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Ariel McDonald: 2 Wins Gets U in Tourney

Posted on March 10, 2014March 10, 2014 by David Shama

 

The Gophers play Penn State in their Big Ten Tournament opener on Thursday night in Indianapolis and Ariel McDonald believes Minnesota has to win the game to remain a possibility for the NCAA Tournament.  A second win in the tournament will make him even more optimistic about Minnesota’s NCAA chances.

“If they can get two wins they should be safe, but right now they live to see another day,” McDonald told Sports Headliners after the Gophers defeated Penn State yesterday at Williams Arena. McDonald, a former Gophers point guard, was the TV analyst for yesterday’s Big Ten Network game when Minnesota improved its conference record to 8-10 and overall to 19-12.

He believes there is some possibility the Gophers could earn an invite to the NCAA Tournament when selections are announced next Sunday if they win just their Big Ten opener.  That optimism is based on Minnesota’s strength of schedule including wins over top 20 teams Iowa, Ohio State and Wisconsin.

But even though Minnesota has defeated Penn State twice this season, winning again on Thursday doesn’t figure to be nearly as easy as yesterday’s 81-63 victory.  “I think one of the hardest things to do in sports is beat a team three times (in one season),” Gophers coach Richard Pitino said last night.

Penn State finished 6-12 in the Big Ten, 15-16 overall.  The Nittany Lions had two wins over Ohio State, an indication of their abilities.  “I think they’re really good,” Pitino said.

The coach expects a “war” on Thursday night and part of the fight will likely be low post scoring.  McDonald said the Gophers need balanced offense coming from the outside and inside.  The inside scoring must come from not only players driving to the basket but the team’s low post players like Elliott Eliason and Mo Walker.  “When they can get you 22 to 25 points in the low post the Gophers usually don’t lose,” McDonald said.

When the Gophers experience five minute scoreless streaks like they did in some conference games McDonald understands why.  “The reason (is) they don’t have anybody they can throw it down low to and just say, ‘Hey, go get us a bucket, or at least a foul so we can go shoot free throws and kind of overcome this lapse.’ ”

While Eliason, Walker and power forward Joey King are important to team success, McDonald said the Gophers hopes each game start with point guard DeAndre Mathieu who provides the offensive tempo Pitino wants. “He dominates the ball and he creates so much for them off the dribble. …Usually when you can control him you can control the Gophers so he is a big, big piece to their success.”

Mathieu is only 5-9, 165. but he is quick and fearless. “I like small guys who just have guts,” McDonald said.  “They’re not scared to go in there to the big guys.  That’s why I like DeAndre.  He seems to be under control.  I think he is special.”

Mathieu and the Gophers will find out soon if they’re special enough for the NCAA Selection Committee.

Worth Noting 

McDonald wasn’t even one of the Big Ten Network analysts before the season but he used his persistence to get on the air.  He worked three network games this season and hopes to have frequent assignments in 2014-15.  He has previous analyst experience working Minnesota State High School League games and this winter has given his basketball opinions weekly on 1500 ESPN.

Ross Travis, from Chaska, started at forward for the Nittany Lions yesterday and scored four points after entering the game averaging nine.  Reserve guard Graham Woodward, from Edina, didn’t score.

While the Nittany Lions have two native Minnesotans on their roster, the Gophers have one in power forward Joey King from Eagan.  The Gophers began playing basketball in 1896 and this might be the first time in program history only one player from the state has been on the roster.

Look for the five finalists for the 2014 high school Mr. Basketball Award to be announced today or tomorrow.

College national championship teams, including the 2013 Gophers women’s hockey team, will be honored by President Barack Obama today at the White House.  The event will be streamed live on Whitehouse.gov/live.  The Gophers had a record of 41-0-0, the only undefeated women’s hockey team ever.

Ron Stolski, the winningest high school football coach in state history, shares his wisdom in an interview for the American Football Coaches Association website.  Stolski, still coaching at Brainerd, has been a Minnesota prep coach for over 50 years.  The interview can be accessed at Mfca.com.

Stolski is also executive director of the Minnesota Football Coaches Association, the organization offering events throughout the year promoting football.  Upcoming events include the MFCA Clinic March 27-29 and the recruiting fair May 5.

Minnetonka High School alum Will Leer, competing for the U.S. track team, finished sixth in the 1500 meters final on Saturday at the IAAF World Indoor Championships in Sopot, Poland.  His time was 3:39.60.

Adrian Peterson figures to be happy about the Vikings re-signing Matt Cassel to quarterback the team. In the February 10 issue of Sports Illustrated he was asked who he wanted as the team’s starter next season.  “Matt Cassel,” Peterson answered.  “We were productive when he was behind center.  If (we do) draft a quarterback, (Johnny) Manziel or (Teddy) Bridgewater.  They have the potential to come in and play.” 

