The league was full of important games this weekend, though most of the intrigue centered around the final playoff spot. Saint John's took an important step at Winona, a place it has struggled at in recent years. Aaron Burtzel and Andy Burns paced the Johnnies with 19 and 17 points apiece, respectively.

While former Saint Mary's head coach and current Johnnie assistant Mike Trewick had to be smiling after the big win, the Oles' playoff hopes suffered a blow against the Auggies. Augsburg senior Nate Alm posted 18 points and fellow post Andy Grzesiak-Grimm had 12, including a monster alley-oop dunk late in the game. The Oles, who are two games behind SJU for the final playoff spot, have lost three straight heading into Monday's showdown with Carleton, their crosstown rival.

Bethel's Mike Moberg, who is coming off MIAC Athlete of the Week honors, led the Royals to their fifth straight win. He scored 17 points and grabbed 19 boards in the 67-59 win over Concordia. The Royals maintain their slim lead over Carleton and Augsburg in the race for the No. 2 seed in the league playoffs.

Reserve Seth Jonker sparked Carleton to a road win over Hamline with a career-high 17 points. Teammate Bryan Rosett was close to a triple-double with 12 points, 15 rebounds and seven assists.

St. Thomas pounded Macalester to remain undefeated.

Minnesota Wrap
Cobber coach Rich Glas gets some love from the Strib. I can understand the appeal — a long-time coach returns to his roots at the "purest" level of play — but is this really the best story the MIAC has to offer? He ran his best player off before the season started and has underachieved, according to the preseason MIAC coaches' poll (picked 5th, currently tied for 8th). I'm also surprised Reusse used the kid gloves when discussing his stint at UND — that seems like something he usually tackles with gusto. At least it wasn't the annual Tommie update, I guess.

*Photo courtesy of SMU sports information department

Mark Hanson's presence on the sidelines has been a steady, calming influence on the Gustavus basketball program since he took over 19 years ago. Really, his .720 winning percentage speaks for itself — which is a good thing, since he's the opposite of loquacious. But there's a certain comfort level that comes with his standard pre-game speech: Play hard, play together and let's have some fun. It took me four seasons and a summer of coaching at Gustie Camp to learn these facts, so consider them carefully:

He's an avid outdoorsman, somehow lucking into teaching those survival skills at his alma mater. His children are home-schooled, Lego-building geniuses who swear by MythBusters. He's the leading scorer (1,774) and second-leading rebounder (824) in school history. He's rebuffed potential job offers at more prominent locations to remain true to his small-town roots in Saint Peter. His parents still attend almost every game, but his brother's son, a freshman, decided against trying out for the Gustie basketball team this winter.

Despite his typically stoic demeanor, Hanson is funny. When told I'd be going under the knife and out of commission for the next 1-2 months, he offered to push back the 100th anniversary celebration from Feb. 7 so I could attend. That brought a good chuckle from us both, but he's not always so easy to read. For example, the media struggled to understand his dry sense of humor when the Gusties played for the national title in the 2002-03 season.

With a full day of reminiscing expected at next weekend's festivities — and my inability to attend, when hundreds of former players could show up — I figured I might detail some of my memories from my years on the hill. Below is a quick preview.

  • Former assistant coach Mike Boschee had us do a simple drill of 3v3 with the goal of getting three straight stops. The first five groups finished within five possessions. I went last with two JV players who had been pulled up for the day. We got yelled at for the first five minutes of futility. We suffered through stony silence for the next five minutes as our teammates ran circles around us. After an embarrassing break to catch our collective breath, Boschee softened to the point of encouraging us until we finally achieved what seemed impossible. My drillmates offered apologies as we slurped water afterward. Outside of the way my football career ended, this might be the low point of my athletic career.
  • Former Wayzata standout Seth Midura spent his senior season in the Black and Gold with hair nearly down to his shoulders. Hanson, who has little room to criticize after playing in a bushy beard 25 years ago, complained about it for weeks until a film session showed Midura wiping it from his eyes on the court. That was the final straw. "Do something to get that hair out of your eyes," Hanson said. Midura, a white kid from an affluent suburban family, came back the next day with cornrows — a 'do he kept through March.
  • Arguably the best game the Gusties played during my four-year career resulted in a loss, but no one was exactly upset afterwards. We fell 80-79 in the final seconds to NAIA Division II power Concordia (CA) in Hawaii during Christmas break of my senior season, but enjoyed the next seven days in the sun. Many liked snorkeling at Hanauma Bay most, but the history nerd in me favored the trip to the USS Arizona Memorial. Believe it or not, I had missed the previous team trip to Sweden two years earlier after having surgery on my feet. Weird.

Stay tuned over the next week as I continue to take a closer look at the rich tradition of the Gustavus men's basketball program. I'm hoping to track down the story of the first African-American hooper in Gustie history. I hear there was plenty of racial tension during road trips with Bill "Shorty" Patterson, who was drafted in the 10th round of the 1958 NBA draft by the Minneapolis Lakers.

