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Lurtsema Advice to Vikings: Avoid Te’o

Posted on April 23, 2013April 23, 2013 by David Shama

 

Bob Lurtsema, who has impressed with his past opinions on the NFL Draft, cautions the Vikings about selecting controversial Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o.

Lurtsema, who in 2011 labeled now Vikings’ tight end standout Kyle Rudolph as the “sleeper of the draft,” doesn’t hold back when talking about Te’o who several months ago was connected to a national story about a girlfriend hoax.  “There is something wrong with the kid and I wish him well, but the Vikings don’t need those kinds of headaches,” the former Vikings’ defensive lineman said.  “Distraction, distraction, distraction.”

Te’o has worked on restoring his reputation and mock draft writers have him being chosen during the first round, perhaps selected by the Bears at No. 20 or the Vikings at No. 23 or 25.  But some observers like Lurtsema think having Te’o around will create locker room problems and bad press.

Lurtsema said Te’o tried to rationalize his slow 40-yard dash time at the NFL Combine this winter because he was under pressure.  That makes Lurstema wonder how Te’o will respond to the pressure of game situations including when from his linebacker position he makes audible calls impacting teammates. “As a defensive lineman I don’t want to wonder, ‘Where did he get that?’ ”

Lurtsema believes in giving “guys second chances but there’s something wrong there.”  The Vikings parted ways with problem players in the past including this winter sending Percy Harvin to the Seahawks.  If the Vikings draft Te’o on Thursday night they “bring in the biggest PR problem in the world,” Lurstema said.

“I wouldn’t touch him with a two million foot pole,” he added about Te’o, a player who had a disappointing national championship game against Alabama in January.

With two draft picks in the first round and one in the second, the Vikings’ priority should be a cornerback, linebacker and defensive tackle, Lurtsema said.  Veteran corner Antoine Winfield left the Vikings for the Seahawks during the offseason.  “I don’t think they realize how much they will miss Winfield,” Lurtsema said.  “I hope it doesn’t show up that much.”

Lurtsema does put an asterisk by his priorities for the Vikings and their early choices in the draft that continues Friday with rounds two and three, and Saturday with rounds four through seven.  While he liked the improvement of the team’s offensive line last season, he would take a “slam dunk” offensive guard if that kind of talent were still available to the Vikings at No. 23 in the draft.

Between now and the draft Lurtsema doesn’t expect Vikings general manager Rick Spielman to reveal intentions.  “I’ve never seen a guy with so many curveballs,” Lurtsema said in admiration.

Vikings & Other Notes

Spielman is enthused about this year’s draft.  “I think this is one of the most interesting drafts because of the depth, and us (selecting) at No. 23 and 25,” he said at his news conference this afternoon.

The Vikings have 11 draft slots including those two first round opportunities.  Spielman said the club has “8,000 different scenarios we can go in.”

He predicted an active trading week by NFL teams and the Vikings could be in the mix.  With so much depth in the draft, the Vikings might move back in the order of selections believing they can still acquire players to help them and perhaps add draft choices for 2013 or 2014.  “I don’t see us looking to move up but that could change,” Spielman said.

Spielman believes the quality and depth of the draft is such that he expects to acquire “significant players” even in round four.  He projected acquiring players in the draft who will be a “major part” of the team in 2013.

Spielman said the club will sign Pat Williams to a contract on Thursday and release him Friday so he can officially retire as a Viking.  The former defensive lineman, 40, left the Vikings after the 2010 season as a free agent.

Condolences to former Vikings’ defensive end Carl Eller regarding the death of his mother. Ernestine Eller, 87, passed away last week, and a memorial service will be held tomorrow starting at noon at Zion Baptist Church in Minneapolis, according to an obituary in today’s Star Tribune.

The Gophers announced today that Daquein McNeil has signed his National Letter of Intent and will be eligible to play as a freshman next fall.  McNeil, who averaged 19 points per game playing for a New England prep school last season, had college offers from prominent basketball schools including Louisville.

Rookie Oswaldo Arcia, playing in his fourth major league game for the Twins this afternoon, hit his first career home run.  His three run homer gave the Twins a 4-3 win over the Marlins.  He hit three home runs in 33 at bats playing for Triple-A Rochester earlier in the year.

Admission to the Gophers’ spring football game on Saturday is free but donations to the Gary Tinsley Memorial Scholarship Fund are encouraged, according to Gophersports.com.  Game time is 1 p.m. with preceding activities including a flag football event involving Gopher football alumni starting at 10:45 a.m. in TCF Bank Stadium.

