Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room

Ex-Twins Making All-Star Bids

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

 

Joe Mauer could see five former Twins at next month’s All-Star Game at Citi Field in New York.  Mauer, though, is likely to be the only current Twin in the July 16 game featuring the best players from the American and National Leagues.

Fans have Mauer as the leading vote recipient among catchers in the most recent results released by Major League Baseball while three former Twins are also popular.  J.J. Hardy is first among AL shortstops, David Ortiz leads the designated hitters and Torii Hunter is third in balloting for outfielders.  Counting the starting pitcher, eight position players and a designated hitter, the American League lineup in the 2013 All-Star Game could include four players, or 40 percent of the personnel, with Twins connections.

It’s up to the All-Star Game managers to choose the pitchers for their rosters and ex-Twins Joe Nathan and Jason Marquis look like possibilities for the AL and NL staffs.  Nathan, who the Twins didn’t re-sign after the 2011 season, already has 20 saves for the Rangers and was chosen for the 2012 All-Star game.  Marquis, who the Twins released last season, is 8-2 with the Padres and just one win behind the National League leaders.

When have so many Twins alums been All-Star candidates?  Perhaps never, and that dates back to when the franchise started playing in Minneapolis-St. Paul in 1961.  Players have more freedom to switch teams than years ago and the Twins have parted ways with a lot of guys because the organization was unwilling (or unable) to meet salary demands.  But the club has made some poor personnel decisions, or just been unlucky with the development of some players who went elsewhere.

Hardy is one of the most distressing mistakes.  The Twins traded Hardy to the Orioles in late 2010 for two minor league pitchers who did nothing for Minnesota.  Hardy is among AL leaders in home runs with 13 and tops in double plays for shortstops with 47.  Not only are the Twins still trying to fill the shortstop role but also in center field where Carlos Gomez, now a .300 hitter with power, once played for Minnesota before being traded to the Brewers to acquire Hardy.

When the 2013 season started there were 35 ex-Twins on MLB rosters, according to a April 13 story on Startribune.com.  Most of them obviously won’t make the All-Star Game but some are producing the kind of numbers that could make a struggling Twins team coming off consecutive last place finishes in the AL Central a better club.

Among alums with the best hitting stats are Gomez and Michael Cuddyer with batting averages of .326 and .337.  Even infielder Nick Punto, hitting .263 for the Dodgers, might be an upgrade as a leadoff hitter for the Twins.  Pitchers Grant Balfour, Jesse Crain, Francisco Liriano and Pat Neshek have turned heads with their impressive ERAs.  R.A. Dickey, although struggling this season, won the Cy Young award in 2012.

The Twins, of course, are looking to the future, not the past, while anticipating the development of hot young prospects in the minor leagues.  Perhaps soon those prospects will be turning the franchise around but at this year’s All-Star Game some Twins fans could turn their heads away and wince after seeing who is on the field, or even while looking at the statistics of Twins alums.

Comments Welcome

Smith to Hire another Ex-U Assistant

Posted on June 12, 2013June 12, 2013 by David Shama

 

Although it hasn’t been announced, Tubby Smith told Sports Headliners yesterday Vince Taylor will join his staff at Texas Tech.

Taylor worked for Smith as an assistant coach at Minnesota until earlier this year.  Already on the staff are Joe Esposito, who was Smith’s director of operations with the Gophers, and Alvin “Pooh” Williamson, the first player Smith recruited when he was head coach at Tulsa.  Smith is still searching for a director of basketball operations at Tech.

Smith’s son Saul, another assistant with the Gophers, won’t be joining the staff in Lubbock.  Smith said his son has always been interested in NBA coaching and could join a pro organization.  “Saul has a great mind and feel for the game,” his father said.

Smith was the Gophers’ coach for six seasons before new athletic director Norwood Teague dismissed him last March.  Smith, who will be 62 on June 30, was surprised by his termination and thought the Gophers job would be his last.

Throughout his tenure at Minnesota there were rumors other schools wanted to hire Smith who built a national reputation at Kentucky by winning the 1998 NCAA championship and routinely had his teams advance to the NCAA tournament second round or better.  Smith confirmed yesterday there were a “bunch of times” he was pursued by other programs while at Minnesota.

