THE OPENER: So much to keep track of right now and Sports Take is here with the help you need to sort out the signal from the noise. Let’s get after it! All of it! — Howard Sinker
IT’S ON. ALL OF IT: WNBA free agency opened Wednesday and player signings can start Saturday. Most of the league’s veterans are free agents after timing their previous contracts to end at last year’s expiration of the old collective bargaining agreement. The WNBA draft is Monday, with the Lynx having the second overall pick following some fancy trade maneuvers. The Timberwolves’ regular season ends Sunday with the NBA playoffs starting a week from Saturday. The Wild’s regular season ends Tuesday with the Stanley Cup Playoffs starting a week from Saturday. The college basketball transfer portals are filling with the Gophers men and women rosters needing another makeover and the St. Thomas men seeing two of their top three scorers enter. And Vikings draft chatter will be nonstop leading up to the NFL Draft on April 23-25, with the general manager search as an encore.
AND MORE: What’s up with the mysterious medical condition of a recently acquired Minnesota United standout? How bad good are the Twins? A Gophers team scored a stunning upset to reach a national tournament next week? Has Kirk Cousins found a place where he’ll be appreciated? Sports Take gets to all of these.
FOUR HOT TOPICS
HOT TOPIC 1: Want a textbook-sized guide to the NFL Draft? The Athletic has published The Beast, which it calls “the world’s most detailed NFL Draft guide: 402 profiles, 2,700 rankings, 45,000 verified measurements and almost 300,000 words.” I’ll start you out with this link to 15 players from Minnesota, two from St. Thomas and seven from the MIAC. THE FULL BEAST: https://fluence-media.co/beast0409
HOT TOPIC 2: The WNBA draft is Monday (6 p.m., ESPN) and the Lynx are in the center of the action by having the second overall pick, the end result of a 2024 trade and follow-up moves that started with Minnesota and Chicago swapping the seventh and eighth overall picks so the Sky could draft Angel Reese, who they just traded to Atlanta for two first-round picks. We’ll get to some options and mock drafts below. One thing for now: If Lynx fans could vote on the pick, the Internet winner would be 6-foot-7 center Lauren Betts, who just led UCLA to the NCAA title.
HOT TOPIC 3: Have you figured out the Timberwolves yet? Are they postseason frauds who will perish quickly in the playoffs based on their inconsistent play? I’m clinging to the more optimistic view that things will come together when the stakes are higher, but I don’t blame you if you feel otherwise. One thing looks certain: They’ll finish sixth in the Western Conference and start out on the road against the third-place finisher, which is currently Denver. By NOT finishing fourth or fifth, that means the Wolves would avoid a conference semifinal series against defending-champion Oklahoma City if they get past (probably) Denver or (maybe) the Lakers in the first round. NBA STANDINGS AND PLAYOFF PICTURE: https://fluence-media.co/nba0409
HOT TOPIC 4: College hockey excellence bypassed Minnesota this year, but the Frozen Four begins tonight with North Dakota playing Wisconsin at 4 p.m. and Michigan playing Denver at 7:30 p.m. (ESPN2). The title game is at 4:30 p.m. Saturday. There are 20 players from Minnesota on the rosters: Wisconsin has seven, North Dakota and Denver have 5, Michigan has 3. Tap the links for the rosters and read on for the fan who came from Saudi Arabia to cheer on hos beloved team. BEST COVERAGE? Spend $3 for a trial subscription to the Grand Forks Herald
WILD SHOWDOWN TONIGHT: Via Michael Russo at The Athletic. Tonight’s Wild game at Dallas (7 p.m., Hulu, ESPN+) will go a long way toward deciding whether the Wild get home ice advantage for the first round of the Stanley Cup Playoffs. After their March stumbles, the Wild are on a four-game winning streak and enter the game (1) Two points behind Dallas with four games remaining and (2) In better health than the Stars. Winning in regulation is vital for the Wild because Dallas holds the tie-breaker of non-overtime victories (35 to 30). Russo makes a case for the Wild being able to make a serious playoff run after losing in the opening round of their last eight playoff series, a streak that dates back to 2015 and includes four head coaches.
