Timberwolves basketball. Are there any words in the Twin Cities sports market that have inspired more “meh?” Well, I decided it was time to get out of that mindset and try to look for positive things to talk about. Granted, Minnesota sports teams don’t make it easy to find optimism, but it’s got to be worth trying, right?
One of the most positive things I can think of off the floor is Glen Taylor has a sale agreement in place for the team. Reports says Alex Rodriguez and Marc Lore are taking a little bit more of a hands-on approach to running Timberwolves basketball. Even though Taylor is said to still have the final say, it’s good to know that new ideas are forthcoming for the franchise.
The new schedule is out, and as I look at the returning players from last year, I’m finding a little more interest than I have in years. The starting five next year might actually be pretty decent. Look, I’m not predicting a march to the NBA finals, nor am I even predicting a playoff spot. I’d be happy with a legitimate run at a .500 win-loss mark. That’s how low my expectations are for Minnesota basketball after the last 20-plus years.
I haven’t had much chance to research the young man the Wolves drafted out of Europe last year, but I am interested to see what the kid can bring to Timberwolves basketball. Of course, this is the one kid that I’m really excited to watch play ball next season.
So, to find out more about the upcoming season, I tracked down Evan with The Daily Wolves fan page on Twitter. We had a lot of basketball notes to get through.
Birthdays don’t mean much after you turn 21, do they? Oh, wait. They do when you turn 50 years old. September 2 is the day I mark a half-century of existence. Do you want to know the interesting part? I didn’t expect to live this long.
I was born with what’s called Wolf-Parkinson-White Syndrome. When your heart beats, the nerve impulse from your brain travels in a circuit around your heart, which constitutes one beat. Yes, I’m oversimplifying, but that’s how it was explained to me.
So, those born with WPW have a defect that allows the nerve pathway to short-circuit itself, which plays hell with your heartbeat. The spells of irregular heartbeats could have done some serious damage, especially as I got into my teenage years. At one point, the top half of my heart was motoring along between 250-300 beats a minute, while the bottom half hit hyper speed at more than 500 beats a minute.
When that happens, blood clots form easily inside the heart. If that clot should get out of the heart, make a circuit around the body and hit the brain, you’re done. You drop dead on the spot. So, long story short, surgery was scheduled on June 3, 1986.
I remember the gap between making the decision to have surgery and the operation being longer than I wanted. That was hard to live with as an awkward teenager. At one point, my stress level was so high I jumped into the middle of a pickup basketball game over the lunch hour at Castlewood High School. Best basketball I’d ever played in my life.
Remember the movie “White Men Can’t Jump?” I’ve always considered that autobiographical. I am as gravity-bound as the movie described white guys. I was a whirling dervish, running up and down the court as fast as my slow-dude legs could carry me. At one point, I came up behind someone going up for a short jump shot and swatted it to the other side of the room. The only blocked shot of my life. I played that whole game wondering if it was going to kill me and I’m not making that up. Fear of death really adds zip to your game, no matter what you’re playing.
So, the surgery came and went, and lo and behold, it was successful. June 3, 1986, was a monumental day in this guy’s life. The one thing I remember the most vividly came after I was in recovery. They were making final plans to get me ready for release only three days after the operation and there was one important thing left to do.
After the surgeon sowed me up, he made two small horizontal slits right underneath the big scar. The doctor then inserted a suction tube in each slit to clear the body cavity of excess blood, preventing peritonitis, which you do NOT want. The doc says, “It’s going to be uncomfortable.” Right. Let me tell you how it felt.
Try to imagine that someone was able to pull your shoulders and collarbones down through your chest cavity and then yank them through your skin and out of your body a few inches above your belly button. The pain was unlike anything I’ve ever felt. Every nerve was on fire, my vision went white, and my mom said I was screaming bloody murder. She was being kind. I was screaming my little white butt off and thought I might be dying. I hope I never have to hurt that bad again.
So, there I was, suddenly assured of a much better chance of seeing more birthdays go by. I’m not making it up when I say at one point during those early years of heart trouble, I literally prayed to God to let me live a full life. That’s all I asked for. He answered.
So, what does the second half of my life look like? I don’t know for sure. I’d like to make an impact for the Kingdom before I leave this world. I don’t know when that will be. You see, several years ago, I had to undergo ANOTHER heart operation as I developed an irregular heartbeat problem apart from the WPW I was born with.