If Smith had known one day the Gophers planned to part ways with him he would have reacted differently to the contacts from other schools.  “I would have been long gone,” he said.

Smith said he left the Minnesota program and community better than he found it including through his work with the Minnesota Chapter of the Tubby Smith Foundation that supports charities benefitting underprivileged children.  Highlights of Smith’s basketball success at Minnesota included three NCAA tournament appearances and a nationally publicized upset win over No. 1 ranked Indiana at Williams Arena last February.

At Texas Tech Smith takes over a team that was 11-20 last season and 3-15 in Big-12 Conference games.  The two previous seasons the Red Raiders were 8-23 and 1-17, and 13-19 and 5-11.

One worry Smith doesn’t have is his former home in Minneapolis.  He and wife Donna sold the residence a couple of weeks ago.

Worth Noting 

Gophers basketball coach Richard Pitino has a day camp for youngsters 7-18 this week at Williams Arena.  Cost is $325 per camper.

Wally Ellenson, who will be a sophomore playing for Pitino next fall, earned All-American recognition last week in the high jump (2.20 meters) at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships.

Bob Sadek, who was the starting quarterback on the Gophers’ 1963 football team, passed away last month.  Sadek’s career as a teacher and coach followed his sports success at Richfield High School and with the Gophers.  His younger brother Mike Sadek played with the baseball Giants after signing his first professional contract with the Twins.

Gophersports.com is featuring a video highlight of the 1973 Minnesota football team that finished third in the Big Ten with a 6-2 record.  The team included freshman running back Larry Powell who after the season developed French Polio ending his football career and changing his life.  Powell was a special prospect and Gophers coach Cal Stoll often said Powell was going to be his “Tony Dorsett”—the University of Pittsburgh running back who won the Heisman Trophy in 1976.

Vikings coach Leslie Frazier said at OTAs yesterday he was impressed with a telephone call from veteran defensive lineman Jared Allen. “He calls me, maybe a month ago now, and he says, ‘coach, count on me this season to be even a better leader than I have been in the past.’  That was music to Coach Frazier’s ears.

“It was unsolicited and he calls me out of the blue and tells me that. That’s what you need. You need your great players to be great leaders if you want to have a chance to change your culture and also win games. For him to call me and say he wants to do even better than I’ve done before, that’s inspiring. …”

Angel Morales, Eddie Rosario, Miguel Sano, the three Twins prospects promoted earlier this week from Class A Fort Myers to Class AA New Britain, couldn’t make their Eastern League debuts last night because the Rock Cats’ game with Altoona was rained out.

Only three MLB relief pitchers have more saves than former Twin Joe Nathan who has 20 for the Rangers.  His ERA is 1.71.

Public relations executive and WCCO Radio “Sports Huddle” co-host Dave Mona will throw out the ceremonial first pitch at the Twins-Royals game at Target Field on June 27.

The College World Series starts Saturday in Omaha.  Indiana is the first Big Ten team to play in the series since Michigan in 1984.  The Gophers’ last appearance was 1977.   Minnesota won NCAA titles in 1956, 1960 and 1964.

Indiana advanced to the College World Series with a two-game regional playoff sweep of southern power Florida State.  NCAA rules changes are making northern teams more competitive than in the past, according to Gophers assistant coach Rob Fornasiere.  Teams across the country have the same starting date for practices, first games and number of games.

During the second day of last week’s first-year player draft the Twins’ selections included two players from Indiana, 6-9, 250-pound pitcher Aaron Slegers and 6-2, 200-pound third baseman Dustin DeMuth.  Fornasiere said Slegers has “amazing control and athleticism for a guy that size.”  He described DeMuth as “very athletic” with a strong left-handed bat.

Fornasiere said Coon Rapids High School pitcher Logan Shore is the “most polished” Minnesota high school pitcher he has seen in years.  Fornasiere also said Shore showed no serious interest in the Gophers and will pitch for Florida.  Fornasiere heard Logan was looking for major compensation in a pro contract but wasn’t selected until the 29th round by the Twins.

