearby—the six children with 19 grandchildren and 10 great grandkids.  The family helps provide inventory for the sale.

If you see Grant next May, tell him you’re happy he and Jim Hanson had a safe landing in Regina.

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