RUSSO: “The Wild have never had a roster like this, boasting three legit stars: 40-goal scorers Kirill Kaprizov and Matt Boldy, and 2024 Norris Trophy winner Quinn Hughes. Hughes’ defense partner, Brock Faber, has developed into a tremendous defenseman since playing six playoff games against Dallas in 2023, when he was fresh off the Frozen Four ice. Wild goalies Filip Gustavsson and Jesper Wallstedt have combined for the best save percentage in the NHL. Jonas Brodin and Jared Spurgeon have been an elite shutdown pair since the Olympics. And two-way center Joel Eriksson Ek is playing his best hockey after getting cheated out of essentially the entire Dallas-Minnesota series in 2023, when he broke his leg blocking an Evgeni Malkin shot late in the regular season.” FULL STORY: https://fluence-media.co/wild0409
MORE: NHL Standings | Playoff format | Wild schedule
ANOTHER BAD, BAD BEATDOWN: Last week’s Sports take posted an MIAC line score that featured a 14-run pitching meltdown by St. Olaf that allowed Macalester to rally for a 17-10 win. There was quite an encore in Northfield on Wednesday afternoon. Four Carleton pitchers combined to give up 32 runs in the first three innings in a 42-9 loss to St. Scholastica. (For the record, Carleton led the second game of the doubleheader 9-3 when play was suspended in the ninth inning.)
BY THE WAY: Want to see the full box score, which includes 22 walks, 19 hits, 11 wild patches and eight hit batters yielded and thrown by Carleton pitchers? IT’S HERE: https://fluence-media.co/boxscore0409 WANT TO SEE MORE? Carleton is hosting crosstown rival St. Olaf in a doubleheader today. First pitch is scheduled for 2:30 p.m. Prayers up for the pitchers! VIDEO
SO MANY OPTIONS: There isn’t an obvious first overall pick in Monday’s WNBA draft, which means there will be serious drama when Dallas makes its choice and the Lynx make the next selection. There are four players who could be taken at the top who would all be reasonable choices: 5-foot-10 point guard Olivia Miles of Texas Christian, 5-foot-11 shooting guard Azzi Fudd of UConn, 6-foot-4 center Awa Fam of Spain and 6-foot-7 center Lauren Betts of UCLA. All could fit just as well with the Lynx as they would with Dallas. How are the mock drafts playing out?
ESPN: Fam goes to the Lynx and Dallas takes Miles. VERBATIM: “Fam, who is averaging 9.2 points and 5.0 rebounds for Valencia in Spain, is just 19 with a ton of potential. It comes down to how quickly and how well coach Cheryl Reeve and the Lynx believe Fam can adjust to the WNBA and how high they believe her ceiling is, especially considering how well UCLA's Lauren Betts played her senior season. Betts has to be considered for this spot, too, if the Lynx pick a post player.”
CBS SPORTS: The Lynx take Miles and Dallas takes Fam. VERBATIM: “Miles is one of the best playmaking prospects we've ever seen. She can throw every pass in the book with either hand, and has an innate ability to see the floor and create opportunities out of nothing. She would give the Lynx the true point guard they've been missing the last few years, and Minnesota's defensive infrastructure would be able to cover up for some of her issues on that side of the ball.”
THE ATHLETIC: The Lynx take Fudd after Dallas takes Fam. VERBATIM: “Fudd has become a ballhawk with 2.5 steals per game, and she has the best on-off impact on UConn’s defense. Minnesota wouldn’t be drafting Fudd to turn into a primary on-ball creator. There is little evidence that she can be the engine of an offense, and her free-throw attempt rate is pretty low. Still, her gravity as a shooter — both at a standstill and in movement — makes her an ideal secondary option, not unlike the role Kayla McBride currently plays with the Lynx. Considering that McBride will turn 34 this season, it’s not a bad time for a succession plan.
USA TODAY: The Lynx take Miles after Dallas takes Betts. VERBATIM: “Minnesota doesn't struggle to move the ball, but adding Miles into the mix gives the Lynx the ability to take their offensive movement up a level. The TCU guard has a high basketball IQ, which should help her with the rookie learning curve on a team with championship aspirations. Head coach Cheryl Reeve can also bring out the best in Miles defensive skills as she adjusts to WNBA play.”
