ADVERTISEMENT

Johannesson

I wonder if this guy might be tight end material. Can he catch the ball? Can he block? We lost Plsek; we need another blocker over there. I know he's looked good running it, but will he get many reps? I was also thinking maybe Johnson could put in an option play; Johannesson looks like a Navy fullback. If we'd had that option play at Michigan, there's no way we would have lost. Even Mason had an option play.

HR Derby Game: Need Help

Ive been asked to join a hr derby fantasy game. You pick 6 players and who's ever lineup ends up with most Hrs at the end of the season wins. Your 6 players had to have had 130 or fewer total HRs in 2015. Here's the lineup I'm leaning towards, am I missing anybody or would sub out someone? These guys totaled 128 last year.

Giancarlo Stanton

Byung Ho Park

Bryce Harper

Kris Bryant

Miguel Sano

George Springer

You want to.wet your appetite for the Final 4?

Catch Eric Mussleman and the Nevada Wolf Pack play.Morehead State on ESPNU this Friday night at 9:00 EST for the CBI Championship.The series is tied at 1-1 with Nevada winning tonight in Reno before a packed "white out" crowd. Musselman doing it with 7 scholarship players and 5 walk-ons. He does his dad's original pre-game warmup that was so popular when Bill was at Minnesota.Previous winners in the CBI tourney have been Virginia Tech when Smart was coaching and recently Oregon. The first two games have been just as intense as anything in the NCAA Tournament. 5 technical fouls called tonight. The Nevada crowd would put the Barn to shame. As reported before Pitino was hired, Musselman was next in line for an interview ( per.Marcus Fuller and Charlie Walters)

Michigan State cleared up their basketball scholarship problem

Yesterday morning, Tom Izzo had one more scholarship player than scholarships to give... After he had the postseason talk and evaluation of each player, Marvin Clark and Javon Bess decided to transfer... Clark is a 6-7 forward who went to the same HS as Dupree McBrayer in Kansas(Sunrise Christian). His stats are not impressive but he only played 10 minutes a game.. Probably a productive 6 to 8 point a game player with 5-6 rebounds if you pro-rate his stats over 20 minutes a game.. He is from Kansas City and I wonder if he will end up in the Big 12 somewhere. Clark ran into a numbers game with the team as he would play power forward... They have Devonte Davis, though they don't know if he will turn pro or not( I dont think it would be a good move) plus they got an unexpected contribution from Kenny Goins, who is an athletic and tough player... They return Gavin Schilling and will play incoming freshman Nick Ward so Clark was the "odd man out."

Bess is a tough kid but he has had health problems with his feet since he arrived in Lansing... From the same HS in the Columbus, Ohio area as incoming freshman, Nick Ward. He is a kid that I wonder as to what level takes him on as a transfer as he has been injured his first 2 years at Michigan State. They still have Eron Harris as well as Matt McQuaid with Kyle Ahrens and are bringing in Miles Bridges and possibly Josh Jackson. Bess would also be an "odd man out"

Michigan State is a major player for the services of Josh Jackson, who used to live in Detroit. A scholarship is open in case he chooses the Spartans. I have heard Kansas and Arizona are in the mix, as well... Jackson is the real deal, as I have seen him play when he lived in Detroit.. He would start right away. If Davis stays, they have to be up there again as one of the top 5 teams when the opening polls come out.

Board of Regents Want Final Approval on Contracts

Maybe this is the norm elsewhere, but it sounds like one more opportunity for bureaucracy to get in the way of the future AD and getting deals done with coaches. Also, I'm wondering if Amelia is fishing around a bit more looking to dig up some more wrong doings in the department. Suspicion around the timing of the Norwood departure and the Pitino deal, hmm.


The University of Minnesota president and athletic director would need Board of Regents approval on contracts for the highest-paid Gophers coaches under a new regent proposal.

Regent Michael Hsu told the Star Tribune he will introduce a resolution at Thursday’s meeting to return contract-approval power to the board, which has not had that authority since 1996.

A draft of the resolution obtained by the Star Tribune says that the board should have final approval over contracts totaling at least $600,000 or exceeding $250,000 annually.

University President Eric Kaler declined to be interviewed for this story. In an e-mail to the Star Tribune, he said he would “support the Board’s prerogative” in determining oversight.

“If a majority of board members wants changes in policy with regard to athletics coach contracts, I will work closely with them to fully implement those changes,” he wrote. Kaler and the athletic director — or an interim such as Beth Goetz — currently have final approval.

