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NHL Outdoor Game Possible Here

Posted on January 6, 2012January 6, 2012 by David Shama

Minneapolis-St. Paul remains a possibility to host the NHL’s New Year’s Day Winter Classic, according to a hockey source who asked that his name not be used.

Five outdoor games have been played, with Chicago being the farthest west of the sites so far.  “A lot of factors enter into the NHL’s decision about hosting the game,” the source told Sports Headliners.

He said those factors begin with what NBC wants and the potential for TV ratings.  Other factors are the on-ice reputation of the host team and having a natural rival to play against, plus high profile players and a “glamorous market,” according to the source.

The Wild haven’t even been a playoff team since 2008.  The franchise has been searching for a high profile scorer since the departure of Marian Gaborik to New York.  The best rival for the Wild in a Winter Classic game here is Chicago.  Minneapolis-St. Paul can’t match the glitz of some American markets but in this area’s favor is a national reputation for both playing and watching hockey.

NHL commissioner Gary Bettman is on record saying Minnesota will one day host a Winter Classic.  No announcement has been made about the 2013 site but the source said Detroit may host the game at Michigan Stadium in Ann Arbor.  “The league is receiving flack for not getting western teams involved,” he added.

The Cleveland baseball park will host the Ohio State versus Michigan outdoor hockey game on January 15.  Tomorrow Boston’s Fenway Park will be the site of a college hockey doubleheader.

Target Field potentially could host a Minnesota Winter Classic.  Although the stadium has fewer seats than TCF Bank Stadium, the venue can sell alcohol while the University’s facility does not.

Twins president Dave St. Peter told Sports Headliners his organization has made its interest known in having Target Field be the site of a Winter Classic, and also he is considering a college-high school showcase.  “We’ve always felt Target Field would be a fun venue for hockey,” he said.

While there’s nothing definitive to announce, St. Peter said he’s “pretty confident” that in the next 60 to 90 days the Twins will further detail plans for hockey at Target Field.  Any hockey at the baseball stadium would be played in January or early February, he said.

Love Contract Talks Face Deadline

 

Timberwolves owner Glen Taylor told Sports Headliners he will be meeting with Kevin Love and his agent Jeff Schwartz this month regarding a new contract for the All-Star forward.  “It’s our intention to make every attempt to sign Kevin,”Taylor said.

Under NBA rules, the Wolves have until January 25 to negotiate with fourth-year players like Love.  If a deal isn’t made by then, contract talks have to wait until after the league season.

Love will be a restricted free agent following this season.  That means the Wolves could match any deal from another league team and retain him.

Speculation is Love could command a multi-year new deal paying him more than $60 million.  Love, 23, has become one of the league’s elite offensive forward, averaging 25.7 points and 15 rebounds per game.

Taylor hopes to keep both Love and rookie point guard Ricky Rubio for many years.  He reports “good talks” with both players.  “I think and hope their main goal will be wanting to be on a winning team,”Taylor said.

The Wolves were 17-65 last season but are dramatically improved, already playing competitively despite a difficult early schedule. Taylor is hoping a nucleus of Love and Rubio will produce a lot of wins for many years.

Taylor also told Sports Headliners his franchise, despite a renaissance in public interest, will lose money again this season — perhaps $15 million.  About $10 million, Taylor said, is because of the shortened pre-season and regular season caused by the NBA labor dispute.

Worth Noting

 

The Winter Classic this year — like the college football bowl games — was on January 2 and played during unusually mild temps in Philadelphia.  Dan Craig, a River Falls native and the NHL’s ice guru, is credited for his work in having the surface ready to play.

The Wild might be looking to trade goalie Josh Harding, perhaps hoping to secure young prospects and gain payroll relief.  Harding’s contract ends after this season and the team’s other main goalie, Niklas Backstrom, has an estimated salary of $6 million.  The Wild probably doesn’t want to have several million dollars tied up in salaries for two goalies next season.  Harding reportedly earns less than $1 million this season but figures to command a lot more in 2012.

Marian Gaborik is having an impressive season with the Rangers.  He ranks second in NHL goal scoring with 23.  At 29, Gaborik has entered his peak years.  The native of Slovakia once spoke no English but has taught himself the language.

Former South St.Paul High School and Notre Dame hockey coaching legend Lefty Smith passed away in South Bend earlier this week.  He was a St. Thomas college graduate.

Wolves second year guard Wayne Ellington remembers his rookie hazing.  He had to bring center Al Jefferson a bottle of 5-hour Energy before each game.  “Sometimes I would forget and…be scrambling out to try to find him one,” Ellington said last week.

