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Worth Noting

Posted on November 11, 2011November 27, 2011 by David Shama

In the November issue of Sporting News Magazine writer Matt Hayes doesn’t include Wisconsin-Minnesota in his listing of top 10 college football rivalries. No. 1 is Alabama-Auburn with Ohio State-Michigan No. 2.

The late Sandy Stephens, a 2011 inductee into the College Football Hall of Fame, will be remembered at tomorrow’s game against Wisconsin. A National Football Foundation Hall of Fame salute will recognize the great career of Stephens. He was the first black All-American quarterback and a key contributor to Minnesota’s 1960 national championship and Rose Bowl teams.

Gophers athletic director Joel Maturi expects a decision “soon” on whether he will continue as Gophers athletic director after his contract ends next June. He said a mutual decision between himself and University president Eric Kaler could come before 2011 ends.

In a mid-season NFL evaluation, the November 7 issue of Sports Illustrated has the 8-0 Packers losing in the 2012 Super Bowl to the Patriots, 31-27. Next Monday the Vikings and Packers meet for the fourth time in seven years in a Monday night game.

Blooming Prairie coach Chad Gimbel earned his 100th career win last Friday night with a 20-14 victory over Southland. His 15 year record is 100-50-0. Blooming Prairie plays Lester Prairie/Holy Trinity tonight in a Class A quarterfinals playoff game.

A busy prep playoff week includes quarterfinal games in classifications ranging from nine-man football to Class AAAAA. Semifinal games will be played at the Metrodome November 18 and 19, with the finals November 25 and 26 in the dome.

MIAC football champion St. Thomas is awaiting a first round Division III opponent for a game on Saturday, November 19. Coach Glenn Caruso’s team has a 10-0 overall record, 8-0 in the MIAC. UST became the first conference team in 48 seasons to have consecutive unbeaten regular seasons, and the first ever to have consecutive 10-0 records. The Tommies allowed 100 points in 10 games, the fewest by an MIAC team since Saint John’s 2003 NCAA championship team gave up 95 during the regular season.

The No. 1 ranked Gophers hockey team, with the National Player of the Month for October in goalie Kent Patterson and the Rookie of the Month in Kyle Rau, plays in Madison tonight and tomorrow night in games televised respectively by FSN and the Big Ten Network. Minnesota coach Don Lucia’s team won’t play the Badgers again after this weekend until March 2 and 3 in Minneapolis.

Comments Welcome

Bruce Lambrecht Speaking Up for Mpls. (Again)

Posted on November 9, 2011November 27, 2011 by David Shama

Bruce Lambrecht and his associates sent a letter to Governor Mark Dayton and other state leaders last week that they hope will help change the face of sports in Minnesota.

Here’s how the letter begins: “For more than a year a group of interested citizens has been crafting and refining an urban revitalization plan that includes a new downtown Minneapolis site for the Vikings stadium, a redevelopment plan for the Metrodome, an exciting vision for what could be on the site of the current building, as well as a proposal for a new structure for financing and operating the region’s sports and entertainment facilities.”

Whew!

Attention commanding ideas from Lambrecht, a local real estate investment developer, and the other Minnesota-based letter signers, architect David Albersman and public affairs professional Mark Oyaas. Lambrecht and Albersman office separately in a building on North Washington Avenue. During an interview with Sports Headliners last week, Lambrecht jokingly referred to himself and Albersman as a couple of guys with a computer working from a building “next to a strip club” (Deja Vu).

But there’s no joking around about their intent as stated in the opening paragraph of the letter. This town learned to take Lambrecht seriously years ago when he advocated for the Rapid Park property that eventually became the site for Target Field.

Lambrecht and other land owners profited from that development. His newest mission is “civic” inspired, he claimed, and while he still owns property downtown he said his gain from a Farmers Market Vikings stadium site will be limited to the expected increase in real estate values that will benefit many landowners and the city.

Building a stadium at the city-owned Farmers Market site is an important piece in a concept Lambrecht and associates refer to as “The Corridor.” The vision is to connect sports and entertainment through transit.

With an emphasis on light rail and commuter train, people will connect to the Vikings stadium, Target Field, Target Center, the Hennepin Avenue entertainment district, Convention Center, Hennepin County Medical Center, a redeveloped Metrodome area, University of Minnesota venues including TCF Bank Stadium, Xcel Energy Center, RiverCentre and the Union Depot. And Lambrecht said a new Farmers Market site can be found near the old location.

The transportation synergy and proximity of attractions excites Lambrecht and others who want to maintain the economic vitality of Minneapolis, the lead city in the region. If downtown rots, the whole “apple (region) becomes rotten,” he said.

Albersman wrote in an October 28 Star Tribune opinion article that the proposed Arden Hills site for the Vikings stadium “flunks nearly every logical test.” He argues that the suburban site is “across the metro from the traditional season-ticket base.” He also views an Arden Hills site as not taking advantage of existing and planned transportation like downtown that also has bars, restaurants and other entertainment attractions already in place. The Arden Hills site throws more economic competition into the metro area mix, instead of maintaining and improving what’s already in place, according to downtown stadium advocates.

They envision the Farmers Market stadium site being an economic stimulus to the North Loop area of downtown. The stadium and other downtown attractions will be linked by rail, bus, bike, and, of course, car. Pedestrians will move through much of “The Corridor” by the skyway system.

Comments Welcome

Plan Calls for New Agency to Oversee Entertainment

Posted on November 9, 2011November 27, 2011 by David Shama

The Lambrecht vision for the Metrodome area is to see the facility torn down and replaced not only by commercial and residential development, but also by greenspace development. Lambrecht’s ideas for the area he calls Downtown East include a new medical facility by the University of Minnesota that would work with the existing Hennepin County Medical Center.

In their letter to the governor, Lambrecht and his colleagues reference the lack of forethought and cohesive planning in addressing metropolitan area stadium issues for more than a half century. They have taken inspiration from the Metropolitan Airports Commission, an agency formed in the 1940s to promote not only air travel but to minimize cost and duplication by the area’s multiple airports.

The Metropolitan Entertainment Commission is Lambrecht’s answer to better sports and entertainment planning, starting with the Vikings stadium project. The letter to the governor makes this pitch: “It is time to get the house in order. Between now and the regularly-scheduled legislative session it would be possible to convene a group of qualified and engaged citizens to form the MEC. They could consider governance, operations and financing options. Additionally this group could act as an arbiter for site selection.”

Lambrecht believes with planning from the MEC a $1 billion stadium might be built on the Farmers Market site without using new public taxes or gambling revenues. A varied combination of private and public funds ─ including from the Vikings, corporate community, existing entertainment taxes, and sale of the Metrodome land ─ might satisfy the financing needs.

Critics will have their doubts about parts or all of Lambrecht’s dreams regarding a Corridor-Farmers Market-MEC solution, but no one can deny he was right about the shabby Rapid Park site that became Target Field, a nationally acclaimed urban ballpark sitting on a tight parcel of land surrounded by 21st century transportation and a variety of big city entertainment options.

The man has vision.

More at www.corridormn.com

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