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Kill Ranks U D-Backs with Big Ten’s Best

Posted on August 6, 2014August 6, 2014 by David Shama

 

Gophers football notes…

Jerry Kill has praise for his defensive secondary as the Gophers prepare for their 2014 season and opening game on August 28 against Eastern Illinois.  “We’re deep in the secondary—secondary-wise we’ll be as good as anybody in the Big Ten,” the head coach said on WCCO Radio’s Sports Huddle program on Sunday.  “We’re athletic.”

The secondary players aren’t drawing national attention but program insiders are impressed including Kill who said on the radio there is “tons of talent” available. However, Lindy’s Big Ten preview magazine, for example, isn’t on board and ranks the Gophers defensive backfield No. 13 in the 14-team Big Ten.  And the Jim Thorpe award is given annually to the nation’s best defensive back and no Gophers are included among the 39 candidates on the 2014 watch list.

Gophers offensive coordinator Matt Limegrover sends passers and receivers against the secondary in practice and said on occasion “we’re not going to look good.”  Senior safety Cedric Thompson, senior cornerback Derrick Wells, and junior cornerback Eric Murray are among the talented defensive backs.  With plenty of talent and experience, the secondary can “get you frustrated,” Limegrover said.

Ed Olson, Jr.
Ed Olson, Jr.

Former Gophers offensive lineman Ed Olson, a senior on last year’s team, referred to the defensive backs as “studs.”  “They will live up to the hype,” he told Sports Headliners.  “They’re a great group of guys.  They work hard and they’ll never give up.”

The collective skills of the secondary players should ultimately help make redshirt sophomore Mitch Leidner better in his first full season as the starting quarterback.  Leidner only threw three touchdown passes last season but the defensive competition in pre-season camp this month figures to help him.

Olson describes Leidner as an outstanding leader and the “hardest worker” he’s known.  “I remember when he came in as a freshman he was on my off-season workout team.  Didn’t really know him.  He’s probably the best pick I ever made.  He came up to me and said, ‘You won’t regret this pick.’

“I’ll never forget that.  He stepped up.  We won like the off-season ‘Rose Bowl’ (competition) and everything.  He’s a big reason for it.  Great friends ever since.”

At practice this week Olson watched his brother Tommy Olson who is on the Rimington Award watch list for the nation’s top center.  Tommy started the last four games of 2013 at center after being moved from guard prior to the season beginning.  As a senior, this will be his last chance to have his best season. “He’s really into football this year and he’s loving it,” Ed said.

His brother also said Tommy has added about 10 pounds and weighs well over 300 but he has also emphasized flexibility in the off-season. “He’s gotten a lot stronger and faster,” Ed said.  “He says he’s the fastest and strongest he’s ever been.  He can’t wait for the start of the season.”

With no more football in his future, Ed has gone on a low carbohydrate diet and dropped about 90 pounds from his playing weight of 320.  He wore jersey No. 58, the same number his father, Ed Sr., did playing for the Gophers in the early 1980s.  Now Tommy will wear No. 58.  “Really cool,” Ed Jr. said about Tommy continuing the tradition.  “Couldn’t think of anyone else wearing it.”

Ed Jr. was recruited as part of coach Tim Brewster’s 2009 recruiting class.  He was redshirted that year, and then played as a starting tackle in 2010 before Kill succeeded Brewster for the 2011 season.

Olson has watched the program go from a Big Ten punch line to a respected program.  The Gophers won four league games last year for the first time since 2005 and went to a second consecutive bowl game.  What about a New Year’s Day bowl game in 2015?

“I can’t make any predictions now but if they take it day-by-day and keep improving like they have been, the sky’s the limit for these guys,” Olson said.

Dan O’Brien, Gophers associate athletic director, has worked with Kill since the coach came here from Northern Illinois and sees him every day.  He said Kill is driving a motor vehicle, an indication of being seizure free for a long while.

“I think he’s managing his schedule well,” O’Brien said. “He seems like he has great energy.  I know he’s excited for the year.  He thinks this will be our best year in his time here.”

Both the Gophers and Stillwater-based Creative Charters are sponsoring fan trips to Minnesota’s game in Fort Worth against Texas Christian on September 13.  The trip is something new for the athletic department, while Creative Charters has been organizing football and basketball trips for many years.

O’Brien said the intent of the TCU trip is to allow fans to get “closer to the team.” Part of the fun will be having the Gophers Marching Band in Fort Worth.  But other than the TCU travel package (a few openings remain) and a possible bowl game trip, the athletic department has no further plans for fan travel.  “We have zero interest in doing it more than once a year,” O’Brien said.

