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Jack Buck: ‘And We’ll See You Tomorrow Night’

Posted on June 13, 2011October 9, 2011 by David Shama

Classless super stars: LeBron James and Dwayne Wade mocking Dirk Nowitzki for being sick with a 101 degree temperature.

Favorite restaurant: Are you kidding? Murray’s.

Best meal at home: Anything followed by large quantities of Peanut M&M’s.

Best way to start the morning: Watching Dan Patrick on TV, or reading his column in Sports Illustrated.

Best way to end the day: With a margarita on the deck.

Worst habit: Paying too much attention to both the past and future.

What I love about Canadian native Justin Morneau: He drinks maple syrup and hangs out with bears.

Things I don’t get about the Twins: What is Bert Blyleven’s “California math?”  How come the team caps say TC?  Are they the Twin Cities Twins?

Joe Mauer’s chances of being booed upon his return to Target Field: Slim but I won’t say none.

Most unforgettable call from a World Series: Jack Buck’s famous words following Kirby Puckett’s winning home run for the Twins in game six, “And we’ll see you tomorrow night.”

Best quarterback I ever saw: Brett Favre, 2009 vintage playing for the Vikings.

Stats I can’t forget: Wilt Chamberlain scoring 100 points in a single game.  Joe DiMaggio’s 56 game hitting streak.

Appalling statistics:  America’s big city school systems graduate less than 50 percent of their students.  It’s not just the systems that need to improve, the parents and kids need to step up, too.

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The Big Lie I Admit to Now

Posted on June 13, 2011October 9, 2011 by David Shama

The lie I can’t shake: Telling myself every spring my golf game is improved.

Best coaching experience ever: Going undefeated in basketball for two years with Washburn area junior high kids.

Best song: The Minnesota Rouser.  When the Gophers are special (and I emphasize special), the school fight song sends shivers up my back.

Best trick trivia question from the old days at Met Stadium:  Who is the only person to play for the Twins and Vikings?  (Answer: the organist).

What I can live without but won’t: Twitter.  Follow me: David Shama @Minn_Sports.

On my nightstand: The Book of Basketball by Bill Simmons, and A New Earth by  Eckhart Tolle.

Nostalgic shopping: Remember when USDA Prime Beef was commonplace at the grocery store?

Unforgettable Gophers football advertisement from long ago: Bronko Nagurski saying, “When the Vikings lose I get mad.  When the Gophers lose I could cry.”

I lie awake at night wondering: Is white goateed Twins manager Ron Gardenhire really Santa Claus?

Question for Vikings owner Zygi Wilf: Would you play Groucho Marx in a remake of the movie “Horse Feathers?”

Favorite winter getaway: Little Cayman Island, Point of Sand.  (Don’t tell.)

Biggest worry and hope: This country has a lot of problems, but many amazing people are doing great things for themselves and others.

People I miss: My mom, dad, uncles and aunts, and favorites from the sports world including Herb Brooks, Paul Giel and Harmon Killebrew.

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Sports Decisions to Command Attention of New U President

Posted on June 10, 2011November 27, 2011 by David Shama

Eric Kaler officially starts his job as University of Minnesota president on July 1.  Perhaps never in UM history has a new president’s arrival been so anticipated by those who passionately follow the school’s sports teams.

Kaler’s reputation for being supportive of athletics was documented at Stony Brook University in New York where he was provost.  And those who conducted the search for the Minnesota presidency to succeed Bob Bruininks put a priority on candidates willing and able to help the Gophers’ athletics department.

Jerry Kill talked to Kaler before he accepted the Gophers football job last fall.  Kill must have liked what he heard from Kaler or he could have remained at Northern Illinois, or perhaps accepted another major college job other than Minnesota.

The Gophers trail several other Big Ten Conference schools in football budgets and there is an arms race across the country to spend on facilities, recruiting and coaches’ salaries.  Kaler’s decisions about football and particularly other revenue producing sports at Minnesota will play an important role in the success of Gophers teams.

It’s not just about throwing more money at trying to be successful, but the dollars are important when combined with the right coaching leadership.  All signs so far are that Kill and his staff have the expertise, if they have the resources, to make Gophers’ football much better than it has been in decades.

Kaler probably has already received input on coaches at Minnesota.  He’s had meetings with athletics director Joel Maturi and it’s known that contracts remain to be finalized with Kill, basketball coach Tubby Smith, hockey coach Don Lucia and baseball coach John Anderson.

Kaler will also need to address Maturi’s future because his contract ends next year. Maturi told Sports Headliners he expects his future to be discussed with Kaler this fall.  “He has to get to know me.  I need to get to know him,” Maturi said.

Maturi has expressed interest in staying on as athletics director but it has to be a situation that is good for the school and him.  Among the factors on his side of the decision is the input of wife Lois who has been hurt by criticism of her husband.

Maturi has been a devout advocate of retaining all 25 men’s and women’s sports.  It’s a constant challenge maintaining a balanced budget and many athletic departments across the country, including ones that excel in football and men’s basketball, don’t have the large number of sports that Minnesota supports.

Kaler’s position on either maintaining or reducing the 25 teams will be interesting.  The educational mantra to provide participation opportunities is strong, but so too is the temptation to reduce some expenditures and direct those monies into football, men’s basketball and men’s hockey, the programs that captivate fans and really are the “window” to the University as viewed by the public.  The athletic department is almost entirely self-supporting, generating its revenues through gate receipts, broadcast rights, fundraising and other sources.

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