Happy Hour with John Gaskins

FULL SHOW: Kalen DeBoer & Kurtiss Rigs on the USF glory days, DeBoer 1-on-1, and Thirsty Thursday with Trent Singer (SDSU baseball vs Huskers, Jacks & USD football TV games, Melsted's first days in Minnesota, Stampede title stamp

1 h 51 min · 29. Mai 2026
Episode FULL SHOW: Kalen DeBoer & Kurtiss Rigs on the USF glory days, DeBoer 1-on-1, and Thirsty Thursday with Trent Singer (SDSU baseball vs Huskers, Jacks & USD football TV games, Melsted's first days in Minnesota, Stampede title stamp Cover

Beschreibung

The record-breaking University of Sioux Falls receiver went on to win three national titles and post a 69-3 record as head coach at his alma mater before several offensive coordinating jobs in Div. I led to head coaching gigs at Fresno State, Washington, and Alabama. Perhaps you're familiar with Kalen DeBoer's 124-20 career record and 86 percent winning clip and the two College Football Playoff appearances of the last three years. His new seven-year extension with Alabama places him among the Top 5 highest-paid coaches in the sport at $12.5 million per year. The quarterback who threw DeBoer the ball stayed in Sioux Falls and coached in high school and professional indoor football — where he won 11 titles in 21 seasons with the Storm — in addition to playing a substantial role on DeBoer's USF staffs during that 69-3 run. Perhaps you're also familiar with Kurtiss Riggs, the football director of the Sanford Sports Academy, which continues to develop youth and prep players, churns out college football players at every level, and provides ample opportunities for those players to become more visible to colleges. And then, there's the decade he has spent as a local TV analyst on live high school and college broadcasts, which has led to his emergence as in IFL game analyst for Yahoo Sports. And, maybe you're well aware these two men were the best of friends in college and still are to this day. But what you may not know is how it all came to be. How did DeBoer and Riggs end up at USF, then become the Montana and Rice of the NAIA in the mid 1990's? After separating for a decade, the two then combined to make USF's offense a runaway train during those dominant DeBoer-led USF years. What were some of those headset discussions like? The two Cougars take us back in time in the latest Happy Hour. DeBoer sticks around to further explain Riggs' football prowess and genius as a coach and announcer, then talks about: * Being a softball dad to Alexis, who was a first-team All-Big Ten softball player at Washington the last two seasons * How a crushing, blowout playoff loss after his first season as USF' head coach — the season before the first of his three USF national titles may help him navigate how he'll react to Crimson Tide's bruising 38-3 Rose Bowl loss to eventual national champion Indiana. * How his coaching experience at USF has helped him handle the NIL/portal landscape and constant roster turnover Before all this, Sioux Falls Live sportswriter Trent Singer joins the Happy Hour host for a Thirsty Thursday at Orion Pub, where they discuss: * South Dakota State's baseball matchup with Nebraska in the NCAA Regional * Recently announced national TV games for SDSU and USD football this season, plus what nine nationally televised games could do for NDSU * How one legendary Minnesota sportswriter reacted to the Golden Gophers hiring now-former Augustana coach Gretta Melsted * The Sioux Falls Stampede's perfect ending to a special Clark Cup season

Kommentare

0

Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert

Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der Happy Hour with John Gaskins-Community!

Loslegen

2 Monate für 1 €

Dann 4,99 € / Monat · Jederzeit kündbar.

  • Podcasts nur bei Podimo
  • 20 Stunden Hörbücher / Monat
  • Alle kostenlosen Podcasts

Alle Folgen

297 Folgen

Episode NLA: Zim on "coaches portal always open" (Dusty May), Summit hoops TV-streaming deal, Jacks new 3-star CB commit, CWS & college baseball, Twins vs Ohtani, Wolves trading Randle, Linda Cohn, "Cheers" creator dying Cover

NLA: Zim on "coaches portal always open" (Dusty May), Summit hoops TV-streaming deal, Jacks new 3-star CB commit, CWS & college baseball, Twins vs Ohtani, Wolves trading Randle, Linda Cohn, "Cheers" creator dying

