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Wrestling: The 54th Midlands Championship

One of the best open tournaments of the year is the Midlands, always the last week of December held at Northwestern. While our Gophers go to next week's Southern Scuffle instead, many B1G teams are at the Midlands: IA, NE, IL, WI, and MI. The action starts tomorrow am and finishes on Friday night and every match will be broadcast on BTN Plus.

I'll put up a thread on The Southern Scuffle (Jan. 1st & 2nd) in the next couple days. It will be very interesting for our Gopher Wrestlers as the suspended wrestlers will be back and there are some additional line-up changes.

Here's an article on The Midlands from FloWrestling:


The 54th Midlands Tournament Preview: Contenders and Predictions

FloWrestling.org
Dec 28, 2016
Andrew Spey

It's the last week of December, which means the 54th edition of The Midlands, the annual holiday wrestling classic hosted by Northwestern, is right around the corner. This year's competition looks to be as mighty and monstrous of a meatgrinder as we've seen in recent memory.

The wrestling starts at Welsh-Ryan Arena in the morning on Thursday, Dec. 29, and concludes the next day on Friday, Dec. 30.

The Midlands organizers have assembled an intimidating lineup of teams: 36 NCAA DI programs as well as at least one top competitor from the Division II, III, and NAIA ranks.
The field is staggeringly deep -- a theme that will be revisited often in the individual weight class previews -- with half of the teams currently in the top 20 slated to compete in Evanston, Illinois.

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A few teams, such as Michigan and Lehigh, will send redshirts and backups but not starters. Furthermore, not all teams have finalized their rosters, and even for the teams that have registered, there is always the possibility of last-minute additions or scratches. So we won't know exactly who will be stepping on to the mats until the brackets are released, but armed with as much foresight as possible, we've nonetheless compiled a list of potential contenders at each weight class.

125 Contenders
#1 Thomas Gilman (Iowa)
#6 Josh Rodriguez (North Dakota State)
#8 Tim Lambert (Nebraska)
#15 Noah Gonser (Eastern Michigan)
#16 Markus Simmons (Iowa State)
#17 Josh Terao (American)
#19 Freddie Rodriguez (SIU-Edwardsville)
#20 Shakur Laney (Ohio)
Ronnie Bresser (Oregon State)
Brent Fleetwood (Central Michigan)
Brandon Jeske (Old Dominion)
Ryan Millhof RS (Arizona State)
Elijah Oliver (Indiana)
Anthony Rubinetti (Northwestern)

Returning NCAA finalist Thomas Gilman has ended every match he's wrestled this year by a fall of either the technical or pin variety. He will be a strong favorite but will be tested by Ryan Millhof and Ronnie Bresser if the Sun Devils and Beavers choose to enter both redshirting wrestlers (teams have traditionally been able to enter up to 15 wrestlers, with redshirts competing unattached). Neither Millhof nor Bresser are registered at the moment, but both teams do have room on their rosters.

Nebraska's Tim Lambert will also be angling for a spot in the finals. This is the start of many stacked brackets to come and don't be surprised if several NCAA All-American contenders are kept off the podium at this year's Midlands.

The results of this bracket will also go a long way in determining the bottom half of the top 20 individual rankings, as those spots have gone through a weekly reshuffling so far this year.

Spey's Soothsay:
Gilman holds off the contenders to claim his third Midlands belt in four trips to the finals. Millhof and Bresser (if they wrestle) finish second and third. The acrobatic Terao of Washington, DC's American University finishes fourth, and the Huskers and Cyclones each get a wrestler on the podium in Tim Lambert and Markus Simmons. To cover myself if Millhof and Bresser don't go, move everyone else up and add Ohio's Shakur Laney and SIUE's Fred Rodriguez to the final two spots.

