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Worth Noting

Posted on March 23, 2012March 23, 2012 by David Shama

Does the search for a new Gophers athletic director include Wisconsin deputy athletic director Sean Frazier?

Jerry Kill said at his pre-spring practice news conference that senior quarterback MarQueis Gray has “tremendous ability” but must continue to progress like he did at the end of last season.  “Is he our starting quarterback?” Kill asked.  “You bet.  If there’s three guys back there and somebody outperforms him, then you’re going to play the best player.”

Among the quarterbacks behind Gray are sophomore Max Shortell who played last season, and freshmen quarterbacks Philip Nelson and Mitch Leidner who enrolled early at Minnesota to participate in spring practice.  With the possibility of injury, Kill said it’s imperative the Gophers have a ready replacement for Gray.

Star Tribune columnist Sid Hartman speaking to Kill about junior punter Dan Orseske who was inconsistent last season: “I could do as well as your guy did last year.”

Kill answered that the coaches could have done more to help Orseske who averaged 37 yards per punt in 2011.  He also said redshirt freshman Peter Mortell will compete for the punting job.

Defensive tackle Scott Ekpe is only 17 but has shown a remarkable will to gain weight and strength since enrolling at Minnesota this winter. The 6-foot-4 Lewisville, Texas native has seen his weight increase from 248 to 276, according to Kill.  “Just think in four years what that youngster will look like,” Kill said.

Kill talking to Sports Headliners earlier this year about college coaches like Michigan’s Brady Hoke who can access private funds almost on demand to help their programs: “If he needs $100,000 for something, he’s gonna get it in five minutes.”

The Vikings are under the NFL salary cap but don’t take that as an indication ownership is planning to sell or move the team.  The Wilfs and the NFL can see progress being made on the stadium issue here.  No stadium deal this spring in the legislature won’t prompt a transfer to Los Angeles.

The Twins’ big four off-season personnel losses were hitters Michael Cuddyer, Jason Kubel, and Jim Thome, along with relief pitcher Joe Nathan.  In spring training so far Cuddyer is hitting .286 with Colorado, Kubel is batting .242 for Arizona, Thome, with Philadelphia, is hitting .273 and Nathan has a 13.50 ERA for Texas in four innings.

Twins first baseman wannabe Chris Parmelee is hitting .333 with two home runs and has six RBI.  Justin Morneau, trying to recover from injuries and with two years remaining on his contract, is batting .091 with two RBI and no home runs.

Star Tribune columnist Jim Souhan said on 1500 ESPN Wednesday that a Twins official told him Parmelee could have a Kubel-like career at the plate.  Kubel’s career statistics include a .271 batting average and three years he’s hit 20 or more home runs in a season.

Brian Dozier, the 24-year-old infielder trying to make the jump from Double A to the Twins starting shortstop in 2012, was rated this off-season by Baseball America as having the best strike zone discipline and being the best defensive infielder in the organization’s minor league system.

Timberwolves fourth-year forward Kevin Love has no chance of winning the NBA MVP award because his team plays .500 basketball and his name is not as prominent as other stars in the league.  Love, though, is the only NBA player who ranks among the top five individuals in scoring average (25.7) and rebounding (13.7).

The Gophers have earned a trip to the NIT semi-finals in New York four times prior to this year, but the 2012 team is the first in school history that won all its qualifying games on the road.  Minnesota plays Pac-12 Conference champion Washington in a semi-final game in New York’s Madison Square Garden on Tuesday night.

Hopkins coach Ken Novak Jr. talking about Apple Valley’s Tyus Jones, considered by some authorities to be the best sophomore point guard in the country: “He’s kind of like one of those kids like Ricky Rubio (and) Royce White that don’t care if they score.  Not searching for numbers, just playing for the beauty of the game, playing to win games.  He’s a kid that people just love to watch. Why? Because he’s selfless. ..”

With the winter sports season completed, Augustana (Sioux Falls) has taken the lead in the NSIC/US Bank All-Sports Standings.  The Vikings have moved up from third place in the fall and lead second place Minnesota Duluth and third place Minnesota State, Mankato.

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Royce White to Review NBA Options

Posted on March 21, 2012March 21, 2012 by David Shama

Royce White’s grandfather dropped him off in Ames, Iowa on Sunday.  What’s the next stop for White?

If conversations during the coming weeks determine the Iowa State sophomore is going to be an NBA lottery choice in June, then the former Hopkins High School All-American has likely played his last college game.  His grandfather, Frank White, told Sports Headliners on Monday that Royce’s dream has always been an NBA career. “If he’s a top 10 lottery pick there’s no way I would (try to) convince him to stay,” Frank said.

The two Whites have a close relationship.  Frank has mentored Royce from childhood.  “I was there (at Royce’s birth) to cut the umbilical cord,” Frank said.

It was grandpa who drove 220 miles from his suburban St. Paul home last week to Ames to pick up Royce.  Then he drove the Big 12 Conference Newcomer of the Year 600 miles to Iowa State’s NCAA tournament games in Louisville.  The two made the return trip to Ames on Sunday while Royce’s teammates flew home.

Royce suffers from anxiety and preferred not to fly to Louisville, believing he would feel better for the most important college games of his life if he travelled by car.  Frank said fans should understand while it made Royce a “little more comfortable” to travel by car, it’s not that his grandson hasn’t done a lot of flying. Royce was on all the Iowa State Big 12 airplane trips except one and took a preseason trip with the Cyclones to Italy.  “He’s been flying since third or fourth grade,” Frank said.

