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Anniversaries Remind of Twins Legend Who ‘Lit Up’ the Room

Posted on April 1, 2026April 1, 2026 by David Shama

 

It was about 30 years ago that blindness from glaucoma in his right eye ended Kirby Puckett’s career.  It was 20 years ago last month that perhaps the greatest Twins player ever died from a stroke.

The legendary Twins centerfielder, who was a five-tool superstar, saw his brilliant MLB career end far too early after 12 seasons and at age 36.  He later died as a relatively young man of 45.

It was March 28, 1996, in the final days of spring training, that the Chicago native who was hitting the cover off the ball, woke up with blurred vision.  The player with the infectious smile and personality was quickly placed on the 15-day disabled list for the first time in a storybook career that included leading the Twins to World Series titles in 1987 and 1991.

Dave St. Peter recalled that in spring training of 1996 Puckett’s spirits were high.  He was wearing a Breathe Right nasal strip and predicting he would be the first baseball player to earn an endorsement deal from the Minnesota company. “He had a great spring.  Really looked good,” said St. Peter who then was working for the club’s communications department and would become team president in 2002.

Initially there was a feeling Puckett would recover and rejoin the Twins but that never happened. “Kirby had some of the best doctors locally and globally take a look and there were surgeries performed and efforts made but at the end of the day I think the damage had been done,” St. Peter said.

Former Twins president Dave St. Peter
Dave St. Peter (photo courtesy of Minnesota Twins)

The gifted fielder, base running threat and power hitter with the lifetime batting average of .318 announced his retirement on July 12, 1996. Not surprisingly, Puckett tried to lift up those around him, including teammates and fans at his news conference.  “Kirby was always one to try to make others feel good,” St. Peter remembered.

It was a devasting ending for Puckett, the team and the fans.  The ball club lost the guy who invited teammates to jump on his shoulders for leadership and production.  The club had added Paul Molitor in the offseason and there was renewed hope 1996 would reverse the trend of recent losing seasons.

The fans lost perhaps the most popular athlete in Minnesota history.  A personality as big as his playing skills.  “This was a guy that was bigger than life,” St. Peter said.  “He had lit up every room he had ever been in.”

Puckett was a first-ballot Baseball Hall of Fame inductee in 2001.  At age 41 he became the third youngest electee in history behind Sandy Koufax and Lou Gehrig.

Playing at about 5-foot-8 and 210 pounds Puckett had a dazzling career and impact on baseball that no one would have predicted when he was growing up as a little noticed high school player in Chicago.  The Twins took a chance on him as a free agent college player in 1982. He became such a revered player that after his retirement the Twins made him an ambassador for the franchise.

The saga of Puckett’s vision loss impacted professional sports. Part of the narrative has always been that perhaps if his eye damage had been caught earlier things might have been different.  “He was still a pretty young guy at the time and that (extensive screening) wasn’t customary across sports.  Things evolve. I can assure you changes were made.  Not just with the Twins, but I think across sports in general with Kirby’s story. I think it was a lesson learned. …”

Tragedy hit again on March 5, 2006 when Puckett suffered a massive stroke. The next day he died.  In a March 7 story for MLB.com St. Peter called it “gut wrenching” to hear of the loss.

“This is a sad day for the Minnesota Twins, Major League Baseball and baseball fans everywhere,” Twins owner Carl Pohlad said in a statement in the MLB.com story. “Eloise and I loved Kirby deeply. Kirby’s impact on the Twins organization, the state of Minnesota and Upper Midwest is significant and goes well beyond his role in helping the Twins win two world championships.”

Puckett was a Twins ambassador for several years until the contract expired. Puckett walked away saying he wanted time to step back from the role, St. Peter recalled.  Nevertheless, St. Peter made ongoing efforts to re-establish the ambassador position with him.

In the years between retirement and his death personal problems surfaced for Puckett including a divorce from his wife Tonya.  It seems fair to say that the joy and satisfaction Puckett felt as a player eluded him in retirement including after he moved to Arizona, the place where he died.