1. Gilman
2. Millhof
3. Bresser
4. Terao
5. Lambert
6. Simmons

133 Contenders
#1 Cory Clark (Iowa)
#2 Zane Richards (Illinois)
#4 Eric Montoya (Nebraska)
#5 Seth Gross (South Dakota State)
#7 Dom Forys (Pitt)
#11 Earl Hall (Iowa State)
#17 Tyson Dippery (Rutgers)
#19 Sean Fausz (North Carolina State)
#20 Cameron Kelly (Ohio)
Scott DelVecchio (Rutgers)
Luke Karam RS (Lehigh)
Cory Keener (Central Michigan)
Brian Lantry (Buffalo)
Alex Madrigal (Old Dominion)
Jamal Morris (North Carolina State)
Anthony Tutolo (Kent State)

It's tough to know where to begin with this absurd weight class. We could see Cory Clark versus Zane Richards, round seven, in the finals (Clark holds a 4-2 lead in that series), but that's assuming both wrestles can get past fellow returning All-Americans Eric Montoya and Earl Hall, not to mention top eight contenders Seth Gross and Dom Forys. It should also be noted that Clark, who has been hampered by injuries this year, is not registered as of publication time, and he is likely to be scratched from the tournament.

Half of the top 20 133-pounders are set to attend, joined by a host of other podium threats. I'm predicting mostly chalk, but that could easily prove to be a foolish forecast with a bracket this overflowing with talent. We could be looking at a lot of repeat podium climbers in St. Louis in March.

Spey's Soothsay:
Iowa wins it's second championship in a row, and Clark his second Midlands of his career, besting Junior and Cadet Freestyle World team member (and former Hawkeye teammate) Seth Gross, in the finals. Richards takes down two-time AA Earl Hall to salvage a third-place finish. Nebraskan Eric Montoya and Pitt Panther Dom Forys round out the top six. If Clark doesn't go, slide everyone up and Ohio's Cam Kelly into sixth place.

1. Clark
2. Gross
3. Richards
4. Hall
5. Montoya
6. Forys

141 Contenders
#3 Matt Kolodzik (Princeton)
#5 Kevin Jack (North Carolina State)
#6 Anthony Ashnault (Rutgers)
#10 Colton McCrystal (Nebraska)
#16 Luke Pletcher (Ohio State)
#19 Cole Martin (Wisconsin)
#20 Joey Palmer (Oregon State)
Michael Longo (Oklahoma)
Gabe Moreno (Iowa State)
Chad Red RS (Nebraska)
Emilio Saavedra (Old Dominion)
Kyle Springer (Eastern Michigan)
Kanen Storr RS (Iowa State)

In yet another weight class silly with depth, Matt Kolodzik, Kevin Jack, and Anthony Ashnault lead our pack of worthies. Expect a bloodbath as these three title contenders battle it out with NCAA tournament seeding on the line.

Nebraska is sending highly touted true freshman Chad Red, who will have his chance to make a statement. The redshirt frosh has 15 wins this year against a single loss, to his teammate, Colton McCrystal.

Ohio State plans on sending Luke Pletcher (along with Myles Martin as its only two entrants). Pletcher was thrust into the starting lineup following the season-ending injury to Keshawn Hayes. The Buckeyes will be counting on Pletcher to score points in March if they are to contend for a team title, and this tournament will go a long way in determining just how hopeful they should be.

Spey's Soothsay:

Jack tops Ashnault for the second time in a month to claim the crown. Kolodzik doesn't go down easy but still finishes third, beating an impressive Chad Red. Nebraska's second placer of the weight class, McCrystal, edges Ohio State's Pletcher, who shows off his bona fides with a sixth-place finish.

1. Jack
2. Ashnault
3. Kolodzik
4. Red
5. McCrystal
6. Pletcher

149 Contenders
#2 Brandon Sorensen (Iowa)
#6 Justin Oliver (Central Michigan)
#10 Alfred Bannister (Maryland)
#13 Christian Pagdilao (Arizona State)
#14 Ken Theobold (Rutgers)
#17 Sam Speno (North Carolina State)
#18 Steve Bleise (Northern Illinois)
#19 Joey Delgado (Oregon State)
Andrew Crone (Wisconsin)
Davion Jeffries (Oklahoma)
Jordan Laster (Princeton)
Mikey Racciato (Pittsburgh)
Zander Wick RS (Wisconsin)

Barely keeping up with its peers, a mere nine top 20 wrestlers are expected to compete at 149, though another four starters are knocking on the rankings door.

Maryland's "Baby J" Bannister is undefeated, but to stay that way he'll have to topple Iowa's Brandon Sorensen, whose last loss to anyone not named Zain Retherford came in the 2015 NCAA finals (to Jason Tsirtsis). The seventh-place finisher in 2016, Central Michigan's Justin Oliver, should not be overlooked.

