South Dakota
South Dakota football cruises past Southern Illinois in conference opener
ootball coach Bob Nielson discusses his team’s first conference win
South Dakota football earned their first conference win of the season on Saturday, defeating Southern Illinois 42-13.
VERMILLION, S.D. — The matchup against Southern Illinois was supposed to be South Dakota football’s first real test of the 2024 season.
The Coyotes dominated in both of their wins over Northern State and Drake, and even put up a fight against Wisconsin in Week 2, but a matchup against a conference opponent would really show where USD stands.
And what Saturday’s game showed is that the No. 17 Salukis were no match for No. 5 South Dakota as the Coyotes defeated Southern Illinois, 42-13.
“I’m getting up there where I don’t necessarily celebrate birthdays much, because I’ve had too many of them, but that’s great way to celebrate one right there,” South Dakota football coach Bob Nielson said. “That’s a tremendous win against a really good team where all three phases of the game went out and executed at a high level. So we’re really proud of (how) our team played today, and excited to keep building forward here”
USD pounced on the Salukis from the jump, scoring 14 in the first while holding SIU scoreless through the first frame. South Dakota added another 21 points in the second and gave up just one touchdown on a quick pass play to go into halftime in firm control, leading 35-7.
Senior quarterback Aidan Bouman had one of his best games of the season throwing for 247 yards and two touchdowns. The run game also looked impressive, especially in the first quarter. Travis Theis paced the running back room with 147 yards and two touchdowns on 25 carries.
South Dakota was also strong defensively, particularly when it came to stopping Southern Illinois on third down in the first half. They only allowed the Salukis to convert on four of 11 third-down attempts.
Here are a few takeaways from South Dakota’s first conference win of the season.
All South Dakota early
Last week’s 42-3 win over Drake was the most complete the USD offense had looked, until this week anyway. And this week’s game being the first against a conference opponent makes the performance that much more impressive.
South Dakota took clear control of the game early, scoring on five of their first seven drives while only allowing one touchdown. The Coyotes took a comfortable 35-7 lead into halftime and really weren’t threatened in the second half.
“We were super efficient in the first half,” Nielson said. “Scoring 35 points in a half against a Missouri Valley defense is something pretty special.”
The run game decided this one
Nielson issued a challenge to his team early in the week heading into the matchup against Southern Illinois. He wanted them to play with a high level of physicality. They were going to need it in their first game against Missouri Valley competition.
The Coyotes on the offensive and defensive line answered the call.
South Dakota’s offensive lineman opened up significant gaps for their explosive backs to get through. USD’s run game got going early against the 27th-best run defense in the FCS. Theis rushed for 45 yards and a touchdown in the first quarter while the other half to his dynamic duo, Charles Pierre Jr., added 22 yards and another touchdown. Theis ended the night with 106 rushing yards while Pierre Jr. ran for 84.
The Salukis allowed only 112.8 rushing yards per game entering Saturday’s contest, but USD surpassed that, rushing for 302 yards against Southern Illinois.
“That sounds like Coyote offense,” Theis said postgame when told the team’s rushing stats. “I think we have a 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, punch, really. It can be anybody.”
On the other side of the ball the defensive linemen exerted pressure and limited the Salukis’ rushing attack. The Coyotes held Southern Illinois to just 60 rushing yards in the entire game.
“That was one of the things going in. You know, whichever team is going to make the other one more one dimensional is going to have a chance to win the game,” Nielson said. “Offensively we were very balanced, defensively we wouldn’t let them run the football.”
USD’s passing offense came to life in the second quarter
The second quarter was all Coyotes but their approach was a little different than in the first quarter. Because the run game dominated in the first, Southern Illinois focused their coverage on stopping the run, opening up the passing game.
After throwing for just 37 yards in the first quarter, Bouman ended the first half with 220 yards and two touchdowns. A couple of highlight plays accounted for the majority of that yardage. The first was an 80-yard touchdown pass from Bouman to JJ Galbreath and the second was a 61-yard touchdown pass to Quaron Adams.
“They know we’re a really good running team, so we took advantage early of our matchups outside,” Bouman said postgame. “We have a lot of skill and a lot of speed out there, and it’s my job to let them make a play, and they did a great job of that today.”
This performance from Bouman was a great sign for a team that has been talking about wanting to be more explosive offensively. The senior quarterback finished the game with 247 passing yards and two touchdowns, completing 11 of his 17 passes.
