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Shortell Feels on ‘Different Level’

Posted on August 21, 2012August 23, 2012 by David Shama

 

When cramps forced quarterback MarQueis Gray to the sidelines in the Gophers opener last year against USC, true freshman Max Shortell had to enter the game in the fabled Los Angeles Coliseum.  Shortell would later start two games for the Gophers.

Looking back at last year, Shortell said he realizes how inexperienced he was.  If called upon to replace Gray this season he will be much more comfortable.

“Last year I was almost just trying to make it through,” he said last week.  “This year I feel like I am on a whole different level.”

Shortell, who completed 26 of 54 passes while throwing two touchdown passes and two interceptions, acknowledged that for a backup quarterback to watch from the sidelines in games not knowing when he will play presents a challenge.

“It’s hard the whole game to be focused (while) on the sidelines,” he said.  “Coming into the game you know you’re not going to play but you have to be in every snap all week mentally.  You have to be prepared to play.

“As far as staying loose on the sidelines, that’s really hard to do.  Especially when it’s cold out.  …It’s real tough just to be waiting.”

Gray is a senior and could be one of the best quarterbacks in the Big Ten.  Shortell’s playing time might be even less than last season when he participated in eight games.

“I hope I can play,” Shortell said.  “I hope I can push MarQueis and step in when I need to.”

Shortell said the Gophers offense, now in its second season with a new coaching staff, is “light years” ahead of where it was in August of 2011.  “We’re making plays that we just missed last year.  In games we just missed plays and now out here on the practice field we’re making these plays.”

Gophers football notes and other items:

A priority for the Gophers in practice during August is special teams.  Coach Jerry Kill and his staff came to Minnesota from Northern Illinois with a reputation for producing results with special teams.  Minnesota won only three games last season but the recovery of a fourth quarter onside kickoff was a big play in a 22-21 win over Iowa and a fourth quarter blocked punt turned into a touchdown produced the final Gophers points in a 29-23 victory against Miami (Ohio).

Punting, kickoffs, coverages and returns receive Kill’s attention and it’s a good bet the Gophers will turn another game or two their way in 2012 with special teams.  “I think you always win in the kicking game,” Kill said last week.  “If you go look at NFL—at college football—the good teams gotta be good on special teams.  Because you’re gonna win some games on special teams, or you gonna lose some games.  And we’ve spent a heck of a lot of time on trying to win, and we’ve always been pretty good at it everywhere we’ve been. …”

Look for Kill to announce his starters for the UNLV game (August 30) in six days or so.  Regardless, in certain position units like the defensive line Kill will play subs, not just starters, in game action.

Sports Illustrated’s college football issue ranks Alabama No. 1 with two Big Ten teams in the publication’s preseason top 10—No. 6 Wisconsin and No. 8 Michigan State.  Other Big Ten teams in the top 25 are No. 13 Michigan, No. 19 Nebraska and No. 22 Ohio State.  The magazine lists seven Heisman Trophy favorites including Michigan’s Denard Robinson and Wisconsin’s Montee Ball.

The Universityof Minnesota Alumni Association is partnering with Creative Charters to promote a fan trip to the Gophers-UNLV game in Las Vegas.  The alumni association is also promoting a tailgate party before the game with a discount available for early registration.  More at www.minnesotaalumni.org

Vikings offensive coordinator Bill Musgrave said yesterday that backup quarterback Joe Webb looked better in his second preseason game than in the first.  The coach said Webb is making progress including understanding defenses.

“Well, Joe is making strides every day,” Musgrave said. “The other night he missed on a couple throws that he would like to have back, but he did some good things for us too. He made some plays with his legs when we spread him out and got everybody out of the backfield. That is definitely one of his strengths.”

Fritz Waldvogel, the former St. Thomas star, has scored 27 touchdowns in nine games playing in the German Football League, according to www.tommiesports.com.

Gophers assistant coach Saul Smith told Sports Headliners Maurice Walker, who missed all of last season, is healthy and playing summer basketball.  Smith said the Gophers need the 6-10, 289-pound Walker’s presence in the low post.  “We’ll need him in Atlantis,” Smith said about the November 22 Battle 4 Atlantis tournament in the Bahamas where the Gophers will play Duke.

Smith’s dad, Tubby Smith, starts his sixth season at Minnesota this fall.  Saul said this could be the best Gophers team so far but Minnesota “will have to prove it” in the Big Ten.

Prep basketball authority Ken Lien emailed that DeLaSalle forward Reid Travis, ranked by ESPN.com as the No. 31 player nationally in the prep class of 2014, has been offered a scholarship by Boston College.

Lien also reported that Cooper guard Rashad Vaughn said Baylor, Illinois, Iowa State, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, North Carolina and Texas are showing strong interest in recruiting him.

ESPN ranks Vaughn the No. 12 prospect in the class of 2014 while Apple Valley point guard Tyus Jones is No. 2.

NBC’s coverage of the USA men’s gold medal basketball game had 12.5 million viewers, while the USA women’s title game had 10.2 million, according to NBA.com.

