Frederick: Vikings’ playoff hopes rest on J.J. McCarthy performing early

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J.J. McCarthy will play his first meaningful snaps of football in 20 months when he steps under center for the Vikings on Monday.

Between his national championship victory and his NFL debut in Chicago was a major knee injury and subsequent recovery that resulted in, effectively, a season off from football.

A logical observer would expect maybe some clunkiness and rust out of the gates. Nevermind the extended time off — nerves also could very well factor in for a 22-year-old playing on the road on Monday Night Football with the nation watching.

And, yet, Minnesota can’t afford any of that.

The Vikings’ early season schedule ahead of their Week 6 bye looks like a soft runway from which their young quarterback can ascend. Of their first five opponents, only Pittsburgh made the playoffs a year ago. Monday’s bout is the only true road game in that span.

It’s not far-fetched to believe Minnesota — a 14-win team a season ago — could go 4-1 in its first five games, if not 5-0.

The thing is … it may have to if the Vikings plan to contend in what may be the most difficult division in football. Because things get ugly after the bye, where the first four contests read: home vs. Eagles, at the Chargers, at Detroit and back home to take on Baltimore — all playoff teams from a year ago and potential Super Bowl contenders this season.

It doesn’t get much easier from there, as their final seven games feature two border battles against Green Bay, another date with Detroit, road games in Dallas and Seattle, and a home bout against the reigning NFC runner up, Washington.

Rough.

Even if McCarthy is in a strong rhythm come mid-October and the Vikings are a better team than they were a season ago, the schedule is significantly more difficult.

No team faces the league’s best on a week-to-week basis and emerges unscathed. All four of its losses came to Detroit and the Rams, a pair of excellent foes.

But last year’s team was excellent at taking care of business. Minnesota consistently handled teams at or below its level. That’s how you guarantee success in a season. The challenge for Minnesota appears to be, at least on its surface, that the “easy” part of the schedule is the early early portion of it. So, McCarthy needs to be ready right now.

So does Minnesota’s defensive unit, which could be asked to prop up the offense if there are any early sputters. Because that can’t equate to losses. Yes, Monday’s bout in Chicago is just Week 1, which can be called “a liar” in the NFL. Early results often aren’t predictive of season-long success.

But it has been for the Vikings of late. The Vikings are 3-3 in their past six season openers. In the years they started 1-0, they made the playoffs; when they started 0-1, they didn’t.

The slate sets the table for that streak to continue, one way or another. If Minnesota is somehow under .500 heading into the bye, there’s little opportunity for it to recover.

It seems as though the Vikings understand the same. They didn’t appear to even consider rolling out a pedestrian wide receiver corps for the first three weeks of the season while Jordan Addison served his suspension. Draft assets were flipped to acquire Adam Thielen because early production is paramount.

So, sorry, J.J. The pressure is on directly out of the gates. No, that probably isn’t fair. But it is the reality.

Welcome to the NFL.

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Authorities investigating fatal helicopter crash in Lakeville

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Officials are investigating a fatal helicopter crash near a Lakeville airport on Saturday afternoon, saying that it was too early to release information about the number of victims or specifics about the aircraft, including how it crashed.

Lakeville police were called to the crash scene west of Airlake Airport about 2:45 p.m., according to a post on the city’s website that provided the following details about the crash.

Police and fire personnel who responded to the crash west of Highway Avenue near 219th Street West determined there were no survivors.

City officials said the crash was in a non-residential and non-commercial area and they believe that the occupant or occupants of the helicopter are the only victims.

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Business People: Adair Mosley to lead GroundBreak Coalition

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NONPROFITS

Adair Mosley

The GroundBreak Coalition, a Minneapolis-based community funding organization made up of corporate, civic and philanthropic leaders, announced Adair Mosley as its first chief executive officer, effective Sept. 15. Mosley served on the organization’s founding board of directors and was CEO of the African American Leadership Forum.

AIRLINES

Sun Country Airlines announced that D. Torque Zubeck has been named senior vice president and chief financial officer, effective Sept. 2. Zubeck most recently served as chief financial officer of Mesa Airlines and prior to that in multiple executive roles at Alaska Airlines. The company also announced that Stephen Coley has been permanently named senior vice president and head of operations effective Aug. 13. Coley had been serving in an interim role in both positions since late April. Sun Country is based at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.

AIRPORTS

The Metropolitan Airports Commission announced it has promoted Mark Rudolph to assistant director of field maintenance to oversee Federal Aviation Administration airfield maintenance compliance requirements at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. Rudolph previously served as manager of field maintenance and planning, overseeing MSP’s fleet department as well as fleet maintenance needs at the MAC’s six general aviation Twin Cities airports.