Freshman walk-on quarterback Jacques Perra is a player to watch develop.  At Roseville Area High School he played for former North Dakota State quarterback Chris Simdorn who led the Bison to NCAA Division II titles in 1989 and 1990.  Perra was the 2013 Minnesota Gatorade Player of the Year and threw 35 touchdown passes and only four interceptions.

The Big Ten Network crew that stops at Big Ten schools previewing the football programs will be in Minneapolis to showcase the Gophers for a report airing August 16.

The Gophers and other Big Ten programs reduce their nonconference games from four to three and increase league games from eight to nine starting in 2016.  Michigan State has arguably become the best program in the Big Ten but the Gophers don’t play the Spartans again until 2017.

Comments Welcome

Iowa Safety Rogers to Visit Gophers

Posted on August 4, 2014August 4, 2014 by David Shama

 

Former Iowa State defensive back Charlie Rogers, now at Iowa Western Community College in Council Bluffs, Iowa, may become a Gopher, according to Scott Strohmeier.

Strohmeier, the Iowa Western head coach, told Sports Headliners his safety’s top two Division I college choices are Minnesota and Illinois.  He also said Rogers is making plans to visit the University of Minnesota.

Rogers chose Iowa State over the Gophers as a high school player at Iowa City West where he was better known as a quarterback than defensive player.  He was a Rivals.com three-star prospect and considered one of Iowa’s best prep recruits in the class of 2012.

As a redshirt freshman last year at Iowa State, Rogers was one of seven freshmen to play for the Cyclones.  He participated in 12 games, starting two at cornerback and nickelback.  He was second team All-Big 12 academic.

Rogers, 6-1, 195 pounds, wouldn’t be the first Iowa Western alum to play for the Gophers.  Mike Henry, a senior fullback on last year’s Gophers, first attended Iowa Western after graduating from Mahtomedi High School.  Linebacker Cody Poock, from Spirit Lake, Iowa, transferred to Minnesota after playing for Strohmeier last fall.

Strohmeier is from Watkins, Minnesota.  He has been head coach of the Reivers since 2008 and won the 2012 National Junior College Athletic Association championship.

Strohmeier’s relationship with the Gophers is enhanced by his friendship with Gophers associate athletic director Dan O’Brien who oversees the U football program and is a former head coach at Concordia of St. Paul.  “Dan gave me my first coaching job at Concordia,” Strohmeier said.  “He got me in the profession.”

Iowa Western is a possible destination for former Washburn High School running back Jeff Jones, the Rivals.com four-star recruit who is trying to become NCAA eligible this summer so he can join the Gophers who started practice last Friday in preparation for their season opener on August 28 at home against Eastern Illinois.  “I would love to have a guy like Jeff but he deserves to play Division I,” Strohmeier said.  “We’re here if he needs to be.”

If Jones were to become a Reiver, he would play in the same backfield with Eden Prairie High School alum Anthony Anderson, a power back who will have major college recruiters watching him in Council Bluffs.  Strohmeier lost his top two tailbacks from last year’s No. 2 nationally ranked team and he expects Anderson to help fill the void.

What would it be like to have a backfield with the elusive Jones and powerful Anderson?  “I could sleep a lot better at night.  I can tell you that much,” Strohmeier said.

Worth Noting 

After reporting on Jones for months and following his story, I will be surprised if he isn’t admitted to the University of Minnesota soon, even if he isn’t NCAA eligible to play for the Gophers this season.

Among the Gophers’ best chances for a road upset this season could be September 27 at Michigan.  The Gophers have only won twice in Ann Arbor since 1986 and have lost five consecutive games to Michigan, but the Wolverines have been faltering the last two years with a 15-11 record.

“It was a low energy program a year ago,” said Big Ten Network analyst Gerry DiNardo last Monday on BTN’s coverage of the conference’s Media Day.

The Wolverines’ problems include having lost five of their last six games against Michigan State.  Spartans’ coach Mike Dantonio was asked at Media Day how MSU can keep up the intensity for the in-state rivalry.  “I continue to live in (the state of) Michigan,” he answered.  “That ought to do it.”

Eighteen attendees paid $2,000 each for the “Boys of Fall Elite Camp” that coincided with the opening of Gophers training camp last Friday, Saturday and Sunday.  Participants received an inside look at the Gophers program, attending team and position meetings and eating with players.  The camp raised money for the football program.

Senior redshirt wide receiver Devon Wright is now on the Gophers’ 105-man roster, after replacing injured redshirt sophomore tight end Duke Anyanwu.  Wright is a former Tim Brewster recruit as a running back from Florida.  He played on special teams last year.

