Worth Noting
Congratulations to Dave and
Linda Mona on the birth of their first grandchild, Camden Mona,
a boy, born on Sunday to son Kirk and wife Chelsey. Dave
is the color commentator for Gopher football games on WCCO Radio. The
Minnesota football staff sent flowers with a note asking for first
recruitment rights.
A broadcast industry source said when
local TV stations buy tickets to help sellout the Vikings home games,
they pay face value. NFL revenue sharing policy among teams doesn’t
allow for discounting the tickets. The inventory for local commercials
on Vikings home telecasts is about 15 ads, perhaps worth $200,000 or
more to a local station. Rather than face a TV blackout because a
game isn’t sold-out, stations can be willing to help buy remaining
tickets.
Oakland Raiders coach and Bloomington
native Lane Kiffin, 32, was mentioned as a candidate for the
Gopher head coaching position before Brewster was hired. If Kiffin had been hired by the Gophers, the Big Ten Conference would have
listed the youngest threesome of head coaches in memory. Northwestern’s
Pat Fitzgerald is 32 and Wisconsin’s Bret Bielema is 37.
Kiffin, who was an assistant coach at Southern Cal prior to becoming Oakland’s coach earlier this year, brings a Raiders team that is 2-7 to
town for Sunday’s game with the Vikings. The Raiders were 2-14 last
season.
The Vikings offense is
leading the NFL in rushing yards with an average of 172.3 yards per
game, while the Raiders defense is 29th in the league against the run,
giving up an average of 144.2 yards per game.
With one punt of 50-plus
yards, Chris Kluwe of the Vikings can break the team’s all-time single season
record of over 50 yard kicks. Kluwe and Mitch Berger share the record
now at 22.
Although he has been a part-time starter, former Viking
Daunte Culpepper leads Oakland in
passing yards with 817, ranking 30th in the NFL. Culpepper has started four games and played in five, throwing
four touchdowns and four interceptions. He’s expected to start on Sunday.
The last time the Raiders
and Vikings played was 2003 in Oakland. The Raiders won 28-18 and
Culpepper threw for 396 yards and a touchdown, completing 27 of 49
passes. He also rushed for 42 yards and one touchdown.
David Gilreath,
a freshman from New Hope, set a Wisconsin record for kickoff return
yards this season, 756. He averaged 22.9 yards per kickoff return and
11.2 yards per punt return, both big improvements for the Badgers over
2006 averages of 15 and 6.6.
In addition to Gilreath, the Badgers have
five other Minnesotans on their roster including starting center
Marcus Coleman of Plymouth. Reserves are wide receiver Isaac
Anderson of Minneapolis, defensive lineman Brandon Hoey of
Shoreview, defensive back Kim Royston of Minneapolis and
linebacker Blake Sorenson of Eden Prairie.
The Gophers announced the signings
yesterday of basketball recruits Devron Bostick, Paul Carter,
Colton Iverson and Ralph Sampson III to National Letters
of Intent. They will be eligible to compete during the 2008-09 season
for coach Tubby Smith.
Bostick, a 6-4 sophomore guard from
Southwestern Illinois College, averaged 19.5 points per game as a
freshman for SWIC. He led the team to a 24-8 record and was named the
Player of the Year in the Great Rivers Athletic Conference. He was also
a second team junior college All-American. The Racine, Wisconsin native
has also been named a 2007-2008 preseason All-American. Bostick
will have two years of eligibility at Minnesota.
Carter, the son of former NBA player
Ron Carter, is a 6-7 freshman forward from Missouri State-West
Plains College. He scored 28 points and had 14 rebounds in the
Grizzlies' 83-75 season-opening win over Labette Community College. His
coach, Brian Ostermann, has said Carter could be one of the best
junior college players in the country by February. Carter will have
three years of eligibility at Minnesota.
Iverson, a 6-10 forward/center from
Yankton, South Dakota, was named first team all-state following his
junior season. He averaged 14.4 points and 9.7 rebounds per game for the
Bucks who won the South Dakota AA Consolation Championship. He spent the
summer playing for the South Dakota Heat AAU team and led the Heat to a
30-8 overall record, including the championship of the prestigious
Hoosier Shootout AAU Tournament in Indianapolis. Iverson was named MVP
of the Hoosier Shootout after scoring 28 points and having 16 rebounds
in the title game.
Sampson, the son of former Houston Rockets
and University of Virginia star Ralph Sampson, attends Northview
High School in Duluth, Georgia. As a junior, Sampson averaged 14 points, 11
rebounds and five blocks per game. The 6-11 forward spent the summer
playing for the Georgia Stars, one of the top AAU programs in the
country. He’s considered a late developing prep star.
MIAC men’s and women’s conference hockey
games begin tonight. In a pre-season coaches poll the men’s teams are
ranked as follows: Bethel, St. Thomas, Gustavus, Saint John’s and St.
Olaf (same number of votes), Augsburg, Saint Mary’s, Hamline and
Concordia. Here's the pre-season coaches poll results for the women’s teams: Gustavus, St. Thomas, St. Olaf, Hamline, Saint Mary’s, Concordia,
Bethel, Augsburg, Saint Benedict and St. Catherine.
A pioneering event in female ice sports in
Minnesota, the 15th annual All-American Girls and Women’s
Hockey Tournament started yesterday and continues through Sunday at the
Schwan Super Rink at the National Sports Center in Blaine. Seventy-four
youth and women’s teams, including 23 from out-of-state, had registered
earlier this month to participate in the tournament, the largest and one
of the oldest female-only hockey tournaments in North America.
Registered teams are from California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,
Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Wisconsin, Manitoba and Ontario.
Spectator admission prices are $20 for an adult all-tournament pass and
$15 for a youth and senior all-tournament pass. Daily passes are $8 for adults and $6 for students and seniors. Children under 10 are
admitted free.