Minneapolis, MN
Looking into Minnesota men’s basketball’s first-half struggles
Minnesota Gophers men’s basketball started their last seven second halves down, going 3-4 in that stretch.
The Gophers trailed Michigan and Maryland at the half but were able to secure single-digit wins. Their next three against Indiana, Iowa and Michigan State all ended in losses before returning home to face Wisconsin in the Border Battle.
Head coach Ben Johnson was asked on Jan. 23 about the team’s mindset heading into the second half after their two-point loss to Wisconsin.
“Playing with confidence and not on your heels, you can’t be afraid to fail, you can’t be afraid to miss shots, you can’t be afraid to play on the attack,” Johnson said.
Their first-half losing streak came to an end on Saturday after an explosive offensive run tied the score against Northwestern.
Minnesota at Indiana
The Assembly Hall is one of the toughest places to play in the Big Ten and the Hoosiers proved that in dominating fashion.
During the first half, the Gophers shot 37.9% from the field and found themselves trailing 31-41 at halftime. The second half wasn’t much better for Minnesota, as they shot 40% from the field and 7.1% from three.
Pharrel Payne led the Gophers with 17 points and five blocks, but big games from Mackenzie Mgbako (19 points), Kel’el Ware (17) and Malik Reneau (16) led Indiana to a 74-62 win.
Minnesota versus Iowa
Once again, the Gophers were down at the half 29-32. Despite a huge 30-point game from junior forward Dawson Garcia, the Gophers only managed to shoot 43.3% from the field during the first half and 48.3% overall.
The Gophers struggled again from three, shooting 5 for 29 from the three-point line. The Hawkeyes had a good shooting first half but shot 60% in the second half to close out the match.
Minnesota gave up 18 more points in the paint than they scored (36-54) and ended up losing by single digits.
Garcia’s 30 points was his second 30-point game of the season and second of his career. He had 36 points in a loss against Ohio State earlier in the year.
Minnesota at Michigan State
The Gophers changed the trend a bit but trailed 34-37 at the half. However, the first half was much better than the second.
Minnesota shot 47.8% from the field and 45.5% from three in the first half but shot only 38.5% from the field in the second half. Michigan State would end up beating the Gophers 76-66.
Michigan State outplayed Minnesota inside, outscoring them in the paint 44-12. Points off turnovers were also a problem for the Gophers. They gave up 21 points off turnovers while scoring six for themselves.
Minnesota’s transitions lacked any significant offensive production, only contributing two points to their final score compared to Michigan State’s 17 points.
Garcia finished the game leading all scorers with 22 points. Junior guard Mike Mitchell Jr. was the only other Gopher in double digits with 12 points.
Minnesota versus No. 13 Wisconsin
Guard Elijah Hawkins returned to play in the Border Battle matchup after missing the previous game due to an ankle injury. He finished the game with 16 points and nine assists.
Minnesota’s shot selection nearly took them out of the game. They shot 31% from the field in the first half while the Badgers made 50% of their attempts. However, with an energetic third quarter, the Gophers fought back from being down 24-34 in the first to make it a close game.
The poor free throw shooting performance from Minnesota, who shot only 38.5% from the line, did not put them out of reach of winning, but it made the end of the game harder than needed.
The Gophers were given an opportunity for a make-one-miss-one free-throw attempt to try to tie the game with a few seconds left. Mitchell Jr. made the first and missed the second perfectly, grabbing his rebound and getting a great look at a mid-range jump shot, but it did not fall.
Johnson did not seem too put off by the loss, knowing the Gophers played a great game and kept themselves in it.
“Mike read it great, had a great miss, and you have a great opportunity to make it, and I think at some point here soon the basketball gods are going to finally shine down on us because they did everything but go in,” Johnson said after the game.
Johnson added his players have done everything asked of them and are hoping for “a little luck” to come their way.
Garcia had a down game, scoring only 10 points and making four of his 10 attempts. Garcia said he understands it was just one game.
“We just got to move forward and just got to finish the job,” Garcia said after the loss.
Minnesota at Penn State
The Gophers’ win in State College, Pennsylvania, was their first since 2019, but it did not come without adversity. The Gophers trailed once again at the half after a double-digit run from the Nittany Lions.
According to Johnson, forward Joshua Ola-Joseph has been a vocal leader in the locker room despite being a sophomore.
“If I see a mistake, I’m getting on a teammate or hyping a teammate up,” Ola-Joseph said on Friday. “Just having energy and people follow along with that.”
Minnesota trailed 31-45 coming into the second half, but the energy shifted for the Gophers. Big games from Garcia (22 points) and Cam Christie (17) helped the Gophers win the game 83-74.
