North Dakota
No. 12 Southern Illinois vs. No. 9 North Dakota Preview, Prediction, And How To Watch
No. 12 Southern Illinois hosts No. 9 North Dakota this weekend in a ranked FCS matchup.
Both squads eye a key ranked victory for their playoff resumes. Check out our preview and prediction below.
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Southern Illinois vs. North Dakota On TV
The matchup between Southern Illinois and North Dakota will air on ESPN+.
Kickoff is at 2 p.m. CT on Saturday, Oct. 18. It is taking place at Saluki Stadium in Carbondale, Ill.
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Southern Illinois vs. North Dakota Preview
In a lighter FCS slate, this is a massive showdown.
SIU is 4-2 overall and 3-1 vs. the FCS (loss at North Dakota State) and is eyeing its first ranked victory. UND is 4-2 overall and 4-1 vs. the FCS (loss at Montana), earning its first ranked win last week against Youngstown State, who was ranked No. 20 at the time and is now No. 25.
The Salukis had a lot of momentum entering last week, holding a No. 8 national ranking. A 45-17 loss at NDSU may have softened expectations, but a win this weekend gets SIU back on track to being ranked in the Top 10. Quarterback DJ Williams will need to keep carrying the offense to wins. He’s been excellent this season, completing 64.4% of his passes for 1,404 yards, 11 touchdowns, and three interceptions while leading the team with 427 rushing yards and 10 scores. Vinson Davis III is his go-to target with 31 catches for 547 yards and three touchdowns.
It’ll be a tough test on the road for UND’s defense, an improved unit from last season. The Fighting Hawks are allowing 18.8 points per game (No. 14 in the FCS) and 95.5 rushing yards per game (No. 6). Teams have found some success through the air, averaging 224.2 passing yards per game (No. 76). Malachi McNeal is having a great season, tallying 44 tackles. Lance Rucker has played a significant role in UND’s increased disruption, adding 36 tackles, seven tackles for loss, and four sacks.
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The other side of the ball may be the difference-maker.
UND is playing good ball offensively and defensively. SIU, meanwhile, has to make strides defensively, allowing 25.0 points per game, 186.7 rushing yards per game, and 216.8 passing yards per game. In the last three contests, SIU has allowed 31 points to SEMO, 27 to Indiana State, and 45 to NDSU.
The Hawks are clicking offensively, scoring 39.3 points per game (No. 10 in the FCS), just ahead of SIU’s 39.0. Coupled with a strong offensive line and ground game led by Sawyer Seidl (336 yards, three TDs) and Gaven Ziebarth (266 yards, three TDs), UND has found an explosive passing attack. Sophomore QB Jerry Kaminski has been terrific in his first year as a starter, completing 61.9% of his passes for 1,217 yards, 17 touchdowns, and one interception, plus rushing for 241 yards and three TDs. Northern Arizona transfer receiver B.J. Fleming leads the offense with 22 receptions for 442 yards and four touchdowns.
UND has looked like a more balanced team than SIU. The Hawks can throw it effectively, run it effectively, and have played strong defense. That will travel well for a crucial road win on Saturday.
Prediction: UND 35-28

North Dakota
Hawks Split Friday Doubleheader against NDSU and Omaha – University of North Dakota Athletics
GRAND FORKS, N.D. – The North Dakota softball team went 1-1 on Friday, falling to Omaha 9-0 in the first game and defeating North Dakota State 2-0 in the nightcap from Albrecht Field. The Hawks now sit at 26-21 overall and 3-9 in Summit League play on the season.
It was a tale of two games for UND, from getting shutout in game one to doing the shutting out in game two. Chloe Bethune was 3-for-4 on the day with a walk, reaching base four times.
Game 1 – Omaha 9, UND 0
UND was outhit 8-2, with the Hawks hits coming from Tyler Price and Bethune. NoDak had three total base runners in the contest.
Unity Nelson took the loss in the circle, falling to 9-8 on the season. The sophomore went 1.2 innings and gave up seven earned runs on just three hits, with five walks. Camryn Lasota came in for relief, throwing a season-high 3.1 innings, giving up two earned runs, five hits, one walk with one strikeout.