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor left the states last week for China to participate in a mission with the Starkey Hearing Foundation.

The St. Cloud State men’s basketball team will play an exhibition game on November 2 at Michigan State.  Kevin Levandoski, a 6-1 sophomore guard from Appleton, Wisconsin, is on the Huskies roster and is MSU coach Tom Izzo’s nephew.  Levandoski suggested the game to Izzo, according to online reports.

About.com ranked the greatest baseball players of all time last week.  Among catchers, the Twins Joe Mauer didn’t receive a mention among the top 15.  Harmon Killebrew ranked No. 6 among first basemen and Jim Thome No. 10.

The Gophers volleyball team is ranked No. 16 in the country in a preseason poll by the American Volleyball Coaches Association.  In a poll of Big Ten coaches Minnesota is picked to finish No. 4 in the league with Nebraska the title favorite.

Comments Welcome

Golf Game Causes & Eases Pain

Posted on August 16, 2012August 16, 2012 by David Shama

 

A column about my tormented golf game?  I have contemplated such an effort for weeks.  Voices race through my head both urging and protesting the exercise of writing a golf confessional.  Today I relented.

Me:  Why now?  Why are you willing to do a self-analysis today?

Self:  I am desperate for a column idea.  And maybe this interview will at least shut you up until you start second-guessing the stock portfolio tonight.

Me:  How would you describe your game in 2012?

Self:  Depressing and painful.  I am playing my worst golf in many years, and that’s like saying the Washington Generals have slipped a notch or two.

Me:  Doesn’t anything about the game perk you up?

Self:  Yes, the greeting card “New Father’s Day Golf Rules” published by Tomato Cards.

Me:   What?

Self:  You remember…Bill gave me a Father’s Day card with 10 new suggested “golf rules.”  I found several of them therapeutic including these:

“Every drive is a practice drive till you get one you like.”

“Subtract one stroke for every tee you remember to pick up.”

“Chipping on the green will be replaced by an underhand toss.”

Me:  That stuff won’t work.  Your golf partners aren’t going to go for that.  Besides, you had five lessons this summer from a pro.  Those first-time lessons should make a difference.

Self:  Yeah, I thought so, too, but my scores on the course are higher than in past years.  My golfing buddy Ron said: “You are worse.  You’re discombobulated.”

Me:  Did you take anything positive away from last week’s 18 holes played with Ron?

Self:  Well, we huddled behind a tree during a downpour and analyzed the Obama–Romney race for the White House.  That was fun, and after my clubs got soaked and we resumed play I had another excuse for my lousy round.  But I can’t remember the last time I played 18 holes and didn’t lose a golf ball.  In fact, I found a couple of good balls.  So you could say I was “plus two for the day.”

Me:  That sounds pretty good.  And here’s another positive thing to remember about playing golf.  Downstairs in the house is a golf trophy that our buddy Myron came up with a couple years ago that is supposed to be awarded to the winner of our annual golf competition.

Self:  Puh-leeze.  It’s no ego trip winning that every summer.  Myron plays tennis three times per week.  He golfs three times a year.

Me:  Well, you don’t have to tell people stuff like that.  Just modestly point to the trophy and say, “Aw, shucks, I’ve been fortunate to win that sucker every year.”

Self:  You know what?  The best thing about my game this year is the golf lessons have me twisting and turning more than ever.  The result?  Chronic pain in my rib cage has lessened, and sometimes goes away for days.

Me:  That alone is reason to keep playing.  Better health through better twisting.  I like it.

Self: Well, I haven’t given up on golf.  It’s just that the game would be so much easier if I could be a specialist – like in football.  Let somebody else drive, or hit from the fairway.  Designated putter is a role that has appeal.

Me:  So you’re willing to commit to next year on the links despite the understandable off-year in 2012?

Self:  Probably, but I did receive a swimming challenge from brother-in-law Mark.  He’s riding high these days after swimming across a big lake in Montana.  He emailed this last week:  “See you next year at Flathead Lake, kid.  Golf, you know, is the lazy man’s sport.  Just hit the ball and take the cart.  Tough.”

Me: Uh, oh.

Comments Welcome

DiNardo: U Done Losing to NDSU’s

Posted on August 14, 2012August 14, 2012 by David Shama

 

The Big Ten Network football crew including commentators Gerry DiNardo and Howard Griffith was in Minneapolis last weekend to evaluate the Gophers as part of a 12-campus tour of Big Ten football programs.  DiNardo and Griffith are impressed with coach Jerry Kill and the improvement of the Minnesota team.

“I think we’re all gonna see (in 2012) why Minnesota hired Jerry Kill,” DiNardo said on the network’s Gophers preview show.  “He’s a guy that maximizes his (player) personnel.  We’ll see him do that.  He maximizes his staff because they’ve been with him so long.

