North Dakota
Fargo North (SBALL) and Shanley (BSB) Win EDC Tournament – KVRR Local News
FARGO NORTH AND SHANLEY WIN THE EDC FOR SOFTBALL AND BASEBALL; RECEIVE EAST NO. 1 SEED FOR STATE
FARGO, N.D. (KVRR)–For the first time in history, the Fargo North Spartans are your Eastern Dakota Conference softball tournament champions. Down 2-0 in the top of the seventh inning, the Spartans put their rally caps on and scored four runs to take their first lead of the game.
In the bottom half of the seventh, after allowing one run in the frame already, junior pitcher Maryn Schneider left the bases full for game ending strikeout to give the Spartans the 4-3 win.”
“When I saw it hit her glove it was just surreal,” said Schneider. “I was so excited.
Head Coach Taylor Ludlum said that she always had faith in her team making the late inning comeback.
“I have a lot of trust in this team,” said Ludlum. “I know they have a lot of fight in them and they wanted this, so I was just excited for them and had all my trust in them.”
Schneider said too was confident, even with her team down two runs and only three outs to go in the top of the seventh inning.
“When we [started the seventh inning] I knew that my job wasn’t done,” said Schneider. “I knew I wanted to [get the win] for my team and that was what I did. I feel very proud of both myself and my team for completing [the comeback], especially since it’s the first championship in program history.”
Fargo North entered the EDC tournament as the number four seed. They defeated number one seed Red River in the semifinals, and then continued their Cinderella run with the championship win over two-seed West Fargo.
Schneider says the win means a lot.
“Oh my gosh, it means so much,” said Schneider. “I knew that we could [win the EDC] from the get-go and it was just a matter of proving to people that we could. “When we had the upset the first game, I knew that we could do it the second game because we had a fire under our butts. “I knew that we could do it again. It was just a matter of completing that and proving to people that we are here…watch out.”
With that confidence, the Spartans enter the Class A State Tournament as the East one seed, Schneider says the team’s focus is to keep it rolling and to keep the same mindset that got them this far.
“We’re kind of taking that momentum and just rolling with it,” said Schneider. “We kept saying ‘why not us?’ That was our mentality the whole tournament. So, the fact that we did it, it was just amazing.”
Coach Ludlum shared that same thought.
“Yeah, we’ve been having conversations just ‘why not us?’,” said Ludlum. “Why can’t we be the number one team. I just think they showed up and played together and we’re all really excited to see what’s to come [next week at the State Tournament.]”
Fargo North opens up the tournament against the West four-seed, Bismarck High. The game will take place at 12 P.M. Central Time on Thursday, May 30. The tournament runs through Saturday, June 1. The entire tournament will be played in Dickinson, North Dakota at Sanford Sports Complex.
Stay tuned throughout the week/weekend for continued coverage of the tournament on air and online.
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The softball EDC tournament was played in Casselton, North Dakota. 30 minutes East at Starion field in Fargo, the baseball EDC Champ was crowned.
The Shanley Deacons did not have it easy. After not playing on Thursday or Friday due to weather, the Deacons won their only two games on Saturday. As a result of their perfect a 11-0 conference regular season record, Shanley won the EDC title and will represent the East at State as the number one seed.
Senior pitcher and outfielder Jordan Leininger explained what the weekend was like for him and his squad.
“On Thursday we were supposed to play… at one or something, but then…one of the games in front of us went late… then it kept getting moved back…more rain came and then called the game,” said Leininger. “On Friday, tornado sirens went off and then the game got canceled. Today, here we are three days later as [EDC Champs].
Head Coach Luke Rustad said the weekend was tough, but his players powered through.
“It was crazy because you’re worried about where the guys minds go,” said Rustad. [Guys were like] ‘Hey, am I still pitching or am I still doing this’. We just kept making sure we were having our regular batting practices, keeping the kids in the loop and making sure that they’re ready to go.”
While some teams may falter when not knowing when/if they will play a conference tournament game on the weekend, the Deacons stayed composed and thrived.
Shanley won their first round game 18-0 over Fargo South. They followed that up with a 4-0 win over the three-time defending State Champion West Fargo Sheyenne Mustangs.
Leininger credits his team for staying focused throughout the weekend.
“We have a ton of senior leadership which I love,” said Leininger. “Quite a few of us have started varsity since our sophomore year. So, we have a lot of experience, but also the young guys being able to step up when we need them.”
Coach Rustad shared the same thought.
“I think it’s just a testament to having seniors that have played a lot of baseball,” said Rustad. [They have] been through a lot of different athletic success in games and being able to keep their heads and just be ready to go when it was time to play.”