There can’t be any second-guessing the decision to drive to Louisville.  Not after White helped the Cyclones to an opening tournament win on Thursday over defending NCAA national champion Connecticut.  And not on Saturday after he scored 23 points, grabbed nine rebounds and had four assists while showing he was the most versatile player on the floor against a star-laden Kentucky team.

The Wildcats are the No. 1 overall seed in the tournament but it was White who received much of the attention from media and fans during and before the game.  He seemed to enjoy the attention and at one point in the Kentucky game reportedly yelled: “I am the best player in the country.”

CBS recorded the moment and although his grandfather didn’t see it he had an explanation. “He said he was just trying to get everyone pumped up,” Frank said.

Royce looked toward the Iowa State fans when he made his statement. He has found acceptance in Ames after fighting through off-court problems with the Gophers, never playing a minute for his hometown University during the 2009-10 school year.

“He’s really embraced Iowa State and they have embraced him,” Frank said.  “At the hotel (in Louisville) I had people telling me how great a young man (and) great player he is.”

Frank said Royce cried after the Kentucky loss, a defeat that may have been the first and only opportunity for him to fulfill his goal of winning a national championship.  “I know he had some tears,” his grandfather said.  “He believed he was going to win.  Some of the Kentucky players he had played against (previously) in AAU (competition), and done well. Kentucky may have played its best game. Iowa State had its worst shooting game of the season.”

Despite being 6-feet-8 and 270 pounds, White wasn’t stereotyped at Iowa State as a player who could only position himself near the basket.  Cyclones coach Fred Hoiberg, the former Timberwolves guard and front office executive, recognized White’s versatility and creativity.  Hoiberg allowed White to bring the ball up the floor, sometimes being a primary ball handler and passer in the offense.  White’s experiences at Iowa State will help make him more attractive to pro scouts who could project him both as a small and power forward.

Frank believes his grandson, who will be 21 next month, could move to the pros this year but he’s also comfortable with a decision to return to Iowa State for another season.  Royce is a 3.0 student with a passion for music, a self-taught piano player who has long been interested in psychology.  “I told him I don’t need anything other than for him to succeed in life,” Frank said.

 

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Worth Noting

Posted on March 21, 2012March 21, 2012 by David Shama

Former Twins outfielder Delmon Young, now with Detroit, is second among major league hitters in spring training batting averages at .485.

The 40-man roster the Twins opened spring training with included seven players acquired through trades and nine via free agent signings.  Nineteen players, including Joe Mauer and Justin Morneau, were acquired through the first-year player draft while three were claimed via waivers and two in the Rule-5 draft.

Former Minnesota Wild executive Billy Robertson is working for the Twins as a consultant on outdoor hockey.

Antoine Walker, whose NBA playing career included time with the Timberwolves, blew $110 million in basketball earnings and is now broke, according to a feature story in the March 19 issue of Sports Illustrated.

Gophers coach Jerry Kill holds a noon news conference today, and then opens spring football practice with sessions at the Gibson-Nagurski Complex on Thursday and Friday.  Those practices start at 3:15 p.m. and like all spring sessions are open to the public.

All four participating teams in the NCAA West Region hockey field will host a free-to-the-public one-hour open practice at Xcel Energy Center on Friday. The times are 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. – Western Michigan; 12:45 to 1:45 p.m. –North Dakota; 2:00 to 3:00 p.m. –Boston University; 3:15 to 4:15 p.m. –Minnesota.

At 12:30 p.m. on Saturday No. 1 seed North Dakota (25-12-3) plays No. 4 seed Western Michigan (21-13-6).  At 4 p.m. No. 2 seed Minnesota (26-13-1) will meet No. 3 seed Boston University (23-14-1).  All games are at Xcel Energy Center including Sunday’s 4:30 p.m. title game.

Coach Ken Novak’s Hopkins teams have won three consecutive Class 4A     championships but the streak might end this year.  The Royals play an opening Class 4A game starting at 10 a.m. today against Woodbury.  Novak told Sports Headliners “we’re a good team” but personnel losses during the season give the coach pause.    “We’re not quite what we have been,” Novak said.  “Do we have a shot to win it?  We still have a shot.”

Novak’s dad, Ken Sr., turns 83 this week and is still an assistant coach for the Hopkins dynasty. Ken Jr. has won six state titles.

Five finalists were announced yesterday for the Mr. Basketball Award: Siyani Chambers, Hopkins; Joey King, Eastview; Sanjay Lumpkin, Benilde-St. Margaret’s; Johnny Woodard, Duluth East; Isaiah Zierden, Benilde-St. Margaret’s.  The winner will be announced after this week’s boys state tournament.

LynxBasketball.com has a section devoted to the upcoming WNBA Draft.  Included are mock drafts and scouting reports on the top 15 college seniors along with updated statistics on more than 60 draft eligible seniors.  The Lynx have six draft choices in the April 16 draft.  Minnesota has two picks in the first round (third and 12th overall), three in the second (18, 19 and 20) and one in the third (31).

The North and South head coaches for the June 30 Minnesota High School All-Star Football Game at TCF Bank Stadium will be Jeff Schlieff of Spring Lake Park (North team) and Bill Ihrke from Plainview-Elgin-Millville (South team).  They have a combined 37 years of head coaching experience and records of 261 wins and 123 losses.

 

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