Like 125, the bottom half of the top 20 rankings here will hopefully achieve clarity by the tournament's conclusion, for Flo's NCAA-ranker Christian Pyle's sanity, if nothing else.

Spey's Soothsay:
In typical workmanlike fashion, Sorenson dispatches all challengers, cementing Iowa's team title (if the Hawkeyes haven't done so already). Oliver and Bleise wrestle tough and finish two-three, respectively, for the Chippewas and Huskies (of the Northern Illinois variety). A surging Speno finishes fourth for the Wolfpack. Bannister bags a medal and Sooner Davion Jeffries gets his season back on track with a place on the podium.

1. Sorenson
2. Oliver
3. Bleise
4. Speno
5. Bannister
6. Jeffries

157 Contenders
#4 Michael Kemerer (Iowa)
#5 Tyler Berger (Nebraska)
#9 Clay Ream (North Dakota State)
#10 Colin Heffernan (Central Michigan)
#11 B.J. Clagon (Rider)
#14 DaWaylon Barnes (Oklahoma)
#16 Josh Shields (Arizona State)
Alex Griffin (Purdue)
Hayden Hidlay (North Carolina State)
Colin Holler (South Dakota State)
Caden McWhirter (Northern Illinois)
Jason Tsirtsis RS (Arizona State)
Evan Wick RS (Wisconsin)

The Midlands' 157 weight class took a major hit in the last couple weeks, when N.C. State's Max Rohskopf and Rutgers' Richie Lewis both went down with season-ending injuries. Their absence should help clear the way for a Kemerer vs. Berger final, in what will likely be the first of many contests between the young Hawkeye and Cornhusker.

As repeatedly mentioned, depth is once again on display, as a bevy of stalwarts in and around the bottom half of the top 20 are expected to hash it out on the mats. NCAA champion Jason Tsirtsis is notably registered at 157. Tsirtsis transferred from Northwestern to Arizona State in the offseason. Redshirt Wisconsinite Evan Wick, if entered, will look to establish himself, as his fellow blue-chip brother will do likewise at 149.

Spey's Soothsay:
Iowa loses its first finals match of the day, when Big Ten rival Tyler Berger gets the better of Michael Kemerer. BJ Clagon shakes off his trademark early season rust and storms his way to a bronze medal. Heffernan places an admirable fourth and ND Stater Clay Ream stops the upstart McWhirter in the fifth-place match.

1. Berger
2. Kemerer
3. Clagon
4. Heffernan
5. Ream
6. McWhirter

165 Contenders
#1 Isaiah Martinez (Illinois)
#3 Isaac Jordan (Wisconsin)
#6 Chad Walsh (Rider)
#8 Clark Glass (Oklahoma)
#12 Anthony Valencia (Arizona State)
#17 Seldon Wright (Old Dominion)
#19 TeShan Campbell (Pitt)
Alex Marinelli RS (Iowa)
Austin Reese (Ohio)
Johnny Sebastian (Northwestern)
Tyrel White (Columbia)
Kyle Bierdumpful (Harvard)

The marquee matchup of the tournament could be the 165 final if two-time NCAA champion Isaiah Martinez and two-time NCAA All-American Isaac Jordan hold seed. The Imar EyeJo tilt will be highly anticipated, with both Big Ten and NCAA tournament seeds at stake. [UPDATE]: Jordan is not on Wisconsin's list of registered wrestlers so our marquee match up is likely a scratch.

Arizona State's Anthony Valencia has had a few stumbles this year but has the talent and creativity to make a deep run in this tournament and reestablish himself as a title contender.

Fans may also get an opportunity to gauge the prospects of another blue-chip Iowa redshirt freshman in Alex Marinelli. There are NCAA team-race implications to Marinelli's finish as well, as head coach Tom Brands may decide to take off the redshirt if the young Hawkeye can show he can hang with the top tier of his weight class.

Spey's Soothsay:
IMar's pace is too much for Zeke, as the Fighting Illini keeps his collegiate varsity career loss total to a mere singleton. AValancia rebounds with a solid third-place finish over Rider star Chad Walsh. Marinelli makes a statement with a fifth-place finish over Oklahoman veteran Clark Glass.

