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Rodney Williams: U Deserves Top 25

Posted on November 9, 2012November 9, 2012 by David Shama

 

Preseason college basketball polls have been giving the Gophers “sniffs,” but Minnesota hasn’t been included in the top 25 men’s basketball rankings of polls by the Associated Press, USA Today Sports, Sports Illustrated, and AthlonSports.com.  Gophers forward Rodney Williams told Sports Headliners he believes Minnesota should be ranked with the nation’s better teams.

“I definitely think we deserve to be in the top 25,” he said.  “I think we’re a team with a lot of depth, a lot of experience now.  I think we can give a lot of teams trouble.”

After two exhibition wins, Minnesota opens the regular season tonight at home against American University and can begin to make its case with the pollsters.  The Gophers return all five starters from last season’s NIT finals team.  The regulars consist of Williams, a senior, and junior guard Austin Hollins, and sophomores Joe Coleman (forward), Andre Hollins (guard) and Elliott Eliason (center).  Off the bench are two players who could become starters, senior forward Trevor Mbakwe and sophomore center Maurice Walker.

Coach Tubby Smith told Sports Headliners earlier this fall his team has three potential NBA draft choices in Andre Hollins, Mbakwe and Williams.  But despite the talent and depth, there are doubts about the Gophers including whether the team can effectively close out games and avoid the injuries that have contributed to consecutive 6-12 regular season finishes in the Big Ten.

Williams thinks the Gophers are ready for a successful season in his last year at Minnesota.  “It would definitely mean a lot because these past years we’ve been so close,” he said.  “We lost a lot of games that we could have won with little turnovers at the end, or not getting that big rebound, but I think with the team we’ve got now we’ll be able to get over that hump and make some noise in the Big Ten Tournament, in the conference play and the NCAA Tournament.”

Mbakwe, who missed most of last season because of his injured ACL, has played limited minutes in the two exhibition games.  He said his leg strength isn’t 100 percent but he expects to be at that level in a month or so.

But Williams already sees the physical, explosive power player that could impact games blocking shots, rebounding and scoring inside like Mbakwe did last year before the injury.

“You haven’t been able to see much of him out there in exhibition games because they are exhibition games and you don’t want to risk anything with him being back a little earlier than a lot of people thought,” Williams said.  “I definitely think Trev is back to his old self and you’ll be able to see that a lot more on Friday.”

American University is a Washington, D.C.-based school and member of the Patriot League.  The Eagles, who were 20-12 last season, placed third in their conference last year and could push for a similar finish in 2013.

Comments Welcome

Prediction for U Win at Illinois

Posted on November 9, 2012November 9, 2012 by David Shama

 

J Leman, former Illinois linebacker and now a football reporter for the Big Ten Network, has twice seen both the Illini and Gophers play this season.  Who will win tomorrow’s game in Champaign?  “I would think the Gophers would win,” Leman told Sports Headliners this week.

The Illini are 0-5 in the Big Ten and are rebuilding under new coach Tim Beckman.  The Gophers, 1-4 in conference games, are rebuilding too, but Leman said Minnesota is “the better team.”

The Illini are 2-7 overall and don’t have the incentive of qualifying for a bowl game.  Leman, though, is familiar with his old program and said Gophers fans shouldn’t expect a demoralized Illinois team.  “I expect a full effort,” he said.

In various aspects of football the Illini haven’t been able to execute, despite having talented players and preseason expectations by some observers that Illinois would qualify for a bowl game.  Leman said the team strength is the front seven on defense, particularly the four down linemen.  The Gophers have an inexperienced offensive line and for the Illini to win the game, the front four probably has to “dominate,” Leman said.

The Gophers, 5-4 overall, can qualify for their first bowl game invitation since 2009 with a win tomorrow.  Freshman Philip Nelson, who Leman predicts can become a “special quarterback,” talked about the game’s importance.

“Being at five wins right now, we want to get that sixth one and get those seniors to a bowl,” he said.  “Every week is very important to get a victory but this one does have a little more meaning to it, just like last week (a loss to Michigan).”

Senior linebacker Mike Rallis is focused on the Illinois game and didn’t want to look at tomorrow’s game as more winnable than Minnesota’s last two games against Nebraska (7-2) and Michigan State (5-4).  “We can’t get caught up too much in what the sixth win means,” he said.  “We gotta prepare for this game, one single game.  If we get too big picture minded, it’s going to hurt us.”

Worth Noting

Gopher football players shaved their heads last week in support of teammate Connor Cosgrove who has cancer.  Rallis had shoulder-length hair prior to the trim.  How does he like the new hairdo?  “I am a little bit lighter and quicker on the field,” he joked.

Nelson is a primary runner in the Gophers’ offense.  Although he’s a quarterback, he doesn’t foresee sliding to the ground to avoid contact in future games, and he referenced quarterbacks coach Jim Zebrowski.

“The way coach ‘Z’ teaches us, there’s no sliding allowed,” Nelson said.  “We want to run physical.  We want to split defenders and fall forward, and get extra yards.  That’s the philosophy that we’re taught and that’s what we go by.”