“I think Kirby struggled with his post playing career largely because he struggled without the structure that the playing career brought,” St. Peter said. “There is a discipline and a framework that goes into being a professional athlete. And sometimes we see when that athlete is taken out of that environment things don’t come as naturally to them. …In some ways Kirby went to a darker place without baseball.”

For another perspective on Puckett, I turned years ago to Gregg Wong, the former Pioneer Press sportswriter who was a beat writer on the Twins for a few seasons and covered the club part time during other seasons. Here is what he wrote to me:

“He was the most upbeat, most accessible athlete I’ve ever dealt with on a regular basis. He would light up whatever room he was in with his non-stop chatter, banter and energy. The noise level in the clubhouse always would go up once he walked in.

“He always had something to say for the record. A lot of times it might just be a cliché, but he always was there to face the music. He never ran and hid, like many top athletes, even if he struck out with the winning run on base in the bottom of the ninth. He was a true professional in that regard; he knew you had a job to do, too.

“Probably my favorite remembrance of him was when he made his first all-star team in 1986, where he was voted in as a starter. The paper did not send me to the game in Houston, but the boss wanted a Puckett sidebar after the game. I asked if he would call me as soon as the game got over so I could ask about his experience and he said he would, although I believed he would get caught up in the hype and hoopla and forget to call.

“I watched the game on TV, made some notes and prayed that he’d call. Five minutes after the game was over, the phone rang. ‘What’s up, Wongie?’ he said. ‘How you doin’?’ Here he had just ended the biggest moment of his career up to that point and he remembered to call and asked how I was doing (just fine because he called)! Not many pro athletes would do anything like that today — and certainly none of the Vikings I covered in a half-dozen years.”

Worth Noting

If Michigan meets Illinois in the NCAA championship game next Monday, why will it be historical? (Pause and think.  Then read below).

Because the last and only time two Big Ten schools played for the title was 1976 with Indiana defeating Michigan for the crown.  Who were the coaches? (Pause again).

Indiana: Bob Knight.  Michigan: Johnny Orr.

Congratulations to the Minnesota Football Coaches Association on its most recent clinic and upholding the standard of excellence the event has set over the years.  In addition to clinic sessions, the MFCA honored Tom Schuller (Jackson County Central) as Coach of the Year and Chad Johnston (Minneota) as its Tom Mahoney Man of the Year.

Hall of Fame Inductees from the high school division are John Clark, Jr., Mahnomen-Waubun; Ronald Johnson, Clearbrook-Gonvick; Bob Kovich, Lakeville North; Jeff Schlieff, Spring Lake Park; and Randy Strand, Adrian. From the college division is inductee Glenn Caruso from St. Thomas.

Honored with the Cal Stoll Award are Ryan Beachy, Pelican Rapids; Kyle Stern, LeRoy-Ostrander-Lyle-Pacelli, and Tim Kirk, Mountain Lake. Terry Kent, Kittson County Central, won the 2026 Broyles Award honoring top assistant coaches in the United States.

Congratulations to all honorees!

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Oregon Tight End Might Be Too Tempting for Vikes to Pass Up

Posted on March 29, 2026March 29, 2026 by David Shama

 

Local football authority Daniel House, known for his football film breakdown and data driven research, predicted on X last year the Vikings would use their first-round draft selection on Ohio State guard Donovan Jackson.  Bingo!  The Vikings did just that.

House, recognized by football followers for his presence on multiple platforms including X @DanielHouseMN, will post his 2026 prediction on X this Wednesday.  He told Sports Headliners he’s “leaning” toward dynamic Oregon tight end Kenyon Sadiq being Minnesota’s choice at No. 18 of the first round of the NFL Draft which opens Thursday night April 23.

Why?  “What a freaky athlete he is and how he tested. It’s pretty impressive.”

The 6-foot-3, 241-pound playmaker had a terrific NFL Combine where he ran the fastest 40-yard dash for a tight end (4.39)  since at least 2003.  Sadiq excelled in physical measurements and also team interviews.

The Vikings have many needs to fill in the draft and already possess a quality tight end in T.J. Hockenson but Sadiq, if available, might be too good to pass on. House said a team’s offensive efficiency can “explode when you have two tight ends on the field.” He added that the versatile Sadiq can line up not only in a tight end position but also in the slot or out wide.  Sadiq, he said, is so talented and versatile he could play some fullback, making the transition easier without C.J. Ham who has retired.