1. Martinez
2. Jordan
3. Valencia
4. Walsh
5. Marinelli
6. Glass

174 Contenders
#4 Zahid Valencia (Arizona State)
#7 Alex Meyer (Iowa)
#12 Lelund Weatherspoon (Iowa State)
#13 Zac Brunson (Illinois)
#16 David Kocer (South Dakota State)
#19 Christian Brucki (Central Michigan)
#20 Jonathan Schleifer (Princeton)
Phil Bakuckas (Rutgers)
Micah Barnes (Nebraska)
Ryan Christensen (Wisconsin)
Trace Engelkes (Northern Illinois)
Josef Johnson (Harvard)
Matt Reed (Oklahoma)
Nick Reenan (North Carolina State)
Conan Schuster (Sacred Heart)

Frosh phenom Zahid Valencia has yet to drop a match this year and should earn the No. 1 seed of the tournament. Last year's Midlands was Zahid's debutante ball, as the then-redshirt freshman finished 7th at 184.

Iowa will look to senior Alex Meyer to stop Zahid in the finals. Lelund Weatherspoon of Iowa State and Zac Brunson of Illinois will try to crash that finals party. Both have proven themselves capable of such a feat despite their frequent spells of inconsistency.

Tournament host Northwestern isn't expected to put too many Wildcats on the podium, but one of its best shots may come at 174 from sophomore Johnny Sebastian.

And keep an eye out for Grandview's Lawton Benna and Messiah's Ben Swarr, the respective NAIA and NCAA Division III No. 1-ranked wrestlers. Their finish will provide some insight on how those non-DI wrestling classifications compare to the top division.

Spey's Soothsay:
ZValencia continues his torrential onslaught, capturing the Midlands throne over Meyer. Princeton's stout Jonathan Schleifer claims third after more than a couple upsets, including one over fourth-placer David Kocer of South Dakota State. Perennial enigmas Weatherspoon and Brunson complete the sextet.

1. Valencia
2. Meyer
3. Schleifer
4. Kocer
5. Weatherspoon
6. Brunson

184 Contenders
#3 TJ Dudley (Nebraska)
#4 Myles Martin
#6 Nate Jackson (Indiana)
#8 Sammy Brooks (Iowa)
#10 Jordan Ellingwood (Central Michigan)
#11 Nicholas Gravina (Rutgers)
#12 Jack Dechow (Old Dominion)
#13 Emery Parker (Illinois)
#15 Michael Macchiavello (North Carolina State)
#18 Ian Baker (Princeton)
Mitch Sliga (Northwestern)

This is yet another ludicrous weight class. The quarterfinals will resemble an abattoir, where at least one of the five NCAA All-Americans expected to enter the tournament will not make the semis.

This past season's NCAA champion at 174, Myles Martin, and 2016's fifth-place finisher at 197, Pat Downey, converged at 184 this year, contributing to what many experts consider to be the toughest overall weight class this academic year. Fortunately for for the Midlands' entrants (but unfortunately for its spectators), Downey will be out of action until 2017 and thus won't be on the mats this week.

Nevertheless, whoever emerges from this charnel house of a weight class unscathed will have truly established himself as a remorseless slaughtering machine and a major threat at the season-ending NCAA Tournament.

Spey's Soothsay:
Showing off his native South Carolinian muscle, TJ Dudley topples NCAA champ Myles Martin in the finals. Brooks settles for third with a win over conference rival and Hoosier Nate Jackson. Old Dominion's Jack Dechow halts the gravy train for Rutgers' Nick Gravina in the fifth-place match.

1. Dudley
2. Martin
3. Brooks
4. Jackson
5. Dechow
6. Gravina

197 Contenders
#5 Nate Rotert (South Dakota State)
#9 Aaron Studebaker (Nebraska)
#10 Brett Harner (Princeton)
#11 Ryan Wolfe (Rider)
#12 Kevin Beazley (Old Dominion)
#14 Shawn Scott (Northern Illinois)
#15 Brad Johnson (Oklahoma)
#17 James Benjamin (Buffalo)
#19 Ricky Robertson (Wisconsin)
Corey Griego (Oregon State)
Pete Renda RS (North Carolina State)
Austin Severn (Central Michigan)
Cash Wilcke (Iowa)

In an attempt to keep pace with its fellow weight classes, 197 shows up with nine ranked wrestlers of its own, in addition to a potential appearance from redshirt superstar and 2016 third-place finisher Pete Renda of NC State.

