Wisconsin
Wisconsin’s chance for a split with Penn State falls apart in third period
MADISON – The Wisconsin men’s hockey team moved the needle in the right direction on Jan. 24, but the bottom line didn’t change.
The Badgers, who are ranked No. 5 in the USCHO and USA Hockey polls, dropped their fourth straight game, falling, 3-1, to No. 8 Penn State at the Kohl Center in a game played in front of the largest home crowd of the season (13,255) and on a night when the 2006 national championship team was in attendance and honored.
Wisconsin threw a shutout before allowing three goals during the final 14 minutes 56 seconds.
The effort came one day after Badgers coach Mike Hastings challenged his players to look in the mirror to see where they can improve to help the team. What was on display Saturday was better than what UW showed Friday in a 7-2 loss, just not good enough.
“We talk about being process-driven and tonight our process was better,” Hastings said.
Wisconsin created more chances but couldn’t finish
The Badgers finished with a 41-33 edge in shots. They also out-shot their opponents in their three previous losses.
Finishing has been the problem. Wisconsin has averaged 1.8 goals per game during its losing streak. Before that the Badgers were averaging 4.2 goals per contest.
Saturday the team’s leaders in shots were seniors Ben Dexheimer (six shots), Aiden Dubinsky (six), wSimon Tassy (five) and Christian Fitzgerald (five).
The only shot that got through through ironically came while Wisconsin was short-handed. Fitzgerald did the honors at the 13:10 mark off a pass from senior Tyson Dyck.
Penn State goalie Kevin Reidler finished with 40 saves
“I think we generated definitely enough chances to win the game,” Fitzgerald said. ”I think ultimately the result was caused by our defensive blunders at times.
“I felt we were in a position to win a game there going into the third, and it’s on us to do better. Can’t let that slip away.”
Wisconsin’s Daniel Hauser finished with 30 saves
That said, the UW defense was more up to the challenge Saturday. It killed three penalties during the first two periods and the play of freshman Daniel Hauser, who finished with 30 saves, was more in line with what he has shown for most of the season.
“I think Daniel Hauser absolutely answered the bell tonight,” Hastings said. “Last night, I think if you asked him, he wanted to be better and he definitely was tonight.
“Now I thought we supported him a bit more tonight, but when we did leave him on an island, he made some very, very good saves, and kept them at that point to zero.”
The Nittany Lions got the game winner from junior Reese Laubach with 6:52 to play off the rebound of a Hauser save.
“I think it’s a team game. I think you completely win as a team and lose as a team …,” Fitzgerald said. “There’s a handful of plays that could have gone into the net, put us up a few more goals and ultimately we lost as a team tonight, and we need to be better.”
The game didn’t end without drama.
When Wisconsin’s Blake Montgomery and Penn State’s Gavin McKenna were called for facemasking and game misconduct penalties with 10 seconds to play. Penn State was also called for four persisting misconduct penalties and Wisconsn was hit with five.
“If you’re around our game long enough, it’s an emotional game,” Hastings said. “Guys are out there competing and sometimes it boils over. I will say, getting the guys off the ice that was probably the best thing for that situation.”
Penn State, which raised its record to 18-6 overall and 10-4 Big Ten (31 points) moved into a first-place tie in the conference with Michigan, which is idle this week.
Wisconsin (15-7-2, 8-6 Big Ten, 22 points) is firmly entrenched in fourth place, eight points behind third-place Michigan State and eight points head of Minnesota.
But if the Badgers aren’t careful, that could change next Friday and Saturday when they visit the Minneapolis. The Gophers are on an eight-game winless streak that includes seven losses.
“Obviously they’re pretty hungry,” junior Quinn Finley said. “We need to go on there with the right mindset and be ready to go Monday and make sure that we’re ready to go when we get to Minnesota.”.
Wisconsin
Thousands remain without power after Wisconsin storms
About 12,000 customers were without power as of 9:19 p.m. June 10 after severe storms moved across Wisconsin, according to the We Energies outage map.
The 279 outages were affecting 12,095 customers.
The number of outages is down from the nearly 38,000 customers reported around 5:10 p.m.
Which counties had the most power outages?
Kenosha County reported the highest number of We Energies customers without power, with 5,881, down from 10,221 around 8:45 p.m. Racine County had 1,631 customers without power, a change of just 13 customers in an hour and a half.
Other impacted areas include Dodge County with 1,491 customers without service, and Waukesha County with 1,438.
This story was updated to add new information.
Wisconsin
Severe thunderstorms bring power outages, wind damage to northeast Wisconsin
GRAND CHUTE, Wis. (WBAY) — Severe thunderstorms moved through northeast Wisconsin on Wednesday afternoon, leaving thousands without power and causing widespread wind damage.
According to poweroutage.us, as of 4 p.m. Fond du Lac County has 2,900 customers without power and Dodge County is at 3,600.
A tornado warning for Fond du Lac County expired last hour, but severe thunderstorms continued across the region with large hail, high winds and heavy rainfall. Trees and branches were reported down across the area.
Rain began in Grand Chute as winds picked up just after 2 p.m. A severe thunderstorm warning issued for the area warned of 80 mph winds and asked residents to take shelter and move away from windows to an interior room.
The storms produced widespread wind damage across Oshkosh, where 1,400 customers were without power. WPS reported more than 3,000 customers without power in Winnebago County.
Copyright 2026 WBAY. All rights reserved.
Wisconsin
Chris Borland heads back to Wisconsin as Hall of Fame inductee
Chris Borland’s spot in Wisconsin’s Athletic Hall of Fame came with the kind of résumé that represented the modern Badgers defense: massive production, big-game hardware and Midwestern toughness.
Wisconsin selected Borland as one of 12 athletes, staff, and supporters in the class of 2026 Hall of Fame inductees. The group will enter the Hall of Fame the weekend of Sept. 18 this fall, with Borland and the rest of the class honored during Wisconsin’s matchup against Eastern Michigan on Sept. 19 at Camp Randall Stadium.
Borland starred at linebacker for Wisconsin from 2009 to 2013 and finished as one of the program’s most decorated defenders of the era. He earned 2013 first-team All-America honors, won Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year, and closed his career with 420 tackles. He also played in three Rose Bowls, anchoring a defense built around physicality, instincts and tackling that excelled in big moments.
Borland’s induction adds a football centerpiece to a nine-sport Hall of Fame class, and it lands on a weekend that will bring a full Camp Randall spotlight back to former Badgers. Wisconsin fans will get their on-field Hall of Fame moment on Sept. 19, when the Badgers host Eastern Michigan and Borland’s career highlights take center stage again in Madison.
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