Up next
South Dakota will travel to Murray, Ky. to face Murray State on Saturday, Oct. 5 at 2 p.m.
Jonathan Fernandez covers high school and college sports for the Argus Leader. Contact him at jfernandez1@argusleader.com. Follow him on Twitter at@JFERN31
South Dakota
6 Most Relaxing South Dakota Towns
South Dakota knows how to slow down. Hot Springs runs an 87-degree natural mineral pool that has drawn visitors since 1890. Spearfish anchors itself with a working fish hatchery dating back to 1896. Mitchell rebuilds its Corn Palace exterior every year out of actual corn. These are six of the state’s most relaxing small towns.
Aberdeen
Aberdeen sits in the James River valley of northeastern South Dakota, known locally for being the closest thing the state has to an Oz theme park. Storybook Land, a free-admission public park on the north side of the city, is built around L. Frank Baum’s connection to the area. Baum lived and published in Aberdeen in the 1880s, and the park features a full Wizard of Oz land with a yellow brick road, the Emerald City, and Dorothy’s House. The same park complex includes a castle, fairy-tale attractions, and a small petting zoo.
Downtown, the Hagerty & Lloyd Historic District holds some of Aberdeen’s oldest homes and buildings, including the Margaret and Maurice Lamont House, a Tudor Revival. Richmond Lake Recreation Area, about 10 miles northwest of town, adds hiking, biking, and camping on a reservoir that is the local summer anchor.
Hot Springs
Relaxation is built into Hot Springs. You can soak in the warm natural waters of the Evans Plunge Mineral Springs, which have drawn visitors for over a century. Established in 1890, the spring-fed waters naturally hold a year-round 87-degree temperature. In addition to the thermal springs at Evans Plunge, you have hot tubs, steam rooms, slides, and more.
Beyond the soak, the Mammoth Site is an active paleontological dig featuring remains of Ice Age giants. Consider booking a stay at the historic Red Rock River Resort Hotel & Spa, a sandstone building constructed in 1891. Family-owned and located downtown, the hotel offers quality care and a well-preserved interior. It’s within walking distance of Evans Plunge and other hot spring locations.
Lead
A close neighbor to the busier Deadwood, Lead is a town every bit as historic and far more relaxing. It’s an old mining town at its core, with several modern amenities along its historic Main Street. The Black Hills Mining Museum showcases the area’s gold rush, while the Homestake Opera House, which hosts year-round tours, concerts, dances, and educational events, is a century-old building that once held a bowling alley, billiards hall, and more.
For families, the Sanford Lab Homestake Visitor Center takes a deep dive into the region’s history, its people, and the ongoing scientific research conducted in its underground laboratories. Lead is the right town for South Dakota’s Wild West history without the commercial trappings.
Spearfish
On the northern edge of the Black Hills, Spearfish sits at the mouth of Spearfish Canyon, a 19-mile limestone gorge cut by Spearfish Creek that drops several notable waterfalls along its length. The Spearfish Canyon Scenic Byway follows the canyon floor, past Bridal Veil Falls and Roughlock Falls, and provides one of the most reliably beautiful and uncrowded drives in the state. The D.C. Booth Historic National Fish Hatchery, established in 1896 and now run as a historic site, anchors the town’s history with restored buildings, raceway ponds full of visible trout, and the Von Bayer Museum of Fish Culture.
Downtown Spearfish has a walkable core along Main Street with local restaurants including Killian’s Food and Drink and Lucky’s 13 Pub. For shorter outings, Spearfish City Park features the hatchery at one end, a sculpture walk along the creek, and shaded picnic grounds. Combined with its easy access to Deadwood, Lead, and the rest of the northern Black Hills, Spearfish offers a strong base for anyone wanting to relax without giving up access to outdoor activities.
Custer
Custer is the gateway to Custer State Park, a 71,000-acre preserve in the southern Black Hills that holds one of the largest publicly owned bison herds in the country, roughly 1,300 head, along with elk, pronghorn, and mule deer. The Wildlife Loop Road runs 18 miles through open grassland and mixed pine, with frequent wildlife sightings. Jewel Cave National Monument, 15 miles west of town, has more than 215 mapped miles of passages, ranking it among the longest cave systems in the world.
Downtown Custer itself is compact, with Sage Creek Grille serving elk-stuffed mushrooms and other regional dishes; it has been a fixture on Mount Rushmore Road for two decades. The Crazy Horse Memorial, still under construction since 1948, sits 15 miles north on Highway 385. For outdoor activity, Custer is the closest town to both the 109-mile Mickelson rail-trail and the trailhead for Black Elk Peak, the highest point in South Dakota at 7,242 feet.