The Wild is 1-1 in games this season against the Kings, the team Minnesota hosts tonight at Xcel Energy Center.  Trying to solidify its position in the NHL playoffs, the Wild’s remaining games after tonight are with two teams Minnesota is undefeated against this season, the Oilers (3-0) and Avalanche (3-0-1).

Wild players will wear custom-designed camouflage jerseys during warm-ups tonight.  The jerseys will be auctioned online (Wild.com) starting Thursday with proceeds going to the Minnesota Wild Foundation and Defending The Blue Line. 

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Mauer Turns 30 with Critics & Admirers

Posted on April 19, 2013April 19, 2013 by David Shama

 

Joe Mauer’s 30th birthday is today.  A cynic might suggest the Twins’ catcher will receive more well wishes from across the country than here in Minnesota.

“He’s under appreciated in his own market,” said Dave Mona, co-host of WCCO Radio’s Sports Huddle.  “Talk shows rip on him all the time.”

The rant over Mauer is about his $23 million salary, minimal home run production and the losing ways of his team.  In 2009 his future with the Twins was uncertain until he signed a contract that puts him among a half dozen or so of the best paid players in major league baseball.

Mauer’s critics argue the hometown hero makes the list of baseball’s best paid players but he isn’t a top five player.  Some baseball authorities wouldn’t even grant Mauer No. 1 status among catchers, preferring the Giants’ Buster Posey or the Cardinals’ Yadier Molina.

But how is it fair to blame Mauer for having leverage with the Twins back in 2009 to command one of baseball’s richest contracts?  “I do believe the Twins had to sign him to a large contract because they were moving into a new ballpark and needed the fan base to be on board that they were going to build a winner,” said a sports marketing authority who spoke anonymously.

In two of their three seasons at Target Field the Twins have finished last in the Central Division.  While injuries sidelined Mauer for much of the disastrous 2011 season (99 losses), he came back last year to play in 147 games and the team still lost almost 100 games.  Mauer doesn’t deserve blame for a franchise whose front office let the talent pool dry up, led by a pitching staff that nosedived to among the worst in baseball.

Home runs?  The casual fan looks at the 6-5, 230-pound Mauer and wonders why has he hit only 22 home runs during the last three seasons, including just 10 last year in 545 at bats.  “I know people want more home runs and I think he could do it,” said Gophers’ assistant baseball coach Rob Fornasiere.  “But that’s not who he is.”

Fornasiere said that in over 30 years of high school recruiting in Minnesota Mauer is the best player he’s seen, and the former Cretin-Derham Hall three-sport star has the same beautiful batting swing he had as a sophomore.  “From a mechanical standpoint he’s just so consistent,” Fornasiere said.

Mauer has been in birthday celebration mode this week.  After consecutive four hit games on Monday and Tuesday nights, he is on a nine game hitting streak — .462 average with two home runs and seven RBI.  The hitting party has raised his batting average for the season to .386.

This week Mauer looks like the hitter who batted .365 in 2009, whacking balls up the middle, finding the gaps in the outfield, and sending balls into the left field corner.  His batting average that season was the highest ever for a major league catcher.  He led the American League in batting average, on-base percentage and slugging percentage — something no catcher had ever done before in MLB history.

Mauer has three batting titles since his big league career began in 2004.   He won the AL MVP Award in 2009.  Coming into this season he had the highest batting average in the major leagues since 2006 (.328) and his on-base percentage of .411 was fourth best.

For those who study baseball, Mauer’s prowess hitting the ball is even more remarkable because of the position he plays.  Catching is the most physically demanding position on the field.  It’s a punishing job squatting behind the plate, subjecting legs to constant stress while hands, fingers and other body parts are targets for foul tips.

Mauer has always liked being back of the plate, helping to dictate the game. His knowledge about opposing hitters helps get the most out of the Twins’ pitching staff, and his strong throwing arm is a deterrent to base runners.

Spoken like a career baseball man, Fornasiere said good baseball teams are built on quality position players in the middle of the field starting with the catcher.  “There’s not a team that wouldn’t take him (Mauer),” Fornasiere said.

If critics don’t like Mauer, then Fornasiere probably has it right when he said, “You’re dealing with other people’s expectations.”  Those who admire Mauer have their own expectations about him including one day seeing him inducted into baseball’s Hall of Fame.

“He’s already done things no other catcher in the history of baseball has done,” said Mona.

And Mauer is only 30 years old.

Worth Noting

A ceremony Sunday at Siebert Field will recognize Gophers’ baseball coach John Anderson for his 500th career Big Ten win last weekend at Northwestern, according to assistant Minnesota coach Rob Fornasiere.  Anderson, who started coaching the Gophers in 1982, is the all-time winningest Big Ten baseball coach — 87 wins ahead of retired Ohio State coach Bob Todd and 205 more than ex-Minnesota coaching legend Dick Siebert.  Fornasiere said that since the fall of 1981 there have been 37 head baseball coaches in the Big Ten.

The Gophers play a series against Michigan State at Siebert Field this weekend including Sunday’s game starting at 1:05 p.m.  Fornasiere said the Spartans’ leadoff hitter and center fielder is freshman Cam Gibson who is batting .297.  He is the son of Kirk Gibson, the Diamondbacks’ manager and former major league star.

The Gophers, 23-13 overall and 7-2 in conference games, are tied for first place with Michigan in the Big Ten standings.  Minnesota pitcher Tom Windle, 5-2 with a 1.35 ERA, leads the conference in strikeouts with 57 in 60 innings.

New Minneapolis public schools athletic director Trent Tucker has known Gophers’ basketball coach Richard Pitino since Pitino was five years old.  Former Henry football coach Jim Dotseth said Tucker attended a meeting of retired city coaches on Wednesday and Tucker remembered young Pitino from his days playing for the Knicks and coach Rick Pitino, Richard’s father.

I don’t know by how much, but the odds of the Gophers convincing DeLaSalle junior Reid Travis to attend Minnesota went up when Pitino hired former Islanders’ star Ben Johnson as an assistant coach.

But not so sure about Minnesota’s chances for landing Apple Valley point guard Tyus Jones and Cooper shooting guard Rashad Vaughn, both juniors.  Elite prep players often want to know how their college experiences can help them earn a roster spot in the NBA.  Pitino, at 30 years old, can’t talk about any players he sent to the next level as a head coach.  Tough competition against power coaches like Kentucky’s John Calipari and Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski.

In a somewhat surprising prediction, Dane Brugler from Cbssports.com has quarterback Ryan Nassib from Syracuse going No.8 to the Bills in his NFL mock draft.  The Gophers beat Nassib and the Orange 17-10 last year at TCF Bank Stadium.  None of Brugler’s other colleagues have Nassib being selected in the first round of their mock picks.

Former Star Tribune Vikings writer Don Banks posted his mock draft for SI.com  with Minnesota selecting Washington cornerback Desmond Trufant at No. 23 in the first round and Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te’o at No 25.

In a mock NBA draft, NBAdraftnet.com projects the Timberwolves choosing shooting guards Shabazz Muhammad (UCLA) and Tim Hardaway, Jr. (Michigan) with the No. 9 and 25 picks in the first round.  The projections also include former Gophers Rodney Williams and Trevor Mbakwe going to Dallas and Utah with the No. 43 and 44 picks.

In a comparison worthy of shoot-first former Gopher Kris Humphries, Muhammad had 27 assists in 32 games for the Bruins last season.

Former Saint John’s national championship coach John Gagliardi and his son Jim Gagliardi will speak Tuesday evening at the MVP event at Trinity Lutheran Church in Stillwater.  Together they helped coach the Johnnies to the 2003 Division III national title.  MVP stands for men, value, purpose.  MVP gatherings celebrate sports with food, fellowship and inspiration.  More information is available at Trinitylc.org.

Comments Welcome

Taylor May Change Wolves Sale Plan

Posted on April 17, 2013April 17, 2013 by David Shama

 

Glen Taylor told Sports Headliners on Monday he might change his intent to find a majority buyer for his Timberwolves.  He also said the future of his team for next season starts with coach Rick Adelman who he believes will decide to stay with the franchise.

Taylor, the club’s majority owner since the mid-1990s, has been shopping the team for awhile because at 71 years old he thought that might be a good idea if he encountered health problems.  While Taylor has identified potential out of town buyers, he hasn’t found one from Minnesota and he wants the Wolves to continue to play in Minneapolis.

“I don’t have a deal (to sell),” said Taylor who turns 72 tomorrow.  “I may go back to what I originally started out with.  Go out and look for some minority interests.  I would look for people who do live in the state to replace some of the people that have been my partners in the past. … So I may just change my tactic next summer and go back to talking to some of those people — that maybe their interest isn’t to run the club — but they would like to be a partner in it.”

Former UnitedHealth executive Bill McGuire is the new owner of the Minnesota United FC soccer team.  McGuire was a high school basketball player and is a Wolves season ticket holder.  He has the financial resources to become the Wolves’ majority owner, keeping a Minnesotan in charge of the franchise.

Taylor said McGuire hasn’t expressed interest in buying him out but could be on a list of potential minority investors.  “He’s the type of person I would ask.  He’s a friend and I respect him.  He’s a good business guy, and he’s got an interest in the Timberwolves.”

Crushed by injuries, the Timberwolves end their regular season tonight at San   Antonio.  The team’s hard luck year included the absence of Adelman who left the team for 11 games to support his wife Mary Kay.  She suffers from seizures and Adelman’s coaching future is uncertain.

Taylor said Adelman is waiting for medical consultation on his wife and that information could come in the next 30 days.  “We’re hoping so, yes,” Taylor said.

Adelman, 66, is among the NBA’s most admired coaches and it’s believed if necessary he will retire to spend more time with his wife.  Although Taylor has a president of basketball operations (David Kahn) with an expiring contract and challenges with player personnel, it is the coach and his availability for next season that is priority No. 1.  He described Adelman as “the key” to the immediate future.

“I think right now the No. 1 decision for me is Rick,” Taylor said.  “I just think with his experience and his relationships with these players and this team, that’s such a critical part of our plan.  And whatever he decides could affect some of the other decisions.”

Kahn’s contract expires May 27.  Taylor said all the injuries this season make it difficult to evaluate whether to retain Kahn, and the Wolves’ owner wouldn’t say whether he will announce a decision prior to late May.

Flip Saunders began his Timberwolves’ career as the team’s general manager and then was quickly given the coaching job.  Would Taylor consider Saunders for either the coaching or general manager positions?

“I just think that I should just not answer that question but first find out what Rick’s decision is going to be,” Taylor said.  “I just think that’s way premature to say what I might do because at this point I believe Rick is going to stay.  He hasn’t said that but that’s my belief.”

Taylor said he recalled in 2005 then general manager Kevin McHale fired Saunders because McHale thought a change was needed.  The Wolves were losing games and Taylor was told by McHale the players-coach relationship wasn’t what it should be.  But later Taylor didn’t hesitate to recommend Saunders for another head coaching job in the NBA.  Saunders is now involved with NBA commentary for ESPN but he and Taylor are friends.

Raising Taylor’s optimism for next season are conversations he’s had with his two star players, power forward Kevin Love and point guard Ricky Rubio.  Love played in only 18 games this season because of injuries and Rubio missed early games recovering from the torn ACL that sidelined him a year ago March.

The two players have informed Taylor about their summer plans to prepare for the 2013-14 season, describing not only what they intend to do but also the names of people who will assist them.  Love and Rubio also told Taylor they welcome having a Wolves’ assistant coach monitor their work.  “To me, it speaks of confidence,” Taylor said.

Worth Noting 

A decision regarding the site for the NHL’s Winter Classic in 2015 could be announced next month, according to a knowledgeable pro hockey source.  He said it’s not known when the league will make its choice but the Wild is pushing for 2015.

Both TCF Bank Stadium and Target Field are under consideration for the outdoor game annually played on New Year’s Day.  The Twins want the game, and they and the Wild can use the attraction to reward season ticket holders who will receive priority seating.

The NHL likes to involve teams who have North American appeal and the Wild have attractive players in Niklas Backstrom, Mikko Koivu, Zach Parise, Jason Pominville and Ryan Suter, but the franchise has yet to establish itself as a postseason winner.  “If they make the playoffs (this spring) they have an outstanding chance of getting the game (for 2015),” the source said.

The 2014 Winter Classic will be hosted by the Red Wings and played at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor.

The Wild are ranked No. 15 among 30 teams in the latest ESPN.com NHL power rankings. 

Sports Illustrated looks clairvoyant regarding Twins’ rookie center fielder Aaron Hicks who has only two hits in 45 at bats this season.  In its April 1 baseball issue the magazine said Hicks’ .370 batting average and four home runs in spring training were misleading, pointing out that most of his success came against “fringe” major league and minor league pitching.  S.I. said the four home runs came with an “asterisk,” pointing out three were wind-aided.

Meanwhile, the Twins’ two regular center fielders from last season are having mixed results.  Denard Span is hitting .313 with two stolen bases in 13 games for the Nationals.  Ben Revere, now with the Phillies, is hitting .207 with five stolen bases in 14 games but he made headlines with an extraordinary catch earlier this week.

The Twins (6-7) have a two-game winning streak after defeating the Angels last night, 8-6.  The Angels (4-10) are tied for the worst start in franchise history, matching the 1961 season when the club was in its first season ever.

The Gophers had their 10th spring practice yesterday and all sessions have been indoors.  Rather than risk pulled muscles or other cold weather induced problems, the Gophers have stayed inside where they can also better focus on execution.

Happy birthday to former Gophers’ basketball coach Jim Dutcher who turns 80 today.

G.G. Smith, Tubby Smith’s son who had been an assistant men’s basketball coach at Loyola University Maryland, was promoted last week to the head job there.  Does that mean Tubby’s son Saul Smith, who was an assistant at Minnesota, will be added to the Texas Tech staff where his dad now coaches?

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