Make every day count. You just don’t know which of your birthdays will be your last. If you haven’t had any kind of problems that threaten your ability to keep breathing, it might be hard to truly understand.
Look at Chadwick Boseman. The world-famous actor passed away recently. What we thought was a picture of health in the Black Panther costume wasn’t the case. He had cancer for the last four years of his life and no one knew he was on borrowed time. It. Can. Happen. To. You.
I can tell you one thing for sure. The two biggest commands in the Bible are a good place to start. Jesus Himself said, “Love the Lord with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself.” I think that’s a good place to start for the second half of my life, however long that may be.
Blogging. What’s it all about? Every time I sit down to
write a blog post, I freeze. Writer’s block is not something that happens to me
very often, but in this case, I’m not sure what’s interesting enough in my life
and the lives of others around me to write about.
Blogging about sports is a good place to start. Watching the Timberwolves play the Miami Heat and realizing just what a dull and uninteresting franchise they are. Notice I didn’t use the words “professional sports” in front of the word “franchise.” I’m honestly not sure they qualify. It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a team revamp virtually their entire roster and not reap any kind of rewards.
I suppose I need to give them time. We’ve already given them
decades and gotten a couple of good seasons for all of our patience. Where have
you gone, KG? Can I ask an honest question? As good as the big KAT is, IS he
the right guy to lead this franchise into the future? Fantastic offensive
talent. Lousy and disinterested on the defensive end. This is a team that
cannot play a lick of defense. Great to score 137 points, unless you give up
140 to the opposition. It’s still a loss.
The NFL Combine is in full swing and I couldn’t be more blasé to the whole thing. Why am I so uninspired about the Vikings and their potential future draft choices? What direction is this franchise going in and how are they going to disappoint their fans next? I mentioned this in an earlier post, but I think it bears repeating; WHY do you want to be a running team first and spend so damn much on a quarterback and two wide receivers? I’m getting a bit of a mixed message here.
By the way, isn’t the NFL a passing league now? And if that’s
the case, does Zimmer’s insistence on running the ball mean the game has passed
him by a little bit? Not saying it has or it hasn’t. Just reading the tea
leaves here.
On to other topics. What’s up with the coronavirus outbreak? Have you seen the hysteria surrounding the “Pandemic?” I’ve been looking behind the headlines and am finding out that the coronavirus fatality rate appears to be three percent. My South Dakota/Minnesota math tells me that 97 percent of the people who are infected appear to actually survive? If that is the case, WHY are we hearing about a “global epidemic” in every major news outlet, making it sound like the second coming of the plague? What don’t I know about this?
Why am I still on social media? I was just perusing a short time ago and couldn’t believe how much the current president is being skewered over the coronavirus. And before you get snippy, I didn’t vote for him. If I blamed presidents I didn’t vote for as much as the current political left does, NOTHING would get done. Ever. Didn’t vote for Clinton either. I’d give my kingdom for a reliable third-party candidate or possibly a middle-of-the-road Democrat. The current list of Democratic presidential candidates are all bat-crap crazy. Not sure the incumbent is a great option either.
I really enjoyed social media when it was first ramping up.
After all, I’d just left full-time media for the first time in my adult life
and it was my only outlet to keep doing what I loved. I really don’t enjoy it
much anymore. Have we as a society ALWAYS been this spiteful and vindictive? Is
social media just a convenient outlet for all that vitriol we’ve been saving
up? Frankly, the behavior of grown adults on social media is the same thing we
all remember growing up during the turbulent teenage years.
Well, there you go. Almost 700 words later and I guess the writer’s block is gone? I do welcome comments when I’m done blogging. You don’t have to agree with me. Just don’t be a jerk about it. Let’s be adults and educate each other about the things we don’t know. Be willing to listen to other people’s point of view once in a while. You and I both might learn something. Think I’ll try this blogging thing again really soon.
Minnesota sports fans, the long-suffering bunch that we are, apparently have to suffer through another rough winter season of mediocrity. Actually, that word doesn’t apply to the “professional” basketball team. That’s just one big bucket of suck.