This year Ellington said Wolves rookies Ricky Rubio and Derrick Williams had to find baby oil for all the players.  “It just goes on throughout the season,” Ellington said.  “They haven’t even tasted any (major hazing) yet.  They’ve had it really good so far as rookies.”

Ellington said Rubio, a native of Spain, is making progress with his English.  “He’s a great guy,” Ellington said.  “He’s pretty funny.  He’s learning our slang pretty fast so it’s funny listening to him.”

Wolves veteran guard J.J. Barea said he’s never seen a player come into the NBA that can pass like Rubio.  “…He can control the game, he can pass the ball,” Barea said recently.  “He likes to play defense, he likes to play hard.  So I think he’s doing a good job.”

Could Rubio one day be the league’s best point guard?  “At some point definitely,” Barea said. “He keeps getting better, (and) keeps working like he’s doing.  Keeps getting better on offense.  Shooting wise I think he’ll be good.”

Barea’s girlfriend, 2006 Miss Universe Zuleyka Rivera, is expecting a baby boy on March 5.  No name decided on yet.

ESPN’s John Hollinger analyzes stats and rates former Orono prep Jon Leuer, now with Milwaukee, as the seventh most efficient rookie in the NBA.  The Wolves’ Rubio is No. 10 and Williams No. 17.

 

 

 

 

Comments Welcome

Ex-Coach Predicts 7th Place Finish for U

Posted on January 4, 2012January 4, 2012 by David Shama

Jim Dutcher predicts the Gophers will finish seventh in the Big Ten and likely will play in a post-season tournament, but he said 0-2 Minnesota needs to win its next two conference games starting tonight against Iowa at Williams Arena.

Dutcher, the former Gophers coach whose team 30 years ago won the Big Ten, is a passionate follower of college basketball and watches many games on TV.  “Minnesota is not a Big Ten (title) contender but can get into a post-season tourney (NCAA or NIT),” Dutcher told Sports Headliners.

He believes a 9-9 conference record is possible for the Gophers, and that would give Minnesota a 21-10 overall record before the Big Ten Tournament.  He said the Gophers might finish their conference schedule with a 6-3 home record and 3-6 on the road.

After opening conference road losses to Illinois and Michigan, the Gophers are home for games against Iowa and then Purdue on Sunday.  “You gotta win your home games,” Dutcher said. “Go at least 6-3 at home and 3-6 on the road.”

The Gophers played better at Illinois and Michigan than Dutcher expected.  Minnesota lost to the Illini, 81-72 in double overtime, and 61-56 to the Wolverines.     “I was more impressed (with Minnesota) after the two losses than I was before,” Dutcher said.  “One game (Illinois) they should have won and one (Michigan) they could have won.”

Obvious in both games was the Gophers don’t know who their clutch player is, and also Minnesota struggles to make outside shots, including three pointers.  But Minnesota has athleticism, depth and plays with effort.

That could be enough to keep the Gophers just ahead ofIllinois in the final conference standings, a program Dutcher describes as “always a work in progress.”  He thinks the Illini will finish eighth in the conference followed by Northwestern, Iowa, Nebraska and PennState.

Purdue has “marginal” talent” but Dutcher has been impressed enough with the Boilermakers to think they will finish sixth in the Big Ten.  His top five teams are: Ohio State, Michigan State, Wisconsin, Indiana and Michigan.  The Buckeyes could be a Final Four team, and the Spartans and Hoosiers might also make deep tournament runs, according to the former Gophers coach.

Neither the Badgers nor Wolverines have consistent inside scoring threats and that will be problematic.  “Wisconsin (also) can’t play from behind (in a game) and get to the free throw line,” Dutcher said.

The Badgers’ deliberate offensive style and tenacious defense could be enough to push Wisconsin just ahead of a more talented Indiana team in the final standings, according to Dutcher.

Love Blossoms, Trade Rival Fades

 

It’s never too late to say thank you.  How about tonight when the Grizzlies play the Timberwolves at TargetCenter?

In the hours following the 2008 NBA draft, Wolves executive Kevin McHale made a multi-player trade with the Grizzlies that brought power forward Kevin Love to Minnesota.  The cornerstones of that trade were Love and shooting guard O.J. Mayo.

Love has become an NBA All-Star while Mayo doesn’t even start for Memphis.  A league source told Sports Headliners McHale wanted to draft Love but instead the organization chose Mayo with the No. 3 pick in the draft.  But Love, who was the No. 5 pick, soon became a Timberwolf when McHale and team owner Glen Taylor worked out a deal that involved eight players.

At the top of McHale’s things-to-like list back in 2008 was Love’s skill in rebounding.  Love led the league in rebounding last season at 15.2 per game.  In five games this season he’s second in NBA rebounding, again at 15.2.