Comments Welcome

Vikings Need to Draft QB for System

Posted on March 7, 2014March 7, 2014 by David Shama

 

Former Vikings defensive lineman Bob Lurtsema remains close to the team and has advice regarding the upcoming NFL Draft.

“With Norv Turner (offensive coordinator) you have got to draft a quarterback that fits his system. …Don’t draft the best available quarterback.”

Many college quarterback prospects are scramblers but taking one with the Vikings’ No. 8 pick in the first round of the May 8 draft might be a mistake.  “That’s not what Turner wants,” Lurtsema told Sports Headliners.  “Turner wants a guy who reads (situations) quick. Throws the ball like a bullet.  There are certain things he wants because of the way he coaches.”

Lurtsema said it’s crucial for a franchise’s draft success to have the general manager, head coach and offensive coordinator on the “same page.”  Will that be true of the Vikings on draft day with general manager Rick Spielman, new head coach Mike Zimmer and new offensive boss Turner?

“No idea,” Lurtsema said.  “I sure hope so.”

The Vikings have devoted much of this century searching for a franchise quarterback.  Daunte Culpepper’s success ended in 2004.  Except for a couple of seasons with Brett Favre, it’s been pretty much trial and error with the Vikings while clubs like the Seahawks and 49ers found quick fixes when they changed head coaches.

Lurtsema said Turner, who has the reputation of being among the NFL’s best offensive minds, has to decide if he wants to make a commitment to Christian Ponder, currently the only quarterback signed for 2014, or to find another QB already in the league.  If he does want to make such a commitment, the Vikings could draft a player other than a quarterback with their first choice on draft day.

Whatever the decision, Lurtsema is optimistic about Zimmer and Turner.  He is convinced the club has upgraded its coaching talent.  “Coaching is 60 to 65 percent (of success),” Lurtsema said.  “I’ve told you that.  I say it on TV.  I say it to everybody.”

Lurtsema is excited about the offensive potential of next year’s team even without knowing the quarterback situation.  Turner’s NFL experience includes head coaching and his resume documents high production offenses in previous employment.  His mantra is a balanced offense and commitment to keeping defenses guessing.  “He really mixes it up very well,” Lurtsema said.

Lurtsema was impressed with Zimmer soon after he was hired earlier this winter.  “He (Zimmer) said he wants to give some guys a big, swift kick in the butt. …There wasn’t a lot of second effort a lot of the time (last season).  You can tell second effort when they’re hauling their fanny.”

Coach Bud Grant won 11 championships with the Vikings.  Lurtsema played for Grant and reveres him.  “He (Zimmer) has a lot of Bud Grant in him,” Lurtsema said.  “You know he’s the boss.  If I was to deal with Zimmer (play for him) and make a couple of mistakes, he wouldn’t tell me about it.  He’d cut me (from the team).  That’s the part that sticks out.  You don’t have to go up and cradle a lot of these spoiled athletes.  They make the dumb mistakes—adios amigo.”

Worth Noting

Lurtsema likes the competitive attitude of Central Florida’s Blake Bortles and predicts he will be the first quarterback selected in the draft.

Derek Carr is a pocket passer and there’s been speculation the Fresno State quarterback could be available to the Vikings at No. 8.  He fits the non-scrambler style Lurtsema said Turner wants to avoid for his system.

Joe Schmit will autograph copies of his new book, Silent Impact, a week from today starting at noon at Barnes & Noble downtown.  The next day, March 15, the KSTP TV sportscaster will be at the Mall of America Sears Court starting at 1 p.m.

Schmit has written a lively, easy to read self-help book about how we impact others including non-verbal communication.  The book’s cover jacket makes this point: “The words we say or don’t say, the things we do or don’t do, and the ways we react or don’t react can have a tremendous influence on those around us.”

Schmit has won 15 Emmys in his broadcast career but has faced challenges including non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.  The disease is in remission and Schmit credits his attitude in battling the cancer.

Minnetonka High School alum Will Leer is competing in the 1500 meters for the U.S. track team at the IAAF World Indoor Championships in Sopot, Poland.  Leer, who excelled in track and cross country at Pomona College in California, is among the world’s elite runners in the mile, 1500 meters, and has advanced to the finals in Poland.

Leer is the nephew of former KSTP-TV reporter Robb Leer who is in the public relations business with Minneapolis-based Leer Communications & Consultants.

North Carolina coach Roy Williams is recruiting Hopkins sophomore guard Amir Coffey and attended the Royals-Eden Prairie section title game on Wednesday night.

