North Dakota
How do y’all deal with ‘the road’?
Travel is a bear, and not pleasant, outside of drifting down rural roads towards the goal of seeing something special.
It consumes the-ever-more-precious gasoline, saps energy and is a vacuum of the only commodity nothing can fill: Time.
Yeah, it makes no sense to the outside observer how y’all deal with sports in North Dakota, and being here might lead to investing in oil stocks while diversifying into Goodyear or Michelin to hedge your bets. It takes a great amount of energy to be an athlete in “the 701,” and you kids might wanna express some gratitude for the parents who sit in the stands to appreciate your talents. (Do it now, young-uns.)
For the imbecile sportswriter, it’s a challenge. But I appreciate your hard-work towards what might seem ephemeral efforts. Don’t get me wrong … I’m selfish and get paid-well for what I do, but it’s astounding the lengths you go-to in-order to satisfy relatively minor goals. So-far as I can tell, you athletes, parents, (especially grandparents) and schools deserve a massive level of gratitude.
I heard recently that in rural communities they accommodate the travel-time by hosting half-squad practices in the gyms at co-op schools to deal with mid-week nonsense and that blew me away. In the interest of working-out with your team(s), you split interests to manage the act of being part of effort? Four prep athletes separate from 7 other teammates because of the sundial, while recognizing how important the workouts are?
Just, wow.
For the goofballs who don’t recognize how important “sports” are, that should show them what lengths people go to in the pursuit of being “teammates.” The team is everything; the team leads to success; the team is who you trust when the chips are down. Honestly, I have enjoyed great teammates and crummy ones, benefited from the hard-work of the one and decried the lack-of-impact of another. You-know-whom-you are: You’re either part of the team, or you aren’t.
As an adult, working in any environment, I can tell the people who stood in the high-school hallways — looking-cool-while-not-being-cool — from those who sweat for the gain. The tragic lack of character that foments the mindset of not-caring is foreign to me, and while I recognize those who cannot be part of the game because of a lack-of-skill it doesn’t mean ya cannot try, no?
Rural North Dakota cannot be satisfied by “specialization,” as it pertains to the big-city landscape. Let’s say you care ONLY about hockey, and invest 100 hours-per-week towards those goals and only wanna focus on the one sport? If you’re talented, people depend on you … it’s your obligation to satisfy-the-demand, because you CAN. Truth-be-told, it’s not up to you. Those of you who grew up here know what I’m talking about, and it’s not a matter of pride. It’s a matter of necessity.
In rural Ohio during the 1960s, they let my Dad run track at meets outside baseball-game-days because they needed him and he did it because he could.
I have a buddy called “Fuzzy” from Nebraska, and his description of that hometown is similar to Bowman: “There was nothing-else to do,” so that’s-what they did. I can think of roughly 25 things that are more destractive (and participated in roughly 5 or so), and I wish I wouldn’t-a been so selfish. Three-sport athletes were the norm for “Fuzzy” and his school in Nebraska, not the exception.
While it would be fun to “Spider-Man” people into the understanding (“With great power comes great responsibility”) of community, it’s obvious some get-it while others don’t. What’s incumbent on us all is that there are many jobs that only can be accomplished by roughly 10% of us.
Be part of the 10%; that’s my advice.
YOU know who you are; look in the mirror and tell me it’s not true. I know the high-school parents who travel all-over-heaven’s-half-acre to satisfy the demand, and they ain’t doing it for themselves. While I recognize they should invest in gas-stocks and tire-rubber, they prolly don’t … it’s because their personal-investment matters.
Yes, some of it is a desire for the halcyon days of their youths and occasionally because they need something to do on a Tuesday-, Thursday- or Friday-night, but it’s mostly because they know athletics make their children better- and more-altruistic people. And because they truly FEEL it.
I dunno about you, but I would rather feel-something than feel-nothing. Also, it’s a preference to recall success and know what it built in myself.
But: The work comes first. And it’s gratifying to see people willing to toil, travel, and I’m looking forward to seeing you out there. Y’all matter.
Gaylon is a sportswriter who originally is from Jensen Beach, Fla. and his column appears weekly. He can be reached at
gparker@thedickinsonpress.com
and/or 701-456-1213.
Gaylon is a sportswriter from Jensen Beach, Fla., but has lived all over the world. Growing up with an athletic background gave him a love of sports that led to a journalism career in such places as Enid, Okla., Alamogordo, N.M., Pascagoula, Miss. and Viera, Fla. since 1998. His main passion is small-town community sports, particularly baseball and soccer.
North Dakota
Retired Game & Fish Director facing new charge of molesting a child – KVRR Local News
MANDAN, N.D. (KVRR-KFGO) – Former North Dakota Game & Fish Director Terry Steinwand has been charged with molesting a child.
The Class “A” misdemeanor was filed after a Morton County District Court judge rejected a proposed plea agreement to a felony charge and prosecutors dismissed the charge while retaining the right to file an amended charge.
Steinwand is from Mandan. The 72-year-old is now charged with one count of sexual assault-offensive contact. The charge carries a maximum sentence of one year in jail.
Steinwand was originally charged in September, 2025, when police say he admitted to sexual misconduct.
Steinwand worked for the Game & Fish Dept. for 40 years. He led the agency for about 15 years and retired in 2021.
North Dakota
SBHE to Review Ray Richards Alterations
(KNOX) – The North Dakota Board of Higher Education is being asked to weigh in on the reconstruction of Ray Richard’s Golf Course in Grand Forks. The upgrades and deferred maintenance improvements are the result of the pending DeMers Avenue/42nd Street Underpass project.
UND sold 6.5 acres of the nine hole course to the North Dakota Department of Transportation for the grade separation. During the road construction the golf course will be realigned and reduced to a par 34 course. UND will also address underground utilities and irrigation systems. The total cost is around 4.5 million dollars.
The course will close for the 2026 and 2027 seasons. The goal is to reopen in 2028. SBHE is expected to approve the design at its April 30th meeting.
Crews are expected to begin preliminary work on the $90 million dollar underpass project this week. The initial phase will have minimal impacts to traffic on both 42nd Street and DeMers Avenue. Larger impacts are expected later this summer.
North Dakota
Windy conditions fuel shop fire in rural Mapleton
MAPLETON, N.D. (Valley News Live) – Casselton Fire responded to a shop fire in rural Mapleton on Saturday afternoon, according to Casselton Fire Chief John Hejl.
Casselton Fire was dispatched to the scene at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. Windy conditions escalated the fire before crews arrived, Hejl said.
Firefighters used defensive and offensive lines to control the fire upon arrival.
Casselton Fire was assisted by Cass County Sheriff’s Office, Casselton Ambulance, West Fargo Police Department, Davenport Fire and Mapleton Fire.
Copyright 2026 KVLY. All rights reserved.
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