Minnesota Wrap
SJU's Burtzel settles in as a "center-point guard."
• A defensive-minded role player on a great team who is better at a different sport? I can respect that.
• Tommiesports.com receives 10,000 hits a day for interesting, irrelevent information like this.

Wednesday's MIAC recap

Posted by Brett Boese | 11:23 PM | | 0 comments »

The MIAC race is effectively over with seven games remaining. Top-ranked St. Thomas pounded second-place Augsburg tonight by 30 to improve to 18-0 overall and 13-0 in the league. The Auggies fall to 14-4 and 9-4, dropping into a three-way tie for third.

Bethel moves into second with an easy win over Mac. Tim Madson continued his string of solid performances, scoring 20+ for the third time in five games. The Royals have now won four straight.

The Gusties nailed their free throws in crunch time to fend off a game Saint Mary's team. They hit six straight in the final minute to keep an eye on a first-round bye in the league's postseason tournament.

Carleton drilled the Cobbers after the break to defend its home court. Zach Johnson added momentum to his MVP push by going off for 23 points, 10 boards, five assists and two steals.

The Pipers held off the Oles to add intrigue to the playoff race. Idle Saint John's remains locked into the sixth spot at 6-6, but the Oles, Pipers, and Cardinals are within 2.5 games of the final spot after Wednesday's results.

Talking Tommies with Mean Gene

Posted by Brett Boese | 10:48 AM | | 0 comments »

The Tommies recently moved to the top of the polls at D3hoops.com for the first time in school history. They also become the highest ranked team in league history, bumping out my Gustavus teams who finished second in the final poll in 2002-03 and began the 2003-04 season in the same spot.

With Wednesday's game against second place Augsburg looming, I wanted to know more about what has made this season special. Having only seen them play once this year, I tracked down long-time St. Thomas sports information director Gene McGivern in search of some feedback.

Brett Boese: You're in the middle of your 15th year serving as the primary media contact for the athletic department at the University of St. Thomas, but you only recently joined the blogging world. Do you find yourself missing the simpler times or have you come to embrace the Age of the Internet?

Gene McGivern: I moved to Minnesota after eight years in the daily newspaper world in Nebraska and Iowa. I started as Augsburg’s SID in November 1988 with a half-time job for a salary of $10,000. I worked a day job as a proofreader in downtown Minneapolis, then worked nights and weekends for the Auggies. (After about two years I joined Augsburg full-time and actually coached track and cross country there for several seasons).

My first office was an interior closet with an electric typewriter (no computer). There was no copier – we typed up football and basketball stats using carbons and duplicated them on an ink rolloff machine. We worked home football and basketball games, keeping stats by hand, then typed the final totals onto the carbons. We “dicatated” that is we read the basketball stats to part-time workers at the Star Tribune and Pioneer Press. All other sports for game days we just phoned a score into the newspapers.

During the 8-to-5 day, we helped compile season stats and mailed weekly reports to the NCAA and conference statistics coordinators. We also mailed out a weekly 2-4 page summary of scores and brief highlights. The SID world has changed so dramatically in those 20 years with the arrival of computers, desktop publishing, voice messaging, statistics programs, faxes, the internet, digital photography and video. All these tools have made it easier to promote your teams, yet at the same time, made our jobs so much more demanding. Now we staff all home soccer, hockey, volleyball, softball and baseball games as well as we always did in football and basketball.

The only thing I think that’s been lost in those two decades is that today we probably rely too much on technology. I used to pick up the phone and make story pitches, or I would occasionally go to lunch with a Star Tribune or Pioneer Press beat writer. It was more personal. Those beat writers are long gone. Today you also have to make en effort to escape all the demands at your computer and regularly visit with your coaches and student-athletes. You need to get to know them as people, not as bios or as athletes. That’s an on-going challenge.

As for blogging, last August I started a blog (it’s really a features/opinion column). Ten years after the internet was introduced, I think colleges at all levels are just now figuring out how to best use their websites to tell their athletic department’s story. In a metropolitan area like the Twin Cities, where there’s no St. Cloud Times or Fargo Forum that comes calling, the days of simply sending out story ideas are over. If the story is good enough, write it yourself.


BB: D3hoops.com has helped raise the profile of small college athletics since it was created in 1995. It elevated the Tommie men's basketball team to No. 1 in the polls this week, marking the first time an MIAC school has reached that lofty status on its site. I'm sure UST coach Steve Fritz would downplay the significance of that achievement, but what's the pulse of the players? Is that something they're excited about?

GM: I think one thing that makes the 2008-09 Tommie squad unique is that it doesn’t have a superstar but is led by four seniors who hate losing, are unselfish, and have had to work hard to get where they are. Last year’s team, with its many impressive wins, didn’t have that senior leadership on the court.

