Happy Hour with John Gaskins

FULL SHOW: Eric Henderson on his first year at Drake / Canaries president Brian Jamros on recent success & what's new in '26 / Melsted moving from Augie to Minnesota

2 h 12 min · 22. maj 2026
episode FULL SHOW: Eric Henderson on his first year at Drake / Canaries president Brian Jamros on recent success & what's new in '26 / Melsted moving from Augie to Minnesota cover

Description

How does a college basketball coach who had known nothing but winning big handle a losing season in his first year at a school that previously had six consecutive 20-win seasons? Eric Henderson blazed through the Summit League, achieving an 80 percent win rate in his six years leading South Dakota State, which followed three banner-hanging seasons as an assistant in Brookings under T.J. Otzelberger. The success landed "Hendo" the gig at Drake, where he replaced Ben McCollum, whose one season in Des Moines yielded a 31-4 record and landed the long-time Division II legend the gig at Iowa. Then, a thud. Hendo's first squad went 14-20, but they secured a monumental Missouri Valley Conference Tournament quarterfinal win over No. 1 seed Belmont. What went wrong, then right? What did the infectiously "glass half full" Hendo learn? How does he expect three Jackrabbits he took to Drake—Owen Larson, Garrett Goodbary, and Bryson Bahl — to contribute? How and why were those the three SDSU players that came along for the ride and why weren't there more? Did Hendo have input in the hiring of his successor? How does Hendo navigate NIL when most mid-major schools are pillaged by the big leagues? What's his favorite memory of Mike Daum? All this and plenty more as the always-gregarious Hendo catches up with the Happy Hour host. Thirsty Thursday local sports talk with Trent Singer If there has actually been a busier or more compelling three days of softball news in South Dakota history, it has been a while. Two days after the shocking removal of 10-year head coach Robert Wagner from USD softball, Augustana's 20-year legend Gretta Melsted became the new head coach at Minnesota. [https://www.siouxfallslive.com/sports/college/gretta-melsted-steps-down-as-augustana-softball-coach-accepts-head-coaching-job-at-minnesota] Yeah, the Gophers. Big Ten. From Division II. Melsted led Augustana to the 2019 national championship, four D2 world series, and a combined 14 NSIC regular season and tournament titles in her two decades. She had turned down prior Div. I offers from mid-major schools. So, what do we make of her leap to the big time, just a couple months after Augie hockey coach Garrett Raboin stayed put after reported strong interest from Minnesota? The Happy Hour host—who sat down with Melsted for nearly an hour about her softball journey a year ago [http://sports/happy-hour-augustana-softball-coach-gretta-melsted-on-another-ncaa-tourney-run]—and Sioux Falls Live sports reporter Trent Singer -- who recently sat down with Melsted for 45 minutes a couple weeks ago, unpack a massive move. Melsted's name was on the tip of anyone's tounge the moment it was public knowledge that USD had an opening. While the school conducts a "national search" to replace Robert Wagner, Singer and the host add layers to a story that has become mysterious, controversial, and combative on social media among USD followers since USD announced there would be a "change in leadership" without mentioning Wagner's name or decade of service. Meanwhile, the Sioux Falls Stampede skate into Muskegon needing just one win to capture the club's first Clark Cup in seven years. Singer has covered the team all season and reported on a bunch dramatic playoff wins in front of packed, rowdy crowds. Why does he suppose attendance has swelled as the title chase has built? Why has the Herd dominated the first two games of these Clark Cup Finals? What will be this team's legacy if it hoists the cup? Canaries president Brian Jamros No team in the American Association has won more games over the last three seasons than the Sioux Falls Canaries. No team had lost more in the several years before that. The Birds have seen an uptick not just in wins, but also in ticket sales and revenue. That has a lot to do with owners Brian Slipka and Anthony Albanese, who bought the club in April 2021, kept manager Mike Meyer, and poured their own money into enhancements for the players and fans at The Birdcage. President Brian Jamros has led the day-to-day operations since the 2022 season and tells the story of how so much has transformed in a few years. Sioux Falls is off to a 5-1 start, with games at The Birdcage every day through Sunday this, then again Friday-thru-Sunday next week. So, what's new? Why are ticket prices lower? What factors influence decisions about ballpark renovations and concessions? Oh, what is a conversation about the Canaries without bringing up a possible new ballpark someday. Perhaps you have heard that 130 acres of city-purchased land just north of Falls Park will be available in a few years.

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297 episodes

episode NLA: Zim on roller coasters, leaving games early, NDSU in CFB27 video game, Sorsby scandal, UND probation, KAT in Finals, Coach Piv at USD artwork

NLA: Zim on roller coasters, leaving games early, NDSU in CFB27 video game, Sorsby scandal, UND probation, KAT in Finals, Coach Piv at USD

Get ready for Matt Zimmer to take you on a roller coaster ride. That's kind of what happens every week on Happy Hour's "Nobody's Listening Anyway" podcast when Zim joins the Happy Hour host over beers at Gateway Lounge to talk sports, but we mean it this time. The Sioux Falls Live sports editor and veteran local scribe was on a family trip to Valleyfair amusement and water park in the Twin Cities over the weekend, and it brought back some squeamish childhood memories. Well, squeamish for Zim, fun for us. So, buckle up and soak in the thrills and spills. Then, at some point, the hosts talk sports during the not-so-dog-days-of-summer-after-all. Just because sanctioned local high school and college sports are now dormant until late August doesn't mean there is nothing to talk about. Not when the lunacy, hypocrisy, and buffoonery of college sports pops up around every corner. What do we make of Texas Tech quarterback Brendan Sorsby being allowed to play—for now—despite breaking the most sacred rule for all sanctioned sports participants: Don't bet on sport, and, especially, don't bet on your own team? Then, there's the NCAA slapping the University of North Dakota with a few recruiting-related penalties and a $25,000 fine [https://www.grandforksherald.com/sports/college/ncaa-penalizes-und-football-for-tampering-violation] for an assistant football coach's tampering violation, which brings to mind the old Jerry Tarkanian line: "They're so mad at Kentucky, they're going to give Cleveland State another year of probation." Almost every week, a new perk of North Dakota State's leap to the FBS seems to pop up. This week, it's the presence of the Bison in the CFB27 video game. Is this a big deal, if not a recruiting advantage over NDSU's old MVFC rivals like SDSU and USD? Zim also weighs in on the USD softball promotion of associate head coach Shannon Pivovar, the call back up of Royce Lewis to the Twins, and Karl-Anthony Towns emerging as an NBA Finals MVP leader through two games of the series with the Spurs... and how that could make a Timberwolves fan feel about the 2024 trade that took KAT to the Knicks. But we begin with a situation every sports fan encounters when attending one of their favorite team's games in-person: Should you ever leave early when it appears your team is going to lose? Zim faced that quagmire at Target Field the day after his roller coaster nightmares came rushing back. Enjoy the ride.

Yesterday1 h 3 min
episode FULL SHOW: Ed Whiting (JHS softball & football), UND's probation and its impact, Justin Jefferson talks Kyler Murray, and KAT's big moment artwork

FULL SHOW: Ed Whiting (JHS softball & football), UND's probation and its impact, Justin Jefferson talks Kyler Murray, and KAT's big moment

Back-to-back state titles, 33 consecutive wins, a 23-0 this season, 13 shutouts, 14 mercy-rule wins, an average final score of 12-1, and a combined tally of 18-0 in Sioux Falls Jefferson's three state tournament games. Not bad for a guy who never intended to coach softball until his wife coaxed him into it 15 years ago at the youth level with their daughter, and he just kind of kept on going. Before last softball season, Ed Whiting was best known as the blitz-happy, universally-respected veteran prep football defensive coordinator and the father of 6'6 Michigan State tight end Eddie Whiting. Now, he has the undisputed best program in South Dakota's highest level, two years running. How? And why did it only get better this season? Whiting sits down with the Happy Hour host at Shenanigans (west), his local neighborhood bar and grill, to unpack the Cavaliers' success and his approach to softball players compared to his football athletes. The former O'Gorman and Augustana player—who shared plenty of Steve Kueter, Jim Heinitz, and Kim Nelson stories in last June's Happy Hour [https://www.siouxfallslive.com/sports/happy-hour-jefferson-coach-ed-whiting-and-the-house-settlement-latest]chat [https://www.siouxfallslive.com/sports/happy-hour-jefferson-coach-ed-whiting-and-the-house-settlement-latest] — also describes Jefferson football's first year with Eric Struck as the head coach and gives an update on Eddie's progress in East Lansing, where Eddie enrolled in January to get a head start on his freshman season. Before all that, the host broke down North Dakota's recent NCAA tampering violation and penalties. What kind of true impact they'll have on the trending-up Fighting Hawks program? Plus, hear what Minnesota Vikings star wideout Justin Jefferson had to say about catching passes from newly-acquired free agent Kyler Murray, and what the host makes of them. Finally, how should Minnesota Timberwolves fans process Karl-Anthony Towns' dominating, MVP-worthy NBA Finals performance so far?

8. juni 20261 h 31 min