THE OPENER: A lot went on while I was taking a holiday week away. The Timberwolves season ended with a spectacular thud and a weird Anthony Edwards controversy. The Twins started purging their roster of dead-wood hitters and rag-armed relievers — and won more than they lost. The short-handed Lynx have the best record in the WNBA and showing out as a fun team to watch. The Vikings quarterback battle — McCarthy vs. Murray — started for real this week and the tension is real. The World Cup is coming. A former Vikings player is running for office in California. And if you’re a volleyball fan, my final item is about a should-see match this evening in St. Louis Park featuring a small-town boys’ team with big tournament dreams. BAR FOR DISCUSSION: Priority goes to the notable news that we can spin into the future because, after all, Sports Take’s No. 1 mission is looking ahead and creating conversation. There’s a lot to talk about! — Howard Sinker
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EYE OPENING: Via Grace Praxmarer at Strib Varsity. The “youth sports industry” has become a $40 billion annual thing in the United States and — no surprise here — kids are being priced out of the market while more parents spend heavily on the premise that what you learn on your school teams and from the playground/gym/backyard is no longer sufficient. Mike Snee, vice president of the Minnesota Wild Foundation, says all the money parents are spending isn’t leading to much different outcomes than in the past. VERBATIM: “They met friends, they learned how to win and lose, they got exercise, they had fun — only they spent a lot more money doing it and wrapped up a lot more of their identity into it, all for the benefit of the industry. "Not for the benefit of the athlete.”
PRICE TAG? Kelly Kinney, a sophomore on the Gophers volleyball team, attended a Florida private school ($35,225 tuition at The King’s Academy for the 2026-27 school year) and has parents who spent five figures annually on costs associated with her volleyball club. VERBATIM: “Once she saw a future in volleyball, her parents doubled down, driving an hour each way to a more elite club and getting specialized lessons to help her reach D-I. Kinney’s father, Matt, estimates (the club) cost about $8,000 annually, and closer to $15,000 0r $20,000 after travel. Matt Kinney said some private clubs ‘take advantage’ of families and the current culture of private clubs fosters unrealistic expectations of greatness, in which athletes are promised D-I scholarships, even if they don’t have the skills or athleticism to make it. He said he and his wife would not have paid for the clubs had Kelly not shown so much promise from an early age.” FULL STORY: https://fluence-media.co/youthsports0528
READ MORE: Via New York Times. How youth sports became a $40 billion industry.
HELP A WRITER OUT. Via Star Tribune. Columnist Laura Yuen is reaching out to youth sports parents to share their experiences. VERBATIM: “I’ve started a reporting project that will try to gauge why youth sports have gotten so expensive and stressful for families. It will examine why so many kids are burned out and quit by 12 or 13. I’ll also explore solutions for families desperate for moderation.” STORY, SURVEY QUESTIONS: https://fluence-media.co/survey0528
McCARTHY VS. MURRAY: Via Emily Leiker at Star Tribune. You can read the tension between the lines of the story about how Vikings starting quarterback hopefuls J.J. McCarthy and Kyler Murray are handling their competition during the Organized Team Activity workouts that run through next week. McCarthy, 23, compared their situation to “two guys in a classroom” working on getting an edge and said he was promised a “true competition” for the job. Murray, 28, a two-time Pro Bowler who was let go by Arizona, sees himself as a mentor. VERBATIM: “On the practice field during Day 2 of Vikings organized team activities Wednesday, McCarthy’s description of his relationship with Murray aligned with observations of the two. When not actively in a drill, the two were not often seen standing close to each other or engaging following their reps. Both quarterbacks worked with the first-team offense during 7-on-7 and 11-on-11 drills; individual players also rotated and mixed teams throughout practice, creating various lineups for the quarterbacks.”
MURRAY’S TAKE: “Murray also used a student analogy when asked about his relationship with McCarthy, though from a mentoring standpoint. He said McCarthy has been ‘overly receptive’ to critiques and has been active in communication and voicing questions. ‘Obviously, I know he’s a younger guy, so any way I can help him . . . give him any knowledge that he needs,’ Murray said. ‘Again, we’re both competitors. I know we both want what’s best for the team.’ “ MY TAKE: More of this, please. Both the drama on the field and the really good description of it. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/qb0528
THOUGHTS AND SHARES: Tell me what you know and what you’re thinking. sportstake100@gmail.com
TWINS ROSTER PURGE: First it was Matt Wallner banished down the Green Line to St. Paul. Royce Lewis and Kody Funderburk followed a few days later. The bullpen needs nametags to track arrivals and departures. The injured lists (including at Class AAA St. Paul) include a batch of key players. The Twins followed baseball’s tradition wisdom and gave their Opening Day roster the first quarter of the season to show strengths and weaknesses and — to the best of their ability — the Twins are attacking their shortcomings in real time. Rookie principal owner Tom Pohlad continues to be an active presence and second-year GM Jeremy Zoll is doing what he can to find replacements in a shallow pool of options. The Twins have gone from playing remarkably bad baseball to boosting themselves — for now — to the fringe of playoff contention. If the season ended today, instead of in another four months, the Twins would be tied with Oakland and Toronto for the American League’s final Wild Card spot.
WHAT’S NEXT? More is needed. The Twins are blessed for now by the remarkable ineptitude of the American League. Only four of 15 teams are above .500. By comparison, all five teams in the National League East are above .500. A closer and a reliable set-up arm will be needed for the bullpen. The offense is underperforming too often. Infield defense is still shabby. As bad teams decide to cut their losses and make players available, the Twins still need to look at their roster as being in need of continuous improvement. As Pohlad said in April, “I want to make sure we’re building on momentum, and I also want to make sure we’re finding ways to improve.”
VETERANS IN DANGER? Switch-hitters Josh Bell and Victor Caratini, signed as free agents over the winter, are both underwhelming and replaceable if the season gets serious. The MLB website Baseball Savant is a good bookmark for putting player performance in context. STATS: BELL | CARATINI
THREE THINGS I LIKE: Without speaking ill of the departed, Derek Shelton’s aggressive managerial style and direct answers are an upgrade from Rocco Baldelli’s chill and word-salad responses. Byron Buxton’s understated leadership is an upgrade from the GM-in-the-clubhouse tone Carlos Correa brought to the Twins. Two veterans who looked like fringe players (or worse) at the start of the season, pitcher Bailey Ober and outfielder Trevor Larnach, have so far been among the team’s best performers.
LIFE AFTER ROYCE? Via Dan Hayes at The Athletic. The Twins have moved Brooks Lee to third base — Lewis’s position — and have veteran shortstop options on the current roster and a couple of top prospects at the position working their way through the minors. If Lewis regains major league batting form, the question will be where he’d play in the field. First base — or in another organization? Even though Lee felt he was playing well at shortstop, his metrics are among the worst in baseball this season, so having Orlando Arcia and Ryan Kreidler take over there is a modest upgrade and Kaelen Culpepper, currently at St. Paul, should eventually get his shot. EXTREME TAKE: Lewis becomes a supersized version of Jose Miranda, who joined the twins with much promise and flamed out for an assortment of reasons. He was recently released by the Padres. VERBATIM: “In Boston, the Twins asked Lee, who in spite of recent improvement still rates worst among all major-league shortstops (in defensive runs saved), to switch positions. “We talked about what was best for our club right now,” Shelton said. “(Lee) handled it extremely professionally. . . . He and I had a very open and honest conversation. He asked me some good questions. I gave him some thoughts. His last comment to me was whatever was going to be best for us to win. That’s exactly what you want a player to say.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/brooks0528
BASEBALL STANDINGS | TWINS STATISTICS
ANT’S WEIRD EXIT: Anthony Edwards said he had his reasons for going over to the San Antonio Spurs bench to congratulate their players even though there were still eight minutes to play before the Timberwolves would be eliminated in Game 6 of the NBA ‘s Western Conference semifinals. For me, his behavior was far down the list of issues the Timberwolves created in their playoff collapse. TV commentators focused on it as bad form. But the really bad form was Julius Randle’s wretched play, Rudy Gobert being overmatched and the Wolves once again talking their tiresome talk about their difficulty following a game plan.