While not quite as top heavy as some of the lighter divisions, 197 will not lack for quantity. Princeton's Brett Harner will look to climb back into the top five where he started the year, and Oregon State's Corey Griego will attempt to pry is way back into the top 20.

Iowa freshman Cash Wilcke will attempt to establish himself as someone who can score points for the Hawkeyes in March. He'll have the opportunity to do so in a field replete with quality veterans.

Spey's Soothsay:
Princeton's Harner ascends the apex in a season-defining tournament. Studebaker's finals appearance helps the Huskers notch another impressive performance. Renda continues his preparation for next year's title run with a solid third-place finish. Nate Rotert ends up fourth. Ryan Wolfe of Rider scores a fifth-place finish over the surprising Austin Severn.

1. Harner
2. Studebaker
3. Renda
4. Rotert
5. Wolfe
6. Severn

285 Contenders
#2 Connor Medbery (Wisconsin)
#5 Tanner Hall (Arizona State)
#7 Sam Stoll (Iowa)
#11 Brooks Black (Illinois)
#15 Collin Jensen (Nebraska)
#17 Ross Larson (Oklahoma)
#18 Ryan Solomon (Pitt)
#20 Ray O'Donnell (Princeton)
Michael Boykin (North Carolina State)
Garrett Ryan (Columbia)
Quean Smith (Iowa State)

If Michigan sends redshirting senior Adam Coon, we may get to see him wrestle Wisconsin's Connor Medbery in one final folkstyle battle. The pair of All-Americans have split their two previous encounters.

If Coon does not make an appearance, expect Sun Devil Tanner Hall or, if healthy, Hawkeye Sam Stoll to meet Medbery in the finals Saturday evening.

Also currently registered is Lehigh's cadet freestyle world silver medalist, Jordan Wood, who will be testing his mettle against top DI competition for the first time.

As with many other weights, 285 should do wonders for helping weary rankers sort out the bottom half of the rankings. The bracket is a minefield, and these heavies will need to be on their A game to avoid falling out of, or further away from, the top 20.

Spey's Soothsay:
Medbery stomps a path to victory over the redoubtable Tanner Hall. Iowan Sam Stoll impresses, coming back from injuries to win third place over Nebraskan Collin Jensen. Pitt scores its highest placement with Ryan Solomon, who beats Brooks Black for fifth.

1. Medbery
2. Hall
3. Stoll
4. Jensen
5. Solomon
6. Black

Team Race:
Though not in a complete runaway, Iowa takes the team trophy without too much trouble, earning its fourth championship in a row. Nebraska finishes second with a sizable lead over the rest of the field. Wisconsin narrowly tops its neighbor to the south, Illinois, for third. A young Arizona State team, with more hardware to come in its future, finishes fifth. Rutgers sneaks past Central Michigan and into the top six on the strength of its impressive depth.

1. Iowa
2. Nebraska
3. Wisconsin
4. Illinois
5. Arizona State
6. Rutgers

Check back here on FloWrestling for updates and tune in live to watch the Monstrous Midlands Mayhem on BTN2Go
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Email to Coyle

I emailed Coyle asking him to act quickly on Claeys and to keep our coach. Here was his response:


Mr. Junit3

Thank you for taking time to send me an email. I appreciate your comments and loyal support of our program.

Kindest regards, Mark

Sent from my iPhone

I didn't expect any reply...this might sound like a generic response from Coyle, but everything he's ever said, this sounds like a well thought out from the heart response from our robot AD. ;)
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Pitino previews Purdue

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Opening statement: Obviously a very, very tough opponent. You know, Haas and Swanigan will play in the NBA. They're big, they're talented, always well coached, always tough. You know they're shooting the ball well. They're coming off an extremely impressive performance against Iowa. I think they're one of the best teams in the league, and it's a tough road experience, so it will be a good test for our guys.

On if it's another big test for the big men...
"Yeah, very much so. This, even more so than Michigan State. They're really physical. Swanigan is an NBA player, and Haas is huge. He'll play in the NBA. We have to do our best to guard them without fouling because so much of what they do from an offensive standpoint is predicated on throwing the ball inside. Almost everything they do is that, so it really revolves all around that. If you don't play post defense, you're in trouble.