Former Gophers quarterback Tim Salem is the Illinois running backs coach and special teams coordinator.  Salem’s dad, Joe, was the Gophers head coach from 1979-1983.

Mike Dunbar is offensive coordinator at Northern Illinois for the 9-1 Huskies.  Dunbar was Minnesota’s offensive coordinator in 2007.

Here are Sports Headliners’ Big Ten football power rankings: Ohio State, Nebraska, Penn State, Michigan, Wisconsin, Northwestern, Michigan State, Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota, Purdue and Illinois.

The Vikings will try to defeat the Lions for a second time this season when the teams play on Sunday at Mall of America Field.  But it’s not at all probable the Vikings will have the same kind of special teams success they achieved in a 20-13 win in Detroit on September 30.  In that game Percy Harvin had a 105-yard kickoff for a touchdown and Marcus Sherels ran 77 yards to score on a punt return.

Harvin leads the NFL in receptions with 62.  He’s caught a pass in every game of his NFL career, 62.  He also leads the league in kickoff return average at 35.9 yards.

Adrian Peterson, who has run for over 100 yards in each of his last three games, leads the NFL in rushing with 957 yards.  He’s second in yards per carry at 5.7.

Vikings offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave was asked yesterday if Peterson, who rehabilitated in the off-season from ACL surgery, is capable of a continued heavy workload.  “I think he’s back up to full speed.  I think he is. He’s doing a terrific job and we’re doing a good job of blocking and creating some air in the defense for him to do his thing.”

Musgrave also said it wasn’t known yesterday if Harvin’s sprained ankle would allow him to play on Sunday.

The Vikings have 74 sacks since the start of the 2011 season, the most in the NFL.  During that period the Vikings have the second most forced fumbles, 25.

Former Vikings receiver Nate Burleson is on injured reserve and won’t play for the Lions on Sunday.  He has a broken leg and is out for the season.

Silas McKinnie, a regional scout for the Lions, had the same responsibilities with the Vikings from 1997-2002.  He was once an assistant basketball coach for Clem Haskins with the Gophers.

Former Gophers tight end Charlie Sanders is assistant director of pro personnel with the Lions.

Gophers hockey coach Don Lucia told Sports Headliners he believes his team was probably a “little overrated to start the year.”  The Gophers have been ranked No. 1 or 2 in the country dating back to last month but he said the team needs time to work in new players, particularly goalies.

The Gophers (5-2 overall) are at Alaska Anchorage (2-2-2) for WCHA games tonight and tomorrow night.  A week from this weekend the Gophers play Wisconsin at home.  The Badgers are celebrating their 50th season of hockey and 40th anniversary of the 1973 national championship team.

The Timberwolves are off to a 3-1 start for the first time since the 2001-2002 season.  The Wolves play the Pacers at Target Center tonight.

Gophers baseball players will lay 40 square feet of sod at the new Siebert Field on Saturday.  Players were told to wear their “oldest and dirtiest clothes,” assistant coach Rob Fornasiere said.  One player responded: “That’s my daily wardrobe.”

Comments Welcome

QB Draft Pick Shadows Vikings

Posted on November 7, 2012November 7, 2012 by David Shama

 

Did the Vikings draft the wrong quarterback in 2011?

The answer isn’t so easy to finalize—at least yet.  Christian Ponder was chosen by the Vikings with the No. 12 selection in the first round of the 2011 NFL draft.  No other quarterback was then selected until the Bengals chose Andy Dalton in the second round with the No. 35 pick in the draft.

Before the draft, former Viking Bob Lurtsema was praising Dalton to Sports Headliners.  Reached by telephone on Monday, Lurtsema, who is still close to the Vikings and was in Seattle for the Seahawks game last Sunday, said that based on 1.5 NFL seasons Dalton would have been the “far better” choice for Minnesota.

Dalton made the Bengals and a lot of other admirers look good in his rookie season of 2011.  His numbers included 20 touchdown passes.  Even more important he helped lead the Bengals to the playoffs for only the third time since 1991.

But Dalton has hit something of a sophomore slump, throwing five interceptions in his last three games. Lurtsema, a former defensive lineman, said there is such a thing as a sophomore jinx and the problem is “you start thinking more” than is needed.

Dalton has passed for 2,130 yards this season, ranking No. 12 in the NFL, while throwing for 14 touchdowns and 11 interceptions.  Pretty comparable to Ponder’s 1,806 yards, 10 touchdown passes and eight interceptions.  Their passer ratings are 86.7 Dalton, 82.0 Ponder.

Dalton’s Bengals are 3-5 while Ponder’s Vikings are 5-4.  The Bengals have lost four consecutive games while the Vikings have been losers in two straight.

Not surprisingly, Lurtsema described Sunday’s Vikings home game with the 4-4 Lions as “huge,” and he hopes Ponder will shake off his Seattle performance that included no touchdown passes and 11 of 22 pass completions.