WHAT EDWARDS SAID: Edwards knew his move didn’t sit well with a lot of people and talked about it during the first minute of a post-series recap video on his YouTube channel. VERBATIM: “That’s why I’m me and y’all are whoever y’all are.” WATCH: https://fluence-media.co/ant0528
MY TAKE: Looking ahead, Edwards has three years left in his current contract that will pay him about $156 million before he’s an unrestricted free agent. He’ll be 28 years old when he signs that next contract — and I’m wondering if his bench visit was a baby step toward establishing rapport with a desirable team. Salary cap rules and current contracts are going to tax basketball boss Tim Connelly’s skills in moving to the level of the Spurs, Thunder and Knicks. If the Wolves don’t move in that direction, don’t expect Edwards to stay. A KAT-like exit down the road? A Giannis departure? Maybe.
CONTRACTS: EDWARDS | WOLVES ROSTER
MONEY QUOTE: Via Associated Press. From Connelly. VERBATIM: “If we mess up, we’ll mess up loudly.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/wolves0528
PERSPECTIVE: Via Michael Rand at Star Tribune. This is a good reminder of what would have been if the Wolves hadn’t made the Karl-Anthony Towns trade. It also makes me wonder — even if hindsight is cheap and easy — if there was an alternative path Connelly could have taken. VERBATIM: “The Wolves, even if they had Karl-Anthony Towns (which means no Julius Randle, no Donte DiVincenzo, no Joan Beringer and no cap flexibility the past two years) would have accomplished about the same these last two years and would be set up worse for the future. Making it to the finals in the NBA’s junior varsity conference is great for Towns and the Knicks, but the Western Conference is just different.” MORE (including a weird rant by a former Wolves player): https://fluence-media.co/randball0528
HERE’S AN IDEA: Via Jace Frederick at Pioneer Press. Milwaukee is expected to trade superstar forward Giannis Antetokounmpo, quite possibly before the June 23 NBA Draft. Minnesota is expected to be a bidder, but the competition for him and salary cap issues will complicate things for Connelly. A different option? Make a play for New Orleans forward Zion Williamson, who combines an inside game with playmaking talent and is on a rebuilding team that won only 26 games last season. It would be a risk — considering Williamson’s injury history — but to use Connelly’s language, the move would be a loud one. VERBATIM: “Williamson could be both an outlet for Edwards and an orchestrator for the offense as a whole. He’s the caliber of talent to which Edwards would be willing to defer when required. No opponent is double-teaming Edwards to willingly play 3-on-4 defense against a Williamson-led attack on the back end of a play. At his best, Williamson would fit the bill of a true, consistent No. 2 option in Minnesota who could climb the final rung of that ladder whenever required. And it shouldn’t cost an arm and a leg to acquire him. Last month, Pelicans basketball boss Joe Dumars said New Orleans has ‘no intention’ of dealing Williamson this offseason. But those words aren’t matched by logic.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/zion0528
WILLIAMSON: CAREER STATS | CONTRACT
SHOCKING! After all the concerns about their roster being broken up and injuries that have kept starters Napheesa Collier and Dorka Juhasz from playing, the Lynx have the best record in the WNBA three weeks into the season at 5-2. WHY? They play as a team, doing things consistently that the Timberwolves often do sporadically. They have already avenged their losses to Chicago and Atlanta, including Wednesday’s 96-81 win over the Dream. Minnesota shot 60% from the field, had 10 steals and finished with all five starters in double figures. The Lynx play at Chicago again on Friday (6:30 p.m., ION) and at Phoenix on Monday (9 p.m., Victory+ and Peacock).
