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THE MOST PRODUCTIVE JERSEY NUMBER IN GOPHER BBALL HISTORY!!

Players numbers have changed on teams on various times. But for nostalgia's sake, I thought I would list the ones that I thought were significant in my lifetime and up to 50 years ago.

#20 - Worn by Austin Hollins, Lawrence Westbrook, Quincy Lewis, Melvin Newbern, and Jim Peterson. JERICHO SIMS, SHOWING YOUR FAM SOME LOVE, BABY!!! Your daddy, Charles was also #20.

#24 was a good number for the Gophers... Worn by Joey King, Blake Hoffarber, Bobby Jackson, Marc WIlson, Tommy Davis(before changing to 34), Mark Hall, Tony Dungy.. Cant forget Rico Tucker, Tyree Bolden, and Jon Retzlaff(Okay, just adding a little levity).

#34 -Devoe Joseph(before wearing number 5), Damian Johnson, Willie Burton, Charles Thomas, Shane Schilling, Brent Lawson. Mitch Ohnstad started here before changing to #11. Dave Winey

#32 Trevor Mbakwe, Kris Humphries, JB Bickerstaff(before switching to #1)Jayson Walton. Roland Brooks, Marlon Maxey, Trent Tucker, Clyde Turner, Zach Puchtel.

#22 Ollie Shannon, Al Nuness, David Grim, Ben Johnson, cant forget Barry Wohler.

#11 Ron Behagan, Osborne Lockhart, Leo Rautins, Maurice Hargrow, Hosea Crittenden, Alonzo Skanes, Mitch Ohnstad

#21 Archie Clark, Voshon Lenard, Travarus Bennett, Json Stamper.

JUST REMINISCING, GOPHER FANS!! Pick your number based on these memories!!

How do you think your favorite team drafted ?

My Texans grade = B

We absolutely killed it in the 1st 3 rounds.

2 stud WR's (one is a burner that will help with stretching the D and catching the WR screens and one that has a massive upside due to his athleticism ). Then we got the guy that best center in the draft.

Then rounds 4-5, we took talent that needs to be developed. The reason I give the Texans a B not an A is the fact they didn't pick a DE in the 4th round. We already have 3 speedy RB's. We needed a guy to play opposite JJ. Unless Clowney becomes a full time DE and not an OLB in the 3-4 defense, I don't understand why we didn't draft a DE.

How did your teams do ?

J Robinson documentary released today

J Robinson feature-length documentary released today

J Robinson Camps
5/3/2016

MINNEAPOLIS, MN -- The life of University of Minnesota head wrestling coach J Robinson will take center stage in an upcoming feature-length documentary film, J Robinson: Full Circle, which will premiere on May 3, 2016, streaming online at jrobinsonfullcircle.com.

Directed by independent filmmaker Ryan Leer, the documentary traces Robinson's life from childhood through the present, offering unprecedented access to one of the most influential personalities in the sport. The film chronicles multiple stages of Robinson's life, examining how his experiences, including his abrupt exit from the University of Iowa's wrestling program, led to the creation and development of one of the most highly regarded wrestling camp systems in the country, J Robinson Intensive Wrestling Camps.

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J Robinson talks to Skyler Petry during a dual meet in Minneapolis (Photo/Jeff Beshey, The Guillotine)

Through Oklahoma State University, the U.S. Army as an Airborne Ranger, the Munich Olympics, the University of Iowa, and the University of Minnesota, Robinson has forged an enduring legacy in the sport of wrestling. This film offers a retrospective examination of his life, mirroring his successes and failures to the experience of attending an Intensive Camp, embodied by the ups and downs of two high school wrestlers from Pennsylvania at the 28-Day Intensive Camp.