Former Gophers linebacker Jon Leverenz is teaching science at Bloomington Jefferson High School and is the head boys track coach.  His 162 tackles in 1987 ranks second for a single Gophers season behind linebacker Bill Light’s 172 in 1970.

Former Gophers basketball captain Al Nuness will be part of the inaugural hall of fame class at his old Chicago area high school, Proviso East, on August 30.

It might be a matter of when—not whether—U.S. Bank is announced as the naming rights choice for the new Vikings stadium.

Wasn’t that Tom Lehman looking at the University of Minnesota Les Bolstad Golf Course last week with the possibility of helping with renovations?

Comments Welcome

Twins Trend: Home Box Office Decline

Posted on August 1, 2014August 1, 2014 by David Shama

 

As the Twins move toward the close of another disappointing season on the field, club officials are concerned about more than losing 90 games again. They wonder about next year’s Target Field attendance.

General manager Terry Ryan was on WCCO Radio’s “Sports Huddle” last Sunday saying the Twins need to put a better “product” on the field.  He expressed concern about losing the attention of fans like in the 1990s when home attendance slipped to averages of under 18,000 per game from 1995 thru 2000 with a low of 13,093.

After winning Central Division titles in 2009 and 2010, the Twins lost 99 games in 2011, then 96 each of the last two seasons.  The 2014 club has a 48-59 record compared with 45-59 a year ago.

The Twins ended an embarrassing 3-7 homestand last Sunday when their problematic play included falling behind early in games. That was a characteristic of last year’s Twins and something club officials like team president Dave St. Peter wanted to see left in the past.

St. Peter was also a guest on WCCO’s “Sports Huddle” on Sunday and was asked if attendance could be a problem next season.  “Any time you go through four straight challenging seasons it’s going to impact your business…it’s going to impact your ticket sales,” St. Peter answered.  “We understand that. We’re going to need to re-establish, and frankly regain, that trust with our fan base and credibility.

“Ultimately at the end of the day that comes down to putting a team on the field that’s exciting and that fans want to come watch.  We’ve had that going at times this year but never consistently enough, and then this homestand has been a struggle.

“It’s going to get better. There’s no doubt in my mind that the minor league system that we have today is going to produce a number of high quality players that are going to be a big part of turning this thing around.  The question is when is that going to happen? I know our fans want and deserve it to happen sooner versus later.”

The Twins are averaging 28,267 fans per home game, according to Espn.com.  That is fewer fans per game than the club averaged during its last season in the much disparaged Metrdome.  In that final 2009 season at the dome the Twins averaged 29,466 fans per game.  Then came the move to outdoor baseball and beautiful Target Field where attendance jumped to 39,798 in 2010 but has declined every year since with averages of 39,112, 34,512 and 30,588.

Going into this year the Twins had the luxury of renewing season ticket holders by offering the perk of priority for MLB All-Star Game seats.  That won’t be on the table in 2015 and a season ticket base believed to total 18,000 at the most will likely decline. “From a season ticket perspective, I think it’s only reasonable to expect that they’ll probably suffer some level of decline,” a former sports executive with knowledge of the Twins operation told Sports Headliners.

The source, who has marketing expertise and didn’t want to be identified, predicts there is a bottom to how far attendance will fall. “I would be surprised if they went below 2 million fans (any time).  What is great about Target Field (the environment and many amenities) will keep people coming out simply because of the experience of it all.  Do they (fans) want to see a winner?  Absolutely.  Does winning make it easier to draw people to the ballpark?  Of course it does.”

The Twins drew a Target Field low of 2,477,644 last year.  The club’s last five seasons in the dome attendance was always 2 million or more, although from 1994 thru 2004 the Twins never hit the 2 million mark in home attendance.

This year’s attendance could total 200,000 or so less than last year, although the team does have attractive games remaining at Target Field against the Tigers and Angels with superstars Miguel Cabrera and Mike Trout, and the Athletics who have the best record in baseball.

It doesn’t seem likely the Twins, lacking talent almost everywhere, will suddenly become such a gate attraction that fans can’t ignore them between now and when the season ends in late September.  And the Twins know that declining attendance can impact other parts of the club’s business including corporate sponsorships, merchandise sales and concession revenues.

The source referred to earlier describes attendance as the “lifeblood of pro sports.”  He added, “Everything else is built on the foundation of attendance.”

