Skip to content
David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners
Menu
  • Gophers
  • Vikings
  • Twins
  • Timberwolves
  • Wild
  • United
  • Lynx
  • UST
  • MIAC
  • Preps
Menu
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room

Spell It Out and Demand this: EXCELLENCE

Posted on October 18, 2010November 4, 2011 by David Shama

EXCELLENCE.  There’s a reason the word is spelled in cap letters. The whole search needs to be done with this mantra: “We are committed to hiring a college head coach who is a proven winner.”  No excuses.

Fundraising starts now. The best of efforts must be made to raise money from outside sources to allow the Gophers to compete for top coaches.  There are probably 25 college coaches or more who earn about $1.6 million or greater per season.  Brewster was paid approximately $1 million a year.  Not good enough going forward.

Hit a grand slam home run.  If the mantra demands excellence at the top of the search criteria then the hunt begins with a dream short list.  Can you say Jim Harbaugh, Chris Petersen or Tony Dungy?  Hire any of those guys and the town goes nuts just like when Lou Holtz brought his magic bag here in 1984 and transformed a slum program overnight into a respectable outfit on its way to the Rose Bowl and becoming bigger in this state than the Vikings.

Keep your eye on the criteria.  If the U can’t hit a grand slam home run, then hit a solo shot.  Head coaches like Air Force’s Troy Calhoun, Utah’s Kyle Whittingham and South Florida’s Skip Holtz are criteria poster boys.  Don’t panic.  The right guy who meets the criteria is out there.

For gosh sake, make sure the administration is on board.  It takes more than a great coach and willing athletic department to have a powerful football program.  The school president and other top leaders have to be arm-in-arm with the coach and supporting his needs.  Gary Barnett led the Northwestern miracle turn around in the mid-1990’s and said about administrators: “They’re not on the outside looking down saying, ‘Good luck.’…”

Check out Wednesday’s column when Sports Headliners will have a more complete list of who should be considered for the job and the names of three coaches the U may ultimately choose from.

Comments Welcome

All-Star Game, Vikings & Other Notes

Posted on October 18, 2010November 27, 2011 by David Shama

Sports Headliners has learned that the Minnesota High School All-Star Football Game will be held at TCF Bank Stadium next year.  All-Star director Dave Fritze said the sponsoring Minnesota High School Football Coaches Association will hold the game there on June 25, 2011 and in future years.

The All-Star game has a long history that dates back more than 50 years.  In the 1970’s the game was played at Memorial Stadium on the University campus.  Other sites have included Parade Stadium and Macalester College in the metro area.  Last year’s game was held at St. Cloud State University.

Fritze said the All-Star game costs about $70,000 to stage and whatever proceeds are available go to the football coaches association, a nonprofit that has long been a vigorous promoter of amateur football in the state with activities such as clinics and the game. The game is played between many of the best graduating prep seniors in the state who represent the Metro and Outstate squads.

As part of the 50th season, the Vikings organization is asking fans to help select the 50 greatest Vikings players of all time.  By visiting www.vikings.com/50 fans can find statistics, biographies, photos and videos of many nominees.  Voting began last week and continues through 29.

Twins hero Michael Cuddyer sounded the Gjallarhorn prior to yesterday’s Vikings-Dallas game at Mall of America Field.

There were about 30 Dallas media, including 12 representing Spanish radio and TV, covering the game.  That will be one of the largest media contingents of the season at Mall of America Field.

Vikings quarterback Brett Favre said after the Dallas game that wide receiver Randy Moss had some words for the team at halftime that were helpful.  Favre didn’t elaborate.

Vikings wide receiver Percy Harvin, who had a franchise record 95 yard kickoff return for a touchdown, was probably the team’s MVP yesterday in the 24-21 win.  He was asked if the addition of Moss to the roster created opportunities for others.  “Definitely, it’s becoming easier,” Harvin said.  “A lot of lanes should open up for us in the running game, and we just have to get it all together, and hopefully this game gave us the momentum and our offense can build from this.”

Dave Mona’s pre-game vignette on WCCO Radio prior to the Minnesota-Purdue game Saturday included the fact that collectively former Boilermakers quarterbacks have thrown more NFL touchdown passes than alums from any other school.  Guess how many NFL touchdown passes ex-Gophers have thrown?  One, according to Mona.  His research showed that Gino Cappelletti threw the lone touchdown pass on a fake field goal.  Purdue’s total? 1,096.

New Wild goaltender Jose Theodore recently contacted goalie mask designer Todd Miska to update the mask he wore with the Capitals.  Earlier this year Miska painted the masks of Niklas Backstrom and Josh Harding.