“The biggest surprise to me a year ago is when Minnesota lost to New Mexico State and North Dakota State.  That won’t happen again.  Minnesota will win every matchup opponent.  Matchup opponent is someone that’s a little better or a little less personnel than you do (have).  He’ll win every one of those games. …It’s taken him maybe a little bit longer here than some of the other places he’s been.”

The Gophers were 3-9 last season including those surprise nonconference losses to the Aggies and Bison.  If DiNardo is correct, the Gophers will sweep their 2012 nonconference games against UNLV, New Hampshire, Western Michigan and Syracuse.  Then Minnesota has to find two wins among eight conference opponents to reach the qualifying six victories to be eligible for a bowl game.

Minnesota is a second-year rebuilding program under Kill, and Griffith thinks the Gophers are still going to “take their lumps.” Griffith likes the direction of the program with Kill and said the players “have bought into the message that he’s talking about from the front of the room.”

No Gopher discussed on the preview show received higher praise than junior defensive tackle Ra’Shede Hageman.  Griffith doesn’t believe any center in the Big Ten can block Hageman who was outstanding in Minnesota’s final game last season against Illinois and has continued to progress.  “In my mind he’s going to be tough to block for anybody,” Griffith said.

Defensive coordinator Tracy Claeys told the Big Ten Network that Hageman, a former tight end, is now understanding the demands of his position.  “There’s not a better athlete in the United States playing d-tackle than what Ra’Shede Hageman is,” Claeys said.  “The more he continues to learn the game, the better off I think he will be.”

Griffith thinks senior quarterback MarQueis Gray can have a “tremendous year.”  DiNardo said proven running skills and improved passing could make Gray the best “dual-threat” quarterback in the conference.

Asked to identify “newcomers” of note this season, Griffith selected redshirt freshman defensive end Theiren Cockran, a promising pass rusher whom Kill has praised in the off-season.  DiNardo chose true freshmen Jamel Harbison, a wide receiver that has shown athleticism in practice this month, and converted quarterback KJ Maye, an exceptionally quick athlete who could play both receiver and running back for the Gophers.

Olympic Basketball & Other Notes:

Minnesotans may never again see an Olympics where men and women with ties to this state played such significant roles in the gold medal success of USA basketball teams. Kevin Love, the Timberwolves’ best player and an NBA All-Star, ranked down the list of premiere players on the men’s roster but he was Team USA’s best rebounder despite limited minutes, while Lynx players Seimone Augustus, Maya Moore and Lindsay Whalen were contributors to the USA women’s team championship run in London.

On a team lacking size and rebounding, it was Love who consistently came off the bench to lead the USA in rebounding at 7.6 per game and he was fifth in team scoring with an average of 11.6.  Balls that he couldn’t control he would tap to teammates.  With the USA only ahead by one point at the end of three quarters in the championship game against Spain on Sunday, Love was asked to play major fourth quarter minutes surrounded by his all-world teammates including LeBron James and Kobe Bryant.

Love showed his usual basketball IQ in the gold medal game, not only positioning himself effectively for rebounds but in the fourth quarter, despite playing with four fouls, he effectively defended Spain’s best player, Pau Gasol.  Despite being undersized against Gasol, he made it difficult for the Spanish center to score, including in the low post.

Love demonstrated something else in the Olympics, too.  He’s a great player but he will never be an alpha dog scorer, the kind that can carry a team to an NBA championship. If the Wolves are ever to dream about a title, they will have to find a James, Bryant, Kevin Durant or Carmelo Anthony to team with Love.

It’s highly doubtful if a healthy Rick Rubio, playing forSpain, could have been the difference in the title game.  The Wolves point guard is not yet a dominant enough all-around player, nor the kind of defensive force that the Spanish team needed.

While the USA men had to struggle in a 107-100 title game win over Spain on Sunday, the women defeated France 86-50 in their title game Saturday.   The Lynx Olympians combined for 17 points. Moore averaged 9 points and 5.6 points per game during the Olympics while Whalen made 56.4 percent of her shots and averaged 8 points.  Augustus averaged 7.8 points.

Augustus, Moore and Whalen will hold a news conference in Minneapolis tomorrow.

The 12-members of the USAmen’s team weren’t paid to play in the Olympics but Kurt Badenhausen writing on August 6 for Forbes.com said those players earned $230 million in NBA salaries and outside endorsements during the last 12 months.  Their Olympic experience will be a further boost to their commercial appeal.

Working for the Big Ten Network on football coverage this fall will be former Gophers Derek Rackley and Justin Conzemius, and ex-Minnesota coach Glen Mason.

Are the Twins moving their metro area radio broadcasts of games to KTWN-FM starting in 2013?

Twins first baseman Justin Morneau is hitting .400 in his last 10 games and moved his average up to .276.  Morneau’s contract expires after next season.  He reportedly earns $14 million this season, according to online information from Cot’s Baseball Contracts.

There have been 126 home runs hit at Target Field this season, the same total as in all of 2011.  In 2010, the opening season of Target Field, only 116 total home runs were hit.

The Twins have drawn over 2 million fans at home this season, the eighth consecutive year they have done so.

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