Wild hockey. It’s not fantastic. Watching the Bruins school the Minnesota “professional” hockey team 4-0 after two periods of play. I shudder to think how much further ahead Boston would be if the Wild hadn’t blocked 10 shots through two periods. This team cannot score goals consistently enough to win.
But how do you go about finding good offense to add to the
roster with the salary cap situation and two contracts that are taking up more
of that cap than they should? Minnesota sports STARTS with hockey. We call
ourselves the “State of Hockey” for a reason, right?
What is it with Minnesota sports? The Wild are stuck in neutral and multiple games away from the playoffs. The Timberwolves aren’t even a blip on the sports radar in the Twin Cities. Oh my goodness, are they bad.
I know Gersson Rojas and Ryan Saunders have a plan that
involves a lot of threes. It’s an offense tailored to the modern NBA game. But
they don’t have players talented enough to play that system well. Isn’t that
like trying to force a square peg through a round hole? As a coach, don’t you
want to at least somewhat build your offense based on the skillset of your
current roster?
Minnesota sports confuse me, especially when it comes to the
professional football team. An 11-win season and the second round of the NFL
playoffs look good on paper. They beat precisely one team with a winning record,
and we were all impressed with that win in New Orleans. But then you don’t put
up any kind of a fight in San Francisco? It took me back to the Philadelphia
fiasco and the day the Vikings laid one of their biggest eggs in a long line of
said eggs. They didn’t show up at all when they had a chance to be the first
team in the NFL to HOST a Super Bowl in their home stadium.
I’d say there’s a pattern forming in which the Vikings aren’t prepared for their biggest games. Is that coaching or is that on the players?
I’m starting to sour on the purple. So, Mike Zimmer wants to
run the ball? Fine. Then WHY did you invest $84 million in a quarterback who
breaks when a defensive lineman gets within ten yards and put him behind an O
line that can’t block elite pass rushers? Why did we invest around $30 million
in two wide receivers? I’m seeing some mixed messages there. You tailor your
offense to play off the strengths of your roster, right?
Maybe it’s just me. Man, I used to schedule my Sundays around Vikings games. Now it’s kind of blasé. I’m sure I’ll keep watching but with much less interest than ever before. If you believe what you see on social media (be careful about that), I’m starting to wonder if the NFL might be looking for some new fans within 5 to 10 years?
Things like this are why I’m more interested in watching
college sports than a professional event. They’re still kids out there having
fun. The atmosphere is more upbeat as well.
Maybe I’m just mellowing in my middle age. Sports aren’t quite the be-all, end-all that they used to be. Is that normal as fans age?
SEC Showcase. Just a cool name for a great day of watching high school basketball. The first-ever Southeast Conference Showcase in Rochester, Minnesota, featured a full slate of basketball games featuring every team in the league. I went down to Rochester from the Twin Cities to specifically take in the Kingsland vs. Mabel-Canton boys’ and girls basketball games.
Kingsland won the girls’ game 53-43. The Kingsland boys made it a sweep, beating the M-C boys 53-49.
Here’s a few video highlights from both games, with the articles and pictures down below.
SEC ShowcaseGirls’ Game
The Knights came out firing early in the game and ran off 11-straight points to start the game before Mabel-Canton would score their first points. All-SEC standout Payton Danielson gave the Cougars their first two baskets of the game, the first coming with 13:38 left in the first half.
The Cougars would knock that Kingsland lead down to 15-11
with 9:18 left in the period. M-C stretched its scoring run to 15-8 with five
minutes to go in the half. The Knights kept their lead around four points over
the final minutes of the first half, leading 21-17 with four minutes to go.
Kingsland would head into the halftime locker room with a 26-22 lead. However, most of the half belonged to Mabel-Canton, who outscored the Knights 22-15 after being down 11-0 early in the game.
The Kingsland girls came out firing in the second half, going on a 10-4 run to take a 36-26 lead six minutes into the second half. The Knights stretched their scoring run to 15-6. Leading by double-digits at 41-30 with 10 minutes on the clock. But Mabel-Canton still wouldn’t go away.
The Cougars whittled the Kingsland lead down to four points
(42-38) with 4:35 left. It was 42-40 Kingsland when MaKenzie Kelly of
Mabel-Canton hit a free throw to tie the game at 42-all with 3:34 left.
