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Retractable Roof Not Worth the Fuss

Posted on May 14, 2013May 14, 2013 by David Shama

  

The new Vikings stadium won’t have a retractable roof.  So what?  Get over it.

About one-third of the world’s population subsists on $2 per day, according to last Sunday TV’s 60 Minutes.  Don’t whine about not being able to accommodate a retractable roof in the $975 million budget.  That’s plenty of money to spend without adding on the retractable roof for another $25 to $50 million.

The design announced on Monday night detailed how part of the roof and huge pivoting doors will allow light into the building, providing the feeling of that long desired outdoor experience.  The stadium will have seven levels, seat 65,000 fans for Vikings games, provide close proximity to the field and be able to accommodate more types of events than any facility in the world, according to venue promoters.

Pro football is a spectacle well suited to indoor accommodations.  It’s a made for TV sport and NFL stadiums are giant TV studios.  Vikings fans will be cozy inside their new stadium with views of the downtown skyline and giant video boards to entertain themselves.  The purple-dressed throngs will be able to walk to the stadium in controlled climate comfort because of the skyway system linking to the facility.

From Detroit to Houston, the NFL has embraced the indoor football experience in multiple cities.  In Detroit the Lions play in a fixed roof facility and in Houston the Texans hardly ever play under blue sky despite having a retractable roof, preferring a climate controlled environment.

Instead of complaining about the absence of the roof, celebrate that this city and state has decided to build a state-of-the-art facility that will compare favorably to any in the world. This will be no built-on-the-cheap stadium like the Metrodome, a facility where tightwad politicians and administrators thought about not using air conditioning to save money.

Even when it was new, the dome with its Teflon coated roof, never won a beauty contest.  Shoulder pads are optional in the overcrowded concourses.  Visiting the restrooms is usually a tradeoff in missed game time.  Worst of all, a roof collapse always seemed a possibility.

The Metrodome did ensure the presence of the Twins and Vikings in Minnesota for more than 30 years.  In the 1970s both franchises wanted the downtown dome rather play in outdoor Met Stadium.  The Vikings particularly pushed hard for a dome.  Historians will remember there once were plans for the Twins to stay in Bloomington while the Vikings would move into a football only covered facility on the west side of downtown.  A parking ramp was to surround the exterior and daily revenues would help pay for the stadium.

The design detailed by HKS Sports on Monday night gave confidence to the notion that this new endeavor will be a world-class stadium.  There’s been a history here of building stadiums without a commitment to quality but that won’t be true of the Vikings’ stadium.  Both Met Stadium and the Metrodome were built with “what can we get by with approaches.”  TCF Bank Stadium and Target Field broke with that sorry mantra and the Vikings stadium looks like it will go a step higher.

The new stadium will host 10 or more Vikings games per year but it will also be a giant indoor park hosting high school and college baseball, saving the spring season in some years here in our bizarre climate.  There will be glamorous and not so glitzy uses of the facility ranging from Final Fours to neighborhood rollerblading, from rock concerts to conventions.  Yes, we might even see a bowl game here and certainly the stadium will host the Prep Bowl just like the Metrodome has for all these years.

A few years ago speculation was the Vikings were headed to Los Angeles.  But the Vikings will be playing in a new stadium in Minneapolis in 2016 and right now LA is still trying to figure out how to finance a pro football facility.  Not only that but LA’s baseball and college football teams play in old stadiums while here in Minneapolis our teams are in new facilities.

Maybe Hollywood is overrated.   Maybe like a retractable roof.

1 comment

No Decision on Webb as Viking WR

Posted on May 10, 2013May 14, 2013 by David Shama

  

Quoting Vikings’ general manager Rick Spielman after a one-on-one interview earlier this week:

On Joe Webb playing wide receiver, not quarterback:  “We’ll look at a lot of different options.  Coaches will make that decision on where he finally ends up, but I know we’ll experiment and do a lot of different things. That’s why you’re in this offseason program now.”

Background: Webb, 26, has been practicing his catching skills this spring and is expected to play wide receiver in the team’s organized practices during May.  Although Webb has three seasons of NFL practice and game experience at quarterback, his size, 6-4, 220, and athleticism make him an interesting experiment at wide receiver, a position he played at times in college.  It’s an opportunity created too by the acquisition of veteran quarterback Matt Cassel who is the No. 2 quarterback now, not Webb.

Spielman on quarterback Christian Ponder who came out of a slump and helped lead the then 6-6 Vikings to a 10-6 record and the playoffs:  “We saw that last year (a step forward).  The biggest thing was for him to start out strong, to go through his slump…but to be able to come out of that and then lead us.  We had Adrian Peterson who had a phenomenal year, but give a lot of credit to Christian with what he was able to do through those last four games, especially two very tough places to go play on the road (St. Louis and Houston).”

Background: The Vikings like the presence of having nine year veteran Cassel around Ponder to help as a mentor.  Ponder is the team’s No. 1 quarterback and his continued development begins any list of whether the Vikings can win the NFC North, or even qualify for the playoffs again.

