After 44 years of Vikings players staying at Gage Hall at Minnesota State Mankato for training camp, this year's team will move to the 1-year-old Julia Sears building. Players are to report the evening of July 29 (Thursday), with one workout the next day at 4 p.m., then two workouts on Saturday, one on Sunday and two on Monday.
Leading home run hitter in the Twins' organization is outfielder Joe Benson, who has 19 between Class AA New Britain and Class A Fort Myers.
The Timberwolves report sales of about 400 new season tickets from their "pay the pick" promotion that priced seats based on their NBA lottery pick (No. 4). That means those season tickets sell for $172 apiece.
The Wolves say they have an overall season-ticket renewal rate of about 85 percent on a full-season equivalent of nearly 6,000 tickets.
Autographed baseballs by the late George Steinbrenner, who included "The Boss" with his signature, are on sale for $899 apiece from Grandstand Sports.
Bloomington golfer Joe Stansberry, with rounds of 73-73 at the 160-year-old Panmure course in Barry, Scotland, qualified for the $2 million British Senior Open that begins Thursday at Carnoustie in Scotland. Stansberry, 54, will be paired with Gordon Brand and Mark Carnevale and tee off at 6:10 a.m. Minnesota time.
Former Gophers hockey captain Mike Vannelli, 26, who last season played in Dresden, Germany, this season will play in Stavanger, Norway.
Three-time Tour de France winner Greg LeMond, 49, still resides in Wayzata.
Randy Meier, 48, the former KSTP-TV and MSNBC-TV news anchor, is senior director of marketing and communications for Cambria.
Former St. Paul Saints pitcher John Van Cuyk, who pitched on the 1949 Brooklyn Dodgers team that won the National League pennant, died at 89 in Rochester, Minn., the other day.
Local author-Twins official scorer Stew Thornley was in Pasadena, Calif., last weekend to receive the 2010 Tony Salin Memorial Award for the Baseball Reliquary for "commitment to preserving baseball history."
Ex-North Star Ernie Hicke will be general manager and coach of the North American Hockey League expansion team in Port Huron, Mich.
Happy birthday: Ex-Twin Tony Oliva turned 72 on Tuesday. Tony is down 10 pounds and intends to lose another 10.
Marty Springstead, 73, who spent 50 years in organized baseball as an umpire and umpire supervisor, is featured speaker at a banquet tonight at Manny's Steakhouse in downtown Minneapolis.
Tartan grad Scott Brown, 36, pitches and catches for the U.S. slow-pitch softball team that on Saturday will play Team Canada in Oklahoma City on ESPN.
Southern Idaho baseball coach Boomer Walker was in town the other day
Kevin Williams scouting Minnesota prep players.
A little birdie says plans are under way for one of Brett Favre's children to enroll at a private school in Wayzata this fall.
Ben Marshall, a star defenseman from Mahtomedi who has committed to the Gophers hockey team, seriously injured a wrist when shoved into the boards at the Detroit Red Wings' developmental camp the other day. Plans are for Marshall to play for Omaha in the U.S. Hockey League this season, then to join the Gophers for the 2011-12 season.
If one issue can be resolved and former Gophers All-America golfer John Harris is announced as the Gophers' director of golf, look for more native Minnesotans to end up playing for their home state
The 2009 playoff run for the Vikings ended in similar kick below the belt fashion to the 1998 playoff debacle when munchkin body double Gary Anderson shanked a gimme field goal giving the Atlanta Dirty Birds a gift ride to the Super Bowl. Last season’s overtime loss to the eventual Super Bowl champion Saints was just as heart wrenching for Vikings fans. Only this time it was real football players that cost them a shot at the ring when #4′s brain cramp interception and
Adrian Peterson’s butterfingers cost the Vikings their first Super Bowl trip since 1977.
This season is playing out like a scene from “Groundhog Day” as Favre is yet again contemplating retirement following offseason ankle surgery. It appears that its just a ploy to avoid training camp and more of the melodramatic from the drama queen country boy. I fully expect Brett to have his wranglers packed for training camp in Mankato by mid-August and reports have surfaced that head coach Brad Childress made a trip the casa Favre in South Carolina this week. Its tough to argue with the
Vikings football jerseys allowing the old war horse to call the shots after he posted arguably the best season in his 11-year career throwing for 4,200 yards, 33 touchdowns and a shockingly low 7 interceptions.
In 2009, the Vikings ranked 5th in the NFL in scoring averaging an impressive 29 points per game. Favre’s presence had rippling effects on the entire receiving corps and WR Sidney Rice, who had previously be criticized for poor work ethic, had a breakout season.
Rice finished with 1,312 yards, eight touchdowns on 83 catches, and a ticket to the Pro Bowl. That is a spectacular jump after totaling only 46 receptions in his first two NFL seasons. The 23 year old is an ideal red zone threat at 6’4 and should be a top 10-15 fantasy WR heading into his 4th NFL season. Rookie Percy Harvin battled migraines that cost him playing time in weeks 14/15 but he is a threat to score from anywhere on the field and finished with 790 receiving yards, 135 rushing yards, six touchdowns and a pair of return touchdowns. TE
Visanthe Shiancoe was a red zone monster last season finishing with 11 touchdowns. However, in his past two seasons he has averaged only 600 yds/season (under 40 yds/game) which makes him a lower end TE1 and a guy that could easily slip to a TE2 as the weekly fantasy production with be up and down.
The running game took a slight step back last season as Minnesota finished 13th in the NFL (120 yards per game).
After averaging 110 yds/game, AP regressed a bit in 2009 (86 yards per game) but he did lead the league with 18 touchdowns. Running mate Chester Taylor (727 total yards, 2 TDs) signed with division rival Chicago so Peterson should see more receptions and should dominate red zone carries provided he has solved the fumbling issues which led has caused him to give the opposition the ball an unbelievable 16 times over the past two seasons. Peterson has been working with a sand-filled, 14-pound football in order to improve his ball security. Rookie second round pick Toby Gerhart will likely serve as AP’s backup. The 2009 Heisman runner-up could be used in the red zone as the 6’0/231 pounder posted an amazing 28 TDs in his senior season at Stanford. He also ran an impressive 4.53 at the combine and finished second in the nation, behind Ryan Mathews, in rushing yards. Gerhart will be a wise handcuff pick late in drafts for all AP owners. The more AP fumbles the more action Gerhart will see in the red zone.