How It Happened
Both teams went down in order in the first inning, but Omaha struck with seven runs in the second on just four hits. Following a double and two walks, Sammy Schmidt hit a no-out double to right field, bringing home Katherine Johnson and Marra Cramer to take a 2-0 lead.
Nelson recorded the first out of the inning on an Ava Rongisch pop up, before throwing a wild pitch which allowed Alyson Edwards to score to make it 3-0. Following two more walks and a Taylor Sedlacek sac fly, UND was down 4-0. The Mavs scored three more in the inning, headlined by a Bailey Sample two-out double. NoDak trailed 7-0 after three.
The Mavericks scored two more in the top of the third to open up a 9-0 lead. UND got its first hit in the bottom of the fourth on a Price infield single, but the Hawks could not get anything going offensively, falling 9-0 in the first game.
Game 2 – UND 2, NDSU 0
Game two was the Tegan Livesay show, as the junior tossed her 13th complete game and fifth complete game shutout of the season, improving to 12-8 in 2026. She went 7.0 innings, surrendering just six hits and three walks with five huge punchouts. She recorded nine groundouts and threw 131 pitches. Livesay left 10 Bison stranded on base.
The Hawks scored two runs through the first two innings, first on a Bethune RBI single to center field in the bottom of the first, which was followed by an RBI double down the left field line from Makenna Alexander in the bottom of the second.
The hit battle was even at 6-6 in the contest, led by Bethune who went 2-for-2 at the plate. Alexander, Taya Hopfauf, Katelyn Neumayer and Aleksia Severson each poured in a hit as well.
How It Happened
Livesay was weaving in and out of traffic all night, battling out of a bases loaded jam in the top of the first. Amai Hanta from NDSU walked to start the game and stole both second and third base to give the Bison a runner on third with no outs. Livesay recorded a massive strikeout on Star Cortez, which was followed by a walk to Bella Dean, setting up runners on the corners with one out.
Jessica Delatorre lined out to Severson for the second out, before Lileigh Nieto walked to load up the bases. Mya Boos grounded out into a 6-4 fielders choice to end the frame on some nifty glove work from Severson to keep it at 0-0.
Alexander and Price both struck out to start the second inning, before Hopfauf and Neumayer both singled. Jaedyn Valdez followed that up with a hit-by-pitch, loading up the bases for Bethune. The sophomore came through with a massive single up the middle, giving UND a 1-0 lead.
Livesay left two stranded in the second inning, surrendering a leadoff infield single to Taylinn Warren. Warren then advanced to second base on a passed ball, but Livesay got Zoe King to strikeout swinging next.
The next batter grounded out to Livesay, before another infield single, this one by Hanta to put runners on the corners. Livesay got Cortez to groundout to first base, where Neumayer took it to the bag for the 3U inning ending putout.
In the bottom of the second, Brooklyn Morris reached on a one-out walk and advanced to second base on a wild pitch. Alexander then belted a ball down the third base line to bring home Morris, giving NoDak a 2-0 lead after two.
Livesay sat down the Bison 1-2-3 in the third and fourth innings before leaving two stranded in the top of the fifth. Hanta and Cortez both logged one-out singles and executed double steals, to give the Bison second and third with one out. Livesay got Dean to line out to short, before punching out Delatorre to get out of the jam.
NoDak stranded a runner on second base in the top of the sixth, with a chance to close it out in the top of the seventh. Livesay sat down Ella Claus, before allowing an infield single to Hanta, sending the tying run to the plate for the Bison.
Cortez was able to reach safely on a fielding error by Livesay, giving NDSU runners on first and second with one out. The junior pitcher did not flinch, striking out Dean on a 3-2 count to make it two outs. Livesay completed the complete game shutout, getting Delatorre to pop out to second base, as UND secured its third-straight win over NDSU.
Game two of the series will take place tomorrow at 1 p.m. on Midco Sports.
For more information on North Dakota Softball, follow on social media @UNDsoftball or visit FightingHawks.com.