The film was shot and produced over the course of two years and includes a series of in-depth interviews with wrestling legends Dan Gable and Bruce Baumgartner, members of Robinson's family, camp staff, the two high school wrestlers, and their high school coach, Brad Silimperi, himself an Intensive Camp graduate from 1987

Now entering its 38th year, J Robinson Intensive Camps (JRIC) has trained more than 35,000 wrestlers with a training philosophy that focuses on developing technical skill, physical preparation, building mental toughness, and life skills. Founded in 1978 by current University of Minnesota Head Wrestling Coach J Robinson, JRIC now operates 11 summer wrestling camps in 7 states across the country. For more information, please call 612.349.6585 or visit jrobinsoncamps.com.


I haven't watched "Full Circle"yet, but if it was made with such close participation with J, his family, Dan Gable and others...I suspect it will be very good!!

FloWrestling also released an hour long documentary on J Rob in February called "Keepers of the Flame", which gave a detailed history of how J turned MN into a top 5 program. There was also considerable focus on the 2001 team that won the Natty Championship with no champions and 10 All Americans. I saw it earlier and it's quite good...lots of original footage and many interviews, especially with members of the 2001 team. It's available to subscribers on www.flowrestling.org .

Ryan James: Question on Jericho Sims

I realize that you said Jericho Sims has a monster upside with elite level athleticism... That gets me excited. I also know he is at a very small high school so it is ESSENTIAL that he proves himself against high level competition in AAU. With those natural gifts, he could have the world in front of him, in terms of hoops.

But I read 2 websites where people have claimed to have seen Jericho play numerous times. They said that they came away from the games thinking Jericho was disinterested and half hearted in the effort that he gave.. He would pick up cheap fouls and then pout all the way to the bench.

I dont know whether to believe these people or not.. But if this is the way he is THE MAJORITY OF THE TIME, then I would not want him on the Gophers. I know I want to watch a player play 4-5 times to get a feel for how the kid is going to be in most situations.. How he handles himself in stressful situations or when he is coached hard. I realize his Dad played in college so that is a plus in Jericho's favor... But that said, the fact that Ralph Sampson's dad was a dominant college player did not do much for RS3 so I hope this is not a similar situation... I am wondering Ryan, if you have any insight on this kid as to how he conducts himself on the court and off.. If he is whiny or pouty with an attitude, I say keep him away from the Gophers no matter how talented the kid is naturally. I kinda wish he would have Dave Thorson or Ken Novak as a coach to make sure Jericho keeps things together and matures along with his game.

What are your thoughts on him, as far as attitude on the court??

American Pharoah is a Champion at the Stud Life too!!

Our wonderful Grand Slam Champion (Triple Crown + Breeders' Cup) from last year American Pharoah is already having a really fun time as a stud with the ladies!!! AP is not a cheap date though as he only gets involved with top level fillies whose owners have the $200,000 stud fee.

How would you like to live like that!!

What a life...three cheers for our retired Champion American Pharoah!!!



Horse Racing

American Pharoah Is Already a Champion at the Stud Life, Too

New York Times
By JOE DRAPE
MAY 3, 2016


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Triple Crown winner American Pharoah outside his stable at Ashford Stud in Versailles, Ky. Credit Austin Koester for The New York Times

VERSAILLES, Ky. — He has put on some weight, 170 pounds to be exact, since sauntering off the racetrack and into what has to be the sweetest retirement in all of sports. American Pharoah, however, carries it well: There are no love handles, and his rich bay coat looks barely able to contain the muscles rippling beneath it.

His day starts at sunup with a breakfast of high-end, organic grains — the equine equivalent of kale and quinoa — and then his work starts in earnest at 7:30 each day. That’s when American Pharoah hooks a left out of the stallion barn and ambles down the path to the breeding shed. Waiting for him is a mare, but not any old nag.

No, securing one of the 160 or so spots on American Pharoah’s dance card this season requires a royal pedigree, an accomplished record as a racehorse and, most important, an ownership with the $200,000 required to have last year’s Triple Crown champion to “cover” (a nicer term than impregnate) its mare.

While horse lovers and aficionados had to wait 37 years for American Pharoah to become just the 12th horse to win the three races of the crown, thoroughbred racing’s holy grail, horsemen have hurried to get their mares in the breeding shed with the Big Horse. What’s a stud’s life? Most days, he does double duty, with a 1:30 p.m. lunch date after the morning fling. Often, he is at again for a third time at 6 p.m.