BLEACHER REPORT: The Lynx take Miles after Dallas takes Fam. VERBATIM: “There are only a handful of point guards in WNBA history who can read the floor like a supercomputer and create their own shot from anywhere. That group is basically Diana Taurasi, Chelsea Gray, Caitlin Clark, Paige Bueckers and soon enough, Olivia Miles. It’s reasonable to be concerned about her defensive projection . . . but it’s not like we haven’t seen offensive superstars supersede those kinds of defensive shortcomings. Miles is an all-time passing prospect, with real counters as a driver and pull-up scorer that keep defenders guessing at all times. If there’s an organization that can maximize what she does best, it’s the Minnesota Lynx.”
MOCK DRAFTS: ESPN | CBS SPORTS | USA TODAY | THE ATHLETIC | BLEACHER REPORT
MY TAKE: I don’t know and I don’t think — if you’re reading this before the weekend — that the Lynx know either. All four players would bring different strengths and projections, and it may well hinge of who the Lynx sign (and who they lose) in the first three days of free-agent signings before the draft. It could well be a front office debate that goes into the final minutes before the draft begins and Reeve tells the draft room who they’re taking.
VISIT CONFIRMED BY LYNX — AND BALLOONS: Via Cassidy Hettesheimer at Star Tribune. A source confirmed that veteran star Nneka Ogwumike is visiting the Twin Cities and could sign with the team. She was second team all-WNBA with Seattle last season and was the No. 1 overall pick in the 2012 draft. The news was actually broken by a Minneapolis company — Amazing Balloons — that posted a video on social media of a custom bouquet it created for the Lynx. The company deleted the post, but not before it was reposted by others. CAUTION: The visit does not mean Ogwumike is signing here, despite the conclusions being drawn by some re-posters. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/nneka0409
THAT BALLOON VIDEO: Watch it here.
“RING OR BUST” LOOKS LIKE BUST: Via Britt Robson at MinnPost. After citing the season’s shortcomings, which intensified as the season wore on, it’s hard for Robson to imagine the Timberwolves pulling together for the playoffs. VERBATIM: “This is a rescue mission. The Timberwolves may still ‘luck out’ and wind up facing a Lakers team recently ravaged by injuries to their two best players, Luka Doncic and Austin Reeves; or a Rockets team without a point guard that has real issues closing out games. They have also traditionally played Denver tough. None of this excuses the fact that the Wolves weren’t ready for a ‘ring or bust’ style commitment and are consequently playing catch-up after being hindered by the sort of travails that befall most contenders over the course of the season. If they do manage to get past the first round, they will almost certainly face one of the top two teams in the NBA, the San Antonio Spurs, in round two, and then the best team, the reigning champion Thunder, in the conference finals. But we are a long, long way away from those pipe dreams. First things first: A motto that has been ignored and bedeviling to these shortcut specialists throughout the 2025-26 campaign.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/wolves0409
AT LEAST THERE’S PEACE: Via Star Tribune. Today is the third anniversary of the Wolves 2023 season finale against New Orleans. You might remember it as the game when Rudy Gobert punched teammate Kyle Anderson during a time out and was given another time out when he was sent home early by Coach Chris Finch. And Jaden McDaniel broke his hand punching a wall in frustration. The shorthanded Wolves went on to lose their first-round playoff series to Denver in five games. STORY, VIDEO: https://fluence-media.co/punch0409
PORTAL PAYOUTS: Via John Shipley at Pioneer Press. Few people really know how much college athletes are getting from revenue sharing and NIL deals, and Gophers basketball coaches Niko Medved and Dawn Plitzuweit have staked out different positions on whether the numbers should be public. VERBATIM: “Plitzuweit said she’s still holding onto a ‘Utopian’ idea of college athletics, and at heart she doesn’t want those numbers — essentially salaries — to be made public. Being a high profile college athlete is difficult enough, she said. BUT: “ ‘What’s challenging now is that in the world of college athletics, there is no transparency of what the numbers are.’ She still believes those numbers shouldn’t be made public, but added, ‘I’m teetering to the side of understanding the value of making the information public.’ “
NIKO’S VIEW: “Medved has fewer issues with making players’ pay public. ‘I do think transparency benefits everybody, so yes, overall I’m in favor of it. But I do think it’s tricky until there is some sort of real cap, or collective bargaining of sorts, with the athletes. That’s tricky to do. And while, yeah, as a whole I think everybody wants it, I think they still have their head in the sand a little bit. There need to be some radical changes made.’ ”
MONEY QUOTE (LITERALLY): Medved cited Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti, who chided university administrators for taking years to make decisions that need to be made in months. VERBATIM: “We’re kicking the can down the road on a problem that we really need a lot of smart people to understand. It’s professional sports, but a different kind of professional sports. There’s still is an education piece, and not everybody is a star player. We need to be a lot more nimble than we are. We need to act fast and put some committees together to discuss this. It’s like AI, it’s all happening so fast and we don’t really understand it.” FULL STORY: https://fluence-media.co/money0409
TOO SOON, BUT: There are a lot of “these would be good fits” for Gophers basketball right now and most aren’t worth the speculation. But two deserve examining.