North Dakota
Glatt to retire from ND Department of Environmental Quality; Armstrong thanks him for 43 years of service
BISMARCK, N.D. – Gov. Kelly Armstrong today thanked North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) Director Dave Glatt for his 43 years of service to the state as Glatt announced his retirement as the first – and only – director of DEQ since it became a standalone agency in 2019. His retirement is effective July 31.
“Dave has dedicated more than four decades of his life to protecting North Dakota’s air, land and water with a regulatory approach that boils down to one simple rule: follow the science,” Armstrong said. “He rejected federal overreach and ideology-based regulation, instead holding firm to a cooperative, common-sense approach that allows North Dakotans to enjoy some of the cleanest air and water in the country as our economy thrives. We’ll miss Dave’s leadership, his expertise and his wry sense of humor. We thank him for his exceptional service and wish him all the best in retirement.”
Glatt was appointed DEQ director in May 2019 by then-Gov. Doug Burgum and reappointed by Armstrong in 2024. Prior to that, he served as chief of the North Dakota Department of Health’s Environmental Health Section from 2002 to 2019. He also previously served as the section’s Division of Waste Management director, interim director of Consolidated Laboratories, Division of Water Quality assistant director, and Groundwater Protection Program manager.
During his long career in state government, Glatt helped implement the Safe Drinking Water Act in North Dakota and was the state project manager for an EPA Superfund project to address high arsenic levels in groundwater in southeastern North Dakota. Through collaboration with government at all levels, industry and citizens of the state, Glatt helped ensure that North Dakota remains a clean air state, maintains high regulatory standards and leads through the efficient implementation of all environmental protection programs.
“It has been a privilege to work alongside so many dedicated professionals and North Dakotans who care deeply about protecting our shared environment,” Glatt said. “They made this work enjoyable, rewarding and meaningful, and I’m deeply grateful.”
Born in Valley City and raised in Milpitas, Calif., Glatt graduated from North Dakota State University where he earned a bachelor’s degree in biology and a master’s degree in environmental engineering. He briefly worked for the Los Angeles Flood Control District before returning to North Dakota in 1983, joining the Department of Health.
The 2017 Legislative Assembly passed legislation separating the Environmental Health Section from the Department of Health to create the standalone DEQ. On April 29, 2019, DEQ became an independent agency after all programs completed a federal review and approval process.
Currently, DEQ has a two-year total budget of $141.8 million and is authorized for 175 full-time employees in six divisions: Air Quality, Chemistry, Municipal Facilities, Waste Management, and Office of Director.
North Dakota
Space Force proposes $250 million operations center at Grand Forks Air Force Base
GRAND FORKS, N.D. (Valley News Live) — The U.S. Space Force wants to build a $250 million space operations center at Grand Forks Air Force Base as part of President Trump’s 2027 defense budget request.
The facility would be about 180,000 square feet and built as a Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility, or SCIF, designed to handle top-secret information. It would house highly classified missile-warning and missile-tracking operations, as well as the space data network.
The project would bring more than 100 Space Force and National Reconnaissance Office personnel to the base across two to three fully manned squadrons, according to North Dakota Senators John Hoeven and Kevin Cramer.
“This new project puts Grand Forks right at the center of what’s next in space operations,” Cramer said in a statement. “It speaks to the depth of our Airmen and Guardians’ expertise and why this base keeps getting tapped for the most important and modern missions.”
The facility builds on the low-Earth orbit satellite mission already at Grand Forks, which serves as the backbone of U.S. military communications. Hoeven worked to establish that mission and has been pushing to add missile-tracking and advanced fire-control capabilities.
The three-story facility will include a 500-person auditorium for secure briefings and conferences, as well as a dining area to support 24/7 operations, according to the Space Force.
Hoeven, a member of the Senate Defense Appropriations Committee, said he spoke with Space Force Chief of Operations Gen. Chance Saltzman about the proposal this week. He said he will work to secure funding through the annual appropriations process.
Design is expected to start later this year if Congress approves the funding.
Copyright 2026 KVLY. All rights reserved.
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