On if he's stressed to Reggie Lynch to stay out of foul trouble to increase his minutes...
"Well Reggie, it's not stay out of foul trouble, it's play defense without fouling. It's just like screening. Oh, I didn't set an illegal screen. No, the goal is to set a great screen. The goal is to play great defense. Great defense is doing it without fouling. He's got to get better at that; that's been an issue for him most of his career. You know it's funny, we have not been able to work with Reggie, so it just feels like now, we're really able to work with him on that. He'll get better."

On if Florida State resembles Purdue...
"Yeah, I mean there are some similarities. Haas and Ojo are huge. Now, Jonathan Isaac is a different player than Swanigan, but there are similarities. Michigan State is very similar from a physical standpoint to Purdue. I think we've moved on from Florida State to be honest. Last game is fresh with our guys from a physicality standpoint, from a post defense standpoint, so we'll talk about that.

On how to defend a player like Ward or Swanigan...
"It's hard. Bakary I thought did a good job on Ward, even Eric was okay, you know. But it's difficult; you have to do your work early on those guys. It's a different dimension than Michigan State because they really, really try to find them every single time. And then they make you pay with really good players: Vince Edwards, Cline, Dakota Mathias. All those guys can make shots and they burn you if you over-help too much. That's what a good team does, and they're a very, very good team.

On talking on his blog about wanting Murphy to get the ball more and Lynch to finish above the rim...
"...I think with Murph, I think throughout the flow of the offense, we need to find him ways to get the ball more. I think he's pretty effective down there. And with Reggie, he's just too below the rim. I think he gets his shot blocked a lot. I think it's just a consistency thing for him to work on. You know, last game you can't take much away from it because he didn't play much. But I thought that Murph has been pretty efficient. We have to continue throughout the flow of the offense to look into him. I think that defensively we're very, very difficult to guard when we're driving obviously because we get fouled a lot, but we have to look to him more often."

On the mindset of Big Ten road games for the new players...
"I've talked to them a little bit about, last game you have a devestating loss, right? You can't look at it like that. You have to say, okay, it's one game. I remember my first year, I want to say we played like three top ten teams in like two weeks, or whatever it was. I mean this league, you've got to learn from the last game, and you have to move on. As disappointing as Michigan State was, you now get to play a top ten, top 15 team in the country on the road. You get another great opportunity, then you go at Northwestern, another great opportunity, then you play Michigan State again. Because this league is so good, you're going to have so many really good opportunities to get really good wins. You've got to learn from the past game, and you got to get over it. You got to move on; you got to get better."

On Bakary Konate not playing much at the start of the year and now seeming like the first one off the bench for Reggie Lynch...
"Well they're all important, but Bakary does a pretty good job versus physical bigs. The one thing about Bakary is he's strong. He is physical; he likes contact and doesn't shy away from that, and in the Big Ten, you need that. Where we got to get him is to stop fouling. He had some fouls in the Michigan State game where there was just no point. If we can get him to stop doing that, he's a valuable weapon off the bench. He's tough, he's physical, he's a very good defender. He gives us another dimension where we don't necessarily have to play small with Eric at the five, and I like that rotation."

On if Jordan Murphy's role has evolved from last year to have more jumpers and perimeter attacks...
"Not really, no I don't think he's taken a lot of jumpers. I think he needs to continue to get points, offensive rebounds, transition. I do like him driving off of a ball screen pop-type situation. I don't think he's taken a lot of jumpers, but I do think he's a matchup issue. We need to put him in spots to make the defense pay. He's kind of that undersized four; he's difficult to guard. He's a bit of a matchup issue."

On how he tries to utilize Murphy...
"We run a ball screen offense, so it's just kind of roll, pop. If you do roll, roll into the post, throw it in there. If you do pop, look to drive it, or look to reverse it and set another ball screen. So I mean there are multiple things that you can do throughout the course of our offense if you're doing it properly.

"I think our offense is behind our defense -- it's very clear. But that's five new faces all trying to figure out what to do, where to be. So that needs to catch up because our defense is pretty good right now, but we got to get our offense moving in the right direction. We're very good getting fouled, but we're still not moving the ball like we need to move it."

Joe Christensen Article

Gophers AD Mark Coyle wants to discuss 'expectations' with Tracy Claeys before decision on coach's future
The decision on the future of the Gophers football coach rests with President Eric Kaler and AD Mark Coyle.