THIS IS HOW THEY DO IT: Via Mike Cook at Pioneer Press. VERBATIM: “With their balanced offensive attack, the Minnesota Lynx continue to force opponents into difficult choices. Do opponents focus on rookie Olivia Miles, who is often manipulating defenses with her top-level ball handling skills mixed in with offensive zone speeds ranging from slow to slow then a burst to all gas? Try to contain Natasha Howard inside? That opens things up for Courtney Williams and her reliable midrange jumper. Play closer to Williams and she’s apt to find Howard inside for an uncontested layup as happened on three straight possessions at one point on Wednesday night. And Kayla McBride coming off screens, and Nia Coffey from in the paint or shooting a 3 can never be overlooked. . . . 'No one’s selfish on this team. It’s so easy to play with everyone because there’s no egos; everyone kind of just wants to get the best shot possible,’ Miles said. “When we’re swinging the ball, we know we’re at our best.’ “ MORE: https://fluence-media.co/lynx0528
LYNX GET BIGGER: Via Minnesota Lynx. The Lynx have signed 6-foot-7 center Teaira McCowan, the No. 3 overall pick in the 2019 draft. McCowan has career averages of 10.7 points, 8.1 rebounds and 1.1 blocks per game. She appeared in 17 games for Dallas last season and played college basketball at Mississippi State. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/mccowan0528
‘NEXT C.J. HAM’? Via Patrick Reusse at Star Tribune. Ben Bredeson has developed into a standout offensive lineman for the Tampa Bay Bucs after being drafted in 2020. Younger brother Max Bredeson is headed for a more obscure role with the Vikings, a slot at fullback and on special teams that’s culmination of a career that started as a walk-on at Michigan, where he followed his big brother’s footsteps. Max will take the role that opened when C.J. Ham retired after 10 seasons as a part time but valued player. The brothers will face each other when the Vikings play at Tampa Bay in Week 3 of the season. VERBATIM: “By Michigan’s 2023 national championship season, Max was a frequent contributor at tight end and on special teams. He was voted team captain by teammates each of the next two seasons, when he split time in the running back room as he carved out more pass protection responsibilities. ‘The kid that you see now was not the 18-year-old that walked into Michigan,’ Ben said. ‘He’s grown up a lot: gotten bigger, stronger, more mature, and that was the best thing that ever happened to him.’ ” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/max0528
RARE SHOW OF LOYALTY: Via Matthew Collier at Purple Insider. For the first time in 48 years, no Football College Subdivision (the lower level of Division I) was taken in the first three rounds of the NFL draft — and only seven FCS players were taken in the final four rounds, a decrease from the past. The reason? FCS players with skills to go pro are moving on to FBS schools to chase money, get better competition and receive more exposure. Against that backdrop comes Vikings fifth round pick Charles Demmings, who opted to stay at Stephen F. Austin in Texas for his entire college career. Demmings didn’t play high school football until his senior year and said he appreciated the opportunity at Stephen F. Austin. VERBATIM: “NIL is getting super big around college football and I had those opportunities, but I had to ask myself, ‘what meant the most to me?’ And that was leaving the legacy and being a fountain, not a drain. Instead of looking for greener grass, build your own garden. Everything that SFA gave me, it was part of my story and I don’t look anywhere else or look at anyone else’s story.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/demmings0528
WATCH DEMMINGS: https://fluence-media.co/highlights0528
THE NEXT RICKY RUBIO? Via Kevin O’Connor at Yahoo Sports. The Wolves need a point guard. This mock draft has a sleeper selection for Minnesota, which has the 28th pick. He’s 20-year-old Sergio De Larrea, a 6-foot-5 point guard from Spain. (The real draft is June 23-24.) VERBATIM: “Just look at how crucial Mike Conley still was to the Timberwolves in these playoffs. But he’s 38. And Ayo Dosunmu and Bones Hyland will both be upcoming free agents. The Wolves might need a guard. De Larrea is a tall playmaking guard with major feel and a knockdown jumper who thrives within team concepts. He suffered a dislocated shoulder that ended his 2024-25 season and removed him from draft boards, but it ended up a blessing in disguise since he returned with a bigger role and stronger production for a great team in the EuroLeague. With size, smarts, and defensive versatility, he has the tools to far exceed his draft slot. And Minnesota general manager Tim Connelly knows more than anyone how important those international hits can be to building a contender.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/mock0528
CHRIS KLUWE PUNTING RUNNING FOR OFFICE: Via Michael Silver at The Athletic. Former Vikings punter Chris Kluwe is running for the California assembly in a traditionally Republican district that has sometimes gone majority Democratic in statewide elections. In Minnesota, Kluwe was an outspoken in 2012 of an failed amendment proposal to the state constitution that would have banned same-sex marriage. He was released by the Vikings in 2013 and then accused his special teams coach, Mike Priefer, of making homophobic comments in response to Kluwe’s political involvement. Priefer was suspended for three games in 2014. VERBATIM: “Kluwe never received another NFL contract offer, essentially making him the Colin Kaepernick of punters. Aside from Priefer’s antagonism, Kluwe recalled, ‘I never saw any blowback in the locker room. I actually got along really well with everyone. Even the guys that didn’t agree with me, they were like, ‘Yeah, that’s your view, but you’re not in here yelling and preaching at us. You’re not making it our business if we don’t want it to be our business.’ There was that mutual respect of, ‘Yes, we can disagree, but at the same time we can still work together to accomplish a common goal.’ And I think that is something that we’re currently missing in America: This idea that at the end of the day, we’re supposed to be on the same team.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/kluwe0528