Now in his fourth season, Love is maturing into one of the NBA’s best offensive forwards.  He’s averaging a career high 25.4 points per game, making 47 percent of his field goals including 44 percent of three point attempts.  He not only shoots with accuracy, but is the team’s best inside scorer.

Love’s passing is timely and accurate.  At 6-10 he’s the best of the team’s big men passers and other than point guard Ricky Rubio, nobody on the Wolves is more unselfish.

During the off-season Love reshaped his body and reflected on his leadership skills.  He’s become both the franchise’s definitive leader and best player, now even drawing comparisons to Kevin Garnett, the former Wolves All-Star forward who will be a certain Hall of Famer.

Love may or may not one day make the Hall of Fame, but you have to like his odds much better than Mayo’s who during the last three seasons has seen his scoring averages decline from 18.5 to 17.5 to 11.3.  This season he’s averaging 8.6 points in five games.

McHale is no longer working for the Wolves and is coaching the Rockets, but he will be remembered tonight.

Worth Noting

 

Speculation is the National Collegiate Hockey Conference will announce former USOC CEO Jim Scherr as its first commissioner today at a news conference.  The conference begins play in 2013-14 and consists of eight teams—Colorado College, Denver, Miami (Ohio), Nebraska-Omaha, North Dakota, St. Cloud State, UMD and Western Michigan.

Iowa basketball coach Fran McCaffery’s wife Margaret was a Minnesota prep basketball star who later played and coached at Notre Dame.  She grew up in St. Paul as Margaret Nowlin and met McCaffery when he was an assistant coach for the men’s team.

Michigan has opened a $20 million-plus basketball practice facility, leaving the Gophers and Northwestern as the only Big Ten schools without such a building. Minnesota is trying to raise funds for a $15 million facility.

The defending champion Mavericks have made personnel changes since last year including allowing point guard J.J. Barea to join the Wolves.  Dallas is off to a slow  start (2-4) and it doesn’t surprise Barea.

“No question.  I knew they were going to have a tough time,” Barea told Sports Headliners.  “It’s going to be a long year for them.  They’ll win some games because they got enough talent and they like to compete and they like to win. …”

Derrick Williams, the Wolves 20-year-old rookie forward, said the difference between the Pac-12 where he played for Arizona and the NBA is a player needs to use his basketball intelligence in the pros or “get left behind.”

The Vikings promotion of Rick Spielman to general manager didn’t prompt a late afternoon headline yesterday on ESPN.com.

Vikings linebacker Chad Greenway talking about teammate and defensive end Jared Allen who set a new franchise single season record for sacks with 22: “It comes back to what makes him great is his ability to play hard every snap. …”

Vikings wide receiver Percy Harvin commenting about the quarterback competition between Christian Ponder and Joe Webb:  “It will be tough to keep Webb off the field, but Ponder did some great things for us this year.  It’s a good scenario to have two quality quarterbacks like that.  That’s not my job, though.  I will show up and do whatever they ask me to do.”

Kyle Rudolph, the Vikings rookie tight end, considers himself fortunate to have played one season having Jim Kleinsasser—the 13-year veteran tight end who retired on Sunday—as his mentor.  Rudolph has referred to Kleinsasser as dad.

The MIAC is one of only three Division III conferences to have seven schools in the first 2011-12 Division III Learfield Sports Director’s Cup Standings of the season.   The MIAC schools are St. Thomas, St. Olaf, Concordia, Saint Benedict, Carleton, Bethel and Hamline.

4 comments

Look for Wilf to Assess Vikings

Posted on January 2, 2012January 2, 2012 by David Shama

 

Bob Lurtsema expects Vikings owner Zygi Wilf to demand accountability in the organization following the team’s 3-13 season, among the worst records in franchise history.

“If I was him I would put people on the spot as far as job security,” Lurtsema told Sports Headliners.  “From people in draft headquarters to assistant coaches.  There’s (got to be) a wakeup call.”

Lurtsema doesn’t expect any change in the head coaching position where Leslie Frazier finished his first full season yesterday during the team’s 17-13 loss to the Bears.  Lurtsema, who played 12 NFL seasons for the Vikings, Giants and Seahawks, said the players play hard for Frazier and that’s a “big, big plus.”  He also acknowledged the importance of coaching, attributing any team’s success to “65 percent” of what the staff accomplishes.

Before Wilf became a Vikings owner he was a loyal Giants fan and friend of Lurtsema.  “I love Zygi Wilf,” Lurtsema said.  “I knew him in New York and have done a lot of different things with him.”

Wilf wants the Vikings to be winners and has shown a commitment to spending money for personnel.  “After a loss you never see anybody more down than Zygi,” Lurtsema said.

