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Momentum Increasing for U Facilities

Posted on September 17, 2014September 17, 2014 by David Shama

 

According to sources, expect 3M to become a corporate contributor to the $190 million campaign to improve Gophers’ facilities, and also look for ground to be broken next spring for a new on-campus indoor football practice facility.

Effective fundraising—mostly still behind the scenes—is being done by the Gophers’ Athletic Department and well-connected volunteers.  An announcement is expected that 3M will join Land O’Lakes as a major contributor to the fundraising campaign.  LOL has made a $25 million commitment to support a wide range of University of Minnesota activities, but the centerpiece will be building the Intercollegiate Athletics Center for Excellence that will benefit over 700 student-athletes through academics and nutrition.

Among projects expected to receive priority in the master facilities plan is the new football practice building, perhaps costing $70 million.  Sources told Sports Headliners they predict shovels in the ground for the football building by next spring.

Jerry Kill
Jerry Kill

Gophers football coach Jerry Kill has been outspoken with high school recruits and media about the importance of a new football complex.  The existing facility has a ceiling so low footballs hit the top and the building has a crowded schedule with multiple teams practicing there.

Athletic director Norwood Teague, who announced the $190 million campaign in July of 2013, said earlier this month $40 million has been secured but hasn’t specified sources by name beyond LOL which reportedly will contribute $21 million of the $25 million to athletics.  Corporations, wealthy donors, the general public and revenue bonds are all on the table as funding sources.

An announcement is expected soon about how the public can make contributions to the campaign.  Included will be a website with information that potential contributors can review.

The $190 million master facilities plan will include a new practice building for Gophers basketball, and amenities for other sports such as wrestling and track.  Minnesota’s athletic facilities are considered among the worst in the Big Ten and generally haven’t been improved for many years.

The near $200 million project is expansive and ambitious, with a fundraising goal that may be challenging to meet without the sale of bonds.  The University is authorized to sell bonds and those involved with the fundraising have been considering that option for awhile.

Worth Noting

“Who would you want your son to play for?”  Football Bowl Subdivision coaches were polled asking that question and ESPN.com posted a story last Saturday reporting Gophers coach Jerry Kill tied for third with Stanford’s David Shaw.  Georgia’s Mark Richt and Oklahoma’s Bob Stoops tied for first.  Duke’s David Cutcliffe was fifth in the ESPN poll while Michigan State’s Mark Dantonio and Ohio State’s Urban Meyer were among five coaches tied for sixth.  Ninety-eight of 128 coaches participated in the poll.

Dick Jonckowski, the Gophers baseball and basketball public address announcer, is selling half of his sports memorabilia to help pay medical bills.  The sale will be October 3, 4 and 5 at the new Canterbury Park Expo Center.  Items—many of of them autographed—will include baseball, basketball and football cards, and photos and publications.

Dick Jonckowski
Dick Jonckowski

For many years Jonckowski’s basement has housed a vast collection of not only Gophers, Twins and Vikings memorabilia but also national items.  He is selling much of the collection because of bills relating to his non-Hodgkin lymphoma and type 2 diabetes.  He expects a full recovery from the cancer.

Former Gophers quarterback and NFL coach Tony Dungy said on Monday’s Dan Patrick Show it remains to be determined whether Vikings running back Adrian Peterson abused his four-year-old son.  Dungy also said he grew up with similar discipline.  See Danpatrick.com.

Mick Tingelhoff, who is a 2015 senior finalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame, said he doesn’t know who he would ask to be his presenter if he does receive induction into the Canton, Ohio shrine.

One reason the Vikings activated running back Joe Banyard last week is his work ethic. Signed as a free agent in 2012, he has yet to have an NFL rushing attempt.  Growing up in Texas, he hunted rattlesnakes.

Parking near TCF Bank Stadium for last Sunday’s Vikings game cost $40 in at least one lot but some customers are paying $70 at the 49ers’ new stadium in Santa Clara.

Rochester Postbulletin.com reported last week that 6-foot-8 eighth grade guard Matthew Hurt, who is being recruited by the Gophers, suffered a lacerated spleen recently and could miss early games with John Marshall High School.  His brother Michael, a 6-7 junior guard-forward, has already been offered a scholarship by the Gophers.

Richard Pitino, who had his 32nd birthday yesterday and is the Big Ten’s youngest basketball head coach, wrote on his Gophersports.com blog last week that Minnesota fans should disregard what his dad—legendary Louisville coach Rick Pitino—says in coming weeks when their two teams prepare for a nonconference nationally-televised game in Puerto Rico in November.  Writing with dry humor but also making a point about his dad, Richard said: “Ignore anything and everything that comes out of my father’s mouth leading up to this game.”

