Longtime Gophers baseball coach John Anderson to retire after 2024 season

posted in: News | 0

The Gophers’ 2024 baseball season will be the end of an era.

Minnesota coach John Anderson says he will retire at the end of the season, ending the longest coaching tenure in the history of Gophers athletics.

Anderson has been the U baseball team’s head coach the past 43 season and a part of the program as a player, student assistant coach, graduate assistant and head coach for the past 49 years, dating back to the fall of 1974.

“It’s been the professional honor of my lifetime to work alongside some of the most talented and dedicated coaches in college baseball, support staff members, gifted colleagues, amazing student-athletes and an impressive group of alumni and donors who provided unwavering support throughout my tenure,” Anderson saod in a statement. “I am grateful for the support of all the athletic directors I worked with throughout my career. The University and the tradition-rich Golden Gopher baseball program have impacted me and my family with so many special opportunities and wonderful memories. My hope is, as the leader of the program, I have been able to make the same impact in return.

“I will forever cherish my time as a student-athlete and coach and the important lifelong friendships and special relationships that were made during the past decades. There will be time to reminisce and share all the great stories that were created on this special journey when the 2024 season is over. But right now, my staff and I are focused on preparing our team for the season ahead and mentoring them into their best version of themselves, so they can reach their potential in the classroom and on the diamond.”

Anderson is the winningest baseball coach in the history of the Big Ten with a 1,365-997-3 (.579) overall record and a 614-414 (.598) record against conference opponents. Inducted into the American Baseball Coaches Association in 2008, he has been named Big Ten Coach of the Year eight times, most recently in 2018 after leading Minnesota to a Big Ten championship and the NCAA Tournament Super Regional for the first time in program history.

Under Anderson, the Gophers baseball team won 11 Big Ten titles and 10 Big Ten Tournament championships, and made 18 NCAA tournament appearances.

“John is Minnesota baseball,” Gophers Director of Athletics Mark Coyle said. “He is one of the finest coaches and individuals in all of college athletics, and our University and state are better off because of his contributions. We look forward to celebrating his final season as the leader of the Gophers.”

Under his watch, 115 Gophers have been drafted to the MLB. With two selections in the 2023 draft, the Gophers extended their draft streak to 36 consecutive years. The streak is the longest in the Big Ten, with Ohio State (12 years) and Michigan (10 years) as the next closest Big Ten teams.

The Gophers finished the 2023 season with a record of 18-34 overall and 10-14 in the Big Ten. Minnesota went 6-4 in its final 10 games, which included a road win at No. 19 Maryland. With a core group of players set to return this season, the Gophers will look to build on their end-of-season success in 2024.

Circle K Stores and Holiday fined $200,000 for gas storage tank violations

posted in: News | 0

Holiday Stationstores and Circle K Stores must pay a $200,000 fine and spend more than $3.25 million to upgrade equipment after being found guilty of violations by the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.

MPCA officials say the fine was levied after an enforcement investigation found that Holiday, based in Bloomington, and Circle K, based in Charlotte, N.C., failed to properly “test, report and fix or replace corrosion protection equipment between 2019 and 2022 at five Minnesota gas station convenience stores owned by the companies,” according to a press release. The stores are located in Northfield, Owatonna, Pine City, Rochester and Walker, according to the MPCA.

The equipment, known as cathodic protection, is designed to protect older underground tank systems from corrosion that can increase the chance of leaks and petroleum releases to area soils and groundwater sources, according to the MPCA.

Operating permits granted by the MPCA require companies to test the equipment at least annually, report failed tests to the MPCA within 30 days and fix or replace equipment within 60 days of failed tests.

According to the MPCA, inspections in 2022 confirmed that “each location documented between one and six failed tests that were not reported and that the equipment was not repaired.”

The faulty storage tank systems at all five locations – which had an average age of about 40 years – have since been repaired or replaced, MPCA officials say. Company officials also have agreed to properly report and respond to any future failed tests.

In addition to paying the $200,000 civil penalty, a settlement agreement requires the companies to spend a minimum of $3.25 million to replace underground tank systems at five other locations – Forest Lake, Beaver Bay, Crosby, Duluth and Ortonville – by the end of 2024.

MPCA officials selected the five other locations “based on their proximity to nearby bodies of water and the age of their systems,” the press release states.

Related Articles

Business |


Obituary: For Forest Lake ag educator Bob Marzolf, teaching was a calling

Business |


Lake Elmo Airport’s new runway gets more use — and more complaints

Business |


Oakdale man receives 4-year prison term for role in downtown St. Paul robbery, fatal shooting

Business |


Meet three powerhouse women of East Metro chocolate, connecting people with one another and the earth

Business |


Lake Elmo: Schroeder tapped to be interim city administrator — again

Injured Vikings quarterback Kirk Cousins shows off his ‘Dad Swag’ on ‘ManningCast’

posted in: All news | 0

Vikings franchise quarterback Kirk Cousins has become known for his Dad Swag.

It started when he rocked a short-sleeve buttoned-up shirt at the podium last season after the Vikings earned a Week 1 win over the Packers. On that particular day, Twin Cities radio personality Dana Wessel tweeted a screenshot of Cousins with the caption, “You just know this dude is rolling in Kohl’s Cash.” The movement took off from there with Cousins actually partnering with Kohl’s in response.

