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Worth Noting

Posted on October 28, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

The Wolves are No. 29 among 30 teams in the power rankings, according to https://sports.espn.go.com/nba/powerranking?season=2010&week=0.

A campus basketball source said if the Gophers played a game now the starting lineup might be guards Al Nolen and Lawrence Westbrook, center Ralph Sampson III, and forwards Damien Johnson and Colton Iverson.  The Gophers open with an exhibition game at home on November 5 against Minnesota Duluth.

Lynx guard Renee Montgomery has her own website, www.reneemontgomery20.com. Included on the site are video and written blogs updating fans on her experiences in Lithuania.  Lynx forward Charde Houston is off to a 6-0 start for Tarbes, a team in the French League. The 6-foot forward is averaging a league-high 20.5 points per game.

Alex Daniels, who started his career at Minnesota and played both offense and defense, is a defensive tackle for No. 7 ranked Cincinnati (USA Today poll).  He had a team season high four sacks for the Bearcats earlier this month against Miami of Ohio.

Gophers quarterback Adam Weber is a close friend and roommate of wide receiver Eric Decker who will miss the remainder of this season because of a foot injury.  Weber said yesterday at a news conference that he will do his best to be supportive of his friend but won’t pretend to know the disappointment that Decker is experiencing.  Decker, whom Gophers coach Tim Brewster describes as the “best wide receiver period” in the country, was named one of 10 semi-finalists on Monday for the Biletnikoff award honoring the nation’s top college receiver.

Brewster said it hasn’t been determined if Decker will need surgery on his foot.  If so, there’s no chance of Decker participating in a bowl game.  Otherwise, he could be back for a bowl game if the Gophers earn an invitation.  Da Jon’ McKnight replaces Decker with Ben Kuznia being his backup.

The Gophers (4-4) might face a somber group of Michigan State players on Saturday night at TCF Bank Stadium.  The Spartans lost to Iowa on the final play of the game last Saturday but the odds-makers must think they will be okay because MSU (4-4) is about a touchdown favorite to beat Minnesota.

The Gophers’ game on Saturday against Michigan State begins at 7 p.m.  Brewster said he loves night games, describing the atmosphere as “electric.”

Vikings wide receiver Sidney Rice has 312 reception yards in the last two games, the fifth best two-game total in franchise history.  No NFL receiver has more yards than Rice the last two weeks.

Rice and running back Adrian Peterson (687 yards) have produced 1,232 yards.  That’s the best receiver-runner combo in the NFC.

The Vikings have the best defense inside the 20 yard line in the NFL, allowing opponents to score 27.8 percent of the time.

Two Minnesota schools are ranked in the top 10 of this week’s top 25 American Football Coaches Association poll.  Minnesota State Mankato (9-0) is No. 4 and Minnesota Duluth (8-1) ranks No. 6.

The 2009 World Series teams, the Yankees and Phillies, have payrolls of $201,449,189 and $113,004,046, according to Cot’s Baseball Contracts web site.   The Twins 2009 payroll was $65,299,266.  More at https://mlbcontracts.blogspot.com/.

George Steinbrenner bought the Yankees in 1973 for about $10 million.  They are now valued at $1.5 billion, according to. https://www.forbes.com/lists/2009/33/baseball-values-09_The-Business-Of-Baseball_Value.html.

Fifty years ago the 1959 World Series between the Dodgers and White Sox went six games, ending on October 8.  If the 2009 World Series lasts seven games, the final game will be played on November 5.

Kevin Mulvey, who the Twins traded to Arizona last summer for Jon Rauch, pitched in six games for the Diamondbacks in September including four as a starter.  He was 0-3 with a 7.04 ERA.   Rauch, at 6-11 the tallest pitcher in major league history, was impressive in limited relief for the Twins with a 5-1 record and 1.72 ERA.

Comments Welcome

Contract Timing Talk Right for Childress, Not Ownership

Posted on October 26, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

Speculation that Vikings head coach Brad Childress and agent Bob LaMonte are trying for a contract extension makes sense to an NFL insider who spoke to Sports Headliners on condition of anonymity.  “If I were Brad, and Bob was my guy, I would have Bob on the horn regularly because they’ve got to work that out,” the source said on Saturday.  “They’ve (the Vikings) got a favorable schedule out of the bye but when they get to December that’s a tough situation.”

The Vikings were 6-0 last week when reports were published that Childress, who is in the fourth year of a five year contract, was looking for a new deal.  Whether that’s true isn’t confirmed by the Childress-LaMonte team, or the Vikings, but the source said the coach should “strike now while the iron is hot.”