The deacons now head to Dickinson in search of their first state title since 2013. After falling just one game short multiple times in the last decade, the team believes they have what it takes to end this season on top.
“We’ve had a lot of experience with playing Sheyenne and State Championships,” said Leininger. “So, this group knows a lot what it takes to get it done. I think that’s what separates us.”
As for Coach Rustad, he says, “[The] leadership we have on the team was even keel and ready to go [this weekend]. So, hopefully that’s the kind of mentality we’ll take into the State Tournament. Hopefully we play good baseball.”
Shanley opens up the tournament against the West four-seed, Williston. The game will take place at 12:30 P.M. Central Time on Thursday, May 30. The tournament runs through Saturday, June 1. The entire tournament will be played in Dickinson, North Dakota at Dakota Community Bank & Trust Ballpark.
Stay tuned throughout the week/weekend for continued coverage of the tournament on air and online.
North Dakota
Challengers declare victory after ND Supreme Court rules against Legislature’s attempt to alter term limits
BISMARCK — A constitutional ballot measure to amend the state’s term limits law as proposed by the Legislature will not appear on November’s ballot, the North Dakota Supreme Court ruled Thursday, siding with petitioners who argued the Legislature exceeded its authority and violated the state constitution in proposing the changes.
“The people’s voice was heard,” Grand Forks County Commissioner Terry Bjerke said in reaction to the news.
Bjerke was a member of the sponsoring committee behind the successful 2022 effort to pass a term limits initiative, which amended the state constitution by capping legislative term limits to eight years in the House and eight years in the Senate. The amendment, which became article XV of the state constitution, also included a clause barring the Legislature from making constitutional changes to term limits.
During the 2025 session, however, lawmakers narrowly approved Senate Concurrent Resolution 4008, in which the legislature proposed Constitutional Measure 1, a ballot measure to amend the term limits language to allow legislators to decide in which chamber they want to serve their 16 years, and to repeal the clause limiting the legislative assembly’s authority to propose an amendment to alter or repeal term limits.
Bjerke and former Minot legislator Oley Larsen brought the lawsuit challenging the validity of the Legislature’s action in January, and the state Supreme Court
heard oral arguments in the case
this spring.
“Those term limits may only be altered by a measure proposed by the people rather than the Legislative Assembly. And yet a few years later, the Legislative Assembly is doing what they are prohibited from doing,” attorney Zachary Wallen argued on Bjerke and Larsen’s behalf.
Tanner Ecker / The Bismarck Tribune
The Legislature’s attorneys argued the clause prohibiting legislative proposals to alter the constitutional term limits language “infringes on our republican form of government” by “limiting the people’s ability to vote on amendments proposed by their elected officials.”
Justice Jon Jensen seemed skeptical of that argument during the April 2 hearing, questioning whether a second vote was appropriate.
“The public did speak on this. The public spoke on it when it passed the original constitutional amendment and they said, ‘Legislature, you don’t even get to propose a change.’ They have already spoken on it,” Jensen said. “You want a second shot, or a second bite at the apple, not a first one, a second.”
In Thursday’s ruling, all five justices sided with Bjerke and Larsen.
“We … conclude the Legislative Assembly’s adoption of S.C.R. 4008 violated N.D. Const. art. XV … and declare S.C.R. 4008 and Constitutional Measure 1 void … We enjoin the Secretary of State from placing Constitutional Measure 1 on the November 2026 general election ballot,” the ruling said.
Bjerke thanked the legal team that worked on behalf of their lawsuit, and said he was grateful the court reached the conclusion it did.
“I’m thrilled that what the people voted on and approved has been validated,” Bjerke said.
He added that the Legislature had “multiple opportunities” to address term limits prior to 2022’s initiated measure and chose not to, and gave a nod to the country’s coming milestone and the process by which voters expressed their support for term limits.
“We’ve lasted 250 years,” Bjerke said. “I have two words for those elected leaders who think they aren’t: everyone’s replaceable.”
North Dakota
Fargo woman convicted in North Dakota fraud case now faces charges in Minnesota: A deeper dive
FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – A North Dakota woman who was sentenced to 180 days in jail in Cass County for defrauding healthcare providers and Medicaid programs is now facing additional fraud charges in Minnesota.
Christine Marie Pryor, 55, pleaded guilty in November 2024 to theft by deception involving more than $50,000. She was sentenced to first serve 180 days with a 3-year sentence suspended. She received credit for 44 days already served.
Pryor was ordered to pay $82,584.78 in restitution to Southeast Human Services in Fargo, where she worked between 2018 and 2019.