ARCHITECTURE/ENGINEERING

Golden Valley-based engineering and consulting firm WSB announced the hiring of Spencer Mertes as director of HRIS and total rewards, a new leadership position overseeing the firm’s human resources.

EDUCATION

Minnesota FFA, a St. Paul-based chapter of a national organization focused on high school agricultural curricula, announced the hiring of Mary Hoffmann as executive director of the Minnesota FFA Association. Hoffmann is a former secondary agricultural education teacher, most recently in Sleepy Eye, Minn.

FINANCIAL SERVICES

St. Paul Federal Credit Union, St. Paul, announced the appointment of Chris Petersen as chief executive officer. Petersen has been with the company for more than 26 years, most recently serving as CFO and interim CEO. … KLC Financial, a Minnetonka-based provider of equipment lease and purchase financing for business, announced the promotion of Amy Lewis from vice president of operations to chief operating officer. Lewis has been with the company since 2022.

GOVERNMENT

Crow Wing County announced it has approved Kelsey Hopps as county attorney, succeeding Don Ryan, who is retiring after more than 30 years in the position. Hopps has been assistant county attorney for seven years. She will serve the rest of Ryan’s term through Dec. 31, 2026. An election will be held for the next four year term on Nov. 3, 2026. … Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz announced that Eric Taubel will serve as executive director of the state’s Office of Cannabis Management. Taubel has been in the role in an interim capacity since January after serving as the office’s first general counsel.

HEALTH CARE

Visana Health, a Bloomington-based virtual women’s health clinic, announced it has appointed Tom Maraday as chief commercial officer. Maraday’s résumé includes executive stints at Omada Health, EHE Health, Bright Horizons and Plus One (now Optum).

MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY

Minze Health, a developer of digital diagnostic and therapeutic devices for urology maladies, announced Thomas Moore as president and chief executive officer, based in the Twin Cities. Moore previously served as chief commercial officer at GT Medical Technologies. The company is based in Antwerp, Belgium.

POLITICS

The Center of the American Experiment, a Golden Valley-based political policy advocacy group, announced the hiring of Josiah Padley as a policy fellow covering education. Padley studied classics and history at Baylor University, worked with the Hertog Institute as a political studies fellow and a humanities program facilitator. Most recently, she taught Attic Greek, Latin and ancient history in Baton Rouge, La.

SPORTS

The PGA of America and Hazeltine National Golf Club announced Dan Mulheran has been named general chair of the 2029 Ryder Cup. Mulheran is president of Abbey Street, an Eden Prairie wealth management and institutional consulting firm. Additional Ryder Cup executive committee members are Greta Siedow, Marty Hancharenko, Matt Hanson, Ben Clymer, Dave Susla, Bob Fafinski and Ruth Kimmelshue. Hazeltine National Golf Club is located in Chaska.

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EMAIL ITEMS to businessnews@pioneerpress.com.

Real World Economics: Farmers always on the cutting edge

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Edward Lotterman

Many economic sectors in our country will face difficult and turbulent times over the next several years. Agriculture faces a true crisis in a matter of months.

Some problems that will be acute in October may abate — such as where to physically store surplus soybeans designated for export if none can be moved to other countries because of President Donald Trump’s ongoing trade and political wars with the rest of the world.

But the immediate lack of farm-product export sales caused by Trump’s policies creates deeper and broader problems for U.S. field crop farmers than in Trump’s first administration.

The breakneck recklessness of Trump’s foreign policy is transforming our international and trade relationships in ways not easily reversed. The United States is in the most fundamental transition since the Truman administration 80 years ago and that is bad news for farmers.

Agriculture may be just the first sector to feel the pain, others will follow, but its unique characteristics will make the coming travail particularly severe. It is the one economic sector that most closely approximates “perfect competition,” with many sellers and many buyers, homogeneous products, relatively low barriers to entry or exit and an abundance of information. Unfortunately, these conditions, fostering a large number of producers, makes U.S. agriculture vulnerable to boom and bust cycles. A bust seems to be unfolding now.

There had been a boom in the period from 1910 to 1920. In the new century, with increasingly capable horse-drawn or steam powered machinery, output per farmer had risen rapidly so that the 1910-1914 pre-war period is often used as a reference point for desired profitability in farming. Feeding war-torn Europe extended the boom. In Minnesota alone, tens of thousands of stately new farmhouses and modern barns were built, replacing rudimentary ones constructed a few decades earlier by settlers.