“I just hope he’s not playing scared because he’s missing a lot of open receivers,” Lurtsema said.  “Trying to be perfect—rather than going with instincts—can really take a toll on your game.”

Not just Dalton and Ponder from the quarterback class of 2011 are struggling.  No. 1 pick Cam Newton was sometimes the face of the NFL last season but in 2012 his numbers are humble including just six touchdown passes.  Jake Locker and Blaine Gabbert, quarterback first round picks at No. 8 and 10, have had their struggles, past and present.  Their teams, the Titans and Jaguars, have combined records of 4-13.

Playing quarterback in the NFL is perhaps the most difficult position in sports and a second-year player can still have a big learning curve in front of him.  A lot of factors impact success, including teammates, injuries, coaching and the opposition.  And what’s between a quarterback’s ears—meaning his confidence, belief in his system and ability to make adjustments—can be the kind of stuff that can challenge a quarterback in his second season, regardless of whether the rookie year was boom or bust.

Allow two more years and then judge whether Dalton, the redhead from TCU, would have looked better in purple than Ponder.

Worth Noting 

Ponder passed for 63 yards and had a passer rating of 37.3 in Sunday’s loss to Seattle, the Vikings’ third defeat in the last four games. Carlos Monarrez, writing for the Detroit Free Press on Monday, said “Minneapolis is now officially panic central” after the Vikings started the season 4-1.

“Looks like the Vikings are who we thought they were, namely a good defensive team that overachieved early on offense and now has regressed to the mean,” Monarrez wrote on freep.com.

Uh, oh.  There goes the Redskins Rule that said if Washington, D.C.’s NFL team lost its most recent home game prior to the presidential election the non-incumbent candidate wins the White House.  The Redskins lost at home on Sunday but Mitt Romney also lost the election yesterday to President Barack Obama.

The Gophers play at Illinois on Saturday, facing an Illini team that has lost six consecutive games.  With three games remaining on the schedule, the 2-7 Illini have no chance to qualify for a bowl game.

Minnesota, though, has a 5-4 record and can become bowl eligible if the Gophers  win against a team that has lost by two touchdowns or more in its six losses.  On Monday the dailyillini.com quoted quarterback Nathan Scheelhaase as saying the Illini are playing only for the “love of the game” now.

Gophers coach Jerry Kill talked about injuries yesterday and said receivers A.J. Barker and Derrick Engel are questionable for Saturday’s game.  Offensive tackle Ed Olson may be available.

Charlie Strong was Florida’s defensive coordinator in January of 2007 when the Gophers head football job was open.  The Gophers chose Tim Brewster but it is believed Strong might have taken the job if offered.  Strong became Louisville’s head coach in 2009 and this season the 9-0 Cardinals are ranked No. 9 in the BCS top 25.

It wouldn’t be surprising if Strong’s name was mentioned to succeed coach Derek Dooley at Tennessee.  The Vols are 0-5 in SEC games, 4-5 overall.

The Gophers are averaging 47,043 fans per game in attendance, lowest of their four seasons at TCF Bank Stadium.  Does a new stadium guarantee attendance success?  Maybe not.  The last three seasons in the Metrodome the Gophers averaged 52,206, 51,791 and 48,958.  Minnesota’s on-campus stadium has a capacity of 50,805 (about 14,000 fewer seats than the Metrodome) but the Gophers have only sold out one game during the last two seasons.

Brainerd coach Ron Stolski, the winningest prep football coach in state history, is looking forward to 2013.  In Brainerd’s final game this fall he started eight juniors and one sophomore on offense.  “Year 52 coming up.  Have as much interest, enthusiasm and passion as ever,” Stolski said via email.

Wolves guard Brandon Roy, trying to make an NBA comeback after not playing last season, has made just 0.292 percent of his field goals while averaging 6.7 points in three games.  He is averaging 4.3 assists per game.  The Wolves play the Magic at home tonight, Minnesota’s second regular season home game.

The Gophers have two potential NBA  first round draft choices in senior forwards Trevor Mbakwe and Rodney Williams but the team MVP could well be sophomore Andre Hollins.  As the point guard, he’s the floor leader including late in games when the Gophers have often had problems closing out opponents. Hollins can create his own shot, drive to the basket or make outside jumpers.

The Gophers open their nonconference schedule on Friday night against American University, the Washington, D.C.based-school that is a member of the Patriot League.  Last season the Eagles were 20-12 and are coached by Jeff Jones who played for Virginia against the Gophers and Kevin McHale in the 1980 NIT championship game.  Jones was head coach at Virginia when he was 29 years old.

The Eagles have seven seniors on their roster.  Junior center Tony Wroblicky had 18 rebounds in an exhibition game win over Mary Washington.

Gophers hockey coach Don Lucia will earn bonuses if his team wins the WCHA title and national championship.  The Gophers have been ranked first or second nationally in polls this fall.

Notable former Twins in free agency this off-season are Torii Hunter, Francisco Liriano, Kyle Lohse, A.J. Pierzynski and Delmon Young.  Bet your Target Field opening game tickets none of them will be pursued by the Twins.

Comments Welcome

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