Don't come driving down the lane on Matt Zimmer with your "coaches portal is always open" snark, Jay Bilas. The Sioux Falls Live sports editor will be ready to stuff, dead in its tracks, the notion (and Bilas' Monday tweet [https://x.com/JayBilas/status/2069108563130167803]) that Dusty May leaving national champion Michigan after just two years for the NBA symbolizes the hypocrisy of college basketball purists who oppose players transferring whenever they want. That's just one of many topics—several involving the modern college sports conversation around eligibility, scholarships, NIL, and transferring—covered in this week's "Nobody's Listening Anyway" podcast with Zim and the Happy Hour host at Gateway Lounge in Sioux Falls. On the other side of the precarious nature of coaching college hoops is USD's Eric Peterson, who is entering the final year of a contract his athletic director Jon Schemmel was unwilling to extend. With his job conceivably on the line and with almost every player who contributed last season having transferred, Peterson rebuilt his roster, [https://www.siouxfallslive.com/sports/college/usd-basketball-a-closer-look-at-eric-petersons-rebuilt-coyote-roster] and Zim explains why he is impressed by the project. Then, there's the changing landscape of college baseball, which just exited its largest stage at the College World Series last night in Omaha. What about that sport has improved dramatically, and why will it likely never become a "summer sport" that ends in August instead of June? Also on the table this week: * Why Zimmer was captivated by his friend and former boss Stu Whitney's recently-released book "The Great Burns" about legendary local football coach Bob Burns * Shohei Ohtani showed out in his first at-bat against the Twins at Target Field, which leads to another Zim rant about the buffoonery of the Twins' ownership and front office management * The Timberwolves traded Julius Randle in what is widely considered a salary dump, which cleared room to sign guard Ayo Dosunmu to a five-year, $112 million deal. Good moves? What's next, or what should be? * What should we make of the Jackrabbits landing a rare 3-star football commit— Larenzz Pratt? * 34-year ESPN Sportscenter Linda Cohn is retiring after hosting the most episodes (5,500+) in the history of the iconic show * The return of the "Dead Guy of the Week"

Gestern1 h 0 min
Episode Stu Whitney, Vol. 2 - "The Great Burns," a deep dive into his new book about the life & legacy of legendary local coach & war hero Bob Burns Cover

Stu Whitney, Vol. 2 - "The Great Burns," a deep dive into his new book about the life & legacy of legendary local coach & war hero Bob Burns

Parachute from an airplane onto the beaches of Normandy and into trenches of World War II, where bullets and grenades are flying and men are dying all around you as you ambush German soliders while trying to figure out both how to surive and help save the world from Nazi persecution. Enter the ring to exchange haymakers during Golden Gloves state championships and national tournaments. Witness the plights, desperate measures, and perseverance of families trampled by the Great Depression, including bootlegging, illegal gambling, and gangster behavior. Saddle up to the downtown Minneapolis bar to hear a brazen if not ridiculous sales pitch to bring the first Minnesota Vikings football game in team history to Sioux Falls. Take a seat in the locker room and on team buses to hear the speeches — or at a Quarterback Club luncheon to laugh uncontrollably at the one-liners — of arguably the greatest football coach at any level in the history of South Dakota. Discover how, time and again, one man ruffles feathers, moves mountains, tickles the funny bone, and inspires ordinary people to do extraordinary things. You can't go back in time, but you can immerse yourself in the incredible life of Bob Burns by reading the biography "The Great Burns," penned by Stu Whitney. The former daily news and sports writer/editor and investigative news and political journalist has spent his entire 36-year post-college career in Sioux Falls. Roughly the first 25 of those were spent covering local sports and describing them in a unique, free-flowing, sometimes caustic, and often whimsiocal fashion. After arriving in Sioux Falls in 1990, the Michigan native quickly discovered the indelible mark Burns made on the city and the region — both on the gridiron and in the community as a coach who won 68 percent of his games and a litany of conference and state championships at three different high schools. Burns turned Sioux Falls Washington into a dominating regional titan and transformed both Augustana College and O'Gorman from doormats to powerhouses. He was the marketing mastermind behind the Dakota Bowl and creation of the South Dakota high school football playoffs. His life's adventures and accomplishments alone are a solid launching pad for a book. But the stories of Burns' bravado, bluster, biting humor, and bigger-than-life personality make for a rollicking page turner, especially after you get past the part where his life could have easily ended in World War II combat. By conducting over 90 interviews with people who knew Burns best, viewing videotapes of interviews with Burns, pouring through heaps of Burns family letters and library newspaper archives, and taking a trip overseas to the battlefields in France, Belgium, and the Netherlands, Whitney immersed himself into Burns' life and legacy. While the 300-plus pages of storytelling are worth the time and money, an hour-long conversation about the book at Gibs Sports Bar with the Happy Hour host also makes for an enjoyable investment of the ear. Whitney dives into some of his favorite stories of a man whom one of Burns' former players and closest friends describes as "a guy who comes around once in a lifetime, or maybe more rarely than that." Enjoy the chat. Then, buy the book. Or do it the other way around. Either way, you'll likely laugh, possibly cry, and be glad you did.

