Minnesota Duluth kicker invited to Packers camp

David Nadeau spent his Sunday morning the same way he has a lot of days since his college football career ended in December — kicking.

Minnesota Duluth kicker David Nadeau (87) kicks off during a game against St. Cloud State on Nov. 13, 2010, at Malosky Stadium in Duluth. (Clint Austin / caustin@duluthnews.com)

While some students probably used the day to sleep in or get a head start on studying for finals, the former Minnesota Duluth placekicker was booting footballs hours after accepting an invitation to participate in rookie orientation next month for a tryout with the Green Bay Packers.

Nadeau received the news shortly after the NFL Draft concluded Saturday afternoon.

“My agent told me to just keep sitting by the phone in case something pops up,” Nadeau said. “I got a call from him about 5 or 6 o’clock that they wanted me to come to their minicamp.”

Twitter was abuzz Saturday night with chatter from friends and former teammates that the Bulldogs senior and lifelong Packers fan from White Bear Lake, Minn., would be going to camp with Green Bay.

“Dave nadeau to the pack??? #ithinkso #theleague,” UMD tight end Ben Helmer tweeted.

Nadeau’s most memorable kick came at the end of the 2010 season on a 32-yard field goal as time expired that gave the Bulldogs a 17-14 victory over Delta State for their second NCAA Division II national championship in three seasons.

The four-year starter holds nearly every kicking record at UMD as well as the program’s all-time scoring mark with 390 career points. Nadeau also was a three-time All-Northern Sun Intercollegiate Conference selection (2009-2011).

Nadeau said playing Division II college football “allowed me to show my potential. I came in here and started as a freshman. I had four years of experience. If I had played Division I, I definitely wouldn’t have had that. Experience helps me out a lot.”

UMD athletic director Bob Nielson returned to coaching football in 2008 after a five-year absence to lead the Bulldogs to their first NCAA championship in Nadeau’s freshman season.

“I think David certainly demonstrated over his four-year career his development as a kicker. He had tremendous years, made kicks in big games; it’s that kind of exposure, particularly with a special-teams player like Dave, that’s important,” Nielson said. “The opportunity that he had here with our program and how he utilized it created situations where he’s going to get an opportunity to get looked at at the next level.”

Nadeau prepared for that next step by kicking throughout the winter — which he said wasn’t easy.

“It was a little difficult in the winter. I’d clear off some snow off the field and kick,” Nadeau said. “The winter was good, though, because we didn’t have a whole lot of snow. I’ve also been in the weight room, staying in shape and biking.”

The conditions weren’t always cold, though. In early March, Nadeau took a trip to Phoenix to participate in former NFL special-teams coordinator Gary Zauner’s kicking combine for college seniors.

“After he was successful there, we kind of had an inkling that he’d have a shot at something,” said Helmer, a senior captain next season and Nadeau’s roommate. “We had an idea of it, but until it came to fruition it was kind of crazy.”

Helmer, who was a redshirt freshman, came to UMD the same time as Nadeau. The Ellsworth, Wis., native quickly bonded with Nadeau once he found out the kid from the Twin Cities was a Green Bay fan.

“The Packers were having that family night scrimmage they have,” Helmer said. “We were both in our dorm rooms and went out and watched it together on TV.”

While wearing No. 87 at UMD, the 6-foot-3, 205-pound Nadeau physically resembled a tight end more than the stereotypical kicker.

“He’s a different kind of kicker because he would work out,” Helmer said. “Dave’s always been a guy that’s worked out really, really hard. You’d never think that he’s the kicker. He’s a big guy.

“He knows a lot about the game. He never got the whole ‘kicker’ tag. He’s always been a big guy.”

His actions weren’t very kicker-like, either, according to Nielson.

“David really became a leader on our football team. You wouldn’t necessarily make that statement about a kicker,” he said. “We’re excited for him to have this opportunity. He’s a great ambassador for our program.”

Nadeau, who’s set to graduate in May with a degree in civil engineering, was thrilled to get a chance to try out for an NFL team, especially his favorite one.

“Absolutely,” he said. “Of course, I’d be happy playing for anybody.”

The Packers’ rookie-orientation camp is scheduled for May 11-13 in Green Bay.

This story originally appeared on duluthnewstribune.com.

Who’s my special, little guy? Eli!

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Eli, put one arm up for each Super Bowl championship you've won. That's right! Good job! (Bill Kostroun / Associated Press)

Well, he did it.

Quarterback Eli Manning helped the New York Giants win their second Super Bowl title — and with it his second Super Bowl MVP award — in five seasons. And, not to mention, they did it against heartthrob QB Tom Brady and the New England Patriots each time.

While I’m not a fan of either team, I can’t help but feel a little bad that Brady was on the losing end Sunday in Indianapolis after he failed to win his fourth (that’s sick, especially since the Minnesota Vikings haven’t played in the big game since the day my 35-year-old brother was born) Super Bowl four years earlier. I’ve been a Brady mark — pro-wrestling term — since he led my little-known fantasy football team to a Yahoo! league championship in 2001-02 after it looked to be decimated by Drew Bledsoe’s injury.

The win made Manning the 11th starting quarterback to win at least two Super Bowl titles and brought on all kinds of talk about where he sits all time and — worse — whether he’s better than his brother, Peyton.

Before you participate in this albeit irrelevant and frivolous debate, don’t forget that football is a team sport. And a complex one at that.

The New York Giants won the Super Bowl, not Eli Manning. Sure, he’s on the team and going to get a ring that proves he was there, but just because you can’t name more than five players on the Giants doesn’t mean each player didn’t play a role in the club’s season-ending six-game winning streak.