KYAN EVANS? Via Andy Greder at Pioneer Press. Medved tried to bring the former Colorado State point guard to Minnesota last year, but Kyan Evans chose North Carolina instead. He didn’t play much and has re-entered the portal. The Gophers need a point guard. VERBATIM: “Evans, a 6-foot-2 guard from Kansas City, Mo., averaged 4.0 points and 2.5 assists in 17.7 minutes per game for the Tar Heels last season. Those numbers fell off from his standout sophomore season with Medved in 2024-25. That year, Evans averaged 10.6 points, 3.1 assists and 2.4 rebounds in 28.2 minutes per game. He started all 36 games as the Rams made it to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/evans0409
AUDI CROOKS? Via Jack Maloney at CBS Sports. The Gophers women need a post player with centers Sophie Hart and Finau Tonga being out of eligibility — and 6-foot-3 Iowa State star Audi Crooks, who averaged 26 points and 8 rebounds per game, has entered the portal. She was first team All-Big 12 and a second-team Associated Press All American. VERBATIM: “It's easy to imagine Crooks sliding into Hart's spot and replacing much of the offensive production Minnesota got from her, as well as senior guards Mara Braun and Amaya Battle. Furthermore, the Golden Gophers have the shooting to space the floor around Crooks.” DOWNSIDE: I asked a high-profile former coach about how Crooks would fit at Minnesota. The reply: On offense, she would fit the Hart/Tonga role. On defense, it would require major adjustments. “She can’t guard anybody,” the coach said, which is probably why Crooks, even though she’s eligible for the WNBA draft, is planning to stay in college. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/crooks0409
TEST FOR TOMMIES: Via Jace Frederick at Pioneer Press. Two of the top three scorers on the St. Thomas men’s team have entered the portal. Guard Nick Janowski was the Summit League’s Freshman of the Year and averaged 16.1 points and 5.1 rebounds per game. Sophomore forward Isaiah Johnson-Arigu averaged 105 points and four rebounds per game. St. Thomas was the second school for each: Janowski came from Nebraska and Johnson-Arigu from Miami. BIG CHALLENGE: Can the Tommies keep leading scorer Nolan Minessale, who averaged just under 20 points per game? VERBATIM: “Should Minessale — who would instantly become a target for many high-major programs — go looking for another program, Tommies coach Johnny Tauer would be tasked with a major roster reconstruction this offseason. But if Minessale stays in St. Paul — something that will undoubtedly require a hefty financial commitment from the Tommies — he will have St. Thomas right back in the Summit League championship conversation next season, and the news would signal that the Tommies can compete in a meaningful way at the Division I level not only on the floor, but off it, as well.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/toms0409
TRANSFER PORTAL TRACKERS: Big Ten men | Big Ten women | Summit League
ADVICE FOR TWINS FANS: Live in the moment. It’ll be the best way to get through the season if the first two weeks are any indication. After watching the first week’s stumbles who would have thought the second week would bring wins in the first three games against AL Central favorite Detroit and a chance at a sweep this afternoon (12:40 p.m., TwinsTV)? Much less a sweep featuring wins against two-time Cy Young winner Tarik Skubal and free-agent hire Framber Valdez. Both are left-handed, or the kind of pitchers the Twins flailed against during the opening week. Despite the success, little has changed the feeling this will be a season of struggles.