Maybe it shouldn’t come as a surprise then that Cousins, who is out for the rest of the season with an injury, used his appearance on this week’s “ManningCast” to further promote his Dad Swag. He released a promo video before he went on with Manning brothers — Peyton and Eli host an alternative broadcast of Monday Night Football — during which he filmed himself in his closet trying on different outfits.

“Just bought this one,” Cousins said of the cardigan he was wearing at the time. “I had a bunch of Kohl’s Cash burning a hole in my pocket.”

Naturally, he settled on the cardigan for his chat with the Manning brothers, then he hilariously revealed a “Kohl’s Cash” chain to the camera. The jewelry was an ode to the “Kirko Chainz” persona he picked up last season when he was filmed shirtless on the team plane with multiple chains around his neck.

Though his Dad Swag was a major topic of conversation during Monday’s alternative broadcast while the Titans beat the Dolphins 28-27 and the Giants beat the Packers 22-21, Cousins also opened up on everything, from tirelessly attacking his rehab from a torn Achilles tendon to positing a video of himself throwing passes to his son Cooper in the basement of the family home.

Flores judges Pace’s backflip

After making an interception in Las Vegas on Sunday that effectively sealed the Vikings’ 3-0 win over the Raiders, rookie linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. did a backflip in the end zone to celebrate.

What did defensive coordinator Brian Flores think of his acrobatics?

“I was shocked,” Flores said. “I couldn’t believe he stuck the landing. Obviously he’s an athletically talented guy. Hopefully he has a reason to do more backflips.”

Joseph comes up clutch

Never mind that kicker Greg Joseph had missed a field goal earlier in Sunday’s game. There was no doubt from special-teams coordinator Matt Daniels when Joseph attempted the 36-yard field goal that proved to be the difference.

“He really responded the right way,” Daniels said. “He’s a guy that comes up clutch when we need him the most.”

Joseph is 19 of 25 on field-goal attempts this season.

Briefly

Not surprisingly, right tackle Brian O’Neill (ankle), running back Alexander Mattison (ankle) and receiver Jalen Nailor (concussion) were absent from a walkthrough practice on Tuesday afternoon.

Related Articles

Minnesota Vikings |


Vikings offensive coordinator Wes Phillips vows to learn from arrest

Minnesota Vikings |


Vikings name Nick Mullens starting quarterback moving forward

Minnesota Vikings |


Dane Mizutani: Josh Metellus is the queen on the chessboard for Vikings’ defense

Minnesota Vikings |


Vikings star receiver Justin Jefferson has ‘good chance’ to play Saturday in Cincinnati

Minnesota Vikings |


Vikings rookie linebacker Ivan Pace Jr. played the game of his life, then celebrated with a backflip

New Hampshire Gov. Sununu endorses Nikki Haley for president

posted in: News | 0

MANCHESTER, New Hampshire — New Hampshire Gov. Chris Sununu endorsed Nikki Haley for president on Tuesday night, giving the former South Carolina governor a boost in a key early state.

“You bet your ass I am,” endorsing Haley, an energetic Sununu said to a cheering crowd packed into a ski lodge here.

“When you look at the poll numbers and you look at the ground game that Nikki has laid, it has been absolutely unbelievable,” Sununu said. “To see her out there, to see her connecting with folks, to feel that momentum — it is real, it is tangible.”

A beaming Haley walked out to a standing ovation and accepted Sununu’s endorsement with a warm embrace.

“It doesn’t get any better than this,” Haley said. “To go and get endorsed by the ‘Live Free or Die’ governor is about as rock-solid of an endorsement as we could hope for.”

Haley, though running far behind Donald Trump, has been steadily rising in polls of likely GOP primary voters in New Hampshire and sits in second place on average. Sununu, the popular governor, will now work to bring more moderate Republicans and independents who can vote in the GOP primary with him to her side.

“We’re just going a say a polite ‘thank you for your service, Mr. President.’ We’re moving on,” said Sununu, a supporter-turned-critic of Trump.

Rival campaigns downplayed Sununu’s endorsement in statements on Tuesday, arguing that the scion of a powerful political family in the state is just one person with limited influence.

“This puts us down one vote in New Hampshire,” Karl Rickett, a spokesperson for former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, said in a statement. “When Governor Christie is back in Londonderry tomorrow, he’ll continue to tell the unvarnished truth about Donald Trump and earn that one missing vote and thousands more.”

But Sununu, who passed on running for president himself, pledged on Tuesday to go “all-in” for Haley. He took his first stab at that on Tuesday, drawing, as Haley joked, “all of Manchester” to see her at the McIntyre Ski Area.

In backing Haley, Sununu, a vocal Trump critic, is bypassing the field’s most forceful detractor of the former president: Christie. And he’s breaking with another early state governor, Kim Reynolds of Iowa, who is backing Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who has all but abandoned the Granite State for Iowa.

“What happens in New Hampshire will be significantly impacted by the outcome in Iowa, where a true Trump alternative will emerge,” DeSantis campaign spokesperson Andrew Romeo said in a statement. “And when Ron DeSantis comes out in that position he will be joined by over 60 New Hampshire state legislators who stand read to take the fight to the establishment.”