Former Timberwolves reserve Mark Madsen will be an assistant coach for the Lakers under new head coach Byron Scott.  Madsen’s basketball resume and positive outlook will likely land him an NBA head job some day.

This is the fourth year WCCO Radio is broadcasting all St. Thomas football games.  A three-year agreement ended after last season but another three-year deal is in place.

Through the first two weeks of the season, MIAC football teams have a 12-5 record against nonconference teams.  Among the highlights last week was a 55-45 Augsburg win against Concordia-Wisconsin when the Auggies had 682 yards in total offense with over 400 yards rushing.  The MIAC has only one nonleague game remaining in 2014—Bethel at home against Chicago on October 18.

Bridgeport Tusler, who was the 2012 Associated Press Minnesota Player of the Year while at Osseo, is now a freshman wide receiver at Bethel.  Tusler started his college career at South Dakota State.

Comments Welcome

Vikings Adrian Peterson Needs Counseling

Posted on September 15, 2014September 16, 2014 by David Shama

 

Adrian Peterson needs help and here’s what I think he should do:

He should first recognize the need for change in his life and be determined to accept the counsel of professionals.  Then he must find the best self-help advisors and meet with them in the coming months to set him on a better course.

Before going further, let’s get this on the record:  I am not apologizing for Peterson or defending him in this column.

If allegations that he injured his four-year-old son by beating him with a tree branch stripped of its leaves are true, then he has no acceptable defense.  What can a four-year-old ever do to deserve a beating from anyone?  Over the weekend the Vikings running back was charged with one count of injury to a child in Montgomery County, Texas.  A trial date hasn’t been determined.

Peterson has fathered several children out of wedlock, according to media reports, with estimates totaling up to seven.  The four-year-old in the news is among those children, and not the child of Peterson’s wife Ashley whom he married earlier this year.

Fathering children without willingness to make a parenting commitment is epidemic in America.  It has much to do with the emotional turmoil in many homes, the academic failure seen in schools and the life of crime that begins for many kids before they reach adulthood.

A child fathered by Peterson died in South Dakota last year, a victim of abuse by another man.  Media reports in 2013 said Peterson learned only a couple of months before the baby’s death that he was the father.  Now the alleged incident in Texas is yet another worrisome development in the story of the 29-year-old football hero.

Peterson’s father, Nelson Peterson, served prison time for money laundering.  Although his father was absent for part of Adrian’s youth, Peterson’s lawyer stated his client disciplined his Texas four-year-old in a manner similar to what Peterson experienced.  If true, who knows how such an experience impacts Peterson as an adult and father?

As first a high school and college football superstar, and now for several years one of the gods of the NFL, Peterson has known a life of privilege with wealth and adulation.  But how accountable is he in his personal life?  What anguish may churn inside him?

If Peterson wants to self-examine he needs to make that commitment now. Thinking and behavior can be modified.  To do so he needs to apply the same kind of determination that he used in making a nearly miraculous recovery from his ACL injury a couple of years ago.

With professional counseling, people do make changes in their thought processes and how they live their lives.  Counseling requires honesty and willingness to accept changes that will help the recipient and others.  And that help doesn’t have to come just from a psychologist or other professional.  It can be provided by advisors who know what they are talking about.

Maybe one advisor could even be Jim Brown, considered by many authorities to be the greatest running back in NFL history.  The two men already know each other, and perhaps the 78-year-old Brown has the wisdom and willingness to help.  Brown’s own past includes allegations of domestic violence, and jail time.

Football should be secondary to Peterson as he contemplates the future. He is positioned at the proverbial fork in the road.  The high ground is a place where he can not only help himself but also his family and the loved ones who need his support.  He may achieve results more meaningful than anything he ever accomplished on the football field.

Maybe a different-thinking Peterson can even enlighten some of the idiots who have surfaced on social media applauding use of a switch as appropriate discipline.  Society needs that kind of punishment to make for better kids, they write.

No, beating up defenseless children just makes this a scarier world than it already is, and reminds us again the real heroes on the planet are often those who have to pick up the pieces from someone else’s mistakes.

