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Vikings Camarillo Makes a Difference for Kids

Posted on December 14, 2011December 29, 2011 by David Shama

 

Greg Camarillo is a benchwarmer for the Vikings, a wide receiver who has just six receptions for 93 yards this season, but to disadvantaged kids like Kitam Hamm he’s a hero.

Hamm is a high school senior who lives in the infamous town of Compton, California.  It’s a place where youngsters are maybe more likely to be shot than attend college.  Hamm, a football player and student of promise, has hope for the future because of his own hard work and encouragement from family and people like Camarillo and his brother Jeff Camarillo.

Hamm was a seventh grader when the Camarillos started the Charging Forward program in southern California.  Compton was targeted not only for the youngsters there who needed help, but also because the Camarillos’ father Albert grew up in the city.

Greg said the Charging Forward program’s goal is to work with student-athletes “that will benefit from a little encouragement and a little reward for hard work in the classroom and on the playing field.”  Rewards for those performing well include meetings with guest speakers and gifts like gloves, cleats and tickets to San Diego Chargers games.

“That simple thing that would get them out of their neighborhood for a day — for a weekend — was just what they needed to work hard,” Greg said.  “Something to look forward to, (and) something to be excited about.”

Hamm’s success was documented in a lengthy feature for the December 5 issue of Sports Illustrated.  The article details the reality of living in a gang-infested community and how Hamm has excelled on the football field and in the classroom.

“He’s a great kid,” Greg said.  “He comes from a great household.  The article does a great job of portraying what he made it past to be successful.”

Greg has used his money and also fundraisers to provide a budget for Charging Forward.  During the next offseason he and his brother plan to start up with another group of youngsters, similar to what they did six years ago with Hamm. The effort will be made easier now that Camarillo has sold his home in Florida and moved back to San Diego.

Greg and Frank hope to have Charging Forward chapters not only in Compton, but San Diego and East Palo Alto, California.  Frank, who was a teacher in Compton, is now an educator in East Palo Alto.

“It’s amazing what just a little bit will do to the hopes and dreams of the kids,” Greg said.

 

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Basketball Gophers Win Praise for Attitude

Posted on December 14, 2011December 29, 2011 by David Shama

 

Tubby Smith likes the “character” of his team and his players have earned the praise.

The Gophers defeated Central Michigan last night, running their nonconference record to 11-1.  It was the team’s fifth consecutive win since Dayton clobbered the Gophers in the championship game of the Old Spice Classic on November 27.  Even more painful on that night was the season ending ACL injury to the team’s best player and potential All-American, senior forward Trevor Mbakwe.

“It tells me a lot about our character, recovering from the loss of one of your top players like Trevor,” Smith said recently.  “I think that changed the mentality, the toughness, the character of this team but we all know it’s going to get a lot more difficult as we get past Christmas.  So we’ve got to continue to play well.”

Gophers junior forward Rodney Williams is averaging career highs in points, 9.4, and rebounds, 4.5, and has played his best basketball since Mbakwe went down.  He’s emerged as a leader defensively, too.  He spoke about the determination of this team.

“Coming into this season there weren’t a lot of people that believed in us,” he said recently.  “Especially after Trevor went down, there definitely weren’t too many people that believed in us.  But we know what we got here. …”

The Gophers have one more nonconference game on the schedule, December 22 at home against North Dakota State.  The Big Ten schedule starts five days later at Illinois and as Smith said, the challenge becomes more difficult for this team.

The Gophers have consistently been willing to work with effort both offensively and defensively.  Their ball movement on offense may be the best of Smith’s five teams at Minnesota and with multiple shot blockers even without Mbakwe the Gophers can be difficult to score on near the basket.

Certainly the Gophers are a team with limitations including erratic outside shooting and problems defending three point field goal attempts.  Their nonconference schedule has been played entirely at home except for three neutral court games in Orlando for the Old Spice Classic so this team hasn’t been tested on the road.  There have been only a few big school opponents, leaving little doubt the schedule—similar to other Big Ten schools—is built for early wins, not games against top 40 teams.

But the players don’t make the schedule and they have accepted the challenge of playing together and with effort no matter who comes to town.  And when Mbakwe and center Ralph Sampson III and point guard Andre Hollins haven’t played because of injuries, it’s been “next man up” to do the job.

How they will perform in the Big Ten will be determined but the team that most everyone said even last summer wouldn’t contend for a high finish in the conference standings has exceeded expectations during the nonconference schedule.  That’s what counts today.

 

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Worth Noting

Posted on December 14, 2011December 29, 2011 by David Shama

 

Joe Mauer’s fiancé is a nurse in the Twin Cities.  He and Madeline Bisanz have known each other since high school at Cretin-Derham Hall.  The two have been in Florida but will be back in Minnesota for the holidays.  No wedding date has been set for Madeline and the Twins catcher who once dated the 2005 Miss USA, Chelsea Cooley.

Next season needs to be a comeback year on the field for Mauer but it’s even bigger for his buddy, first baseman Justin Morneau.  Injuries have slowed Morneau for two seasons and production has been far below his best years (in 2011 four home runs, 30 RBI and a .227 batting average).  He turns 31 in May and 2013 is the last year of his contract with the Twins.

Joe’s brother Jake Mauer will return for a third year as manager of the Twins Single-A affiliate Ft. Myers Miracle (Florida State League).

The Saints franchise that comes to Mall of America Field on Sunday to play the Vikings beat Minnesota in the NFC Championship Game on January 24, 2010.  Since then the Saints are 21-8 in regular season games, the Vikings 8-21.

The Minnesota Football Coaches Association’s annual clinic with the Gophers is March 29-31.  Coaches interested in attending can learn more at www.mshsca.org.

New Timberwolves coach Rick Adelman has only four teams in 20 seasons of NBA coaching who didn’t make the playoffs.  Twice his teams have been in the NBA Finals.

In five seasons playing in the Spanish ACB League, new Timberwolves guard Ricky Rubio made .374 percent of his field goals and .314 of his three point attempts.  Although he’s only 21, Rubio’s shooting and defense will be scrutinized in the early weeks of the NBA season.

Last summer Rubio treated a north Minneapolis family, who had been impacted by tornadoes, to an afternoon at the Mall of America.

Saint John’s head coach Jim Smith has 731 career wins, the 21st best total in college basketball history.  Smith is 10 wins behind former Temple coach John Chaney.

The Wild will never have a better goalie storyline during the first months of the season than this year.  Training camp opened with the comfort of having six-year veteran and regular goalie Niklas Backstrom on the roster.  But backup Josh Harding has probably been the team MVP while supporting roles have been played by 51-year-old “emergency” goalie Paul Deutsch and Matt Hackett who didn’t make his first start until December 8.  On Monday Hackett was named by the NHL as its Second Star for the week after a 2-0, 1.01 goals against average last week.

The Wild’s Devin Setoguchi is scheduled to sign autographs at the Maplewood Mall Hockey Lodge store on Friday from 6 to 7 p.m.  The store is located at 3001 White Bear Avenue in Maplewood.

 

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