Jim Dutcher enjoyed a reunion last month with 13 of his former players in Ypsilanti, Michigan where he coached Eastern Michigan for six seasons.  Among those unable to attend was one of Dutcher’s ex-NBA players, George Gervin, selected one of the league’s 50 greatest players in 1996.

Dutcher, the former Gophers coach from 1975-1986, thinks Minnesota’s Trevor Mbakwe will be a mid-second round draft selection in the NBA draft later this month.

Minnesota native Mike Muscala who played collegiately at Bucknell and Indiana’s Cody Zeller are among the NBA draft hopefuls who will workout this afternoon at Target Center.

Mike Miller, the Mitchell, South Dakota native who played for the Timberwolves during the 2008-09 season, has come off the bench to make nine of 10 three point shots in three games of the NBA Finals for the Heat who trail the Spurs 2-1 in the series.

Comments Welcome

Gerhart Open about Future Post-2013

Posted on June 7, 2013June 7, 2013 by David Shama

 

Toby Gerhart becomes an unrestricted free agent after this season and the Vikings’ second team running back told Sports Headliners he isn’t about to predict where he wants to be employed in 2014.

“Totally open.  We’ll see.  It’s going to be interesting.  For me I am just focused on this year.  We have a good team. …”

In three seasons Gerhart has mostly warmed the bench with a close-up view of all-world running back Adrian Peterson.  The exception occurred in 2011 when he started five games, mostly because Peterson was injured.  That season he rushed for 531 yards and a career best 4.9 yards per carry.  In his rookie year of 2010 he rushed for 322 yards but last season just 169 as Peterson dominated the offense while coming within nine yards of breaking the NFL all-time single season rushing record.

Playing behind Peterson is something like being vice president of a country with a dictator for president.  There is The Man, and then everyone else falls in line.  Peterson is 28 and Gerhart is only two years younger.  Peterson is incredibly gifted and also motivated including his zeal for offseason training and apparent will to play at a high level for years to come.

Gerhart, an All-American at Stanford and second round draft choice by the Vikings in 2010, is a power runner with deceptive speed.  At the NFL scouting combine, Gerhart said he was timed at 4.53 seconds.  He spent much of the last offseason working to increase quickness and his weight is down a few pounds from his 235 of last season.  “Feel quick, feel good out here,” Gerhart said after practice on Wednesday.

Gerhart also believes his skills are that of an NFL starter but his opportunities have been so limited with the Vikings where he’s accepted his role without complaining. “It’s hard to show what I can do when you get one carry in the first (quarter) and another carry in the fourth (quarter).  That’s not really my style of running.  I am a grind down the defense type of back.

“I hear everybody say he only averaged three yards a carry, or whatever it is.  But given the circumstances and the situation that I am in, in terms of carrying the ball, I just gotta do a job and a role.  It makes it tough but, hey, we’ll see what happens.”

Obviously 2013 is a year that will provide answers about Gerhart’s future.  Will the Vikings ease the pounding on Peterson and give Gerhart more opportunities in the offense?  Or will Gerhart’s total carries be similar to 2012 when he had a career low 50?  Will the Vikings trade Gerhart between now and their opening game in September?  Such a move would acknowledge what most observers already believe and that is the Peterson system will be status quo in 2013.  A trade could bring the Vikings more value in return than waiting to lose Gerhart for a compensatory draft pick next year.

Whatever the answers, Gerhart has the right attitude by emphasizing the present moment and not focusing much on a future that is only partially under his control.

“Are the Vikings going to sign me back?  I don’t know,” Gerhart said.  “Hopefully I put enough good stuff on tape that A they want me back, or B another team wants me…we’ll see what happens.” 

Worth Noting 

Gerhart reportedly earns $630,000 in base salary this season, according to various Internet sources.   

Gerhart talking about expectations for third-year quarterback Christian Ponder: “I expect him to continue to grow.  I think he’ll grow as a leader.  So far this spring he’s actually thrown the ball really well around here.  He’s good with his reads, good velocity and been accurate so far.  So he’s looking good this spring.”

Gerhart and two friends were fishing on Lake Minnetonka near Big Island on Monday.  “We probably caught (and released) 50 bass,” Gerhart said.  “It was unbelievable.  There was streaks where six casts in a row I would reel in a bass. Another time there was four casts in a row. …It was one of my best fish days of my lifetime.” 