Today 1980 Olympic hockey gold medalists Bill Baker, Steve Christoff, Dave Christian and Rob McClanahan will be at the Herb Brooks Foundation booth at the Let’s Play Hockey Expo in St. Paul’s RiverCentre.  Baker, Christoff, Christian and McClanahan will be autographing commemorative hockey pucks that have inspirational Herb Brooks quotations. Baker is scheduled from 10 a.m. to 11 a.m., Christoff 11 a.m. to noon, Christian 2 p.m. to 3 p.m. and McClanahan 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.

This weekend eight wrestlers who won titles last year will try to repeat as Big Ten champions including Minnesota’s Tony Nelson, Dylan Ness and Kevin Steinhaus.  The Big Ten Wrestling Championships are tomorrow and Sunday at Wisconsin.  Penn State has won four consecutive team titles but the Gophers are ranked No. 1 nationally in the USA Today/NWCA/AWN Division I Coaches Poll.  Penn State is ranked No. 2, Iowa No. 3.

Hammond Stadium, the Twins spring training home in Fort Myers, is being renovated and changes include a walkway around the field providing fans with various views of the gameday action while enjoying more concession options.  Minnesotan Rolf Bjelland praised the walkway in an e-mail and offered other comments after attending a recent game:

“Our arrival was effortless with good parking direction and very friendly parking attendants. There is ample parking and an oversupply of handicap parking. Walking from the parking lot to the stadium, one has the feeling of a county fair with wonderful colors, crowds of people and various outside vendors. …

“They now have two grass slopes for spectators—great for sunbathing and child play. The field looks like a carpeted checkerboard in green and the infield like a well-manicured golf bunker.”

Comments Welcome

U Women’s Team Needs Tourney Run

Posted on March 5, 2014March 5, 2014 by David Shama

   

Although apathy characterizes the attitude of many fans toward Gophers women’s basketball, there is anticipation and curiosity about the team that begins play in the Big Ten Tournament tomorrow night as the No. 6 seed.

Coach Pam Borton’s team finished 8-8 during the regular season, the program’s best showing since 2009 and the last year Minnesota was invited to the NCAA Tournament.  The Gophers won six of their final eight league games, and a win over No. 11 seed Wisconsin tomorrow evening would almost certainly guarantee an NCAA invite.  Minnesota is 19-11 overall and may qualify for the NCAA Tournament even if the Gophers can’t win a game in the conference tourney in Indianapolis.

But Borton and her team need to build momentum in the program by not only winning a couple of NCAA tourney games this month, but also earn major success in the future with plus-.500 Big Ten records. The program has faltered since the glory days of 2003, 2004 and 2005 when Minnesota played in the Sweet 16 twice and Final Four once.  The Gophers were 6th in the conference standings this season, certainly an improvement over the previous four years of 11th, 9th and two 8th place finishes.

The Gophers averaged 9,800 fans per game in 2003-2004, and 9,200 and 8,329 the following seasons, ranking in the top five or six nationally for women’s college basketball attendance.  The last three seasons the Gophers have averaged 2,835, 3,277 and 3,178 fans per game.

The Gophers can do better on the court and at the box office than the results of more recent seasons.  The program has the potential to be a revenue producer for the athletic department and no doubt athletic director Norwood Teague wants to see home attendance more comparable with Big Ten leaders like Purdue and Michigan State who averaged 8,031 and 7,145 fans per game this season.

Teague’s reputation is that of a basketball authority.  He hired nationally respected Shaka Smart as men’s coach at VCU.  Last year he dismissed Tubby Smith as Gophers men’s coach and hired Richard Pitino who has impressed with his teaching skills while working with minimal talent compared to the Big Ten’s best teams.

Teague also hired Beth Goetz last year as his department’s senior women’s administrator.  Before coming to the Gophers, Goetz was at Butler where she earned praise from Bulldogs’ renowned head basketball coach Brad Stevens.  Her responsibilities at Minnesota include women’s basketball and it seems likely she will play a key role in evaluating Borton after this season.

Borton has been Minnesota’s head coach since 2002.  The athletic department invested significantly in her despite struggles on the court and large financial losses with the program.  (Example: a May 4, 2013 Star Tribune story reported a 2011-2012 “deficit of almost $2 million.”)  Borton has received over $400,000 annually since the 2008-2009 season and at that time was in the top one-third of the Big Ten’s best paid women’s coaches.  Her contract extends through the 2016 season.

Among the positives Goetz could mention in an evaluation of the coach are two of Borton’s best recruits ever, junior guard Rachel Banham who led the Big Ten in scoring at 23.3 points per game and freshman center Amanda Zahui B., the conference’s top rebounder at 11.5 per game.  Both players were chosen all-Big Ten first team by the media.  The media and coaches chose Zahui B. as Freshman of the Year.