Spielman on building a championship team:  “We’re feeling we’re trying to do everything we think is right to bring in the right players.  We feel very confident and excited about the coaching staff, and with coach (Leslie) Frazier and everything they’re able to do and bring.  So just like everybody else, we’re definitely trying to build a championship team or else we wouldn’t be doing this.”

Background:  Spielman said this time of year every team in the NFL has championship ambitions and he’s right.  The Vikings haven’t won a division title since 2009 and bottomed out in 2011 with a 3-13 record.  The franchise has made astute draft choices to rebuild the roster and create competitiveness among players.  The Vikings have also given new contracts to retain core players in offensive tackle Phil Loadholt, wide receiver Jerome Simpson and linebacker Erin Henderson, although they did lose veteran cornerback Antoine Winfield this offseason.  But the Vikings are on the rise in accumulating young, talented players while keeping most of their best veterans.

Spielman on whether the political views of Chris Kluwe were a factor in releasing the nine year veteran punter:  “…I have the utmost respect for Chris and his outspokenness — that he has the courage to get out there and speak his mind.  That has nothing to do with the evaluation on what we’re trying to do as a football team.  So that’s two totally different, separate entities, and what he does outside of our building, more power to him. …That’s his right as a U.S. citizen.”

Background:  Kluwe’s replacement, 2013 fifth round draft choice Jeff Locke, will earn a lot less compensation than Kluwe, and that had to be a consideration by the Vikings.  The Vikings will also have a punter in Locke who is eight years younger than Kluwe.  At UCLA, Locke did his punting outdoors while Kluwe, playing at Mall of America Field and other domes, did a lot of indoor kicking.  In 2014 and 2015 the Vikings will be playing outdoors at TCF Bank Stadium.  Perhaps Locke gained favor for that reason, too.

Spielman on Kluwe punting outdoors and the decision on replacing him with Locke:  “I think he (Kluwe) can punt outdoors.  He’s just been a little inconsistent.  I know the way our roster is shaping up and understanding where we’re going to be two, three, four years from now, it was a unique opportunity to get a young punter. ..Just a little bit a part of our youth movement, and understanding the financial situation with Chris.  It’s just all purely based on football and trying to make the best football decisions you can make.”

Worth Noting

My reaction will be extreme surprise if plans announced next Monday regarding design of the Vikings’ stadium includes a retractable roof.  It seems improbable with the limitations of the $975 million budget — and now uncertainty regarding projected revenues for the state’s share of $348 million — that the project can include a retractable roof.

The Minnesota Sports Facilities Authority, the Vikings and HKS Sports will announce details regarding design of the multi-purpose stadium Monday night at a MSFA board meeting at the Guthrie Theater. Expect the stadium plan to include creative ways to allow light into the building even though the roof will be fixed.

This week the Steelers signed veteran offensive tackle Guy Whimper.  Not exactly a made-for-Hollywood football name.  Vikings’ general manager Rick Spielman was asked light-heartedly if he would sign a player with that name.

“Actually he’s a very good player,” Spielman said.  “In our business we don’t pay very much attention to names.  We just pay attention if they can play or not.”

Schedulemakers from the two conferences sent the Gophers a message when the matchups were announced on Wednesday for next season’s Big Ten/ACC Challenge. The matchmakers don’t think the Gophers will be an exceptional team, and delivered the same message to Florida State, Minnesota’s opponent for the Tuesday, December 3 game at Williams Arena.

Not that Gophers’ season ticket holders aren’t at least somewhat appreciative to have a power conference team on the home nonconference schedule that is typically filled with the likes of American, Lafayette and Tennessee State.  It’s just that a yawn can be excused since the schools have played against each other four times (2-2) in the 14 year history of the Challenge.

The Gophers will have to become a Big Ten title contender to command a game against legendary ACC schools like Duke, North Carolina and Syracuse but even a game in 2014 against Notre Dame, Georgia Tech and North Carolina State would be more fun than another matchup against the Seminoles.

The surprising Twins, now over .500 with a 16-15 record, won three of four games in Boston this week and will play the Red Sox in Minneapolis May 17-19.

The Twins will see their former shortstop, J.J. Hardy, when they play the Orioles in a three-game series starting tonight at Target Field.  The Twins traded Hardy in 2010 and never have replaced his offensive production at shortstop.  He has six home runs this season, more than any Twins player.

The Twins have parted with several players in recent years who would be major assets to the club.  A list can start with outfielders Carol Gomez, Torri Hunter and Michael Cuddyer.  Gomez leads MLB in hitting at .386, Hunter is fifth in the American League at .344 and Cuddyer is among NL leaders at .319.

Former Twins’ first baseman David Ortiz has impressive numbers for the Red Sox in limited plate appearances (68), hitting .353 with a .662 slugging percentage. Wilson Ramos, who would give the Twins needed catching and bench depth, has often shown a good bat since joining the Nationals in 2011.

Collective earned run averages for Twins’ starting pitchers have ranked high this spring but ex-Twin Kevin Slowey has surprised with a 1.81 ERA and 1-2 record for the Marlins.