2 comments

Kill May Land Best Recruiting Class Yet

Posted on September 12, 2014September 12, 2014 by David Shama

 

National Signing Day for college football programs isn’t until next February but Ryan Burns told Sports Headliners he will be surprised if the Gophers’ 2015 class of recruits isn’t the best of the Jerry Kill era.  Burns manages the GopherIllustrated.com website that tracks Gophers recruiting.

Burns is optimistic because he believes multiple members of the 2015 class will be talented enough to play as true freshmen, and also the Rivals.com star rating system values these recruits more than past Gophers groups.

And there are other reasons for his optimism about Minnesota signing a lot of quality players to National Letters of Intent on Signing Day.

Ryan Burns
Ryan Burns

Burns, who played high school football at Tartan and then at St. Olaf, is impressed that the Gophers staff is chasing what he calls “plan A” recruits—and more so than in the past.  “They’re not going to be going down the list to the B’s and C’s, I don’t think, in this class.  They’re just in on too many of the plan A guys,” he said.

The 2015 recruiting class, which eventually could total about 25 scholarship players, will be Kill’s fifth at Minnesota.  Expecting it will be the best isn’t downgrading the 2014 group that is already contributing to the Gophers including when as many as six true defensive freshmen have been on the field together.  “I wouldn’t say by far (the best group in 2015) because the 2014 class is very good, but I think they’re going to take another step up in this class for sure,” Burns said.

Burns pointed out that prep players sometimes use schools as safety nets by verbally committing to programs before Signing Day but knowing if more desirable scholarship offers come along they will switch loyalties.  With players who have already verbally committed to the Gophers for 2015, Burns sees a group that wants to be in Minneapolis.

“They’re not using Minnesota as a reservation place, or they’re looking around for bigger offers,” Burns said.  “They’ve come to (Minnesota’s) campus.  They’ve seen it.  They’ve talked to the coaching staff.  They really like them and they stick.  That’s why you’re only probably going to see one or two kids compared to…six or seven (flip commitments) come Signing Day.”

GopherIllustrated.com lists 13 players who have verbally committed to Minnesota’s 2015 class.  They are Almonzo Brown, wide receiver from Suwanee, Georgia; Shannon Brooks, running back, Jasper, Georgia; Ray Buford, athlete, Southfield, Michigan; Nick Connelly, offensive line, Red Wing; Demry Croft, quarterback, Rockford, Illinois; Bronson Dovich, offensive line, Chaska; Jonathan Femi-Cole, running back, Aurora, Ontario; Jacob Huff, defensive back, Bolingbrook, Illinois; Julian Huff, linebacker, Bolingbrook, Illinois; James Johannesson, running back, Fargo; Quinn Oseland, offensive line, Springfield, Illinois; Ted Stieber, offensive line, Akron, Ohio; and Jaylen Waters, linebacker, Copperas Cove, Texas.  All are Rivals.com three-star players except for Brooks, Connelly, Johannesson and Julian Huff who are rated two stars.

Speed, length and wingspan are defining characteristics among the potential 2015 class. “That’s what everybody is looking for nowadays,” Burns said. “You look at Eric Murray (the Gophers outstanding junior cornerback).  He had no offers coming out of high school.  But what did he have?  He had great length and he had great speed.

“Look at guys (among the 2015 commits) like Jaylen Waters—his arm’s extremely long and he runs well.”

Major college programs have been chasing Gophers commits like Brown, who has offers from Florida, Kentucky and Missouri. “You see a lot more of that (than other years),” Burns said.  “You’re seeing Kill win more battles and it’s just something that hasn’t happened.  Usually (in the past) it’s coming against teams like Middle Tennessee State.

“Probably one of the crown jewels of this class so far is Quinn Oseland. He has all the connections in the world to go to Illinois.  He had Oklahoma State, he had Michigan State, Oregon (after him).  But he came up here on a visit…in July.  He really didn’t’ even want to come.  His coach kind of like was, ‘Hey, you should take a visit.’  His eyes were opened to it (becoming a Gopher).”

Burns is enthusiastic, too, about Croft, the 6-4 quarterback, and cousin of Minnesota sophomore wide receiver Donovahn Jones.  “I think his ceiling may be the highest of (all) the Big Ten quarterbacks so far committed.  He has so many physical tools. If he can learn the system, if he can develop, he is an ideal dual-threat quarterback for what Kill wants to do.”

Even two-star recruits like Dovich and Johannesson have Burns curious about what they will be like in college.  He said Dovich could have the “highest celing”among the offensive linemen who have committed. “His athleticism is off the charts (and)…I think he will probably be bumped to three stars.”