Even Lonnie Robinson, who made All-America in baseball as a senior, has had to constantly work hard in both basketball and baseball to get where he is now. Al McCoy and B.J. Viau played a year of JV and sat one year on the pine while waiting their shot. Brett Tuma has played the last three years with confidence and always seems to spark the team. It’s a cliché but a big part of why this team is 17-0 is that they do focus on one game at a time with the first goal to outwork the other team.

As for a No. 1 ranking, I suspect it’s something they will look back on with pride and appreciate more a few years down the road, but won’t spend too much time this week talking about it or reveling in it. With the MIAC schedule so condensed, they won’t have time to celebrate with an improved Augsburg team up Wednesday on the road. As for now, I think their two main goals are to win the fourth consecutive conference title, and to play their best basketball in the postseason, wherever that takes them.

BB: Perhaps more importantly, are you a reader of Posting Up? Do you have a favorite poster? I hear that Willy Wonka character is pretty cool.

GM: I read d3hoops’ basketball chat room a fair amount but have never posted. The site seems a little more civil than when they first started a few years ago. Chat rooms and blogs, with all their warts, are here to stay, so people just need to accept them as an outlet for fans. I dislike posters using anonymous names, especially if they don’t do their homework or just rip players and coaches for the joy of it. On the plus side, the posters tend to be some of the MIAC’s most ardent fans and we need all the spectators and advocates we can get.

I seem to recall that the Wonka guy is quite knowledgeable, but is he the same guy who sometimes obsesses on players’ individual stats in the box score? Like dogging a recent Tommie 3-point shooter who played 20 feet from the basket for not getting enough rebounds? Or riding a current Tommie guard who doesn’t get a lot of assists (even though in this offense, that’s not his primary role)? Oh, well, we all have our opinions.


BB: The Tommies are currently 17-0 overall — the last undefeated Division III team in the nation — and 12-0 in conference play. They own a 3.5 game lead over a surprising Augsburg team and their average margin of victory is nearly 20 in a typically rugged league. How surprised are you by their dominance? Has any one player in particular raised his level of play this season?

GM: Among the surprises, at least to those who don’t watch practice every day, is the consistent play of Al McCoy at center. I think the bench is even more productive this season with Tuma, newcomer Brady Ervin and lately with centers Josh Peltier and Sam Eicher stepping up. Lonnie Robinson has been a beast and has shown no signs of senioritis. Tyler Nicolai continues to improve and has hit some big shots.

As far as the MIAC race, I’m sort of a “Law of Averages” guy, so I expected that this would be a tricky season for St. Thomas coming in as such a huge target, trying to win a fourth MIAC title in a row. I expected January to be tough with the four-game stretch at Bethel, home Carleton, at SJU and home Gustavus, then five in a row on the road. I think St. Thomas and Augsburg have been the conference teams who have played most consistently and closest to their ability. Jeremy Sutherland’s injury has probably cost Carleton in a couple of close defeats. Bethel has some talented seniors and still is capable of making a February push. If UST keeps focusing on its next game and working hard in practice, it has a chance at a good postseason.

BB: A recent four-game stretch against the other title hopefuls — Gustavus, Bethel, Carleton and St. John's — saw UST win all four by double digits. With eight games left in the regular season, how confident are you that the Tommies will run the table? Has that ever happened before? Which remaining games make you most nervous?

GM: A few teams went 16-0 or 18-0 in the 1960s and 1970s, but only one men’s team has gone 20-0 since the league expanded to 11 teams in the 1980s. St. Thomas went 20-0 in 1994-95 with a team that played just seven guys. This season’s UST team has fresh legs, depth and balance, so, sure, eight more wins could happen. But the odds are stacked against it, and I’ll be surprised if the Tommies go 20-0.

Augsburg will be a good test Wednesday since the Auggies, coming off a bye, have often played UST close in recent seasons. UST easily won the first meeting with Augsburg at home, but Nate Alm was in early foul trouble and sat most of that game, and he’s been huge lately. Bethel has lost 10 in a row to UST, so it may be due. And there are road games at Carleton and Gustavus. When you play a team a second or third time, they look at the film and sometimes change strategy, too.


BB: When I played against the Tommies earlier this decade, coach Fritz seemed to ride his starters into the ground. For example, the 2001-02 season saw four starters play at least 35 minutes a game. He seems to have gone to the other extreme this year, with 10 players averaging between 10 and 28 minutes. Is that a product of the numerous blowouts, a change in coaching philosophy or do the Tommies simply possess a more reliable bench this year? I will say that they didn't seem to lose much when the starters sat down against Gustavus — but I'd appreciate if you could avoid breaking down that particular game in any great detail.