If Banham and Zahui B. could lead the Gophers to a couple of wins in the Big Ten tournament and two more in the NCAA, the momentum going into next season will be noticeable and that apathy bandwagon would have fewer passengers.

Worth Noting 

The Timberwolves, 30-29, wouldn’t earn a spot in the NBA Western Conference playoffs if the season ended now but Minnesota can’t be counted out.  Starting tonight at Target Center against the Knicks (21-40), the Wolves face six opponents in the next seven games with records at least a half dozen wins under .500.  Six of the games are at home for the Wolves who have a realistic chance to earn the eighth and final playoff spot before the season ends on April 16.

Another opportunity awaits later this month when the club has games at Dallas and Memphis, and home against Phoenix.  The Mavericks, Grizzlies, Suns and Warriors are the teams most immediately ahead of the Wolves in playoff positioning.

The possibility of the Wolves earning a playoff spot this year and next is expected to have a lot to do with whether All-Star forward Kevin Love opts out of his contract in the 2015 offseason.  In his five previous seasons in Minneapolis the team has yet to make the playoffs.  Winning is something Love knew at UCLA and as a pro with the 2012 gold medal U.S. Olympic team.

Although the lure of playing for a better team (perhaps in a warm weather climate) is worth worrying about, Love could decide to stay here if the Wolves become a legitimate top 10 NBA team with more promise ahead.  He might not find another point guard who sets him up better for open shots than Ricky Rubio.  Also, don’t discount the relationship between Love and Flip Saunders, the team’s president of basketball operations who has made it a priority to develop rapport with the 25-year-old superstar.

Former Vikings coach Bud Grant will speak at the March 13 CORES luncheon at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Bloomington. Grant, who was one of the Gophers greatest athletes ever and played two seasons for the Minneapolis Lakers, coached 11 championship teams with the Vikings. Grant, who turns 87 on May 20, will have copies of his book, I Did It My Way, on sale at the luncheon. CORES is an acronym for coaches, officials, reporters, educators and sports fans.  Reservations (by March 10) for the lunch and program can be made by contacting dotsethj@comcast.net.

Grant’s buddy Sid Hartman, the Star Tribune columnist and WCCO Radio personality, will be 94 on March 15.

Defensive end Everson Griffen never won a starting job with the Vikings but figures to create some stir as a free agent because of his strong pass rushing skills.

No doubt former Gophers offensive coordinator Jedd Fisch, now the OC with the NFL’s Jags, has to be anticipating Jacksonville taking one of the top college quarterbacks with the No. 3 selection in the NFL Draft’s first round.

Former Twins first baseman Justin Morneau, in his first spring training camp with the Rockies, is hitless in two at bats.

Baseball America’s top 10 Twins prospects (in order) are Byron Buxton, Miguel Sano, Alex Meyer, Kohl Stewart, Jose Berrios, Eddie Rosario, Lewis Thorpe, Trevor May, Danny Santana and Jorge Polanco.  Five of those prospects are pitchers including Thorpe who is among the least familiar names to some Twins fans.  Thorpe, 18 and from Australia, signed with the Twins as an undrafted free agent last July.  He led the Gulf Coast League in strikeouts with 64 in 44 innings pitched, starting eight games, relieving in four and compiling a 4-1 record with a 2.05 ERA.

FOX Sports 1, the nation’s new sports channel trying to rival ESPN, makes its major league baseball programming debut April 5 with a doubleheader that includes the Twins at Indians game.  The other telecast will be the Giants at the Dodgers.

Former Vikings safety Darren Sharper, who faces multiple rape charges, has been fired by the NFL Network.

St. Olaf men’s basketball coach Dan Kosmoski, a former Gophers assistant, made his 20th season memorable.  The Oles are MIAC playoff champs for the first time in school history and advance to the NCAA Division III Tournament where they play Central College (Iowa) on Friday in Stevens Point, Wisconsin.  St. Thomas, the team that lost to St. Olaf last weekend in the title playoff game, is also in the NCAA Tournament with a game on Friday against Augustana (Illinois) in Whitewater, Wisconsin.

St. Olaf’s Sam Daly and St. Thomas’ Courtney Pahl have won with the MIAC Elite 22 Award for men’s and women’s basketball.  The elite 22 awards program recognizes MIAC athletes in various sports for high academic and athletic achievement.  Daly, a senior with a 3.65 GPA, has a double-major in chemistry and psychology. Pahl, a sophomore with a 4.0 GPA, has a double-major in biochemistry and biology.

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