The defense was an additional significant contributing factor to snapping Minnesota’s brief losing streak. They held Penn State to 35.7% shooting in the second half while shooting 53.8% themselves.
Minnesota versus Northwestern
Northwestern started Big Ten play with No.1 ranked Purdue and won 92-88 in overtime. Their only other ranked win came on Jan. 24 against then-ranked No. 10 Illinois in overtime.
The Wildcats came into the game against Minnesota ranked outside the top 25, receiving 32 votes in the most recent Associated Press poll.
The Gophers broke their seven-game streak of being down at the half with a 10-point run in the final two minutes to tie the score at 27 points. Wildcat guard Boo Buie made two free throws with four seconds left to send the game to overtime.
Garcia took over, scoring eight straight points after the three-minute mark. He finished the game with 20 points while Christie added 15 points with multiple threes in the second half.
Minnesota won 75-66, allowing five points in overtime. They moved to an even 5-5 in conference play and 14-7 overall with the win. Their next match will be a late-night rematch at home next Tuesday against Michigan State.
Minneapolis, MN
Affordable senior housing revived at 600 Main St. SE
The Blueprint
A team led by Lupe Development Partners and Wall Cos. wants to bring more than 100 units of affordable senior housing to a triangular parking area near the Mississippi River in Minneapolis, the latest version of a yearslong effort to redevelop the site.
On Thursday, the Minneapolis Planning Commission Committee of the Whole reviewed plans for the five-story, 104-unit building at 600 Main St. SE. The project would require a comprehensive plan amendment, rezoning and other approvals.
Jess Olstad, a city spokesperson, said in an email that the committee took no formal action.
“The next step for the project team will be to conduct public engagement around their potential comprehensive plan amendment, and to prepare their land use applications for submittal,” Olstad said.
Steve Minn, vice president and chief financial manager of Lupe Development, said Friday that the project received “very positive feedback” from the committee.
“We’re just going to proceed with the rest of our application, which will be in the next week or so,” said Minn, who added that the proposed location is a “perfect site for housing” and that “senior housing is a need.”
A comprehensive plan amendment would require Metropolitan Council review. If the approval process goes well and financing comes together next year, the project could break ground in 2028, Minn said.
A 58-space “principal parking facility” currently occupies the 37,401-square-foot development site, which is framed by Sixth Avenue Southeast, Main Street Southeast, and a railroad property, according to a city staff report.
The project would primarily offer one-bedroom units, though the mix would also include some two-bedroom dwellings and efficiencies. Thirty-nine stalls of underground parking are also planned.
Located near the Stone Arch Bridge trailhead in the Mississippi River Critical Area Overlay District, the project would be “compatible with the surrounding neighborhood architecture,” according to a narrative submitted on behalf of the developer.
The plan includes site improvements such as structured parking and pedestrian spaces, and a new public trail, which would connect to existing Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board trails in Father Hennepin Bluffs Park.
According to the developer’s narrative, the project “represents a reinvestment in a privately owned, undeveloped parcel that is not used for park purposes and is not planned for acquisition.”
The project would align the property’s “land use, built form, and Mississippi River Corridor Critical Area Overlay District designations with the surrounding urban context and applicable regulatory framework,” the narrative states.
Wall Cos. and Lupe Development Partners, doing business as Bluff Street Development, have long wanted to redevelop 600 Main St. SE. In 2023, the developers pitched a plan for 80 affordable housing units on the site.
The developers’ history with the site goes back as far as 2009, when they proposed separate plans for a 98-unit and a 79-unit apartment project, as previously reported. In 2010, Bluff Street sued the city after the City Council rejected the plans. The lawsuit was dismissed in 2011.
When development efforts first started, the Mississippi River Critical Corridor Area rules and regulations had not been defined, and “there was a lot of angst in the community” about what those regulations would be, Minn said.
Those regulations are now “well defined,” clearing the way for development, he said.
Minneapolis, MN
Reform, money and trust: Council members’ key criteria for Minneapolis’ next police chief
Minneapolis leaders agree the next police chief is a critical choice, but it remains unclear whether the mayor and City Council can align on a candidate.
Mayor Jacob Frey declined an interview on the topic after announcing the hiring process and timeline earlier in the week. But 5 EYEWITNESS NEWS spoke with City Council Member and Public Health, Safety & Equity Committee Chair Jason Chavez and Council Member LaTrisha Vetaw, the prior Public Health, Safety & Equity Committee Chair.
All agree the police chief is one of the most important roles in Minneapolis.