22. Juni 20261 h 6 min
Episode Vol. 1 - Stu Whitney - 2025 - The life & career of a Sioux Falls sports & city writing staple Cover

Vol. 1 - Stu Whitney - 2025 - The life & career of a Sioux Falls sports & city writing staple

From June 6, 2025: Happy Hour's first interview with veteran sports writer, columnist, and now book author Stu Whitney: Stu Whitney's high school football team celebrated a big win by gleefully ripping to shreds a newspaper column he wrote claiming they weren't worthy of the playoffs. He ended up being right. The head football coach at Michigan State invited Stu into his office to berate him at the top of his lungs and call him every nasty name you could imagine after he unveiled some unsavory information about the program. But George Perles didn't deny his reporting. The Sioux Falls Stampede coach literally got in his face, point blank, after a game to intimidate him after a column about how that coach should be fired. And he eventually was. Stu Whitney's words — in his own words, at times caustic and controversial — had a uniquely strong and memorable impact on those he wrote about as a sportswriter, at-large columnist, investigative journalist, and author of a fictional memoir called "The Covid Chronicles" that tackled the way leaders in Sioux Falls and South Dakota handled the pandemic. Now, "SuFu Stu" is embarking on a second novel, this time a non-fiction about World War II aviator and former Washington High, Augustana, USD, and O'Gorman coach Bob Burns. He also has another script in the about South Dakota and its people, one that won't be in book form, a script he had yet to announce... ...until now, in a 90-minute sit-down with Happy Host John Gaskins from Gateway Lounge. Stu looks back on his 35-years in Sioux Falls — a stretch piled full of colorful characters, stories, columns, confrontations, and, ultimately, massive critical acclaim from readers — whether they liked him or not.

22. Juni 20261 h 28 min
Episode FULL SHOW: Ben Leber (Vikings analyst) and Patrick Lalley's mayoral runoff preview Cover

FULL SHOW: Ben Leber (Vikings analyst) and Patrick Lalley's mayoral runoff preview

Down the stretch they come! J.J. McCarthy vs. Kyler Murray to become Minnesota Vikings starting quarterback. Christine Erickson vs. Jamie Smith to become the next mayor of Sioux Falls. Both races have heated up over the last few weeks as the finish line draws closer. Who will win? What have the combatants done to position themselves for a win? If only there was a local talk show that could bring on experienced, well-connected and well-studied analysts to provide deft commentary on these races. Thankfully, there's Happy Hour. Ben Leber The former Minnesota Vikings linebacker (2006-10) and South Dakota Sports Hall of Famer has had almost unparalleled access for over a decade as a sideline analyst and postgame locker room interviewer for the Vikings Audio Network. The Vermillion High School alumnus has seen the performances of Arizona Cardinals import Murray and Vikings top 10 draft pick McCarthy up close at recent Vikings mini-camps. Leber also knows Coach Kevin O'Connell's complex and at times wildly effective offensive system well. He has a breakdown on how those two QBs have run the offense so far and what their advantages are within it. Yes, Leber has a prediction on who will win the job and when "splitting reps" will — or at least should — turn into "No. 1 gets most of the reps." Leber also weighs in on a Vikings defense that was top 5 in the NFL in many metrics last season but has lost some playmakers. He also assesses the hiring of first-time general manager Nolan Teasley, who has brought over two of the top three lieutenants from the Super Bowl champion Seattle Seahawks' front office. Patrick Lalley Sioux Falls Live's editor and primary political reporter has spent over 30 years covering city and state government and elections in his hometown of Sioux Falls. He was part of a panel that peppered mayoral runoff candidates Christine Erickson and Jamie Smith in one of the recent head-to-head debates. What are his observations from those debates? How much more have we learned about them since our last discussion right after the June 2 mayoral election, when Lalley said he could not decipher major difference in their platforms and views on the city's most pressing issues? What main differences can we decipher in how the two would lead the city? How much does the endorsements of Smith from two of the other candiates — Greg Jamison and Joe Batchellor — matter? And how much does gubernatorial runoff finalist Toby Doeden's scorched earth condemnation of Jamison, Batchellor, and Smith—plus, his endorsement of Erickson—matter?

19. Juni 20261 h 8 min
Episode SF Mayor Runoff Election preview with Patrick Lalley Cover

SF Mayor Runoff Election preview with Patrick Lalley

Sioux Falls Live's editor and primary political reporter has spent over 30 years covering city and state government and elections in his hometown of Sioux Falls. He was part of a panel that peppered mayoral runoff candidates Christine Erickson and Jamie Smith in one of the recent head-to-head debates. What are his observations from those debates? How much more have we learned about them since our last discussion right after the June 2 mayoral election, when Lalley said he could not decipher major difference in their platforms and views on the city's most pressing issues? What main differences can we decipher in how the two would lead the city? How much does the endorsements of Smith from two of the other candiates — Greg Jamison and Joe Batchellor — matter? And how much does gubernatorial runoff finalist Toby Doeden's scorched earth condemnation of Jamison, Batchellor, and Smith—plus, his endorsement of Erickson—matter?

19. Juni 202645 min