It sounds exhausting until you do the math: up to $600,000 a day, and a $30 million annual haul for his owners, Ashford Stud, over the course of the five-month breeding season.

Best of all, American Pharoah has adapted to his new career with the same efficiency, élan and joie de vivre that he demonstrated while winning nine of his 11 starts, electrifying thoroughbred enthusiasts on the track and charming them off it.

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A group of mares and foals in one of the paddocks at Ashford Stud in Versailles, Ky., home of the Triple Crown-winning racehorse American Pharoah. Credit Austin Koester for The New York Times

He is clearly the Matinee Idol of a breeding farm that already boasts one of the most successful sires in the world, Giant’s Causeway, American Pharoah’s neighbor across the barn. On Tuesday, American Pharoah stood like a medieval knight awaiting his armor from his valet as a tour group aimed cameras and admiring gazes at him. He then stepped gingerly around Garfield, the farm’s cat and the second-most-popular animal here (sorry, Giant’s Causeway).

“He’s just a joy to be around,” said Scott Calder, one of Ashford’s executives, about American Pharoah. “He does everything so easily. We were the ones that had to adjust. So many people want to come to see him. He is a household name far beyond the sport of horse racing.”

No horse is born a natural stud.

Cigar, who died in 2014, was the sport’s leading money winner when he retired, but proved to be sterile in the breeding shed. The 2002 Kentucky Derby and Preakness Stakes winner, War Emblem, was bought for $17.7 million by Japanese breeders who discovered — disappointingly — that he did not like girls. They tried several unorthodox therapies, including surrounding him with a harem, to no avail.

The folks here at Ashford took no chances when American Pharoah arrived here last fall after ending his career with a triumphant victory in the Breeders’ Cup Classic. He spent his initial weeks alongside Thunder Gulch, the 1995 Kentucky Derby and Belmont winner, now 25 years old. The old-timer’s assignment was to teach American Pharoah about life not on the run.

New stallions want to play and sprint — a lot — and company only encourages them. Not Thunder Gulch. He taught American Pharoah the finer things in stallion life, such as eating grass and whiling away an afternoon lounging atop the purplish-blue flower buds that roll over these 2,000-acres like a royal carpet.

The Hollywood version of American Pharoah’s first day at the office says that it came on Valentine’s Day. Not quite, says Calder. It was the day after, and it was filled with tension for Ashford’s breeding team. American Pharoah’s father, Pioneerof the Nile, had earned a reputation for being something of a prima donna over at WinStar Farms.

Pioneerof the Nile preferred peppermints to carrots. He was also sometimes reticent and required a whiff of pheromones from a cup of thawed mare urine to become interested. He also took his time and was prone to false starts, rocking back on his hind legs once, twice, as many as four times before consummating the relationship.

Not American Pharoah.

“Fortunately, those genes were not passed down,” said Calder, a wry smile curling on his lip.

Instead, he has been polite and determined, as well as efficient: So far he has a better than 80 percent strike rate when it comes to successfully conceiving a foal. His book of mares reads like a social registry. There’s the aptly named Judy the Beauty, the Eclipse Champion sprinter; Take Charge Lady, the dam of the 2013 champion 3-year-old Will Take Charge; and Rags to Riches, who in 2007 became the first filly since 1905 to win the Belmont Stakes.

When he is not at work, American Pharoah sometimes lounges in a roomy stall in a barn made from furniture-quality oak or gambols here in the bluegrass. Roaming alone in the paddock, he is framed by limestone fences, the handiwork of 20 master stonemasons, and looks every bit to the manner born.

American Pharoah has plenty of visitors — more than 3,000 so far from 45 states and a half-dozen other countries. The daily tours have been sold out for months in advance. He had two special tours earlier this week when his Hall of Fame trainer Bob Baffert came Monday and his rider, Victor Espinoza, came Tuesday.