SPORTS BUSINESS HIRE BY STRIB: Via Report for America. The Star Tribune has hired Shelby Swanson to cover sports business. Swanson was an intern at the Strib after graduating from North Carolina in 2025 and is returning to Minnesota following a year of covering college football (and Bill Belichick) for the Raleigh News and Observer. The position is funded for two years with an option for a third. BIOGRAPHY: https://fluence-media.co/swanson0528
SAVE THE DATE (AND TIME): The Gophers will end their regular-season football schedule at Wisconsin on the night after Thanksgiving. The Black Friday game kicks off nationally on NBC at 6:30 p.m. FULL SCHEDULE: https://fluence-media.co/ufootball0528
NDSU GETTING LOTS OF TV TIME: Via Bison Athletics. North Dakota State’s elevation to the Mountain West Conference comes with 10 nationally televised games on various networks. HIGHLIGHTS: The opener of August 29 against Jacksonville State will be on CBS Sports Network, the Mountain West Conference debut vs. Air Force is Sept. 12 on FS1 and ESPN will show their Sept. 19 game at Sacramento State, another school making the jump from to FBS. SCHEDULE: https://fluence-media.co/bison0528
BLAKE SCHOOL HIRES A COACH: After the controversial dismissal of Tyler Biwan as boys’ basketball coach at The Blake School following his team’s surprising run to the state tournament, the Minneapolis private school has hired Damian Johnson, whose coaching contract wasn’t renewed by Benilde-St. Margaret’s after a sub-.500 season. Johnson, a former Gophers player, had a 106-58 record in six years with the Red Knights, including conference titles in 2023, 2024 and 2025.
BENILDE BACKSTORY: Via Marcus Fuller at Strib Varsity. Johnson was replaced at Benilde by John Sand, who was hired last year as the school’s assistant athletic director after coaching basketball at St. Thomas Academy. Benilde’s athletic director, Matt Pryor, previously worked with Sand at STA. VERBATIM: “I understand there’s going to be a perception,” Sand said, referring to the school’s decision on Johnson. “I stepped away from coaching, and an opportunity came, and I went through the interview process. They made a decision to hire me, and I was very thankful for it.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/coach0528
WOMEN’S SPORTS PARTY BUS: Via Meet Minneapolis. The Lynx and Minnesota Aurora are sponsoring a ticket bundle for both teams’ games on June 6 that includes bus transportation from Target Center to TCO Field, as well as a return trip to A Bar of Their Own for a postgame party. The Lynx play Seattle at noon and Aurora plays RKC Third Coast at 4 p.m. VERBATIM: “We know thousands of fans will already be downtown that afternoon, and we wanted to create an easy, fun way for people to continue the experience together at Aurora’s Pride Match. This is about celebrating community, Pride and the incredible momentum behind women’s sports across the Twin Cities,” said Aurora FC president Saara Hassoun.” DETAILS, TICKETS: https://fluence-media.co/lynxaurora0528
PANNEK FOR MVP: Via Pioneer Press. VERBATIM: “Frost wing Kelly Pannek is one of three players named finalists for the PWHL’s Billie Jean King MVP award. She is joined by goaltenders Ann-Renée Desbiens of Montreal and Boston’s Aerin Frankel. A selection committee voted on the nominees and the three players who received the most votes were named finalists. The winner will be announced on June 16, the day before the PWHL Draft.” MORE: https://fluence-media.co/mvp0528
GOOD LOONS CONTEXT: Via La Velle E. Neal III at Star Tribune. Minnesota United has struggled through the first half of its season and is in seventh place as MLS takes a World Cup break through the final week in July. The struggle shouldn’t be a huge surprise. VERBATIM: “There was no way the Loons were in position to pick up where they left off last season, their most successful in their nine years in the league, when they finished fourth in the West and reached the conference semifinals. They lost nine players, including MLS Goalkeeper of the Year Dayne St. Clair. Coach Eric Ramsay left for West Bromwich Albion, where he was fired after a little more than a month, and replaced by Cameron Knowles.“ MORE: https://fluence-media.co/loons0528
WORLD CUPPERS: Defenders Michael Boxall will play for New Zealand and Carlos Harvey for Panama. Both have seen limited action for the Loons this season because of injuries. Midfielder James Rodriguez, who made a messy departure from the team before the break and isn’t likely to return, will play for Colombia. Two former MNUFC notables — goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair (Miami) and forward Tani Oluwaseyi (Villarreal in Spain’s top league) — will play for Canada. The latter will be cheered on during the local Canadian Consulate’s Canada Day celebration, which is set for June 18 at Fulton Tap Room and will feature a stream of the Canada vs. Qatar match.