GM: Some recent Gustavus teams had very deep benches, and a couple of Johnnie teams in the last dozen years also brought some good players off the pine, but this Tommie team might have as good of an overall bench the MIAC has seen in the last 25 years – not just in scoring but in guys who can play defense, apply a full-court press, rebound, and shoot from outside.

Last year’s UST bench was pretty good, and you add in Brady Ervin and have some sophomores playing with more confidence. I would say it’s more of a case of Coach Fritz having better athletes on his last two teams, and the fact that if you want to press and run, you need to use more guys and keep players fresh.


BB: The Tommies have won at least 19 games seven times in the last nine years, won the MIAC title the last three years and consistently reached the NCAA Tournament. However, they haven't won two straight games in the national tournament in a decade. That includes two disappointing losses at home in the last two years. What factors have played a role in the lack of postseason success?

GM: In the last decade, few men’s or women’s teams from the MIAC have gone far in the NCAA playoffs. Is some of that due to the 20-game (22 for women) conference schedule, that limits opportunities to play more good region and outside teams? I don’t think it helps. You have to be good and catch some breaks to make a deep postseason run.

First of all, the West region is one of the better ones, so you don’t get any easy games. Since the 1993-94 Toms reached the Final Four, St. Thomas had six more NCAA playoff berths in the next 15 seasons. None of those NCAA exits could be considered chokes, and only one was a double-digit loss.

In 1995, a 27-0 Tommie team which went just seven deep probably ran out of gas when it lost 94-74 in the second round at home to a very good Nebraska Wesleyan team. In 2000, playing without MIAC career 3-point leader Kip Sparby, UST lost in round two at Buena Vista, 69-66. In 2002, in Mark Buri’s final game, they lost at home in overtime in the second round to UW-Oshkosh, 88-85, on a night where Oshkosh I think made 22-of-23 free throws. In 2006 UST lost in the second round on the road to No. 1-ranked Lawrence (Wis.), 63-59 after cutting a 15-point deficit to one point in the final 30 seconds. In 2007 they lost in the second round at home 86-80 to a very athletic Carroll (Wis.) team; and in 2008 they lost in the first round at home 72-70 to a deep and athletic Buena Vista (Iowa) team that later lost in overtime to eventual NCAA champion Wash. U.

I think the Nebraska Wesleyan, Carroll and 2008 Buena Vista losses weren’t ideal matchups. But the best teams overcome all obstacles, and UST’s postseason record since 2002 is what it is — 10-3 MIAC playoffs, 1-4 NCAA.

BB: Every significant contributor returns from a year ago for UST and the results have been impressive. It certainly looks like the Tommies could reach Salem without ever visiting a place like the Road Star Inn in Stevens Point (Thanks for splurging, Myles Brand). While expectations have certainly been raised for those diehard UST students, what concerns might you have as the end of another season looms? Do you see any small issues that could become big problems down the road?

GM: I don’t think anyone associated with the UST team is even aware that Salem is where the Final Four is played. Since none of the current players have ever reached the Sweet 16, they aren’t looking very far (if at all) into the postseason.

As far as UST students with J-term ending next week, many students who were on study abroad or home working will return. I would expect good crowds for St. Mary’s, Bethel, St. John’s and Hamline games in February.

One thing that concerns me is potential foul trouble, even with UST’s depth. In the Tommies’ last two defeats, last season at Concordia-Moorhead and at home to Buena Vista, they were badly outscored at the foul line.

Bleeding black and gold...and maroon and gold

Posted by Brett Boese | 12:56 AM | | 0 comments »

Brett Boese played for the Gustavus Adolphus football team from 2000-2002 and was a part of the basketball program from 2000-2004. He missed his senior season in shoulder pads with plantar fasciitis in both feet, but is still eighth is school history in touchdown receptions. He was a two-year starter on the hoops team, helping the Gusties to Salem in the 2002-03 season and making his best Gene Wilder impersonation part of Gustie lore.

Those are hardly his only ties to the MIAC, however. His sister, Erin, was a two-time member of the MIAC all-defensive team on solid Gustavus women's teams and his parents both played for the Cobbers.

Doug Boese played for legendary basketball coach Sonny Gulsvig and graduated the year before Concordia won the national title on the gridiron. Doug was inducted into the Cobbers' athletic Hall of Fame in 1993 in a ceremony Brett was deemed too young to attend. Plus, Brett didn't — and still doesn't — want to dress up in fancy clothes.

Cindy Boese, his mom, played on the women's basketball team and was known for her sharp elbows.

The black sheep of the family, Kristi, snubbed the MIAC to play at the University of North Dakota. Brett's sister was a two-time First Team All-America selection and is among the leaders in scoring and rebounding in school history. She's currently debating a return to the Fighting Sioux to join the coaching staff.

Brett has spent the last four years covering high school sports for a daily newspaper and is making his initial foray into the blogging world.