WHY? The bullpen is thin and shaky. It struggled to close out Tuesday’s 4-2 win over Detroit — following a magnificent start by Taj Bradley — and came close to spitting up a seven-run lead in Wednesday’s 8-6 win. The defense, Byron Buxton excluded, makes too many routine plays look difficult. The left-leaning roster is still a disorganized mess. EXTRA ANNOYING: If ownership issues over the winter hadn’t distracted the team from making a few needed improvements, this could actually be a good team. Manager Derek Shelton is basically running a lottery of untrustworthy relievers and there’s a crying need for right-handed batting. The defense will be an ongoing minus with the current roster.
KEEP IN MIND: The Twins have yet to play a team with a winning record so far this season and their next two series are against Toronto (5-7) and Boston (4-8). Not until they host Cincinnati, starting a week from Friday will they play a team that’s off to a strong start. ADVICE: Enjoy the wins when they happen and don’t let the front office off the hook for its off-season failings.
IT WON’T LAST, PROBABLY: But I can’t help but share. CARLOS CORREA, Houston starting third baseman/shortstop: .262/.354/.381 average/on-base percentage/slugging. 1 home run, nine RBI, $32.8 million salary. TRISTAN GRAY: Twins reserve third baseman/shortstop: .286/.353/.571, 1 HR, 8 RBI, $820,00 salary. It’s a small sample size but I . . . don’t . . . care.
VIKINGS DRAFT: Via Nick Baumgardner at the Athletic. In this mock draft of the first 100 picks, the Vikings get Oregon safety Dillon Thieneman of Oregon with the 18th overall pick, Notre Dame running back Jadarian Price with the 49th pick, Mississippi State wide receiver Brenen Thompson with the 82nd pick and Auburn center Connor Lew with the 97th pick. VERBATIM: “A complete athlete with a nose for the ball and enough versatility to play either safety spot (and a bit in the slot), Thieneman feels like almost too good a fit for the Vikings for it to come true. He’s exactly what they’re looking for.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/mock0409
GO TO THE VIDEO: Via Star Tribune. Football writers Emily Leiker and Ben Goessling go deep on why Thieneman is the consensus choice among drafters on their Access Vikings podcast.
HIGH SCHOOL LEAGUE VS. GOPHERS: Via Joe Christensen at Strib Varsity. The state boys’ basketball tournament was pushed back a week this year because the Gophers put a hold on Williams Arena for their women’s basketball team if it qualified to host the first two rounds of the NCAA tournament, which ended up happening. Next year, there could be a bigger conflict with the girls’ tournament, which is set for March 17-20, 2027. The Gophers again want to keep Williams Arena open for the women and the NCAA has made Minneapolis a site for the first two rounds of the men’s tournament that weekend. Options could include Maturi Pavilion at the U or the Lee & Penny Anderson Arena at St. Thomas, although both are smaller than The Barn. The state hockey tournament is the weekend before at Grand Casino Arena, but it’s unlikely the Wild could be booted from their home ice on consecutive weeks late in the season. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/tourney0409
THREE NEW SPORTS? Via Joe Nelson at Bring Me the News. The Minnesota State High School League is expected to vote in June on sponsoring girls’ flag football, girls’ dual wrestling and esports for the 2026-27 school year. VERBATIM: “Girls’ flag football has exploded in the past two years behind support from the Minnesota Vikings and the Minnesota High School Girls Flag Football Coaches Advisory. Fifty-one Minnesota schools had a girls’ flag football team in 2025, and there are 106 teams registered ahead of the 2026 school year. If accepted, girls’ flag football would be labeled an ‘emerging’ sport, possibly being fully sanctioned by the MSHSL in future years. The same goes for girls’ dual wrestling. To date, girls wrestle with boys in league-sanctioned events, though schools are allowed to schedule up to eight girls-only events, while the MSHSL has a girls division in the individual state tournament.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/mshsl0409
