Booooo! We picked our top Minnesota sports villains

In sports, enemies are abundant. For every championship season there is a team that pulled off the upset. For every winning play a gutting gaffe. For every hero a villain.

June 18, 2020 at 10:36AM
(Brian Stensaas/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Thanks to Michael Corleone, we all know to keep our friends close but our enemies closer. In sports, enemies are abundant. For every championship season there is a team that pulled off the upset. For every winning play a gutting gaffe. For every hero a villain.

Who has got the goat of Minnesota sports teams and players over the years? That question was pondered by a group of Star Tribune sports writers and editors who gathered Wednesday for our weekly Virtual Happy Hour.

This week, we focused on the biggest, baddest villains. Some of the picks were blatantly obvious. Norm Green moved the beloved North Stars out of Bloomington (and to this day you can hear chants cursing his name). Teams didn't escape the wrath. Sixteen playoff losses in a row to the Yankees makes any Twins fan cringe and putting them on the list was about as certain as an extra-innings double (it was FAIR!).

We had time for 18 picks, and a bevy of bullies escaped from the schoolyard without getting snitched. Let us know who we missed by leaving your picks in the comments.

Here are our picks

1. Norm Green (Chris Miller, pro sports editor)

2. Aaron Rodgers (Andrew Krammer, Vikings writer)

3. Brett Favre (Michael Rand, senior digital writer)

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4. New York Yankees (Jeff Day, copy editor)

5. Drew Pearson (Randy Johnson, Puck Drop editor)

6. Michigan Wolverines football (Brian Stensaas, night web sports editor and golf writer)

7. Blair Walsh (Ken Chia, copy editor)

8. Al Secord (Joe Christensen, Gophers editor)

9. Dave Forbes (Pete Steinert, Sunday sports editor)

10. Dick Butkus (Steinert)

11. Chuck Knoblauch (Christensen)

12. Carl Pohlad (Chia)

13. Eden Prairie football (Stensaas)

14. Todd Bertuzzi (Johnson)

15. Jimmy Butler (Day)

16. Stephon Marbury (Rand)

17. Nate Poole (Krammer)

18. Nick Bockwinkel (Miller)

about the writer

about the writer

Brian Stensaas

Multiplatform Editing Team Leader

Brian Stensaas has been with the Minnesota Star Tribune since 2004. He is a Multiplatform Editing Team Leader, with reporting experience covering high school sports, the NHL, NBA and professional golf.

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