Whether the Twins can significantly improve their on-field product between now and next season will have everything to do with how many season ticket holder accounts are renewed, the total number of fans that are in the stands and whether fans tune in games on radio and TV.  The source is a supporter of Jim Pohlad and said the Twins owner is frustrated with losing, and willing to spend money on players.

“The truth of the matter is Jim desperately wants to win,” the source said.  “He does care very much about the team and its success.  He’s a fan.  He’s at virtually every game.  I think the Pohlads truly do get a bum wrap sometimes that they’re cheap.  The reality is that Jim trusts people inside the organization—always has—to do their jobs.  If they (Twins executives) come to him and say, ‘We should sign this guy, he can help us,’ I have every belief that Jim would say, ‘Go for it.’ “

Worth Noting 

It’s been a rough few months for Dick Jonckowski, the Shakopee-based sports emcee and Gophers public address announcer.  In April he was diagnosed with type 2 diabetes and in June the basement in his home was heavily damaged by water.  In early July he was diagnosed with non-Hodgkin lymphoma and is receiving chemotherapy.

Jonckowski’s niece, Michelle Beisner, is married to Joe Buck, the Fox baseball play-by-play announcer, who invited Jonckowski to join him in the broadcast booth for the MLB All-Star Game in Minneapolis last month.  Jonckowski couldn’t accept the invitation because he was in the hospital but Buck extended best wishes during the telecast.

Jonckowski told Sports Headliners his cancer is curable, and he appreciates the support he’s received from friends.  “I’ve heard from people from all over the country,” Jonckowski said.  “I should be fine.”

The basement at his house is being remodeled after the water damage and Jonckowski is planning to sell about 60 percent of his extensive sports memorabilia collection that for years has been kept at his home.  He has about 80 boxes of memorabilia and likely will have a sale in late August.

No one has ever won the 3M Championship in consecutive years but 2013 champ Tom Pernice Jr. is optimistic he can change that.  “My game is in a good place,” he told Sports Headliners yesterday.  “My putting is in good shape and you need to putt well this week because you need to shoot low.”

Pernice said he is playing as well or better now than last year at this time.  He finished tied for third in the recent Senior British Open, a tournament won by Bernhard Langer who will also be here for the 3M Championship that starts today and concludes on Sunday at TPC Twin Cities in Blaine.  Langer has twice won the 3M.

Why hasn’t anyone won consecutively in the senior tour event here?  “You know I have no idea,” Pernice said with a laugh.  “Golf is really a funny game.  Several players have won more than one time (but) it’s just the way it goes.”

Vikings coach Mike Zimmer after being asked yesterday to evaluate the coverage work of rookie linebacker Anthony Barr: “Coverage is great. He moves well. He’s got a good idea. Somebody was telling me that he takes copious notes in the meetings. He’s got pages and pages of them…so he’s very, very into trying to learn what we’re trying to do and teach.

“He’s got a lot of raw, athletic ability that helps in the coverage aspect of things. There’s times when he may pull off of somebody a little bit too soon…he’s got to do better at (that).”

The Jefferson Football Golf Classic is today at Dwan Golf Club in Bloomington.  In 13 years the event has raised about $45,000 to assist 39 former Bloomington Jefferson High School football players with college expenses.  Event organizers are Rich Bird, Dennis Kane, Stan Skjei and Larry Swartout.

Nate Hanson, the 27-year-old Chanhassen native and former Gopher, is a first baseman with the Twins AAA Red Wings farm club.  He is hitting .247 with two home runs and 11 RBI in 77 at bats.

Josmil Pinto, who could well be the successor to Kurt Suzuki as the Twins starting catcher, needs work behind the plate and is only hitting .250 with five home runs and 18 RBI in 96 at bats with the Red Wings. Unlike Hanson, the 25-year old Pinto is on the Twins’ 40-man roster.

Writing for the July 30 Gopherillustrated.com, Ryan James reported that highly recruited DeLaSalle guard Jarvis Johnson lists Minnesota, Baylor, Michigan State, Maryland, UNLV, Wichita State, and Wisconsin as schools he has heard from the most this summer.

The Minnesota Senior Games begin today at the University of St. Thomas with about 1,500 athletes ages 50 and over participating.  The games go through August 9 and events include 5k and 10k races, archery, badminton, basketball, billiards, bowling, cycling, disc golf, golf, horseshoes, pickleball, racquetball, shuffleboard, softball, swimming, table tennis, tennis, track and field and volleyball.  Events will be held at sites in Bloomington, Eagan, Minneapolis and St. Paul.  Athletes can qualify for the 2015 National Senior Games that will be held in Minnesota July 3-16.

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