However, Alyssa Link of Kingsland answered with a big three-point basket.
It was 46-42 Knights with 2:15 to go. Link hit a couple of
big free throws late to make it a 50-42 Knights’ lead with 25 seconds left.
Anika Reiland hit free throws to stretch the Kingsland lead to 53-42 with five
seconds left. A Danielson free throw for M-C made it a 53-43 final.
Link, who looks completely healthy and is playing without a
brace after recovering from a serious knee injury last season, led the team
with a double-double, getting a team-best 15 points and pulling down 11 boards.
She had three big three-pointers and went three of four at the free-throw line
in the second half, coming up with big points in clutch time. But she had help
on the perimeter as well.
Sam Wernimont finished with 13 points, hitting three shots
from outside the arc in the first half. Meredith Farlinger provided scoring in
the paint, finishing with another double-double of 12 points and 14 rebounds.
Free throws were huge for Kingsland in the second half, when
they made 12 of their 16 attempts (75%). It was a marked improvement from the
first half when the Knights were just three of 10 at the stripe.
On the defensive end of the floor, Kingsland finished with
six steals (Wernimont 2, Audrey Webster 2) and nine blocked shots (Farlinger
4).
SECBoys’ Game
The SEC Showcase game tipped off in the Mayo Civic Center and points were slow in coming for both teams. The Knights trailed just 4-3 with five-and-a-half minutes off the first-half clock. Just over two minutes later, Brayden Gjere of Mabel-Canton grabbed an offensive rebound and landed a put-back shot to give the Cougars an 8-7 lead with 12:16 to go in the first half.
The Knights trailed 10-9 when Luke Howard drained a
three-pointer to make it a 12-10 Knights’ lead with 7:23 left in the half.
However, the Cougars’ Reid Crawford answered with a trey of his own to give MC
the lead back at 15-14 with six minutes on the clock.
Both teams were settling into the neutral court and were
finding the range more consistently on their jump shots. As the tempo picked
up, another Luke Howard trey made it 22-15 Kingsland at 3:44 to go in the half.
He attempted another three as the first half buzzer sounded and was fouled. He
dropped in one of three free throws to make it a 25-19 Kingsland lead at the
half.
Mabel-Canton came out swinging in the second half with a 7-0
scoring run to take a one-point lead (26-25) with 16 minutes left in the game.
An offensive rebound and made basket by Reed Merkel broke the streak and gave
the lead back to the Knights, 27-26 with 15 minutes left.
The lead would go back and forth for the rest of the game. Kaden Rath hit a jumper to tie the game at 37 with just over eight minutes left. Another Howard three-pointer and a steal and layup from Nick Eickhoff made it 42-39 Kingsland with 7:15 on the clock.
As the game wound down, Kingsland started showing a
full-court press. The Knights had shown a half-court trap before that and had
some success forcing Mabel-Canton mistakes with the basketball.
Walker Erdman nailed one of two free throws to tie the game
at 44. The teams traded baskets and tied the game at 46 all, when Howard hit
the biggest three of the game off a Mabel-Canton turnover and Kingsland was
back on top, 49-46 with 1:21 to go.
The Cougars’ Reid Crawford line up a three-point try that
rolled all the way around the rim and fell away. The Knights grabbed the
rebound and Erdman hit two free throws to make it a two-possession game at
51-46. However, Crawford came back the other way and drained a three to cut the
Kingsland lead to just two points, 51-49 with only 4.7 seconds left.
Mabel-Canton tried hard to swipe the inbound pass and was
forced to foul. Two free throws from Howard sealed the game and a Knights’ win,
53-49.
Howard and Erdman tied for the team lead in scoring, each
finishing with 14 points. Howard was two rebounds from a double-double,
grabbing eight missed shots and finishing with two steals. Erdman also grabbed
eight rebounds and hit three of five free throws. Eickhoff chipped in 12 points
on five of 11 shooting.
The team hit 19 of its 53 shots (35%) from the field. They
were most effective down under the basket, making 13 of 27 shots (48%) from
two-point range. The Knights did make enough free throws to win the game, but
they could have given themselves a little more breathing room late. Kingsland
was just nine of 18 from the stripe.
They finished with 32 rebounds, 12 offensive.
Defensively, the Knights came up with seven steals and four blocked
shots.