Hsu said “a group” of like-minded regents favor the change, prompted by their frustration with what has been learned about the 2015 contract extension for Richard Pitino. The deal, finalized days after athletic director Norwood Teague’s sudden resignation, gave the men’s basketball coach the highest potential buyout in Gophers coaching history — $7.1 million.

That high cost to make a change is preventing full consideration of all options for the team’s future, some regents and others said.

“It certainly illustrates the point,” regent Darrin Rosha said of Pitino’s extension. Rosha said he “would have never supported a buyout of that size.”

The team just posted one of the worst seasons in Gophers history and endured more of the off-court problems that have marked Pitino’s three-year tenure.

Despite those troubles, Pitino likely will be given the chance to coach a fourth season. The alternative could cost nearly three times the $2.5 million buyout paid to Tubby Smith in 2013, the most the school has ever paid to fire a coach.

Kaler defended Pitino’s extension in his e-mail to the Star Tribune. “It represents a strong commitment to the coach and shows our desire to retain him while being competitive within the Big Ten,” he wrote.

Kaler’s chief of staff, Amy Phenix, said last week that the contract is “fair and equitable.”

“The reality is you’re very rarely going to fire someone not for cause in year one of a contract extension,” she said. “It’s just highly unusual.”

Board chair Dean Johnson agreed that Pitino’s contract prompted the debate and said that he “wants to hear the discussion.” Without offering support or opposition, Johnson added, “I don’t think generally boards should be setting salaries and compensation. We have people in place to do that.”

Major contracts at eight of the 13 other Big Ten schools require approval from a board, according to officials at the universities.

Any change would affect the U’s athletic director position, and potentially the AD search.

Goetz, likely a candidate to be the permanent AD, was not made available for an interview. Pitino also was not made available.

Kaler responded to a question about the potential impact on the AD job in his e-mail, writing that “any diminishment of the AD’s authority would make the job less attractive.”

“The AD should be both responsible and accountable for those choices,” he added.

Pitino contract draws ire

A multimillion-dollar buyout is not uncommon in the Big Ten. The Star Tribune obtained contracts for 11 of the other 13 Big Ten men’s basketball coaches (Penn State and Northwestern do not share university documents) and found Pitino’s $7.1 million to be in the midrange of potential buyouts.

“It’s just kind of the reality in the early years of a contract to have a large buyout,” said Phenix.

Some of the conference’s most successful coaches, however, would have received less than Pitino if fired one year after signing their most recent contract, including Michigan’s John Beilein ($6 million) and former Wisconsin coach Bo Ryan ($4.65 million).

Pitino’s potential payment, like most buyout clauses, decreases each year, in his case by about $1.4 million each season.

Regents Hsu and Rosha also questioned the timing of Pitino’s extension approval.

Teague resigned as AD on Aug. 7 amid allegations that he sexually harassed two members of Kaler’s leadership team and so that he could seek help for what he called “alcohol issues.” That same day, Pitino signed the contract he and Teague had negotiated that gave him two more years and a $400,000 raise and increased his buyout by more than $4 million.

“The terms were negotiated months before the contract was signed,” Kaler wrote in his e-mail. “Intervening events did not change the rationale we had in agreeing to those terms in the spring.”

Additionally, Phenix said the president’s office protected itself by adding two clauses: the sum Pitino would have to return if he took a job elsewhere after this season increased by $500,000 to $1 million, and there is a mitigation clause that demands Pitino “make diligent efforts to obtain comparable employment” if fired.

The school would stop buyout payments if Pitino found “comparable employment” — as an NCAA head coach or an NBA assistant, for example — after being fired. An NCAA assistant job is not defined as comparable and the U would pay the balance between the buyout and new salary in that case.

“You never want to be in a position where your reasons for not firing a coach are because you would owe him too much in a buyout,” Hsu said. “I think that’s a bad way to do business. I think the people of Minnesota deserve better.”

Hsu said the regents were not informed of the extension until after Goetz and Phenix signed, seven days after Teague resigned.

“When we had this issue come up of Norwood resigning and the circumstances related to it, I think more regents had the understanding that we were going to stop, take a pause, take a look at what’s going on in athletics and make sure we’re doing the right things, we’re doing things properly,” Hsu said. “And for something like this to happen almost immediately after … I think some people are concerned about that timing.”

Desire for oversight

Rosha, an at-large regent from 1989 to 1995 when the board approved contracts, was surprised to learn of the change when he returned a year ago.