Burns said Johannseon ran for 40 touchdowns and 2,600 yards as a junior, and he has seen the 6-2, 212-pound North Dakotan run a 4.5 forty.   “You don’t have a lot of athletes like that,” Burns said.

Kill and his staff are trying to build a winner at Minnesota by sometimes identifying talent others don’t see.  The Gophers aren’t among the glamour programs in college football and that partially explains why the 2015 class is only ranked No. 60 in the nation by Rivals.com.  But other Kill classes have been ranked low and probably undervalued so Gophers fans are advised not to worry too much about the players’ real potential.

“I would be shocked if Jerry Kill ever got a top 25 class in Rivals rankings,” Burns said.  “I mean he’ll even tell you he doesn’t look at it.  Just for the perception of the fans he would love to (have a highly ranked class) but I think if Minnesota gets to the point where they’re signing a class that’s between 30 and 45 in the nation I think they will be extremely happy.  Anything above that I think is just gravy.”

Worth Noting 

The Gophers had 67 yards passing in last week’s victory against Middle Tennessee State. Can they win tomorrow at TCU with similar production against the Horned Frogs?

“I don’t think so. …I would imagine they will open it up this week and they’ll throw the ball a little bit more,” Gophers radio analyst Darrell Thompson told Sports Headliners.

Minnesota only had 156 yards passing in its opening win against Eastern Illinois.  The Gophers rank No. 13 in passing among 14 Big Ten teams, and may not have starting quarterback Mitch Leidner (knee injury) available tomorrow.  If backup Chris Streveler takes over, will the Gophers throw frequently despite his limited experience?

Darrell Thompson
Darrell Thompson

“I think they have to,” Thompson said.  “I think it’s just at a point now where if we don’t, we’re limiting ourselves, just becoming a little too predictable.”

TCU (1-0) will certainly be the best defense the 2-0 Gophers have seen so far.  Horned Frogs coach Gary Patterson is on a short list of college football’s best defensive minds.  “He’s as good a defensive coach as there is in the country, and I think everybody knows that,” Gophers coach Jerry Kill said.

The temperature for tomorrow’s game in Fort Worth will probably be in the low to mid-70s by kickoff at 3 p.m.  The Gophers could have faced a warmer welcome to Texas in September but will still be prepared with liquids—even pickle juice for replenishing sodium.

Gophers’ tight end Maxx Williams talks with former teammate and ex-Minnesota quarterback Philip Nelson who is in Mankato awaiting trial for a fight incident earlier this year. The two have known each other since ninth grade and were football rivals in high school, Williams at Waconia and Nelson at Mankato West.   “He’s still one of my friends,” Williams said.

Big Ten football hasn’t been impressive in nonconference matchups for years and the conference’s image is ready-made for critics to pile on again.  Big Ten teams have lost every major test to nonconference powers during the first two weeks of the season and the highest ranked league team now is Michigan State at No. 13 in the AP poll.  Other top 25 Big Ten teams are Wisconsin at No. 18 and Ohio State, No. 22.

Sunday’s Vikings-Patriots game at TCF Bank Stadium will not be the first for New England on the University of Minnesota campus.  In 1971 the two teams met in an August preseason game.  The Patriots will become the first NFL team to have played the Vikings in four Minnesota stadiums, TCF Bank and Memorial Stadium on the U campus, Met Stadium in Bloomington and the Metrodome downtown.

The Vikings’ Adrian Peterson needs 78 yards to break Cris Carter’s career club record for combined net yards, 12,410.  With two more touchdowns Peterson can tie Randy Moss for second place in career TD’s, 93.  Carter holds the Vikings record with 110.

Vikings wide receiver Cordarrelle Patterson rushed for 102 yards on only three carries in the win over the Rams last Sunday, including a 67-yard touchdown run, but offensive coordinator Norv Turner said it was the other runs that impressed him the most.  “The two other runs were more impressive to me because they were challenged runs at the line of scrimmage, they were physical runs. Our guys did a good job up front (blocking).”

No. 7 nationally-ranked Bethel plays at No. 15 Wartburg tomorrow in Waverly, Iowa.  Wartburg defeated Augsburg, 40-3, in Minneapolis last week.  Tomorrow will be Bethel’s opening game.  The rankings are by D3football.com.

The Wild will hold a practice open to the public on Saturday, September 20 at Xcel Energy Center from 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.  Fans can enter Gate 1 starting at 8:45 a.m.  Admission will be free with concessions for purchase.  That morning single game tickets will be on sale.

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