By Joe Christensen Star Tribune

DECEMBER 28, 2016 — 10:08PM

ELIZABETH FLORES
U of M President Eric Kaler, center, and AD Mark Coyle, left, will review complex circumstances in Tracy Claeys’ performance.

blank.gif


Gophers head coach Tracy Claeys.


According to sources, contract extension talks for Claeys never got off the ground in December, even before the program became engulfed in controversy.

On Dec. 13, the university suspended 10 players from the team in connection with an alleged September sexual assault. Gophers players staged a two-day boycott in protest of the administration’s handling of the suspensions that threatened the team’s trip to the Holiday Bowl. Claeys tweeted his support for the players, which publicly aligned him against the administration.

Kaler later said he realized Claeys was in a difficult situation as a coach, but he continues to face public criticism. As of Wednesday night, a moveon.org petition calling for the coach’s termination had drawn 2,788 signatures, compared to 817 in another petition to retain him.

For Coyle and Kaler, the immediate decision will be whether to keep Claeys for 2017, with any extension talks likely to wait until the spring or summer.


Claeys still has two years and $3.1 million remaining on his contract, but the university can buy him out for $500,000. His top nine assistant coaches, including coordinators Jay Sawvel and Jay Johnson, all have one year remaining on their deals, and those salaries are guaranteed at a total of $2.93 million.

So if the university fires Claeys and his staff this winter, the cost would be about $3.43 million — his buyout plus the assistant salaries.

Claeys continued to dismiss questions about his professional future after Tuesday’s victory.

“I don’t know,” he said. “We’ll deal with that. I don’t like doing that with the media. That’s not important. What’s important is you walk into that locker room, you see smiles on all these kids’ faces.”

Back on the Quallcom Stadium field after the game, Claeys had tears welling in his eyes as he congratulated players and assistant coaches on their second consecutive bowl victory, this one despite being a 10-point underdog.


Beyond the 10 suspended players, the Gophers also were missing starting center Tyler Moore because of a back injury, forcing them to thrust third-stringer Matt Leidner into his first collegiate start.

Kaler could be seen with his arms crossed and a serious look on his face as he stood watching the game on the sidelines next to Coyle and other athletic department officials.

But after the victory, Kaler pumped his fist and shared a moment with Claeys, shaking his hand. University Regents chair Dean Johnson was more exuberant, wrapping Claeys in a big hug.

Claeys, who turned 48 on Christmas Day, is 11-8 as the Gophers head coach since replacing Jerry Kill, who resigned in October 2015 because of health reasons.

Kill said he was overcome with pride watching the Holiday Bowl on television. Recently hired to be Rutgers offensive coordinator, Kill singled out the coaching effort by Claeys in the wake of the team’s suspensions and threatened bowl boycott.


“That’s probably one of the greatest coaching jobs of all time,” Kill said via telephone. “With all that stuff going on, and all the things those kids have gone through — from their old coach to the new coach to all the stuff they had to handle — that’s flat unbelievable the job those guys did. [Claeys] deserves a darn contract [extension].”

Kill is biased, of course. Claeys was his longtime assistant, and so were most members of the Gophers coaching staff. This call will be made by Coyle and Kaler, and in the first hours of the postseason Wednesday, they passed on making a quick decision.



Joe Christensen covers Gophers football for the Star Tribune.

Boye Mafe update

Boye tells me that Rutgers just offered him. They're the other team that he said was in his top two three weeks ago.

He told me that he wanted to make a decision before January, but now he's planning to visit Rutgers on January the weekend of January 23. He also says a visit to South Dakota State is possible the weekend before and that he doesn't plan to visit Minnesota because he's been on campus so much. As I said in the recent top 10 targets article, Wyoming is the dark horse because he has teammates leaning towards Wyoming.

I think he's a Gopher lean at the moment, but I'm not expecting him to be a Gopher come Signing Day. He's had the opportunity to commit forever and ever, even before Claeys' contract became an issue, and hasn't made the move.

Here's Scarlet Nation's article on him from today: https://rutgers.rivals.com/news/rutgers-offers-three-star-de-boye-mafe
And my article from three weeks ago: https://minnesota.rivals.com/news/mafe-talks-top-two

This is my Post!