But the end of wartime demand and a ham-handedly severe contraction of credit by the new Federal Reserve threw agriculture into financial difficulties in the 1920s. This worsened as the global economy collapsed in the 1930s. U.S. history classes and Great Depression retrospectives teach about how the Dust Bowl was exacerbated by harsh climate conditions. Farm households still made up a third of all Americans. Before prosperity returned with World War II, a third of all U.S. farms had gone through foreclosure or bankruptcy.

With post-war peacetime, a second wave of mechanization based on modern tractors and combines with internal-combustion engines and hydraulic systems along with hybrid seed corn and cheap synthetic fertilizers boosted production faster than domestic demand. A U.S. dollar overvalued in the Bretton Woods international financial system limited export sales. The government intervened by buying up crops and storing them. This created chronic and troublesome surpluses. Many farmers moved to cities. Federal ag policy shifted to paying farmers not to produce.

The devaluation of the dollar in the 1971 “Nixon shock” suddenly made U.S. farm products far more competitive in world markets. Coupled with a rigid Communist regime in the USSR that needed to appease an increasingly restive population with more food, U.S. agriculture entered an export-fueled wave of prosperity not seen for 50 years.

With higher prices, farmers bought new machinery, erected grain storage and handling, improved drainage and spent on farm houses and other buildings. And they sought to expand their operations by purchases of additional land that would allow full realization of the capacity of newer tractors and other machinery. Young people who had left stagnant farms for university degrees and urban jobs came back to the farms already dreaming of further expansion. Land prices rose and then rose again.

So did inflation in the general economy. Jimmy Carter appointed Paul Volcker to head the Federal Reserve, knowing he would clamp down sharply on the money supply. He did, driving interest rates to unprecedented levels, and suddenly burdening farmers who depended on borrowed money.

High interest rates attracted foreign capital, driving up the value of the U.S. dollar thus making U.S. wheat, soybeans and cotton more expensive. Carter also suspended grain sales to the Soviet Union following its invasion of Afghanistan. Many blamed that for the ag troubles that followed; but this ignores the fact that ag exports continued to climb, hitting levels that would not be matched until the 1990s.

Yet the combination of high interest rates and shrinking export sales put field crop agriculture into the worst crisis since the Depression. Estimates of the number of bankruptcies varied but were near those of the 1930s. The strong dollar was dealing similar blows to U.S. steel and auto industries, so discontent and financial pain were widespread. The 1995 farm bill re-structured measures dating back to 1933. Farming recovered slowly, but rural social structures had changed permanently.

Recovery was slow, but China’s economic flowering set off a “global commodity supercycle” around 2004 that pushed up prices of most major field crops — soybeans, wheat, corn, cotton —  and the sales prices of land needed to grow them. Midwestern cropland in the doldrums around $1,500 an acre in 1990 hit $2,500 by 2003 and topped $5,000 by 2009. There was another spurt around 2012 and then level prices for a decade until most recently, when COVID-era low interest rates, a weaker dollar and Russia’s invasion of European breadbasket Ukraine touched off another frenzy.

Thus, in many cases, prices of cropland are 10 times as high as they were in the wake of the 1980s crisis.

Which brings us to today and the second Trump administration. Now, with higher interest rates, a president battling all the other countries in the world rather than just China, continued expansion of South American ag exports and greater production in economically vibrant India, U.S. farmers now seek large subsidies because current yields and prices do not cover their “cost of production.”

This is an old lament that sways the sympathy of urbanites. But it glosses over a key factor. There are two categories of production costs: Ones that vary with output and are zero when output is zero are “variable costs;” in farming these include seed, fertilizer, chemicals, diesel fuel, energy for drying, storage and delivery.

Then there are “fixed costs” that one pays regardless of the level of output. These include interest on money invested in machinery and facilities and the depreciation of the same, as well as insurance, marketing information and so on. And from a cash-flow perspective, principal payments on land and machinery loans need to come from somewhere.

So with current product prices, most farmers can quite readily cover all variable costs. But with interest rates above where they had been for at least a decade after the 2007 Wall Street financial debacle, there is not enough revenue left over to pay all the fixed costs. This year the gap is great and growing as a trade war of choice — and not of necessity — dims export prospects.

So farmers want big subsidies. The trouble is that any time crop subsidies are raised, farmers bid up land prices. There is a ratcheting effect that, whenever the economy pauses, leaves farmers unable to cover the cost of production. Consider now that if cropland prices had not jumped by 30% to 50% since 2020, their costs would be a lot lower. Much more could be said and there will be ample opportunities to do so as the problem will be in the news for months.

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St. Paul economist and writer Edward Lotterman can be reached at stpaul@edlotterman.com.