Asked what it would take to get enough members on board with a candidate so that they can be confirmed, Council Member Vetaw said, “I think we’re figuring some of those things out, but what I hear from all council members is someone who’s strong on reform and wants to actually get reforms done right.”
Vetaw added that the next permanent chief should also have a strong record on slowing overspending.
“We need somebody who’s really going to reel that in and handle our money with care. I think those are two things that I hear from all of my colleagues,” she said.
Brian O’Hara resigns as Minneapolis police chief after report shows he interfered with investigation into his conduct
Asked the same question, Council Member Chavez agreed on key candidate criteria, but he expressed less confidence in the hiring process.
“Well, I mean, I’ve cleared out — I’ve laid out some of the things that I would like to see in a candidate,” Chavez said. “And then I want us to feel included in this process, so they can hear our feedback, and I want there to be robust community engagement. I don’t think that it’s oppositional to this plan. I guess my only thing is I want to make sure that all 13 members are included in this process.”
“I really care about community engagement, I really care about the criteria, and I want to make sure that the police chief that comes into Minneapolis is strongly committed to police accountability,” he continued.
“People want transparency and accountability. They want someone who can speak to the community, and it’s truthful,” Vetaw said.
“Like, we’re all looking for the same kind of leader.”
The question comes as Community Safety Commissioner Todd Barnette, as the head of the department overseeing MPD and nominated by Mayor Frey in April, remains without enough City Council votes to be reappointed. Vetaw supports Barnette, while Chavez does not.
Vetaw said the lack of agreement over Commissioner Barnette is not an omen for the process of hiring a new MPD chief.
“I don’t believe that what’s happening with the commissioner is a direct reflection on the process for searching for a new chief. I think this council certainly separates those two,” she said.
“Do I want to move fast? Absolutely not. I want to move at a pace where we get the best person for the job … and I think we all want that. This is one of the most important roles in the city of Minneapolis.”
Chavez said he hopes the process leads to a chief he can support.
Asked if he believes he’ll be able to put his vote behind the candidate ultimately nominated by the mayor at the end of the process, Chavez said, “I would hope so.”
“And I want to be able to vote for a chief,” he continued. “I just think that we have to make sure that there’s a robust process that includes all council members, and that ensures that the voices of our community are not being left out.”
Former Chief Brian O’Hara was unanimously confirmed in 2022, though the council had a few different members at the time.
In a statement, a spokesperson for Mayor Frey said, “Mayor Frey has been very clear that the search for a new police chief will be a collaborative process that includes community, City staff, and Council Members.”
5 EYEWITNESS NEWS will continue tracking the selection process, including its cost to taxpayers.
Minneapolis, MN
Minneapolis City Council approves 5-month pause on data center development
Minneapolis City Council members approved a five-month pause on new data center development Thursday.
The moratorium does not apply to smaller data centers located downtown that are less than 350,000 square feet.
The Minneapolis City Council voted to temporarily halt new data center projects while city staff study regulations and examine concerns about environmental impacts, energy use and public safety.
The vote comes as opposition to data center projects has surfaced in communities across Minnesota.
In Elk River, Minnesota, this week, the city’s planning commission recommended against a proposal that would pave the way for a data center, despite the fact advocates said the project could generate an estimated $800,000 in additional revenue.
In Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota, a packed city council meeting erupted in boos after officials delayed a final vote on a proposed data center. The vote is now scheduled for Friday.
The issue has drawn strong opinions in Minneapolis.
At a Minneapolis committee meeting last week, a vocal majority spoke out in favor of the pause. Labor groups highlighted the construction jobs data centers can provide, while residents raised concerns about neighborhood impacts and whether the facilities would benefit local communities.
Councilmember Soren Stevenson said residents throughout Minneapolis have been clear in their opposition to additional data center development.
“My constituents and people from across this city are so, so clear that they don’t want data centers at all,” Stevenson said.
Supporters of the moratorium said the temporary pause will give city officials time to study the industry and develop regulations before additional projects move forward.
Council Member Aurin Chowdhury argued that data centers have had disproportionate impacts.
“That industry has shown over and over again negative impacts, especially in communities of color and communities that have been impacted by environmental injustice,” Chowdhury said.
Opponents of the pause warned the move could discourage future investment in Minneapolis and send the wrong message to businesses considering projects in the city.
Councilmember Linea Palmisano said the moratorium could undermine efforts to attract economic development at a time when residents are facing higher property taxes.
“We send a message to the business community that they aren’t important or supported by this council,” Palmisano said. “We send the message that we don’t want their investment.”
The measure now heads to Mayor Jacob Frey, who plans to spend the next several days reviewing the ordinance before deciding whether to sign it, a spokesperson said.
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