How the scheme unfolded
According to court documents, Pryor worked at multiple healthcare facilities in North Dakota and Minnesota between 2018 and 2023, using the identities and credentials of three licensed professionals without their knowledge. She submitted fraudulent Capella University diplomas and transcripts to gain employment.
Investigators say Pryor admitted she searched state licensing websites for therapists who shared her first name, then used those therapists’ last names and license numbers when applying for jobs.
At Southeast Human Services, where she worked as a Licensed Addiction Counselor, Pryor earned $55,584.82 while providing therapy services to approximately 150 patients. She also opened her own counseling center, NIAM Brain Injury Center, in Fargo between 2020 and 2021, and worked at The Lotus Center in Moorhead, Minnesota, from 2021 to 2023.
Court documents say the three licensed professionals whose identities were used told investigators they had no knowledge of Pryor’s actions and did not give her permission to use their information.
Two additional charges against Pryor in North Dakota, unauthorized use of personal identifying information, were dismissed on motion of the state.
Additional charges in Minnesota
Pryor is also facing charges in Minnesota. Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison announced on Tuesday charges against Pryor in Clay County District Court for six theft offenses and six identity theft offenses related to defrauding Minnesota’s Medicaid program of more than $150,000.
According to the Minnesota complaint, Pryor claimed to provide psychotherapy and alcohol and drug counseling services to Medicaid recipients despite having no license or credentials to do so. Prosecutors allege she used the credentials and identities of three licensed professionals while claiming to provide Medicaid-funded services to 169 clients.
The Minnesota charges were filed as part of National Health Care Fraud Takedown Day, a joint effort involving the Department of Justice and more than 40 state Medicaid Fraud Control Units.
Copyright 2026 KVLY. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
NCAA Set to Change Unpopular Football Rule Just in Time for North Dakota State’s FBS Jump
North Dakota State playing in the FCS playoffs and College Football Playoff in back-to-back years? It’s likelier than you think.
That’s because on Wednesday, according to a report from Ross Dellenger of Yahoo! Sports, the NCAA Division I cabinet voted to repeal a rule that effectively barred teams transitioning from FCS to FBS from playing in postseason games in their first FBS seasons. The Bison are making that move along with Sacramento State in 2026.
The reported change has been a long time coming; the rule has hampered teams from immediate bowl eligibility for decades. Its good intentions of dissuading teams from rashly making the FCS-to-FBS leap have been rendered obsolete in recent years by the fact that programs generally arrive in FBS more prepared than ever before.
Consider the number of new FBS teams that have had to work within the provision in the past decade alone
That list includes: Liberty (home for the holidays at 6–6 in 2018), James Madison (8–3 in 2022 under coach Curt Cignetti, and barely able to play in a bowl at 11–1 in ’23 due to a lack of bowl-eligible teams), Jacksonville State (8–4 in ’23 before backing in like the Dukes), Missouri State (7–5 in 2025, also backed in) and Delaware (6–6 in ’25, ditto).
James Madison in particular became a cause célèbre in ’23 because it started the season 10-0, climbing as high as No. 18 in the AP Poll in mid-November. Then-Virginia attorney general Jason Miyares bandied about suing the NCAA before the Dukes lost 26–23 to Appalachian State, an event that caused the program to back off and accept a bid to play Air Force in the Armed Forces Bowl. James Madison lost that game 31–21, by which time Cignetti had left for Indiana.
There was a time when the FCS-to-FBS jump was an imposing one, and the NCAA did not want to incentivize making it lightly—not even a proud Florida A&M program could make a mid-2000s attempt at a jump stick. However, the Flames, Dukes and other teams have shown it’s not so great a climb for programs with the right resources and management.
Now the Bison and the Hornets stand to benefit.
How far can North Dakota State and Sacramento State go in the near term?
The Bison opened 12–0 last year before a shock loss to Illinois State in the FCS playoffs’ second round, so that question may answer itself. North Dakota State does not play a single Power 4 team—a potential strength-of-schedule albatross if it has designs on really surging. A potential roadblock: the fact that the Bison have to visit the Mountain West’s two favorites, UNLV (Oct. 10) and New Mexico (Oct. 24).
It’s a different story for the Hornets, a 7–5 squad a year ago whose move to the FBS is widely seen as a gamble on their growth potential. Sacramento State also does not play a major-conference team, but has a breakneck travel schedule ahead of it—the Hornets will visit Ypsilanti, Mich.; Bowling Green, Ohio; Muncie, Ind.; Mount Pleasant, Mich. and Honolulu. Combine that with a first-year coach—Oakland native and ex-MC Hammer choreographer Alonzo Carter—and it could be a long FBS debut in California’s capital.
More College Football From Sports Illustrated
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