Among the Vikings needs is help at running back and it wouldn’t be too surprising if they selected Minneapolis native Emmett Johnson.  The Gophers didn’t pursue Johnson, but he became one of college football’s better backs at Nebraska despite not having top speed.

“He was really good…(with) acceleration, deaccelerating,” House said.  “Sudden, elusive type of back. I feel like NFL teams are going to like Emmett Johnson quite a bit.”

House predicts Johnson will likely be a round two or three pick.  He said Johnson may not have tested that well with scouts but he “transitions” so well when he runs that he is an intriguing prospect. “That’s where he is elite. So, I think maybe that’s going to be the calling card for his game is the ability to make people miss. And that’s the bread-and-butter success at the running back position. …”

The first Gopher to be taken by an NFL team either in the draft or free agency is likely to be defensive lineman Deven Eastern from Shakopee.  Defensive tackles are coveted in the NFL, and House said the 6-foot-5, 315-pound Eastern has “great length and movement skills.”

Worth Noting

Gopher football coach P.J. Fleck
P.J. Fleck

Gophers head football coach P.J. Fleck, speaking at the Minnesota Football Coaches Association Clinic last week, told the audience his teams frequently exceed expectations of prognosticators and this year’s team can be “sneaky good.”  He also told Sports Headliners quarterback Drake Lindsey is improved in throwing the deep ball.

Former Gopher wide receiver and now TV analyst Ron Johnson after being asked if national champion Indiana’s coaching staff is superior to Minnesota’s: “No, I wouldn’t say that.  It’s all about the dollars (to pay players).”

Johnson is an admirer of Lindsey including his 6-foot-5 height.  That’s prototypical of ideal NFL quarterbacks.  “It (the height) changes the trajectory of the ball,” Johnson told Sports Headliners.

The Gophers, now in spring practices, have a roster of players from 29 states.

Dan Stoltz, president and CEO of Blaze Credit Union, spoke about leadership at the clinic. An inspiring speaker, Stoltz has a book coming out this summer with a working title of “Quest to Be Your Best.”

Retired girls’ high school basketball coach Brian Cosgriff, who won eight state tournament titles, thinks the world of Amaya Battle, the Golden Gopher senior guard who played her last game in Friday’s NCAA Tournament loss to UCLA.  Cosgriff coached her at Hopkins High School and recalled how the death of Battle’s mother prompted her to stay home for college and be near family.

The versatile scorer, rebounder and assist maker is one of the Gophers all-time best players.  Cosgriff describes her as a great player, person and student who is also “funny as heck.” Cosgriff told Sports Headliners: “I am going to make it my cause to go out and see if we can hang a banner of her at Williams Arena.”

The Twins were efficient in gaining their first win of the regular season yesterday, scoring four runs on four hits to defeat the Orioles 4-1.  Twins pitchers struck out 16 batters, including nine by first-year starter Taj Bradley in 4.1 innings.  The suspect labeled bullpen used five relievers who gave up only two hits and struck out seven.

Timberwolves owner Alex Rodriguez was a big hit speaking to the Twin Cities Dunkers last week. He graciously posted a thank you on his LinkedIn page. (43) Post | LinkedIn

Comments Welcome

Medved Expects ‘Large Number’ of Returnees to Gophers

Posted on March 25, 2026March 25, 2026 by David Shama

 

Niko Medved has nine players on his roster that appear to have eligibility for the 2026-2027 season. The men’s college basketball transfer portal opens for 15 days beginning on April 7 so the Golden Gophers coach will know a lot more by the end of next month, but he told Sports Headliners he believes a “large number of them (players)” will return.

Starters Isaac Asuma (guard), Bobby Durkin (forward) and Grayson Grove (center) have remaining eligibility.  Center Jaylen Crocker-Johnson, who was a starter until a foot injury sidelined him in February and sixth man Kai Shinholster (guard) have future eligibility, too.