Mitchell
Mitchell is home to the Corn Palace, a civic auditorium on Main Street whose exterior is redesigned every year out of actual corn, grain, and native grasses by a rotating group of local artists. The original structure dates to 1892, with the current building completed in 1921. New murals go up each summer. The building hosts high school basketball, concerts, and the annual Corn Palace Festival in late August. Admission is free year-round.
Woolworth’s Caramel Apples, next door, has been making the same recipe since the 1950s. The Dakota Discovery Museum a few blocks away covers regional history with a restored 1886 one-room schoolhouse, 1900 farmhouse, and 1909 Italianate home, plus a collection of Native American art and early 20th-century prairie paintings by Oscar Howe and Harvey Dunn.
Visit Relaxing South Dakota Today
These six towns split fairly cleanly between two South Dakotas: the prairie side, Aberdeen and Mitchell, and the Black Hills side, Hot Springs, Lead, Spearfish, and Custer. The prairie towns are anchored by one or two strong local institutions and a quieter pace. The Black Hills towns are anchored by the landscape itself. Either side rewards a weekend, and together they give you a fuller picture of the state than Mount Rushmore alone ever could.
South Dakota
South Dakota teaching apprenticeship cohorts to expand
The state Teacher Apprenticeship Pathway has both increased its cohort size and endowed about 50 new teachers. Advocates say in a state with a noted teacher shortage, it represents steps toward closing the gap for educators.
The pathway gives qualified and interested paraprofessionals the opportunity to advance their careers and become fully fledged teachers.
For Kathryn Blaha, state Department of Education Division of Accreditation director, it does make a difference in the lives of those involved, and the communities they serve.
“As I listen to people who have been accepted into the program and hear their stories, it’s an opportunity for them to make a difference at a different level in the classroom, but it’s also making a significant impact on the communities that they’re living in and the financial changes for their own personal children,” Blaha said.
These cohorts are expanding to provide more opportunities on the back of support from the governor.
“We’ve had state support for additional funding for the program,” Blaha said. “It really is a program that allows individuals who otherwise may not have had an opportunity to seek a position as a teacher in a classroom to gain the experience and training to do so.”
As a result, Blaha said the new cohort will have over 70 positions. That’s the largest group since the inception of the program in 2023.
“It’s been a tremendous program,” Blaha said. “We have 118 that have graduated as of the spring and summer 2026 graduation ceremonies. We’re really to the impact and the differences those individuals will make.”
The program is run through Northern State University and takes an average of two years to complete.
South Dakota
SD Lottery Mega Millions, Millionaire for Life winning numbers for May 12, 2026
The South Dakota Lottery offers multiple draw games for those aiming to win big.
Here’s a look at May 12, 2026, results for each game:
Winning Mega Millions numbers from May 12 drawing
17-32-35-40-47, Mega Ball: 17
Check Mega Millions payouts and previous drawings here.
Winning Millionaire for Life numbers from May 12 drawing
19-21-35-38-53, Bonus: 01
Check Millionaire for Life payouts and previous drawings here.
Feeling lucky? Explore the latest lottery news & results
Are you a winner? Here’s how to claim your prize
- Prizes of $100 or less: Can be claimed at any South Dakota Lottery retailer.
- Prizes of $101 or more: Must be claimed from the Lottery. By mail, send a claim form and a signed winning ticket to the Lottery at 711 E. Wells Avenue, Pierre, SD 57501.
- Any jackpot-winning ticket for Dakota Cash or Lotto America, top prize-winning ticket for Lucky for Life, or for the second prizes for Powerball and Mega Millions must be presented in person at a Lottery office. A jackpot-winning Powerball or Mega Millions ticket must be presented in person at the Lottery office in Pierre.
When are the South Dakota Lottery drawings held?
- Powerball: 9:59 p.m. CT on Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday.
- Mega Millions: 10 p.m. CT on Tuesday and Friday.
- Lucky for Life: 9:38 p.m. CT daily.
- Lotto America: 9:15 p.m. CT on Monday, Wednesday and Saturday.
- Dakota Cash: 9 p.m. CT on Wednesday and Saturday.
- Millionaire for Life: 10:15 p.m. CT daily.
This results page was generated automatically using information from TinBu and a template written and reviewed by a South Dakota editor. You can send feedback using this form.
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