“Are you serious?” he remembered asking. “You could literally have the athletic director and the president’s chief of staff commit to $100 million — and yet the regents have no oversight over those decisions.”

Hsu said he hopes the resolution can “fix some of these issues” identified in the handling of Pitino’s extension.

“This is public money, to some extent,” he said. “For that reason, I think we have to be careful about how we spend the money within the athletic department.”

The 12-member board could vote on the issue Thursday or table the discussion until their May meeting.

“We’ll see if the other members of the board are wanting to be accountable to the people and the state,” Rosha said, “or if we’re going to be caught inside the university bubble where logic doesn’t quite look the same as it does for the rest of us.”

http://www.startribune.com/u-regent...buyout-push-for-contract-authority/374073421/

In-state DB taking unofficial this weekend to UofMN

Hopkins H.S. (Minnetonka, MN) DB Malik Lofton confirmed this evening he will be taking an unofficial visit this weekend to U of MN.

Lofton does not hold an offer from Minnesota but that could change this weekend. Lofton currently holds six offers: South Dakota, Montana State, Wyoming, South Dakota State, North Dakota State and Northern Iowa.

Login to view embedded media
  • Like
Reactions: dubwa

Top 5 concerns....

heading into the last week of spring ball. I understand that it is April 1, and much can and will change between now and September. I'm just thinking out loud, and at this time I would list them in this order:

1. OL -- from both a depth and performance perspective. I have nothing against Fahning, but if he is our #1 LT I have to wonder if it is because he has improved that much or if we just have a lack of options. No way this offense works like we all hope if we don't see improvement in both run and pass blocking.

2. DE -- this is the one thing holding us back from being a top defense in the B1G. I know, we are already good, but stout DE play against the run (watch the WI OL wash them out time after time last year) as well as QB pressure would kick us up a level.

3. CB opposite Myrick -- there is a lot of hype around the young guys, and I have no reason to doubt them, but I also need to see it under the lights.

4. WR -- it seems like we could say the same thing about every one of them - "we need them to step up their game this year." Well, hopefully at least 2 of them do.

5. P -- I suppose some might look at this like a joke, but in our system field position is critical. I have a fear that we won't know how good we had it with Mortell until this year.

I hope I don't sound negative. On the contrary, I'm super pumped for this year, especially with the coaching changes (including Claeys taking over, not just Miller/Johnson.) Hope to see some of you at the Spring Game.

March 31 Practice Report

Kamal Martin, Carter Coughlin, Conner Olson, Phillip Howard, Eric Abojei, Gavin Blomberg, and Luke Schmidt were at practice today. De’Vondre Campbell was there as well. Blomberg spent a lot of time with Morgan Liggett and some other recruiting assistants. I wouldn’t expect much to happen there with the Gophers only taking 2-3 lineman this class and three in-state lineman already holding offers, but he seems to be talking to them a lot nevertheless.

Shannon Brooks, Dior Johnson, KiAnte Hardin, Ace Rogers, and Isaiah Gentry were all out. Walk-on safety Joey Gorgen was also out. He unfortunately tore his ACL recently, which is a big blow because he just joined the team as an unrecruited walk-on.

Mitch was throwing during drills. He took one set in 8v7 and none in 11v11. He had a rough time completing short- and mid-range passes (I don’t remember him attempting anything very long). His velocity wasn’t very good either, but I’m sure both issues are still largely because he’s still recovering from surgery on his plant foot. He did look more mobile than last practice, but is still limping a little bit when he jogs. The coaches don’t have him moving any quicker than a light jog to get to the line when they’re practicing at a high tempo.

Croft got a lot of reps. It seemed like he got even more reps than he usually does even with Leidner out, but maybe that’s just because I was watching other position groups when he wasn’t throwing. He was very crisp and accurate throwing ten and fifteen yard out routes and throughout the drill portion, but was a little less accurate (although not bad) in 8v7 and 11v11. Croft has always seemed to have a natural poise to him, but during the season it still seemed as if he’d get uncomfortable and indecisive when he was blitzed. He’s definitely improved in that regard. His decision making looked good today, too. There was only one throw I watched that he shouldn’t have made, and like I said, he took a lot of snaps.

Seth Green still has an odd, low release near his helmet, but his passes are always on a rope. He was probably the most consistent passer today.

Conor Rhoda was off-and-on in drills on short- and mid-range throws, although I think he’s better throwing in that range than deep. He did much better in 11v11 where he led the offense to a touchdown on the final drive. He also had a really nice run (quarterbacks can’t be hit but it was definitely still noteworthy).

The other thing I’ll say about the quarterback group is that Jay Johnson is a really positive guy. You can’t hear everything from the sideline, but I don’t remember him ever putting down a recruit and he gives a lot of encouragement.

Rodney Smith made several nice runs, but didn’t get as many reps as most other starters. One thing I was reminded of today was his pass blocking ability. He’s one of the better pass blocking backs in recent Gopher history.

Jonathan Femi-Cole had a great practice and was getting most of the reps with the 2s. Despite his upright running style, he has some wiggle and is able to get skinny through holes. He did drop a pass, though, and I think that’s an area of his game he’ll have to keep working on. I don’t think he caught very many passes out of the backfield at all in Canada. Johannesson didn’t get a whole ton of carries but did have a 20 or so yard run.

Nick Hart got reps in a fullback-ish role, which is interesting as I had always thought of him as more of a receiving tight end. He lined up in the backfield quite a bit.

The first team receiver group was Still, Carter, and Wolitarsky, with Woli usually in the slot. The 2s were Brian Smith, Chris Streveler, and Melvin Holland Jr.

Eric Carter made the catch of the day. He got up and extended far to snag a pass that was well thrown by Conor Rhoda between a flat and deeper zone. Wolitarsky also made a nice catch today -- a sliding grab near the sideline.

Holland had a deep pass fall between his arms. He’s a great route runner, so let’s hope he improves his hands, which I think he can.

Brian Smith made a couple of nice catches. It will be interesting to see if he ever gets playing time, as you probably remember me really talking him up in fall camp too.

The walk-ons impressed...Will Reger dropped an easy pass, but also made a couple plays today. He’s quicker now than I remember him being in the past. I can see why there’s been a lot of talk about Adam Mayer. He’s really quick in and out of his breaks. He can probably naturally create more separation in the slot on crossing routes than Wolitarsky, but I still don’t think he’ll be pushing for a whole ton of playing time. We’ll see, though. He’s definitely one to watch. Matt Morse put a nice move on Alex Starks and beat him deep in what was one of only two long receptions in drills that I remember. The other was Will Reger beating Ray Buford on a hitch-and-go and doing a nice job of going up and coming down with the ball.

Bart Miller told the media after the practice that he’s seen improvement in the line, and I certainly agree. Earlier in the spring the line particularly struggled in pass protection, but the first team looks much improved keeping Croft upright. The first team is opening up holes more consistently, too. The second team was still getting beat fairly regularly. The first team offensive line was Pirsig - Calhoun - Moore - Mayes - Fahning. In my notes, I have the second team being Wright - Stieber - Weyler - Dovich - Connelly.

Chad Fahning took all the reps with the 1s that I remember at left tackle and held his own for the most part. The strength is there, but he’ll need to work on his quickness.

Jared Weyler stands up too easily, but has a strong upper body. Weyler was taking reps at center with the second team. There were several bad snaps, but honestly I can’t remember if it was Weyler or Moore.

Connor Mayes had an excellent practice, as did Tyler Moore. Both were clearly the best lineman today. They’re physical and consistently getting push in the run game.

Both the JUCO tackles move reasonably well. Wright has pretty quick feet, and Calhoun looks a little more athletic than I expected, although he really struggled today, particularly in pass protection.

Nick Connelly looked great in 1v1s, and was up-and-down otherwise. I think he’s the most athletic tackle on the team. Bronson Dovich was the opposite, as I thought he held his own against the second string defensive line in the scrimmage portion but struggled in 1v1s. It will help him a lot if he’s able to improve his feet and quickness and become more physical.

Jonah Pirsig was excellent in pass protection. I don’t remember Gaelin Elmore and his other matchups getting by him. In the run game, he doesn’t really pop off the ball, but maybe that will come this fall. He played up to his All-Big Ten Honorable Mention status today.

On defense, the first team ran a lot of 3-4, while the other units stuck to a 4-3. I don’t anticipate there to be a real switch to 3-4 -- probably just a package the staff will use to get all of their linebacker talent on the field. There didn’t seem to be a ton of rhyme or reason to where the first team linebackers were put in the four. I think Rallis played some on the outside, and Huff played some on the inside, which I thought was interesting.

The news on the defensive line is that Mose Hall has moved back, after moving to offense for a while. He’s gained so much weight since the fall that I didn’t even recognize him. I thought he did well today. He shows a lot of effort and has violent hands.

Like I said, the pass protection was significantly better today than a couple weeks ago, and there were only a couple times where the d-line would have got a sack (They’re not allowed to hit the QB.), and Winston DeLattiboudere had two of those. He continues to impress. That might be partly because he’s not routinely going against the first team, but regardless I think it’s safe to say he’s one of the better pass rushers on the team.

Merrick Jackson had a great and made plays both rushing the passer and against the run. He’s very strong, although I think he could still lose some weight.

Thomas Barber is already very compact and at a ready-to-play weight. He’s still settling in and the game seems to be moving pretty fast for him.

At corner, Jalen Myrick shut everyone down. Antonio Shenault got a lot of time with the 1s and did well.

The safeties did a good job of limiting everything over the top. I particularly remember Kunle Ayinde doing a nice job breaking up a deep ball to Wozniak.

TLDR: Mitch Leidner was limited and didn’t have his best day, whereas Croft and Rhoda both had their moments. Seth Green did very well. Shannon Brooks was out and JFC was very impressive. Nick Hart is taking some reps at fullback. Mose Hall moved back to defense. Winston DeLattiboudere and Merrick Jackson both impressed. The first team defense played a lot of 3-4. Antonio Shenault got a lot of time with the 1s. Walk-on safety Joey Gorgen tore his ACL.

Homecoming pins/buttons

I'm on the hunt for U of M Homecoming pins for the years listed below to fill out my collection for a display in my basement. I have searched the online auctions, flea markets, and collector shows for a couple years, but haven't had much luck lately, so I thought I'd try posting on the board. If anyone has any for sale, please PM me to discuss! Thank you!

1914
1916
1921
1943 (It's only a ribbon)
1944
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
1977
1978
1990
1991
1992
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2001
2003

I'm also interested in any vintage (i.e., pre-1963) University of Minnesota-related collectibles or memorabilia. Thanks.

The more coverage I read about PSU, the more I wanna see the Gophers

absolutely curb stomp the Nits this fall.

The coverage of PSU is always so fawning. Every analyst acts like James Franklin is on the verge of bringing back the glory days. That Josh Moyer slob on the ESPN blog, literally goes out of his way to pick PSU players EVERY SINGLE TIME they do a list of 'best this' or 'dark-horse that'.

Moyer really irritated me in 2014 when he wrote like 80 articles downplaying the win and portraying it as a 'fluke'.

I mean, a fluke is when you lose on a Hail Mary. Minnesota physically dominated Penn State in that game. The score was never close. The game was never in doubt.

Also, Pete Mortell had arguably his best game as a Gopher.

Now the Limegrover thing is adding juice to the game. Limey has gone out of his way to recruit Minnesota's targets and the state of Minnesota. Don't tell me that's not a tiny bit personal. Limegrover says the right things, but I doubt there's any love lost between Limey and Claeys.

Anyway, we open with PSU to start conference play. They will almost certainly be coming off a loss against Michigan.

Nothing would make me happier than to crush them and watch the hand wringing in State College when they start conference play 0-2.

Also, if Mitch is healthy we should have the QB edge in that game. McSorley looked all right in relief of Hack in the bowl game, but he's barely played and doesn't particularly scare me.

SKI-U-MAH! Go Gophers!
#CrushtheNits

http://espn.go.com/blog/bigten/post...lds-lead-in-penn-state-qb-competition-for-now

B10 transfers and the Gophers

As the transfer list grows and grows across the NCAA and the B1G, I'm wondering if and when we will see one of our guys leave. Iowa recently had Fleming and Hutton leave, OSU lost almost their whole class last year, Michigan lost Albrecht and Doyle and Sparty's scholarship situation has been discussed here. It's also been noted here and on Twitter that Pitino and staff are looking at some potential grad transfers, Springs and Pryor from Robert Morris come to mind, which leads me to believe that at least 1 player will move on. RJ has also said a million times that "something always happens" and a scholarship always opens up.

I'm not advocating for any player to leave, but I certainly would feel that a Pryor-type player could be an upgrade from say Gaston. We could certainly use a shooter after watching the three point line be our enemy last year. It seems that with the upcoming talent being brought in, several guys might feel that their playing time will be drying up.

It will be interesting to see if any feels they should move on and when that will happen. Transfers are also becoming the free agent world of college hoops.
ADVERTISEMENT

Filter

ADVERTISEMENT