Remove Kaler, Coyle and Claeys name from everything and read this article!

The administration, coaches and players were in a no win situation. This is a political issue, PERIOD!


https://www.google.com/amp/www.wsj....roo-courts-on-campus-1482882574?client=safari



The University of Minnesota football team’s dramatic walkout in protest of what they saw as unfair treatment of 10 fellow players in a campus sexual-assault investigation came to an end on Dec. 17. But it made national headlines for imperiling the team’s trip to the Dec. 27 Holiday Bowl and for the players’ demands that their accused teammates receive a “fair hearing” with a “diverse review panel.”

The solidarity shown by the University of Minnesota players and the attention the team’s protest drew could prove a powerful blow to the Education Department’s efforts to regulate sex and speech on campus through the abuse of Title IX, the federal law against sex discrimination in education.

In September, following allegations that Minnesota football players had sexually assaulted another student, Minneapolis law enforcement investigated and declined to charge any player with a crime. Yet the university’s Title IX investigation into the same incident—which lacked full access to some video evidence used by police—resulted in 10 players’ suspensions from the team, angering members and inspiring the walkout.

Such wildly divergent outcomes between campus and police investigations erode confidence in both systems. Yet they have become more common than ever since the Education Department’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) began to do end-runs around the law five years ago.

In April 2011, the OCR surprised colleges by announcing in a “Dear Colleague” letter that, henceforth, campus tribunals involving sexual misconduct had to use a standard of proof known as “the preponderance of the evidence,” which requires that they be only 50.01% certain when determining whether a student committed an offense. Given that campus courts routinely deny students counsel, the right to face their accusers, access to evidence, and even the presumption of innocence, this mandate banned what was often a student’s only meaningful due-process protection: that fact-finders be more than just barely persuaded of their guilt.

Worse, in May 2013, in a settlement with the University of Montana that it labeled a blueprint for other colleges and universities, the OCR, joined by the Justice Department, determined that all “unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature,” including speech, should be deemed sexual harassment. Even a single, unwelcome, overheard dirty joke is “harassment” under this standard.

The results have been profound. My organization, the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which has sponsored lawsuits challenging the OCR’s decisions, has identified more than 130 lawsuits filed by students who claim they were wrongly punished for sexual misconduct since the Dear Colleague letter was issued. Victims and accusers also routinely complain of bad investigations by college administrators who are poorly equipped to handle felony crimes.

The OCR’s debased definition of harassment, meanwhile, has led to absurdities such as a feminist professor being investigated for criticizing Northwestern University’s Title IX efforts in a newspaper column. Confidence in the system is low for very good reason.

The change of administrations in Washington offers a valuable opportunity to erase these failed policies. First and foremost, the OCR should officially renounce both its “preponderance of evidence” mandate and its wildly overbroad definition of sexual harassment. Because the agency chose to make these changes through fiat rather than the notice and comment procedures required by the Administrative Procedure Act, such a reversal is fairly simple.

The OCR should also change its definition of peer sexual harassment to exactly track the Supreme Court’s language in Davis v. Monroe County Board of Education (1999). Davis defines harassment as behavior that is targeted, discriminatory, and “so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it can be said to deprive the victims of access to the educational opportunities or benefits provided by the school.” This standard fulfills the requirements of the First Amendment while giving schools the ability to combat real harassment. While the OCR has claimed that its standard tracks Davis, few schools treat it that way—and neither does the OCR.

If further rules are necessary, the OCR must work with Congress or go through the official regulatory process as required by law. Since 2011, defenders of the embarrassingly minimal standards of campus courts have argued that they are sufficient because schools find a student “responsible” for rape rather than “guilty” of it. Yet the ultimate determination being made—did the assault happen or not?—is exactly the same.

Campus courts might not be real courts, but sexual assault is equally serious whether it happens on campus or off and deserves to be treated as such. New leadership at the Education Department dedicated to equal justice for every student could do much to help schools like the University of Minnesota fight sex crimes on campus while improving the fairness and accuracy of campus discipline and respecting the Constitution.

Mr. Shibley is executive director of the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE).

recruit

I remember we hosted a recruit and MJH said shortly after the visit "he isn't coming here" and it was insinuated that he was not a good dude and not at all a good fit

was this the recruit at the start of the train?
was there more to it than just the train?
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