Minnesota
Kansas beats Minnesota 29-1, matches NCAA record with 5 straight homers
Brady Counsell of Kansas grew up watching his dad do plenty of incredible things on big league fields.
Craig Counsell was never a part of something like his son was Wednesday.
The younger Counsell hit the third of five consecutive home runs for Kansas, which propelled the Jayhawks to a 29-1 win over Minnesota in a game shortened to seven innings. The run of homers in Minneapolis matched an NCAA record set three time previously, most recently in 2006, when South Carolina accomplished the feat against Georgia.
No big league team has ever hit five straight home runs.
“I’ve never been a part of anything like that,” Brady Counsell said. “I think kind of in the moment I didn’t really realize that we had three, and after (Brady) Ballinger went deep that was four. We were kind of like, ‘Oh my gosh. What is happening?’”
Then Jackson Hauge went deep to make it five.
“And it was, ‘Wow! That’s crazy!’” Counsell said.
Counsell’s father, who is now the manager of the Chicago Cubs, hit 42 homers in 16 seasons and 4,741 big league at-bats.
The spree for Kansas started with Chase Diggins’ three-run shot with no outs in the third inning. Max Soliz Jr. went deep next, and Counsell, Ballinger and Hauge followed. The Jayhawks scored eight more times in the fifth inning to win in a rout, setting a school record for runs against a Division I opponent on the road.
Kansas also set a record for margin of victory against a Division I opponent.
“I’ve never seen that,” said the Jayhawks’ Dan Fitzgerald, who has been coaching college baseball for nearly 25 years. “We hit three in a row earlier in the year, and of course been a part of some of those, but never five in a row. It was super cool, and I love how engaged our guys were today. I thought our approach at the plate was awesome.”
The first college team to hit five consecutive homers was Centenary, which did it against Stephen F. Austin in the first inning of a game in 1992. Eastern Illinois matched the feat in the fifth inning against Morehead State in 1998.
“I actually didn’t know we had four when I went up to the plate because they made a pitching change,” said Hauge, who actually had two homers in the game. “It was Diggins, Soliz and then a pitching change. I was just going up there thinking, ‘This would be awesome to go back-to-back-to-back. When I got back in the dugout they yelled, ‘Five!’ So it was pretty cool.”
The record for consecutive homers in a big league game is four, which has happened 11 times.
Kansas is 15-2 heading into its Big 12 opener Friday against Baylor.
“The five home runs in a row? That was fun to be on the right side of it,” Fitzgerald said.
Minnesota
Here’s how much snow parts of Minnesota got on Saturday, Feb. 28
Storm reports in from Minnesota on Saturday, Feb. 28.
LANESBORO, Minn. (FOX 9) – Impressive snow totals were reported in parts of Minnesota after a narrow band of heavy snowfall worked its way across the state.
Minnesota snow totals for the last day of February 2026
Snow totals for Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026. (FOX 9)
By the numbers:
Many areas saw more snow than was expected before temperatures warm up in the coming days.
The following snow totals were reported across Minnesota:
- Lanesboro: 10 inches
- Preston: 10 inches
- St. Peter: 7 inches
- Stewartville: 7 inches
- Caledonia: 6 inches
- Nicollet: 6 inches
- New Ulm: 5.5 inches
- Rochester: 4.9 inches
- Mankato: 4.5 inches
The Source: This story uses information from the FOX 9 weather forecast and the National Weather Service.
Minnesota
East Range Police Department officer passes away
A police officer in northern Minnesota unexpectedly passed away earlier this week.
The East Range Police Department said that Sgt. Cody Siebert passed away on Friday, less than 24 hours after being diagnosed with a brain infection.
The department said that Siebert was known for his happy-go-lucky personality and that “if you couldn’t get along with Cody, it was your fault.”
Siebert started at the K9 program in Babbitt with K9 Taconite (Tac) before going to the East Range Police Department.
“The hole left by Sgt. Siebert’s passing will be impossible to fill,” East Range police said. “We at ERPD love you and will miss you always. We have it from here.”
Mesabi East Schools also stated that the district was “truly blessed to have him walking our halls, greeting students, encouraging staff, and building relationships that went far beyond the badge.”
Click here for a GoFundMe to support Siebert’s family.
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