Projected starters earlier this season Chansey Willis (guard) and Robert Vaihola (center) are candidates to receive medical redshirts.  Others on the roster with apparent future eligibility are Max Lorenson (guard) and Chance Stephens (guard).

Medved added that while in this transfer happy era of college basketball there are no guarantees he “feels good” about the process as the window nears for the 2026 portal. He made that comment after Nehemiah Turner (center) transferred but prior to the more recent transfer out of the program by B.J. Omot (forward).

Medved said none of the players who were sidelined with injuries, including Crocker-Johnson, will participate in the College Basketball Crown tournament in Las Vegas starting April 1.  The Gophers are part of an eight-team field with their opening quarterfinal game in the single elimination tourney scheduled against Baylor of the Big 12.

Niko Medved, Gophers hoops coach, photo by David Shama
Niko Medved

The Gophers haven’t played a game since their Big Ten Tournament loss to Rutgers on March 11.   In the days since Minnesota players had about a week off. The rest period was one of the reasons Medved and his players opted for the Crown tournament. The Gophers have been playing with a six-man rotation that Medved said will continue in the tourney.

The players were also attracted to the tournament because of potential NIL money.  The two winners in the semifinals (April 4) are guaranteed a pool of $50,000. The winning team in the April 5 championship games divides up $300,000 while the loser receives $100,000.

Medved said it’s “cool” that his players have an opportunity to earn money in the postseason. He also likes that the tournament is all in one location, expenses are covered by the tourney and there is an association with FOX Sports, which is a Big Ten partner.

Now in its second year after being founded by FOX Sports and AEG (Anschutz Entertainment Group), the 2026 field consists of Minnesota and Rutgers from the Big Ten, Baylor, Colorado and West Virginia from the Big 12, Creighton from the Big East, Stanford from the ACC and Oklahoma from the SEC.

The Gophers and Baylor have never played against each other. Their game April 1 will be televised starting at 9:30 p.m. CDT.

Hired about a year ago, Medved and his staff scrambled to put a roster together and then faced a discouraging number of injuries that thinned out the talent even more. There was plenty of adversity, including the experience of a losing season (8-12 in the Big Ten and 15-17 overall).  Medved and the players took a positive approach to the adversity, and the season included three upsets at Williams Arena over top 25 teams.

“The players deserve a ton of credit for staying with it,” Medved said.  “Every time we got knocked down…they just bounced right back. You know it’s really cool. They set a great standard for…the way we want our culture and our program to look like moving forward.”

Worth Noting

Illinois freshman All-American guard Keaton Wagler was an under the radar talent for awhile when in high school in the Kansas City area.  When Medved was head coach at Colorado State he said the Rams were recruiting Wagler hard.  Medved thought he had a good chance to get him to Colorado State, but he eventually attracted more attention from colleges including Illinois.  “…I thought he would be really good,” Medved said. “I don’t know that anyone, even Illinois included, thought he would be this good, this early. Kudos to him.’’

The women Gophers, under third year coach Dawn Plitzuweit, are setting a foundation for increased box office attendance and fan following.  The Gophers are headed to the Sacramento Regional and a Sweet 16 game Friday night against UCLA.  They earned their first trip to the Sweet 16 since 2005 with a dramatic home win Sunday on a last second shot by Amaya Battle in the fourth quarter.

The Gophers might not have won the 65 -63 game without the raucous support of the fans.  Playing first and second round NCAA Tournament games at Williams Arena, the Gophers had announced attendances of 10,355 and 10,763 (arena capacity 14,625).  Those were easily the largest home crowds of the season and brought the average for 18 home games to 4,792.

Last year home attendance averaged 3,819.  This season and last the Gophers sold in the range of 2,300 to 2,600 public season tickets so there is a lot of potential for growth. With some key returnees and top 40 recruits, the Gophers figure to be winners again next season. Plitzuweit has won everywhere she has coached, including her four previous head jobs.

Gophers football historians noted the recent passing of Minneapolis native Tom Brown who was the dominant player on Minnesota’s 1960 national championship team.  A two-way lineman, he was known as a “rolling boulder” on offense and “rock of Gibraltar” on defense. The All-American finished second in the Heisman Trophy balloting in 1960, something no lineman had ever accomplished.

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