The Vikings expect 200-300 members of the press at their game against the Steelers in London on September 29.

Former Viking center Matt Birk told KFAN FM yesterday morning he and his world champion Ravens teammates will receive their Super Bowl rings today.  Birk chose not to join his teammates at the White House earlier this week for a Super Bowl celebration with President Barack Obama.  Birk said on KFAN that the President’s comments several weeks ago saying “God bless Planned Parenthood” were the reason he chose not to attend the White House event.  Birk is known for his pro-life views.

Fox Sports North will televise the minor league Kane County game against Cedar Rapids (Twins’ super prospect Byron Buxton) on Monday starting at noon.  Replay Monday night beginning at 6:30 p.m.

Timberwolves forward Kevin Love said on ESPN TV yesterday morning that he and guard Ricky Rubio will workout together in Los Angeles this summer in preparation for next season. 

Dave and Linda Mona have country music star Kathy Mattea booked for the fourth annual Camden’s Concert on Wednesday, July 17 at the Hopkins Center for the Arts.  Dave e-mailed that more than $100,000 has been generated from past events to benefit cystic fibrosis research.  Some revenues are generated from the silent auction, and items that will provide experiences such as great seats to a game, or riding a Zamboni are being sought for this year’s event.  Suggestions can be emailed to: l.mona@creativeenvironments.net.

Some offseasons are more interesting than others, and there’s nothing boring about what lies ahead for the Wild.  The club has no first round draft choice but it wouldn’t be surprising if a trade changes that before NHL teams make their picks on June 30.

Decisions will have to be made about whether to retain selected Wild free agents.  Salary cap restrictions are expected to make the Wild cautious about who they bring back and also acquire, but after having a mediocre season on the ice everyone knows the team has to improve.  “The single biggest need for next year is to get bigger on defense,” an NHL source told Sports Headliners.

Adding more quality players throughout the roster, including more productive scorers, is a need, too.  The responsibility for making changes starts with general manager Chuck Fletcher who is being judged by an impatient owner, Craig Leipold, and skeptical fan base, according to the source who spoke on condition of anonymity.

The team doesn’t have a winning legacy and recently announced season ticket price increases for next year.  The source said some season ticket holders are debating about renewing and could be hold-outs at Xcel Energy Center until after the schedule begins, waiting to see how the team is playing.

Although there was speculation about the job security of Fletcher and coach Mike Yeo earlier this spring, the source doesn’t believe Leipold was close to making a change. The dynamics will be different next season, though.  “If the Wild gets off to a bad start, it may be the demise of the whole (coaching) staff,” the source said. “If in the first 15 games they lose 10, it will not be good.”

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 460
  • 461
  • 462
  • 463
  • 464
  • 465
  • 466
  • …
  • 1,184
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Tommies Locker Room   Iron Horse   Meyer Law   KLN Family Brands  

Recent Posts

  • Even Hospice Can’t Discourage Ex-Gopher & Laker Great
  • At 61, Najarian Intrigued about “Tackling” Football Again
  • NFL Authority: J.J. McCarthy Will Be ‘Pro Bowl Quarterback’
  • Vikings Miss Ex-GM Rick Spielman’s Drafts, Roster Building
  • U Football Recruiting Class Emphasizes Speed, Athleticism
  • Keeping QB Drake Lindsey in 2026: Job 1 for Fleck, Gophers
  • Advantage & Disadvantages: Vikes Face former QB Darnold
  • Time for Vikings to Try Rookie Max Brosmer at Quarterback?
  • Mike Grant’s Season: 400th Win & Another State Tourney Run
  • Vikings Head Coach O’Connell Calls Boo-Birds ‘Justified’

Newsmakers

  • KEVIN O’CONNELL
  • BYRON BUXTON
  • P.J. FLECK
  • KIRILL KAPRIZOV
  • ANTHONY EDWARDS
  • CHERYL REEVE
  • NIKO MEDVED

Archives

Read More…

  • STADIUMS
  • MEDIA
  • NCAA
  • RECRUITING
  • SPORTS DRAFTS

Get in Touch

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme