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Greenway: Henderson to be ‘Great’

Posted on May 29, 2013May 29, 2013 by David Shama

 

Opinion, news and notes from Chad Greenway, Rene Pulley and Joel Maturi.

Chad Greenway said after practice this afternoon at Winter Park he expects Erin Henderson will be “great” at middle linebacker during the 2013 season.  Henderson is moving from weakside linebacker to middle linebacker and the transition will be among the most scrutinized Vikings moves between now and the end of the season.

Greenway said learning pass coverage responsibilities will be a challenge but Henderson has “great instincts.”  Greenway, the Vikings’ Pro Bowl strongside linebacker, will be surprised if Henderson doesn’t play well.  “He’ll be on it and will be great,” Greenway said.

Henderson, 26, knows there are doubters but said he isn’t upset with them.  “It doesn’t anger me.  I can’t get mad at people for having their opinions and having their beliefs and how they view things.”

Henderson has been dedicated to his conditioning during the offseason.  He knows he will be on the field for three downs at a time and doesn’t want a lack of conditioning to interfere with his “technique.”

Greenway, 30, said his offseason included activities to make him more effective within the “10-yard box” that he so often plays in during games.  “Worked on little things that can make my game a lot better.  Just balance, footwork.”

Youth basketball authority Rene Pulley told Sports Headliners prep point guard Tyus Jones is already an extraordinary player.  “He is like a pro now,” said Pulley who is executive director and CEO of Howard Pulley Basketball.

The Apple Valley High School junior is a target of new Gophers coach Richard Pitino, along with Robbinsdale Cooper shooting guard Rashad Vaughn and DeLaSalle forward Reid Travis who are other members of the state’s super class of 2014.  Pulley said it’s difficult for a young coach at a new school to recruit against coaching legends like Michigan State’s Tom Izzo and Duke’s Mike Krzyzewski.

Pulley doesn’t know if the Gophers will land any of the Big Three but Vaughn might be the most likely to play at Minnesota.  “He has always wanted to embark on his own trail,” Pulley said.  “Since the U is down on talent, he could trail blaze.”

Former Gopher Rodney Williams, trying to interest NBA teams, was scheduled to workout for scouts today at Target Center.  Pulley has observed the high potential, low performance four-year career of Williams at Minnesota.

“I think he was way under his potential, and I am not placing blame anywhere,” Pulley said.  “He has the athleticism of the LeBron Jameses, Kobe Bryants and Michael Jordans.  He can be a very fantastic player.”

Pulley expects his Pro City League at the High Performance Academy in Eagan to begin its schedule in late June.  Jones, Travis and Gophers players are among those expected to participate.  As in the past, the public is welcome.

Joel Maturi has spoken to new Texas Tech basketball coach Tubby Smith.  “He feels good about another opportunity,” the former Gopher athletic director told Sports Headliners.

How does Smith feel about his six seasons at Minnesota and being let go in March?  “He has nothing but good things to say about Minnesota,” Maturi said.

Although Smith was a national championship coach at Kentucky, he struggled at Minnesota winning just one NCAA Tournament game and had a losing record in the Big Ten.  Maturi, who hired Smith, declined to talk about why he believes the coach wasn’t more successful here.  “I have my own feelings but I don’t want them in print,” Maturi said.

Smith will have a more difficult time winning at Tech than he did at Minnesota.  The Red Raiders were 11-20 overall, 3-15 in the Big 12 Conference last season, and counting Bobby Knight employed five head coaches since 2007.

Smith has been a head coach at Tulsa, Georgia, Kentucky, Minnesota and now Texas Tech.  In a mid-May story by the Amarillo Globe-News he was asked how the Tech job compares to the others.  “It’s tough.  This is probably the toughest,” he said.

Smith has yet to complete his staff and recruiting seems to be off to a slow start.  Former Gopher assistant Joe Esposito, who has connections in Texas, is on the Tech staff.

Comments Welcome

Tapemark Golf: Good Stories, Great Cause

Posted on May 24, 2013May 24, 2013 by David Shama

 

Okay, trivia fans, answer this one:

Who is the only golfer to win the British Open, Scottish Open and Tapemark Charity Pro-Am?

I bet my typewriter more than one of you answered correctly with, “Tom Lehman.”

Minnesota’s pro-am hasn’t been around as long as the British Open and Scottish Open, but in more than four decades the event has commanded a lot of attention including memories of Lehman winning the 1990 Tapemark.

That was before Lehman, the Alexandria, Minnesota native, made it big on the PGA Tour.  Bob Klas Sr., who along with Tapemark company partner Tom Cody started the charity tournament, remembers Lehman was “flat broke” in 1990.

“He asked how long it would take to get a check, if he could win one,” Bob Sr. said.  “He was very concerned about his lack of funds.  It was interesting.  That was really the launching of his pro career. That was the pint of blood that kept him going.”

Klas said he thought Lehman earned a check for about $3,000 by winning the 1990 tournament.  Years later Lehman made a commercial promoting the event with this message: “Who won the British Open, the Scottish Open and the Tapemark Charity Pro-Am?”

This year’s Tapemark will be the 42nd and involve men and women — pros and amateurs — in early June at Southview Country Club in West St. Paul.  Golfers, volunteers and spectators are all welcome at the event that raises funds for agencies serving Minnesotans with developmental disabilities.  Through the years nearly $7 million has been donated to nonprofits.  More about the tournament online at tapemarkgolf.org.

Klas and Bob Jr. shared stories with Sports Headliners about the famous and not so famous figures associated with the Tapemark.  Tournament followers from the 1990s remember Denny Hecker was the major sponsor for two years.  He contributed about $70,000 in cash, plus promotional considerations. “I will say for all the things he was in the news for, everything he promised that he would do for us, he actually delivered on,” Bob Jr. said.

Hecker’s promotional assistance included bringing baseball great Pete Rose to town.  Rose played golf on a Friday afternoon and that night Hecker hosted his famous guest and a large group of Tapemark supporters at Manny’s Steakhouse.

Rose was the attraction after drinks and dinner, and his remarks were not exactly boring.  As a former player and manager for the Reds, Rose was well acquainted with franchise owner Marge Schott — a controversial figure even now after her death.

“She thought…Adolph Hitler did some pretty good things,” Bob Jr. recalled Rose saying about Schott.  “He improved the roads in Germany.  He started off okay but maybe toward the end (of his regime) he wasn’t so good.

“Pete tried to defend her (saying) ‘you need to understand that Marge has no friends.  The only thing that might be close to a friend is her dog.  Marge likes to drink.  Night games are particularly hard because she spends most of the day drinking before the game.’

“Basically the defense of Marge Schott from Pete Rose was she’s not really a bigot.  She’s a drunkard.”

Through the years there has been some great golf played at the Tapemark.  For championship consistency nobody was better than Don Berry who won the tournament six times. George Shortridge won five times.  Last year’s men’s and women’s pro champs were Craig Brischke and Martha Nause.

Long time Tapemark followers have fond memories of four-time champion Dave Tentis who first won the tournament in 1998 with his “miracle shot” at Southview. The final day Tentis trailed Aaron Barber by one shot on the last hole, No. 9.  The hole is surrounded by challenges including a pond, parking lot and road.  Despite the tight fairway, Tentis pulled out his driver, hit the ball about 330 yards and made it stick on the green.  “The best shot I’ve ever seen in Minnesota tournament golf,” said Gregg Wong, the former golf writer for the Pioneer Press.

Tentis two-putted for birdie and went on to win the tournament in a playoff.  No doubt he never looked back on his decision to use a driver, and not the five iron he contemplated.

Skill sometimes encounters luck at the Tapemark.  When those two forces meet, the result could be a hole-in-one and winning a new car.  Among the winners over the years has been Phil Johnson, son-in-law to Bob Sr.  Johnson’s hole-in-one on No. 15 was reported the next day in the Star Tribune along with these somewhat painful words: “On his way to shooting 104.”

Sometimes there’s no avoiding a tough day on the course, particularly when the strokes pile up for amateurs.  Years ago the tournament was on local television and the late Pete Boerboon, a great friend of the event, was really struggling on the course.

“His ball was in a bunker near the green and on his first shot he could not get out,” Bob Jr. said.  “On his second shot he knocks the ball across the green and into another bunker.

“By his ninth shot he was on the green.  Pete thought his saving grace was that the TV cameras had only been covering him from the start of playing No. 17, not all the way through his shots near and on the green.

“A few days after the tournament, he was taking the garbage outside when a neighbor said, ‘Hey, Pete, I saw you on TV and you had a rough time.’

“Pete replied, ‘Yeah, I had nine blows.’  The neighbor disagreed and countered, ‘No, you had 11.’ ”

Television coverage, other publicity and simply word of mouth has helped tell the Tapemark story over the years including the important purpose of the event. The inspiration for the tournament was Frances Klas, born in 1951 and mentally retarded.  Her dad and mom, Bob and Sandy Klas, learned about organizations available to assist children like Frances, and they wanted to help.

Today society is much more aware and accepting of those with developmental and learning disabilities than decades ago.  “The aware factor can’t be overemphasized because when we started out 42 years ago mental retardation was still in the background,” Bob Sr. said.  “We’ve done a lot of good.  Much of it has to do with the publicity we generated.”

Done a lot of good including fundraising…and had a lot of fun.

Comments Welcome

U RB Target Likes Iowa State

Posted on May 22, 2013May 22, 2013 by David Shama

 

Washburn High School four-star running back Jeff Jones is still verbally committed to the Gophers but there is no guarantee yet he will play for Minnesota, and Iowa State is a school of interest, too, according to Millers’ coach Giovan Jenkins.

“I would consider it a soft verbal,” Jenkins said about the Gophers.  “He (Jones) went to coach Kill and told him he committed too early.”

The Washburn junior first verbally committed to Minnesota coach Jerry Kill last year but since then realized he wants more time to decide on the college he will enroll at next year.  Jenkins told Sports Headliners on Saturday that Jeff’s father is “getting out of jail” and wants to be part of the recruiting process, so that is also a factor.

Jenkins believes Iowa State is a “soft” No. 2 behind the Gophers on the list of possible choices. “He likes the staff and proximity (of Ames) to Minneapolis,” Jenkins said.

In addition to Minnesota and Iowa State, Jones has offers from Illinois, Iowa, Kentucky, Michigan State, Syracuse and Wisconsin.  Although Wisconsin has a great tradition of running backs, Jenkins believes Jones is likely to choose Minnesota if he decides on a Big Ten school.

Rivals.com labels Jones a four-star prospect and ranks him No. 17 among running backs in the class of 2014.  Jenkins said Jones is a “once-in-a lifetime talent.”

The 6-foot, 190 pound prep is the first four-star running back to commit to Kill since he started coaching at Minnesota in 2011.

Jenkins described Jones as “big, strong, (with) excellent vision, great burst, very explosive — kind of a one-stop shop.”  But the coach said Jones has to determine how close he will come to fulfilling his potential.  If the desire and hard work are present, Jenkins projects Jones as a 220 pound runner in college.  “If he works hard, he could be the best at that level, too,” Jenkins said.

Jones has been a starter for Washburn since ninth grade and a major contributor to the Millers’ success.  In today’s world of transfers, Jones has been a target of other high schools.  “He gets approached every year,” Jenkins said.

Jones lives in the Washburn district and likes playing for the Millers.  He heard from former Miller David Gilreath that he regretted leaving Washburn for Robbinsdale Armstrong, according to Jenkins.  Gilreath is now in the NFL with the Steelers after a college career at Wisconsin.

“Everything he’s got (Jones), he’s got from Washburn,” Jenkins said. “He is a loyal kid.”

Worth Noting

Washburn coach Giovan Jenkins has two other players he expects will have college offers following summer camps, running back Raymonte Maynard and defensive end Clayton Burton.  Maynard could end up at a MAC or WAC school, according to his coach, while he identifies Burton as a “BCS kid.”

Bruce Feldman, writing yesterday for Cbssports.com, put Gophers defensive tackle Ra’Shede Hageman No. 2 on his annual college football “Freaks” list that recognizes players for their extraordinary athleticism.  Feldman wrote that Hageman can do a “360 dunk” and is the Big Ten’s most athletic defensive lineman.  “Not only does he have the 36-inch vert, but he also has bench-pressed 465 pounds and clocked an electronically timed 10-yard sprint in 1.57 seconds.  For comparison sake, no DT at this year’s NFL Combine jumped higher than 33 inches, and Terron Armstead, the offensive tackle who ran the blazing 4.71 40 at the combine, did a 1.64 in his 10.”

Former Vikings coach Bud Grant turned 86 on Monday.  Rick Reilly, writing for Espn.com yesterday, ranked Grant No. 11 on his list of the 20 greatest NFL coaches ever.

The basketball Gophers are looking at Rivals.com four-star center Dominic Woodson who no longer is committed to Baylor for next season.  Incoming Gophers freshman guard Daquan McNeil played with Woodson in 2011 at Vermont Academy in Saxtons River, Vermont.

Quinton Hooker will be presented with the Mr. Basketball trophy on May 29 at an invitation only reception in Brooklyn Park.  Mr. Basketball chair Ken Lien will make the presentation.  Hooker, a shooting guard, scored 2,147 career points and will attend North Dakota.  He is the 39th recipient of the award recognizing the best boys senior player in the state.

Last night’s NBA Draft Lottery telecast prompted memories from years ago when league commissioner David Stern mistakenly referred to the Minnesota Timberwolves as the “Minnesota North Stars” on national TV.

The Gophers baseball team plays its opening game in the Big Ten Tournament today against Illinois at Target Field, a facility Minnesota used for one game last year and the entire 2011 season.  How much of an advantage is that for the Gophers?

“None,” assistant head coach Rob Fornasiere told Sports Headliners.  “The tournament is wide open.  The league has improved so much the last five years.  Teams one through six are so evenly matched.”

The Gophers, the No. 4 seed, have lost six of their last eight games. “We haven’t hit or caught the ball very well (lately),” Fornasiere said.  “We’re second in the league in ERA but have struggled on offense all season.  We’re second to the bottom in hitting (average) and home runs.”

Fornasiere predicted the Gophers “will play hard” and be in close games during the double elimination tournament.  The Gophers’ pitchers in their first two games will be Tom Windle and DJ Snelten.  Fornasiere expects Windle will be taken in the first or second round of next month’s MLB amateur draft while Snelten will be among the first nine players selected.

Next year’s Big Ten tournament will be in Omaha before returning to Target Field in 2015.

A respected baseball source who has been involved with and followed major league baseball e-mailed Sports Headliners after reading Monday’s column about the length of MLB games.  He asked that his name not be used but wrote the following:

“MLB should demand that umpires enforce the rule of pitchers having to deliver the next pitch within 12 seconds of getting the ball back from the catcher with no runners on base, as it states in the rules.  The umpires never enforce this.  For example, (Jose) Valverde, the Tigers’ closer, takes about 30 seconds between every pitch, even with nobody on base.

“It’s a joke how umpires break up conferences on the mound:  They walk slowly out to the mound, tell them their time is up and then jog back to the plate to make it seem like they are hustling and that will speed up the game — which it doesn’t.

“They also need to cut down on players stepping out of the box after every pitch. Remember (Chuck) Knoblauch stepping out after every pitch and readjusting his batting gloves?”

Expect an announcement soon by the city and Timberwolves regarding a $100 million renovation of Target Center.

Former Wayzata High School tennis player Karl Gregor is the Intercollegiate Tennis Association Northeast Region Assistant Coach of the Year.  He is an assistant at Tufts.

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