ULTIMATE SUPERPOWER: Carleton College’s women’s Ultimate team won the national Division I title last week with a 15-13 victory over the University of British Columbia in the championship match, capping a 7-0 tournament run that included wins over Georgia, Colorado, UCLA and Oregon. The men’s team took second, losing 15-11 to UMass in the title match after wins over Pitt in the quarterfinals and Colorado in the semis. Carlton sent separate teams to the D-III tournament and the men finished second after losing 15-7 to Middlebury in the title game. MORE: https://fluence-media.co/ultimate0528.
STORYBOOK SEASON: Bethany Lutheran of Mankato broke the mold for Upper Midwest Athletic Conference teams that earn bids to postseason tournaments and are usually knocked out quickly. Bethany (enrollment 850) defeated defending national Division III champion Wisconsin-Whitewater twice to win a four-team sectional in Whitewater, Wis,, and lost 3-2 to Adrian College of Michigan in the finale of a best-of-3 supersectional that sent the winner to the eight-team national tournament. The Vikings finished the season 35-8, including a 6-0 record against MIAC teams. THREE THINGS ABOUT BETHANY: 1. Of the 850 students, 57 of them were on this season’s baseball roster. 2. The school was founded as Bethany Ladies College in 1911. 3. Bethany went from being a two-year school to a four-year college in 2001.
AND FINALLY: Via Boyd Huppert at KARE-11 and Joe Brown at West Central Tribune. When boys’ volleyball was first sanctioned by the Minnesota State High School League for the 2024-25 season, it was seen mostly as a sport for the metro area. But that wasn’t the view in Milan, about 150 miles west of the Twin Cities on Hwy. 7, where 46.6% of the residents in the city of 564 people identify as Micronesian. It’s another Minnesota community where immigration has been a lifeline, with volleyball being the No. 1 sport for many who arrived. The students attend Lac Qui Parle Valley in near-by Madison for middle and high school, and have a varsity boys’ team on which all but two members are from the Micronesian Islands. After two years as a club sport, the team made the jump to varsity play this season. The path to Milan was started by a Peace Corps volunteer from Minnesota and many have found work over the years at a nearby turkey processing plant. VERBATIM: “We don’t really have to teach basics,” says Molly Hennen, Milan’s head boys’ volleyball coach. “You can just tell they’ve played all their life.”
ALL THAT TRAVEL: Because there are only three other outstate boys’ volleyball teams, Lac Qui Parle Valley has played mostly in metro-area weekend tournaments, compiling an 8-8 record, including wins over Hopkins, Maple Grove and Forest Lake. There have been no home matches. At 6 p.m. tonight, the team plays at Benilde-St. Margaret’s in a section quarterfinal. TICKETS
GOFUNDME: To cover costs associated with a fully on-the-road schedule, the team has a GoFundMe page that has so far collected more than $5,000.
READ MORE: KARE-11 | WEST CENTRAL TRIBUNE
That’s all for now. Enjoy the drama.
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