SAUDI ARABIA TO FROZEN FOUR: Via Tom Miller at Grand Forks Herald. Max Anadon went to elementary and middle school in Grand Forks before moving to Minot, N.D., — and moving again and again and again in his work as an accountant. He made the trek from Neom, a futuristic and environmentally friendly region under construction in Saudi Arabia, and was watching North Dakota practice Wednesday in Las Vegas. VERBATIM: “ ‘I had to drive to the closest city of Tabuk. From Tabuk to Jeddah. To New York. To Minneapolis. To Minot. Minot to Las Vegas.’ Anadon developed a passion for UND hockey while living in Grand Forks from 1967 to 1981. He recalls games at UND’s old Winter Sports Center, which predates both Ralph Engelstad Arenas. ‘They had the old barn, a Quonset, and my parents would take me, and we’d go with blankets and hot chocolate because it would snow inside.’ ” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/undfan0409
KIRK COUSINS, HYPE VS. REALITY: Via NFL.com and Spotrac. After being linked to a return to the Vikings — as well as the Jets and Packers — Kirk Cousins, 37, has signed with Las Vegas, where he should open the season as the No. 1 quarterback while the team grooms Fernando Mendoza, the expected first overall pick in the draft, to take over the role. HYPE: Technically, Cousins signed a five-year contract worth $172 million. REALITY: $11.3 million is guaranteed this season by the Raiders and he’s expected to be leaving Las Vegas at season’s end. VERBATIM: "Going into Year 15 now, I'm trying to set a standard in the locker room. Just trying to be an available resource to everybody in the locker room that would want to ask questions or want to learn about what my journey has been like in this league, I'd love to help them anyway that I can." MORE: https://fluence-media.co/cousins0409
U GYMNASTS GOING TO NATIONALS: Minnesota’s gymnastics team qualified for nationals April 16-18 in Fort Worth, Texas, by coming in second behind UCLA in a four-team regional competition. The Gophers upset Utah, which had been to 49 consecutive national meets, and Alabama, which has won six national titles. Minnesota will be trying for its first national title and last went to nationals in 2022. Minnesota, Utah, Oklahoma and Arkansas will compete for two spots in the finals (3:30 p.m. April 16, ESPN2) and the finals are set for 3 p.m. April 18 on ABC. LSU, Stanford, Georgia and Florida are the other semifinalists. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/ugymnastics0409
WHAT’S UP WITH LOONS STAR? Via ESPN. It was a big deal when James Rodriguez, a veteran of high-profile European clubs and captain of Colombia’s national team, signed a contract with Minnesota United in February. But he has appeared in only two of the team’s matches — both as a substitute — and was hospitalized after suffering “severe dehydration” following a match between Colombia and France late last month. Little was revealed about his health, save for a statement from Colombia’s football federation that it was not related to an on-field injury. The news took an odd turn this week when Minnesota United put out a media release denying web rumors that Rodriguez was suffering from rhabdomyolysis, a condition that causes rapid muscle tissue breakdown. VERBATIM: “The club and our medical professionals can unequivocally state there has been no clinical or laboratory evidence of rhabdomyolysis. We respectfully ask members of the media and the public to refrain from further speculation regarding James' health. Any additional updates will be communicated directly by the club through official channels.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/james0409
READ ABOUT RODRIGUEZ: “The gasoline that fuels him” | Career statistics
OOPS: I messed up something in last week’s newsletter and I’m betting — given this audience skews toward the politically knowledgeable — a number of you caught it. In my writing about the late J Robinson’s strident opposition to Title IX, I cited a quote from former Board of Regents chair Dean Elton Johnson about the wrestling coach’s firing from the University of Minnesota in 2016. I identified Johnson as a “former Republican state legislative leader.” That part was accurate. Johnson was the Senate minority leader in the 1990s but switched parties in 2000 and, as a member of the DFL, was the majority leader from 2004-2007. Thanks to reader Roger Greiling for the cheerfully worded email adding the context.
AND FINALLY: Carleton’s lopsided baseball loss reminded me of the school’s 2015 football loss to St. Thomas, when they took an early 3-0 lead — and ended up losing 80-3. The Knights’ sports information staff handled the loss wonderfully, making sure to point out the early lead, that the Tommies went for a two-point conversion after their first touchdown and deferring mention of the final score:
You can read that game report here and next week you can read here about Carleton athletic teams that are among the nation’s best regardless of enrollment.
THANKS FOR READING AND STAY IN TOUCH.
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