Productive moves by Twins’ general manager Terry Ryan in the last two off seasons have included adding pitchers Jared Burton and Kevin Correia, catcher Ryan Doumit, outfielder Josh Willingham, and 2012 draft choice Byron Buxton (outfield).  Ryan is rebuilding the club in his second tenure as GM.

Augsburg’s football team defeated a Canadian foe 78-6 in an exhibition game in Winnipeg last weekend.  It was the Auggies’ third international football game in school history having previously been to Canada and New Zealand.

The Hobey Baker dinner on May 22 at 317 On Rice Park in St. Paul is a near sellout.  The event will honor 2013 Hobey Baker winner Drew LeBlanc and Legend of Hockey recipient Jeff Sauer.  More at Hobeybaker.com.

Comments Welcome

Saunders Tested Buyer Interest in Wolves

Posted on May 8, 2013May 8, 2013 by David Shama

 

Write down the names of well-known Upper Midwest businessmen T. Denny Sanford and Bill McGuire as potential Timberwolves owners.  Flip Saunders told Sports Headliners he contacted representatives of both men last summer about the Minneapolis-based NBA franchise.

At that time Wolves owner Glen Taylor was interested in identifying a majority owner for the club who would eventually take over for him.  Since then Taylor decided to remain in control but less than a year ago Saunders, then looking for his next basketball opportunity, made contacts with Sanford and McGuire representatives.

Saunders, a former NBA coach who last week was named by Taylor as the Wolves’ president of basketball operations, thought that Sanford and McGuire, both wealthy basketball fans, “would be good people” for the organization.  It might be that one day either or both are involved financially.

Saunders himself is now a minority owner.  “The reason I’ve invested is because I believe we’re moving forward,” he said.

Saunders didn’t barter his undisclosed minority share.  He paid cash and plans to buy more interest in the club some day.

The Wolves were devastated by injuries last season, finishing with a 31-51 record.  The club is much better than the record indicates with Olympian forward Kevin Love, promising point guard Ricky Rubio and other worthy players but Saunders knows he has plenty of work ahead in building a better roster.

“If I had to say a word, it’s going to be a process.  I am realistic.  I am not going to buy into it’s great and everything is rosy… (and) everything is ready built because there are 30 other teams in the league and a lot of those teams are saying the same thing.  So it’s a process but we have some pieces to put together.”

Worth Noting 

Good guy and former Gopher basketball player Larry Overskei is disappointed his nephew Chris Halvorsen, a non-scholarship player, is no longer on new coach Rick Pitino’s Minnesota team.  Halvorsen participated in a few workouts but since has been told the Gophers are going in a “different direction,” according to an e-mail Overskei sent at the request of Sports Headliners.

Overskei’s comments included this: “So now we have an ’M’ man, all-Academic Big Ten and graduating on May 10th with a degree in Bio-medical Engineering and he is told he is not wanted back for his last year of eligibility. GO FIGURE! Plus his uncle is a basketball alumni.”

Halvorsen, 22, played in seven games for the Gophers last season and averaged  0.6 points per game.  The 6-8 former Henry Sibley High School graduate transferred to Minnesota from Valparaiso after the 2009-10 season.

Goalie Niklas Backstrom has missed all four Wild playoff games including last night’s 3-0 loss to the Blackhawks.  His unavailability for the team’s first playoff series since 2008 can’t be helpful for his future with the club.

Backstrom is an unrestricted free agent this summer.  At 35, he earns a reported $6 million in the last year of his contract.  A pro hockey source, speaking on condition of anonymity, speculated the Wild will let Backstrom go elsewhere and use Josh Harding and Darcy Kuemper in goal for 2013-2014.

Other Wild players with expiring contacts as unrestricted free agents are forwards Matt Cullen and Pierre-Marc Bouchard.  Both might be playing their final games this spring for the Wild, although the source said Cullen is especially valued for his attitude.  “He is a coach in the locker room,” the source added.

After last night’s game the Wild trail 3-1 in the playoffs and while “anything can happen” in postseason hockey the source also said Minnesota’s speed among its players is “not close to Chicago.”  “My observation is their depth and team speed needs to improve,” he added.

He predicted this summer the NHL will announce the 2015 NHL Winter Classic will be hosted by the Wild, with Target Field the more likely site than TFC Bank Stadium.

Sports Headliners reader Tim Hoff e-mailed that on a trip to Israel he and his wife unexpectedly saw Vikings’ owner Zygi Wilf.  “In Jerusalem we stayed at the Ramada.  While there we noticed Zygi Wilf in the lobby and were told he owned the Ramada.  During our stay we toured the Israeli Museum which features the Dead Sea Scrolls as well as the King Herod display.  During the tour we were told one of the exhibits would soon be dedicated.  The Wilf name appeared on this exhibit.”

Former Viking running back Ted Brown, who was drafted out of North Carolina State, was announced yesterday by the National Football Foundation as one of 12 players named to the 2013 College Football Hall of Fame.

Saint Benedict’s first-year second baseman Kim Lidstone saw her near-season-long 31-game hitting streak come to an end last week — the longest since 2004 in NCAA Division III softball and tied for fourth longest ever.

Comments Welcome

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