




There has been misguided reporting elsewhere that a sale of the Minnesota Twins is expected to be done by opening day this season.
The Pohlad family, which owns the Twins, announced in October that it was exploring a sale of the Twins. The Pohlads never announced they were selling the team.
If the Pohlads don’t get the price they want, expected to be in the $1.8 billion range, there’s a scenario that they retain ownership of the club. There is also a scenario that they retain just a part of the team.
Overseeing a potential sale is Steve Greenberg, the son of Hall of Fame baseball player Hank Greenberg.
The Pioneer Press reported three weeks ago that the Ishbia family that bought the Phoenix Suns for $4 billion a year ago was cocksure it could acquire the Twins, but that it also could have an exclusive option to buy the Chicago White Sox from Jerry Reinsdorf, who on Tuesday will turn 89 years old. Now, the New York Times reports that billionaire Justin Ishbia has abandoned his bid for the Twins to “boost his stake” in the White Sox.
>> It’s been more than a month since the Vikings extended coach Kevin O’Connell’s contract. Meanwhile, the team still hasn’t extended general manager Kwesi Adofo-Mensah.
The delay is intriguing. O’Connell and Adofo-Mensah were hired three years ago with four-year contracts.
In the summer of 2020, the Vikings extended coach Mike Zimmer, then a week later GM Rick Spielman.
After three underwhelming drafts, it could be that Vikings owners Zygi and Mark Wilf are waiting until April’s draft to further evaluate Adofo-Mensah.
>> The NHL’s new team salary cap limit of $95.5 million next season means it could cost the Wild nearly $153 million over eight years to retain star Kirill Kaprizov.
That’s $19.1 million a season.
Kaprizov, 27, is playing for $9 million this season in the fourth year of a $45 million, five-year contract, after which he can become a free agent. He can re-sign next July 1.
The NHL labor agreement is that no player can get more than 20% of the entire team cap. It will be surprising if Kaprizov isn’t offered 20% and if he wouldn’t accept it.
Four years ago, Kaprizov turned down the Wild’s guaranteed $72 million, eight-year offer for his current deal. A consideration for the left wing, though, is that if he accepts the maximum eight years next time and the salary cap continues to grow, after five years he could see some two dozen players surpass him in salary.
The Wild have the right to make Kaprizov an offer a year before any other team can. If he’s offered the maximum, it will be hard to say no.
Kaprizov, who is from Russia, appears to enjoy playing in Minnesota. As for his free agent options, not all NHL teams can afford to give a player 20%. The Wild, however, can afford the maximum, and probably will have to offer that.
Kaprizov is the face of the Wild. Check out the number of No. 97 fan jerseys at a Wild game. He is worth the price of admission.
“We will make it work,” Wild owner Craig Leipold told the Pioneer Press in December.
There are some great players in the NHL, some who are even better players than Kaprizov. But Kaprizov has played really well in Minnesota and Minnesota loves him.
>> That was Leipold at Mayo Clinic undergoing spine surgery last week to relieve acute hip pain. Meanwhile, he ranks No. 7 on The Hockey News’ new “Top 100 People of Power and Influence” in the sport. No. 1 is NHL commissioner Gary Bettman.
>> The NFL’s anticipated salary cap increase of about $6 million for next season isn’t expected to increase chances of the Vikings signing free agent QB Sam Darnold, but it should help in retaining other free agents, in particular cornerback Byron Murphy. That’s because each of the league’s 32 teams will get the same increase.
>> It still looks like the Raiders or Steelers are most likely Darnold’s next team.
>> Look for the bronze statue of Twins Hall of Famer Joe Mauer that will be dedicated on April 13 to be located near Gate 34 in front of Target Field, near the statues of fellow Twins Hall of Famers Kirby Puckett and Harmon Killebrew.
The statue of Mauer, who was a .306 lifetime hitter, sculpted by Bill Mack, will be of him as a catcher.
>> By the way, the bronze statue of former Twins owner Calvin Griffith, removed outside of Target Field five years ago due to racist comments made in Waseca in 1978, remains in the Twins’ archives.
>> It was 45 years ago Saturday that the Herb Brooks-coached USA Olympic men’s hockey team upset the Russians en route to winning the gold medal in 1980 in Lake Placid, N.Y.
Brooks, from St. Paul, was 66 when he died in a car crash in 2003. He is buried at Roselawn Cemetery in Roseville.
“I was there yesterday,” Patti Brooks said last week. “I go out there often.”
Patti is Herb’s widow. There is no shrine to Herb’s monumental hockey achievements at his burial site, just a plain, flat, indistinct concrete gravestone.
There are hockey pucks on Brooks’ gravestone placed by respectful fans.
“They’ve been there all through the years,” Patti said. “(Fans) keep putting them there.”
Roselawn Cemetery is 160 acres. Brooks’ gravesite is the most visited on the grounds.
Jim Craig, who played at Boston University and was the star goaltender for Brooks’ Olympic gold medal team, once visited Brooks’ gravesite in the dead of winter and had to shovel through snow to get to it.
The National Bobblehead Hall of Fame has released a Craig model to commemorate the 45th anniversary. Herb Brooks would have been 87 years old today.
>> The other day at Twins spring training, after a youngster asked Royce Lewis for an autograph, Lewis signed, then asked the kid to sign Royce’s hat. The classy Twin asks kids to sign his hat so he remembers them next time.
>> Cretin-Derham Hall’s 6-foot-7 basketball sophomore shooting forward Ty Schlagel already has offers from Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin. Junior 6-2 guard JoJo Mitchell has offers from St. Thomas, Colorado State, Wyoming and South Dakota State. Senior Tommy Ahneman, 6-10, has committed to Notre Dame.
Ahneman, by the way, is nearly a duplicate of 6-10 former Detroit Piston star Bill Laimbeer, who also played collegiately at Notre Dame.
>> The Steelers defeated the Vikings 16-6 in the 1975 Super Bowl at Tulane Stadium in New Orleans while the Superdome was being built. Ticket price was $20. The average ticket price for this year’s Super Bowl at the Superdome, where the Chiefs defeated the Eagles 40-22, was $6,000.
>> As of last Friday, just 36 tickets remained (date unannounced) for the Packers-Vikings 2025 game in Minneapolis, per stubhub.com. Cheapest ticket: $461.
>> On Friday, the Gophers baseball team plays at Arizona State, which next year will have 34 full scholarships for its 34 players.
Meanwhile, the Gophers are expected to share 11.7 scholarships among 36 players.
>> St. Paul’s Dennis Ryan, the recently retired longtime Vikings equipment manager, is a finalist for the Pro Football Hall of Fame’s Awards of Excellence.
>> Sauk Rapids’ Anthony Bemboom, 35, who played in 82 major league baseball games as a catcher between 2019-2023 with different three teams, is retiring.
>> Willmar’s Jordan Smith, 34, a star outfielder at St. Cloud State before spending several seasons in Cleveland’s minor league system, this season will be manager of Guardians’ Class A Lynchburg Hillcats.
>> Prayers are welcome for Bob Hoffman, the ultimate Gophers sportsman from Waseca who is at Mayo Clinic undergoing treatment following several surgeries.
>> The national Football Film Federation convention for college and high school video staffs will be April 26-27 at Mall of America.
>> This week’s Sports Illustrated has an eight-page spread on St. Paul-born skier Lindsey Vonn.
>> Boden Sampair from Hill-Murray is the fourth Sampair family member over the years to be named a finalist for the Minnesota Mr. Hockey award.
>> North Oaks native Frankie Capan, playing in this weekend’s $7 million Mexico Open, was tied for 36th entering Saturday’s play.


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