Worth Noting
Gopher football coach Tim Brewster said
University basketball coach Tubby Smith could have the No. 1 recruiting
class in the country in 2008. “Right now I think he’s at No. 5 or No.
6,” Brewster said.
Brewster’s depth chart yesterday had three
true freshmen in starting positions in the defensive backfield,
cornerbacks Ryan Collado and Kyle Theret, and free safety
Curtis Thomas. Theret, 5-11, 185, “has a heart as big as his
body,” Brewster said.
Jeff
Sagarin’s college football rankings have North Dakota State ranked No. 50,
Wisconsin 55 and Minnesota 100.
Sporting News
ranked the NFL’s coaches in a recent issue and placed the Vikings’
Brad Childress at No. 28. Not surprisingly, the No. 1 and 2 coaches
were New England’s Bill Belichick and Indianapolis’
Tony Dungy. A sidebar about coaches on the spot
placed former Viking assistant Scott Linehan, now head coach of
St. Louis, first and Childress second.
The Vikings had to call a timeout before a
field goal attempt in Sunday’s Dallas game when lineman Ryan Cook
forgot to go on the field. Childress said Cook can’t make that error
and “must have lost his head.” The field goal was blocked and returned
by the Cowboys for a touchdown.
Childress said he and his former boss in
Philadelphia, Andy Reid, talk on a regular basis but probably
won’t this week as the Vikings prepare for the Eagles to play at the
Metrodome on Sunday.
The Timberwovles’ new marketing and advertising campaign is called "See
What They Can Do.” Part of the campaign features four TV ads focusing
on the team's new mentor and spiritual leader Archibald
"Sweetwater" Jones, a 3-foot-11 inch ABA and NBA journeyman from the
1970s, who has been described as part Julius Erving, part
Barry White and part Yoda. Jones provides his existential
wisdom with the young Timberwolves in the commercials including sharing
his insights and giving a pep talk on the importance of team to several
of the more youthful Wolves, and helping point guard
Randy Foye better "focus his mind" for the fourth quarter.
The Wild are at Calgary tonight in the
first game between the two teams this season. The Wild won three
times in eight games last season, with two of Minnesota’s victories in
shootouts. The first place Wild have a five point lead over the
second place Flames and Colorado in the Northwest Division.
The Wild has
recalled right wing Cal Clutterbuck from the Houston Aeros of the
AHL.
Clutterbuck, 19, had three points including a power play goal, a
plus-one rating and 11 shots on goal in five games with Houston this
season.
Augsburg
junior wide receiver
Royce Winford set a new Augsburg and MIAC single-game
record for receptions, catching 20 passes for 235 yards and three
touchdowns as his team defeated Carleton 38-16 on Saturday. Winford was named MIAC Offensive Player of the Week. The 20-reception total is
the most for any NCAA football player this season, regardless of
division. The total is tied for the third-most in NCAA Division III
history. Bethel University senior safety
Brandon Carr was named Defensive Player of the Week for
his two interceptions and a key pass break-up that helped his team defeat
St. Olaf, 35-14. St. Olaf senior punter/kicker
Paul Fortman punted
four times for a 53-yard average, including a pair of 60-yarders. He
was named Special Teams Player of the Week for the ninth time in his
career.
Linebacker
Duy Huynh
of Concordia-St. Paul is the NSIC Defensive Player of the Week. He had
a last minute interception to help Concordia hold off Upper Iowa 20-17
last Saturday. He had
eight tackles and had 3.5 of Concordia’s 14 tackles for loss in the
game. The defense held T.C. Hicks, the fifth-leading rusher in
NCAA Division II, to 52 yards on 25 carries.