Defenseman Brent Burns and wife Susan are working with the nonprofit Defending The Blue Line to offer free Wild tickets to military service members. Preference is given to currently deployed, combat wounded, and families of KIA (Killed In Action) service members.  www.DefendingTheBlueLine.com

FOX Sports North will televise tomorrow night’s Timberwolves-Indiana game from Target Center beginning at 7 p.m.

The Minnesota Swarm has re-signed forward Ryan Benesch to a three-year contract extension. Benesch, 25, played in 15 games during his first season with the Swarm in 2010. He had 83 points on 28 goals and 55 assists last year, tying him for ninth in the NLL in scoring.

Swarm fans can buy two season tickets at full price, and then purchase two more at 50 percent off.   www.mnswarm.com

Registration for the second season of the Minnesota Hockey Recreational League is open through November 1. The league begins play in early December and offers a low cost hockey option for boys and girls ages 9-14.   More information is available at www.minnesotahockey.org or send an email to info@minnesotahockey.org.

Comments Welcome

Statistics Tell Story of U Defense

Posted on October 15, 2010November 4, 2011 by David Shama

Among coach Tim Brewster’s repeated mantras has been “building a championship defense.”  Halfway through Brewster’s fourth season that hasn’t been heard for awhile and for good reason.

Taking “Gopher Nation” to the Rose Bowl following a Big Ten championship has been the Brewster goal since becoming coach in January of 2007.  That success was to be built on a championship defense but the 2010 Gophers are…um…struggling.

Minnesota is last in conference scoring defense at 32.3 points per game.  Also last among the league’s 11 teams in rushing defense yielding 196.3 yards a game.  In total yards Minnesota is giving up 417.8 yards per game, the second most in the conference.

Those stats are troublesome and so, too, is that the defense’s stated goal and No. 1 priority is stopping the run.  Through six games, neither the linemen, linebackers nor defensive backs have impressed as the Gophers, with a 1-5 record, have lost five consecutive games including a 41-38 loss to South Dakota.

During Brewster’s first season in 2007 the Gophers gave up 440 points, second most in school history. That was an average of 36.7 points per game in the 1-11 season.

By now more was expected of the coaching staff and players.  The defense and overall limited success is more similar to coach Jim Wacker’s program, than Glen Mason’s, the coach Brewster replaced.

Wacker, who coached the Gophers from 1992-96, had a 3-8 record in his fourth season and his team gave up 33.5 points per game.  Mason inherited a mess from Wacker but by his third season was 8-4, including 5-3 in the Big Ten and his team allowed 16.3 points a game.

Mason, who coached Minnesota from 1997-2006, took the Gophers to seven second level bowl games. His mantra from day one on the job was “stop the run first” and sometimes his teams did.  He was dismissed because his career Big Ten record was 16 games below .500.

Mason’s last team had a 6-7 record and gave up 26 points per game.  He left a “cupboard” with more resources than Wacker put in place for him.  But so far Brewster’s record is more Wacker-like than similar to Mason.  Brewster is 6-20 in conference games and 15-29 overall.  Wacker’s numbers through the same number of games: 7-19 and 12-32.

Comments Welcome

Posts pagination

  • Previous
  • 1
  • …
  • 689
  • 690
  • 691
  • 692
  • 693
  • 694
  • 695
  • …
  • 1,180
  • Next
  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use

Search Shama

Archives

  Tommies Locker Room   Iron Horse   Meyer Law   KLN Family Brands   Culvers

Recent Posts

  • Undrafted Brosmer Wins Confidence of Coach, Teammates
  • J.J. McCarthy and Teammates Pull Off a Stunner in Motown
  • Revenue Increase Projected for Gopher Men’s Basketball
  • Scattergun Column Talking Mimosas, Vikes, Gophers & More
  • Harbaugh or KOC? Who Would Have Been Better for Vikings?
  • Eagles & QB Jalen Hurts Fly in Costly Vikings Home Loss
  • 2025 Hoops Game Failed but Gophers-Tommies Still Teases
  • Impatience with McCarthy by Fans, Media Wrong Approach
  • Glen Mason Speaks Out about Honoring U Football Players
  • Win or Lose, U Can Make Positive Impression at No. 1 OSU

Newsmakers

  • KEVIN O’CONNELL
  • BYRON BUXTON
  • P.J. FLECK
  • KIRILL KAPRIZOV
  • ANTHONY EDWARDS
  • CHERYL REEVE
  • NIKO MEDVED

Archives

Read More…

  • STADIUMS
  • MEDIA
  • NCAA
  • RECRUITING
  • SPORTS DRAFTS

Get in Touch

  • Home
  • Biography
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
Blaze Credit Union

Dinkytown Athletes

Murray's Restaurant

Meadows at Mystic Lake

Culver's | Iron Horse | KLN Family Brands | Meyer Njus Tanick | Tommie’s Locker Room
© 2025 David Shama's Minnesota Sports Headliners | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme