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 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio 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

Descripción

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

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297 episodios

episode NLA: Zim on SDSU hoops newcomers, Buxton bombs, Sorsby leaving CFB, grown men wearing jerseys, World Cup interest, Dawn Plitzuweit extension, and Murray vs. McCarthy artwork

NLA: Zim on SDSU hoops newcomers, Buxton bombs, Sorsby leaving CFB, grown men wearing jerseys, World Cup interest, Dawn Plitzuweit extension, and Murray vs. McCarthy

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episode FULL CHAT: Mike Begeman, SD Sports Hall of Fame basketball player and coach artwork

FULL CHAT: Mike Begeman, SD Sports Hall of Fame basketball player and coach

It is difficult to find a more beloved sports figure in South Dakota than Mike Begeman. But being a gregarious and gracious good guy is not what earned the Parker native an upcoming spot in the South Dakota Sports Hall of Fame. Begeman scored 1,477 points, was a three-time All-State shooting guard, and won 70 games (to just 10 losses) in three seasons for legendary coach Gayle Hoover in Parker in the early 1970's. At Augustana, Begeman was part of a 1978 squad that captured the North Central Conference title. Begeman was far from done winning. He immediately became a high school head coach in Colman, then secured a dream job at West Central in Hartford, close to his family farm. He did well enough there to achieve another dream: Coaching at the highest level in Class AA. O'Gorman may seem like a plum gig now, but in 1986, the Knights had gone almost 20 years without reaching the state tournament. So, how did Begeman jump start the small Sioux Falls private school back to a tourney team in just his second season? By the 1990's, the Knights were a fixture in the event, reaching the championship game four times from 1992-2005. This included each of Begeman's final two seasons at O'G, with son Mitch at point guard. And, then, poof, it was over. Begeman called it quits before age 50, choosing to accept a "private sector" job that allowed him to attend plenty of Mitch's games at USD—something being a prep bench boss would not allow. And Begeman never returned to the bench, spending over 15 years as a public relations manager, then vice president at Sanford Health. Did he miss leading young men on the hardwood? Did he have any regrets about switching gears? With a 329-212 record over 26 seasons as coach and 399-222 mark when factoring in his Parker playing days, the only coaching feat Begeman did not reach was hoisting the state title trophy. So, what did it mean to Begeman when Mitch led Sioux Falls Roosevelt to wins over O'Gorman and Begeman's replacement, Derek Robey in back-to-back seasons of 2021 and '22? Now over four years retired from Sanford, Begeman still spends time in leadership roles and recently won a landslide election to be a Minnehaha County precinct committeeman. Begeman sits down with the Happy Hour host for almost 80 minutes for a look back at a basketball life well lived... and one that's still going strong.

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episode SD Sports Lounge: Mike McFeely, USC coach Eric Musselman (on NIL payroll & USD transfer Isaac Bruns), Craig Mattick (SDPB prep sports), Zach Borg on Sioux Falls' NCAAA men's tourney bids artwork

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It's a small basketball world after all. At least in South Dakota. If you were wondering whether there was a local tie to USD and Summit League leading scorer Isaac Bruns' transfer portal landing spot at USC, you were correct. Well, kind of. South Dakotans know the name Eric Musselman well. The third-year Trojan head coach is the son of former Golden Gopher coach and the first-ever Minnesota Timberwolves coach Bill Musselman. He was in his 20's when the Thrillers and Sioux Falls Skyforce waged a heated in-state rivalry. In the 30 years since, he has stalked the sidelines in the CBA, USBL, and NBA—where he led both the Warriors and the Kings — the NBA D-League and G-League and, for the last 14 years, the college game. He took Nevada to its first Sweet 16 and Arkansas to its first Elite Eight since the Nolan Richardson glory years— and famously took his shirt of and twirling it around on-camera along the way. In part of his entertaining, engaging chat on Sioux Falls Live's "Happy Hour with John Gaskins," Musselman explains exactly how Isaac Bruns ended up in Los Angeles and what Bruns must do to see significant playing time at USC. Plus, how has Musselman's experience as a professional coach honed his ability to deal with NIL roster payroll? And just how does the construction of a roster in the NIL era work? The segments leads off this week's South Dakota Sports Lounge, a weekly digital TV show for Midwest Sports+ that takes hand-picked best segments from Forum Communications shows like Happy Hour, Hot Mic with Dom Izzo (Fargo), and the Nate Brown Show (Rapid City)— all which can be found and viewed on your TV (or any device) with the MS+ app. Other segments this week: Hot Mic w/ Dom Izzo (Fargo): Dom had Mike McFeely on for his weekly segment. They start by discussing the NBA Finals. Mike takes umbrage with NY Knicks fans complaining about officiating. Then, they discuss the national reaction to the Brendan Sorsby decision at Texas Tech. The Nate Brown Show (Rapid City): Craig Mattick, broadcaster for SDPB/ In Play Podcast host, starts his weekly segment by talking about why the South Dakotas state baseball tournament isn't a sanctioned high school varsity sport. Zach Borg feature: An investigative piece looking into the viability of Sioux Falls as a host site for the newly expanded first round of the NCAA basketball tournament.

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