While Wilf can assess the leaders in the organization, it’s up to those authorities to scrutinize themselves and people who work for them, according to Lurtsema who is a passionate follower of the team.  Players have to do their own assessments, too.  “Everyone has to be accountable,” Lurtsema said.  “Being nice will get you nowhere.”

The Vikings need to draft better in the future, according to Lurtsema who credited the organization with “the steal of the draft” in 2011 with the second round selection of tight end Kyle Rudolph.  Lurtsema believes the first draft priority in 2012 is a big play wide receiver who can open up the field for the offense.  He also said fans have to realize the reality of NFL drafting is “one-third” of the picks will be busts.

Worth Noting

 

If the Vikings decided to restructure their front office by creating a powerful general manager position, Brian Billick would be an interesting candidate.  The former Vikings offensive coordinator and Super Bowl winning head coach with the Ravens is a TV commentator now, but last week expressed interest in the Dolphins coaching job.

Joe Webb considers himself a quarterback, not a wide receiver.  His minutes at quarterback have been limited in playing behind Christian Ponder.  Why hasn’t he played more?

“They (the coaches) don’t give me a reason,” Webb said last week.  “I try not to get into all that.  I just try to control what I can control.”

Webb has sometimes been impressive in spot duty but Lurtsema noted those are different circumstances than when opposing defenses game plan for a quarterback’s tendencies week after week.  “He’s got a great attitude, studies hard and is athletic,” Lurtsema said.

Webb is conscious of being an upbeat leader.  “They (teammates) see you down, they’re going to be down,” he said.

Vikings running back Toby Gerhart was drafted in 2010 but couldn’t participate in the team’s organized team activities because he was finishing school work at Stanford.  In 2011 there were no OTA’s due to the NFL labor dispute so he’s looking forward to more thorough offseason preparations in 2012.  Adrian Peterson’s left knee injuries have clouded the Vikings’ starting running back situation and yesterday Gerhart also hurt a knee.

“Adrian is a great friend of mine and he’s become like a brother,” Gerhart said recently. “You don’t want to see anybody get hurt, no matter what the circumstance.  We pray for a speedy recovery for the interim. …”

Reserve wide receiver Greg Camarillo is a free agent after this season and may not return to the Vikings.  Camarillo, who has played six seasons with the Vikings, Dolphins and Chargers, admires Vikings tight end Jim Kleinsasser whose last game yesterday ended a 13 year career.

“I was just telling Jimmy Kleinsasser he’s my hero,”Camarillo said last week.  “Because if you can play 13 years and retire on your own free will, instead of injury or something like that, that is truly respectable.  To have a career like that guy would be ideal.”

Defensive tackle Kevin Williams has two years remaining on his contract and is 31 years old.  He’s undecided how much longer he wants to play, perhaps four or five more seasons.  “I know if I can’t play at a high level, I don’t want to do it,” he said.

Glenn Caruso has been named 2011 Division III National Coach of the Year by American Football Monthly.  The 37-year-oldSt. Thomas coach led his team to a school-record 13 wins and the program’s first trip to the Division III semifinals.  He is also one of five finalists for the Liberty Mutual D-III National Coach of the Year award.

Concordia, St. Paul senior left offensive tackle Tyler Hendrickson placed fifth out of nine national finalists for the 2011 Gene Upshaw Division II Lineman of the Year award presented by the Manheim Touchdown Club.  The award is given annually to the top NCAA Division II junior or senior lineman (offense or defense) in the nation.

It will be a surprise if major league baseball doesn’t award the 2014 All-Star game to Target Field.

The Timberwolves, who only sold out one game last season, sold out their first two home games this season.  The TV rating of 5.6 for the home opener against Oklahoma City was the best in years.

Burt McGlynn, who was a Timberwolves owner and once owned the Minnesota Buckskins of World Team Tennis, died last month.  He also owned McGlynn Bakeries.

Former Gophers coach Jim Dutcher said his ex-assistant Jimmy Williams was hired as an assistant at Memphis last month to fill the vacancy left by Luke Walton.  Walton was working for the Tigers until the NBA labor dispute was settled and then returned to the Lakers.

Dutcher’s son Brian is the head coach in-waiting at San Diego State.  When Steve Fisher retires the school has agreed to promote Brian from assistant to head coach.  Jim said the Aztecs, ranked No. 25 in last week’s A.P. poll, are the only nationally rated team on the West Coast and have defeated three Pac-12 schools this season.

The Aztecs play in the Mountain West Conference and among the league’s best teams is UNLV.  Jim said UNLV is the “most underrated” team in the country.

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