While American Pharoah’s first runners will not hit the racetrack until 2019, there is a strong — if very hopeful — vibe that they will have inherited the speed, mind and talent that their father demonstrated throughout his brilliant career.

Until his offspring start crossing finish lines in the afternoon, only a couple of things are certain: American Pharoah is enjoying his retirement and seems to be good at it.
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Scoggins: Gang of 16 interviewers clogging search for Gophers AD

I think most people will agree with Chip here.



The University of Minnesota’s marathon process of finding a new athletic director apparently is close to entering the next phase.

Don’t worry, folks. They’re almost halfway done.

The outside search firm Turnkey has conducted a series of phone and in-person interviews the past few weeks and will submit a list of candidates for formal interviews with university President Eric Kaler and his 900-member internal search committee.

The actual number on Kaler’s hand-picked committee is 16, but it might as well be 900 because the size of that group served as a stop sign for some potential candidates.

How many? I don’t know, but people privately have shared their concerns.

I had a conversation last week with a current AD at a Division I school who had mild interest in the job. His credentials would have made him an attractive candidate.

Multiple reasons caused him not to apply, not just one thing. But he admitted the potential of interviewing with 16 people under the premise of confidentiality was a deterrent.

Too risky, he said, because his bosses, coaches and — perhaps as important — his school’s donors wouldn’t have known that he applied for the job.

What if word leaked that he interviewed as a finalist and he didn’t get the job? Good luck digging out of that hole.

A person with connections to the U also told me that several candidates called him seeking information about the job. All expressed reservations about the 16-member committee. The source declined to say whether those people applied anyway.

In revealing his internal committee in late March, Kaler said: “Absolutely, yes, the full committee will winnow this list down. So unlike last time, where we had the smaller group that did the interviews, all 16 of these people will be involved in the interview process.”

There is speculation growing that not all 16 members will take part in every interview. If that’s true, that begs the question: Why create that perception at the beginning of this process?

If, say, six members interview one group of candidates and then a different mix of committee members interview more candidates, how will they reach a consensus on which finalists to send to Kaler?

What a strange process.

Members of the search committee signed confidentiality agreements, promising not to reveal any information regarding their duties. I don’t doubt that most, if not all, intend to honor that request. There are sincere people on the committee.

This is about perception, though. Candidates — and not just current athletic directors at other schools — see 16 potential leaks and biases, which might be deal-breakers for those who can’t risk having employers know they’re looking around at other jobs.

That doesn’t mean the Gophers can’t or won’t make a strong hire. The list of candidates reported to be under consideration includes some smart, qualified people.

The search process hasn’t been ruined, but Kaler made things overly complicated and affected his candidate pool with an overcorrection to past mistakes.

Kaler relied on a four-member committee in the search process that ended with Norwood Teague’s regrettable hiring. Backlash from Teague’s sexual harassment scandal focused on Kaler and his committee’s due diligence. A university review of that search recommended using a larger committee this time.

Kaler went overboard.

His intentions in utilizing a committee have some merit. Seek opinions from people invested in the university with the hope of avoiding another mistake.

Fine, but a 16-member committee feels like a tortuous attempt to appease too many constituents. Or maybe he’s trying to provide himself cover if the next AD doesn’t pan out, either.

A committee of 5,000 couldn’t guarantee that they won’t hire the wrong person.

Whatever his reasons, Kaler could have formed a committee of five to eight people and still accomplished the same thing.

Granted, confidentiality could be compromised with a committee of that size, too. But this particular group has so many members of varying backgrounds, interests and viewpoints that one wonders how they will whittle the list of semifinalists to a manageable number.

Does it really need to be this complicated?

Minnesota offers 3-star Florida ATH Michael Nesbitt

Michael Nesbitt, a two-way play at Boyd Anderson H.S. in Lauderdale Lake, FL, tweeted today he has received an offer from Minnesota.

Nesbitt, three-star a receiver and defensive back, has 21 offers, including Rutgers, Florida State, LSU, Auburn, Arkansas, South Carolina and Pittsburgh.

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