Although the Vikings lost to Pittsburgh yesterday, the team’s impressive start to the 16 game season provides the 53-year-old Childress with leverage for a contract extension.  His annual coaching records have reflected progress: 6-10, 8-8, 10-6 and now 6-1.

In the fragile world of coaching security, results and employment can change fast.  The Vikings play at Green Bay next Sunday, and then have the next weekend off.  Following that are likely wins in November at home against Detroit (1-5) and Seattle (2-4).  After that starts a run of games against Chicago (3-3) in late November, with December dates versus Cincinnati (5-2), Carolina (2-4), Chicago again and the early January finale with the Giants (5-2).

If the Vikings falter in their late season games, the record won’t be so sparkling and the contract negotiating leverage is gone.  Childress is in a strong position now not only because of the team’s impressive start in the first seven games but also for his gamble to make Brett Favre a Viking.

Childress helped convince the 39-year-old legend to postpone retirement, also moving aside the hoped for plan to make Tarvaris Jackson the starting quarterback.  Jackson was drafted in 2006 and schooled for three prior seasons by Childress.  “Brad Childress pushed all his chips to the middle of the table on Favre, essentially giving up on Tarvaris Jackson,” the source said.

However, the Vikings ownership, including Zygi Wilf, has sound reason to wait until the season ends before negotiating with Childress on a contract extension.  The full 2009 results and four coaching seasons will be complete in January.  Waiting and then evaluating also avoids a potential distraction for the team during the season, the source said.

Childress is believed to earn less than $2 million annually, making him among the lower paid head coaches in the NFL.  Prior to coming here Childress had never been an NFL head coach.

Data on NFL coaches’ salaries is scarce, so figures can involve some guesswork. The source said Childress and his agent might be looking for a new five year deal that provides security and compensation reflecting the average of what the upper tier of NFL coaches is paid.  What’s negotiated, though, could be less than the average and for perhaps $4.5 million a year with incentives that let Childress make more based on performances.

Comments Welcome

Gophers’ Season Record Looking Like 6-6

Posted on October 26, 2009February 7, 2012 by David Shama

The Gophers’ season record may end at 6-6 if they can win November home games against slumping Illinois and small school South Dakota State.  Coach Tim Brewster’s Gophers, 4-4, also have remaining games with Michigan State and Iowa.

The Illini, a Rose Bowl team a year ago last January, is in free fall having lost five consecutive games.  The only Illini win is against Illinois State, a Missouri Valley Conference team as is South Dakota State.  Illinois was 5-7 last season and considered a possible Big Ten conference contender going into this season, but the Illini (1-6) have imploded badly losing by double digit margins in every game including to so-so Indiana and Purdue.

The struggling Gophers can hardly be over confident about beating Illinois, or South Dakota State.  The Jackrabbits have a 6-1 record playing teams such as Cal Poly, North Dakota State and Northern Iowa.  Those aren’t scary teams but the Gophers got more than a fright put into them two years ago when North Dakota State (same conference as SDS) upset Minnesota in the Metrodome.

The Gophers’ two other remaining games, against Michigan State and Iowa, definitely look spookier.  This Saturday, on Halloween night at TCF Bank Stadium, the Gophers play MSU (4-4), a solid team.  MSU went down to the last play before losing 15-13 to undefeated Iowa (8-0) last Saturday. The Spartans have one of the Big Ten’s better defenses, although probably less formidable than what the Gophers have faced in recent weeks.

The Gophers had 138 yards in total offense against Penn State a week ago last Saturday in a 20-0 loss.  At Ohio State last Saturday the Gophers managed one late fourth quarter touchdown in a 38-7 loss.  Minnesota had 286 total yards but 78 of those yards came on the touchdown drive when the game was long decided.

The Gophers put together a heavy list of mistakes in Columbus on Saturday including five dropped passes in the first half alone.  A blown coverage in the secondary gave the Buckeyes an easy touchdown pass for a 7-0 lead at halftime.  A fumbled kickoff return to start the second half and later two Gopher interceptions and other mistakes made for a disappointing outcome against an Ohio State team that has a struggling offense, too.

With successive home games coming against Michigan State, Illinois and South Dakota State, the Gophers are likely to have better performances than the last two weeks.  Two or three wins are possible.  A November 21 finish at Iowa looks much more difficult.  The Hawkeyes are the favorite now to win the conference championship and they beat Minnesota 55-0 last season.

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