Worth Noting
In April, the NCAA changed a rule
regarding foreign trips to allow incoming freshmen to participate.
Minnesota has eight new players on its 2010-11 roster, six of whom will
be making the trip to Vancouver, British Columbia: guards Maverick
Ahanmisi, Austin Hollins and Eric Stark, forwards
Trevor Mbakwe and Mo Walker and center Elliott Eliason.
After the Canadian trip, the Gophers don’t
play again until they have home exhibitions November 2 and 8 against
Northeastern State and Winona State.
Former Timberwolves player and front
office executive Fred Hoiberg is making national news with four
transfers coming into his program as the new basketball coach at Iowa
State. Those transfers not only include former Gopher and Minnesota Mr.
Basketball Royce White, but also ex-Michigan State starter
Chris Allen. Both White, a forward, and Allen, a shooting guard,
are considered pro prospects.
Here’s what you can believe about a
proposed new stadium for the Vikings: the facility is unlikely to have a
retractable roof because that adds about $200 million to the total cost
of an open air stadium. But a fixed roof stadium would be less
expensive than a retractable roof and will satisfy the Vikings and also
serve the community as a venue for other spectator attractions like a
Final Four, and offer a site for amateur events and recreational
activities.
It has been proposed in the past that the
Vikings owners be responsible for about $222 million of the cost but in the coming
legislative process that figure is likely to be negotiated up. There is
more political interest in making the stadium a reality than in the past
and given the franchise’s enormous popularity it’s a big political risk
for any of the three gubernatorial candidates to oppose legislation for
the facility.
Determining the public funding will be
controversial and various ideas are likely to be offered including a
seven county metro area lodging surtax. The stadium site seems almost
certain to be where Mall of America Field is now.
It will be interesting to see if the
Vikings are improved at catching passes tomorrow
night in their final preseason game. Last Saturday night there were too
many balls thrown by quarterback Brett Favre that should have
been caught. That raised questions about whether this team has one or
two high quality receivers who offer the speed and exceptional catching
ability that’s missing with best receiver Sidney Rice sidelined
for perhaps half the season. As for running the ball, in three preseason games the Vikings
have rushed for 101.3 yards per game.
Denver will be the opponent tomorrow night at Mall of America Field with
a roster that includes former Gopher wide receiver Eric Decker
who has caught six passes for 69 yards and one touchdown in preseason.
The Vikings and other NFL teams must
reduce their rosters to the season limit of 53 on Saturday.