I’m not discounting Manning’s role, either. He’s a terrific quarterback and was one of the Giants’ best players in the 2008 and 2012 games, but if the two were to go toe-to-toe based on ability in real life or in a “Madden NFL” video game, big brother Peyton is coming out on top each time.

Peyton Manning’s Indianapolis Colts have one Super Bowl victory (2007 against the Chicago Bears) and a loss in the big game (2010 against the New Orleans Saints). His 1-1 Super Bowl record doesn’t mean Eli’s 2-0 makes Eli better. At 3-2 in Super Bowls, I think Brady is better than both because he’s a better player (my man-crush might skew it, though).

Football personalities and fans rightfully stress throughout the year that it’s a team sport, but some of those same people are quick to forget that as soon as it comes to how many championship rings a player possesses. Former Dallas Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers defensive lineman Charles Haley has been a part of five Super Bowl victories. I remember watching Haley play in the 1990s, and he was an excellent player, but is he the best defensive end or linebacker in NFL history? No. Even with quarterback carrying more weight in an argument because of the role it plays in an offense, Super Bowl wins alone don’t equal greatness.

Terry Bradshaw won four Super Bowls with the Pittsburgh Steelers, but I’ve never heard anyone credible say Bradshaw is the best quarterback in history. At 30, I never saw Bradshaw play and know him more for his role as an analyst for Fox and his dull “Tonight Show” interviews. He’s in the Pro Football Hall of Fame for a reason, though. One four-time-winning QB, Joe Montana, who won four with San Francisco, is regarded as one of the best, if not the best. He’s also the one quarterback to whom Brady most often is compared.

Maybe it’s his aw-shucks demeanor or his I-just-took-a-drop-kicked-basketball-to-the-face-when-I-wasn’t-looking expression, but I’m not sold on Eli Manning being an all-time great. Yes, I’ll take him on my team over Donovan McNabb, Christian Ponder, Joe Webb and Rhett Bomar, but there are dozens I’d put ahead of the younger Manning when it comes to their place in NFL history.

Bulldogs’ winning ways prompt more fans to wear their pride

Where my ’Dogs at? These days, they’re everywhere.
The University of Minnesota Duluth Bulldogs are on shirts. Hats. Car windows. Even cupcakes. (My favorite is chocolate, with gold frosting.)
It wasn’t always this way, though.
As a child growing up in Duluth, the only thing I knew UMD for was a hockey team that never won quite as many games as I’d hoped.
“I remember 15 years ago, when if you only looked in the crowd and not on the ice, you wouldn’t know what teams were playing based on what fans were wearing,” UMD sports information director Bob Nygaard said. “Apparel or sporting your school colors is the most visible sign of school pride. Nothing is a bigger marketer tool than getting your image out there on everything from stuffed mascots to notebooks.”
The past decade-plus has brought expansion — I can’t remember a day during my time there as a student that something wasn’t under construction — and with it, a grip load of students.
Sure, new facilities have made UMD a more desirable institution, but I never saw anyone wearing a T-shirt with the Swenson Science Building on it. It wasn’t until the school’s recent athletic success that it got something that all the fundraising, top-notch courses and ever-rising tuition costs could never buy — swagger.
It began in 2008, when the Bulldogs went undefeated in football and won the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II championship for the first time in school history.
I didn’t attend a football game in my four years at UMD, but I couldn’t have been happier than I was jumping in front of my TV with my maroon Bulldogs T-shirt on that day.
“Part of the reason I came here was they were already coming off a national championship,” said Chase Vogler, a junior from the Twin Cities area.
He’s now the Bulldogs’ starting quarterback and held that position last year when they again won an NCAA title — in an unbeaten season.
In 2009, the UMD men’s hockey team made a remarkable playoff run highlighted by becoming the first No. 5 seed to win the Western Collegiate Hockey Association Final Five and a final-seconds comeback in an NCAA regional game.
I almost tore my Bulldogs T-shirt off Hulk Hogan-style after watching Evan Oberg’s tying goal with 0.8 seconds left in the third and Mike Connolly’s overtime winner in that game against Princeton.
The volleyball and women’s hockey teams had impressive seasons, too, bookended by the women’s hockey team’s NCAA Division I titles in 2008 and 2010 — cementing the respect they earned in 2001, 2002 and 2003.
Then in April came the icing on those gold-frosted cupcakes: The Bulldogs won their first NCAA Division I men’s hockey championship — in overtime, nonetheless — in their home state. And I witnessed it from my third-row seat along with my younger brother, Josh, and thousands of fans in Bulldogs gear.

Kenny Reiter

Junior goaltender Kenny Reiter led Minnesota Duluth to its first NCAA Division I men's hockey title April 9, 2011, in St. Paul. (Clint Austin / caustin@duluthnews.com)

All this happening on national TV suddenly made UMD a “sexy” school.
In the past year, I can’t walk downtown or fill up at the Spur or buy ant killer at Marshall’s Hardware without seeing people decked out in Bulldogs clothing. And it’s not my imagination. As of the end of May, UMD had sold a quarter-million dollars in NCAA championship-related apparel in 2011, Nygaard said.
“People like to come in and get their championship stuff as well as other stuff and support their team,” said Caroleen Zylka, who works at UMD Stores.
Not to mention the explosion of another Bulldog-embossed item — the championship ring.
Can’t buy that.

Jimmy Bellamy is the multimedia editor at the Duluth News Tribune in Duluth, Minn. Contact him at (218) 723-5390 or jbellamy@duluthnews.com. This column originally appeared here.