New Mexico
Runners end losing skid with OT triumph – Rio Rancho Observer
New Mexico’s Colton Oord (in black) plays defense while Runners goalkeeper Nate Yeager keeps an eye on the action Sunday afternoon in the Rio Rancho Events Center. The Runners won the game after a shootout. (Herron photo)
RIO RANCHO – The visiting Kansas Bandits, arriving at the Rio Rancho Events Center with only 11 players dressed for their soccer game with the New Mexico Runners, looked like they were going to be easily disarmed Sunday afternoon.
Nineteen seconds into the game, the Runners had a 1-0 lead. Less than four minutes into the contest, it was 3-0.
Austin Snyder, Froilan Ramirez and Jaime Hernandez, respectively, built that lead for the Runners, who ultimately won their first game of the 2023-24 season, 9-8 in overtime – the first time in franchise history the Runners played a game decided by penalty kicks.
Goalkeeper Nate Yeager sealed the win for New Mexico (1-4) by stopping the Bandits’ fifth penalty attempt in its tracks, and the Runners’ Josh Garcia made it 5 for 5 in his team’s kicks.
After that early 3-0 lead, the Bandits (2-5) were still down three at the end of the first period, 5-2, and then by two, 6-4, at intermission. It was still a two-goal lead for the Runners, 7-5, after three quarters, leading to the late rally by the Bandits and overtime.
But the short-handed Bandits continued to keep it close, after trailing by no more than three goals and catching the Runners at 7, and then 8, after Nicholas Cashmere scored the lead goal with 6:12 to play.
Unfortunately for the Runners, they had two players serving penalties, and while the Bandits also had one serving time, they pulled their ’keeper to have a fifth attacker, which paid off with 53 ticks left in the fourth quarter and a deadlock at 8.
A 10-minute sudden-death overtime settled nothing, thus the PK shootout.
Both teams traded penalty kicks for four rounds, with neither goalie being able to get a save. In the fifth cycle, Garcia would give the Runners the advantage. Yeager got the save on the ensuing kick.
The Runners are on the road Saturday at first-place Wichita (6-0).
The Runners’ next home game is Feb. 10 at 3:05 p.m. vs. El Paso, a team that New Mexico opened the season with on Dec. 30, a 13-8 Rhinos victory.
New Mexico
Deb Haaland Wins New Mexico Democratic Primary For Governor
Native Vote 2026
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — A Laguna Pueblo woman is the front runner to be New Mexico’s next governor.
Shortly after polls closed Tuesday night, Deb Haaland was declared the winner over Bernalillo County district attorney Sam Bregman in the state’s semi-open Democratic Party primary. As of 11:00 p.m., Haaland carried support from 72% of the Democratic primary voters to Bregman’s 28%, according to unofficial results from the New Mexico Secretary of State.
“We’re showing everyone that a better future in New Mexico is possible,” she told supporters gathered in Albuquerque’s historic Old Town Plaza. “New Mexicans want a leader who will stand up for working people, and who is ready to take on Donald Trump. I proudly accept your nomination as a Democratic nominee.”
Haaland spoke for 13 minutes, at times through a scratchy throat that required her to pause for water breaks. “Excuse me, I’ve been talking with voters all day,” she said while grabbing a water bottle before hitting her campaign stump notes on affordability, health care and public safety.
She will face Republican Gregg Hull, a former mayor from suburban Rio Rancho that won his party’s three-way primary with 47% of the vote, according to unofficial results from the New Mexico Secretary of State.
Haaland will be the Democratic Party nominee in a state dominated at every level by Democrats, and is expected to be heavily favored in the general election. With that insight she said her campaign message does translate to Republicans and Independent voters.
“We want our kids to thrive. We want our kids to have a quality, public education. We want every New Mexican to have health care. Everybody wants to feel safe in their neighborhoods, and everybody wants to be able to afford to put a hot meal on their table every night and have a roof over their children’s heads,” she said. “Those issues transcend whatever political spectrum we’re trying to slice and dice people into.”
Shortly after the race was called, Haaland campaign staff, major donors, surrogates, and their families walked from a building on the west side of Albuquerque’s Old Town Plaza to the historic plaza core, where the Haaland campaign had set up a stage and reserved the entire plaza for its victory celebration.
“We are now witnessing history in the making,” New Mexico state Rep. Derrick Lente (Sandia Pueblo) said to supporters immediately after Haaland was declared the winner.
Denise Wilie (Dine) also joined the celebration of Haaland’s victory. Wilie said she worked on get-out-the-vote efforts with the Native American Voters Alliance in McKinley County.
“It just is so exhilarating to even think about, a woman and a Pueblo woman,” she said. “Indigenous all the way, is how I feel. I’m like, yes, let’s get more of our voices.”
Haaland was introduced by her two sisters and walked to the stage escorted by a mariachi band.
Speaking to reporters after the event Haaland reflected on voting for a Pueblo woman (herself) for governor.
“I got emotional, quite frankly, when I went to vote for myself because you do that when you’re a candidate,” she said. “We’ve never had a Native American governor in New Mexico. We’re a multicultural state. I think representation matters, especially in a political era such as this one. So, I’m really proud and honored to carry on the legacy of my ancestors, who worked so incredibly hard to make sure that I had a place here today.”
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New Mexico
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New Mexico
Pay it 4ward: Angels’ Voices Silenced No More
When a famly unexpectedly loses a loved one, or has someone go missing, the details of what comes next can be overwhelming.
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. – When a famly unexpectedly loses a loved one, or has someone go missing, the details of what comes next can be overwhelming.
But they don’t have to do it alone thanks to an organization helping New Mexico families with some of those burdens.
Watch the video above for more.
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