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In wake of rule change, Wisconsin football’s Luke Fickell looks back at last year’s win at Illinois

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In wake of rule change, Wisconsin football’s Luke Fickell looks back at last year’s win at Illinois


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INDIANAPOLIS – Luke Fickell said he wasn’t trying to bend any rule.

During Big Ten media day Tuesday, Wisconsin’s football coach was asked about the rule change that appeared to be inspired by the Badgers’ game-winning touchdown at Illinois last season.

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Braedyn Locke threw a 3-yard touchdown pass to Nolan Rucci on a tackle-eligible play with 27 seconds left to complete a 14-point, fourth-quarter comeback. UW won, 25-21.

Rucci, listed as No. 66 on the roster, wore No. 93 in the game, a change that gave him the potential to be an eligible receiver. When UW lined up after breaking the huddle, Rucci was a tackle. He became an eligible receiver after the two tight ends who were lined up next to him shifted to other spots in the formation.

After faking a block, Rucci ran to the flat and used all of his 6-foot-7 frame to catch the game-winner.

The play was legal. What bothered Illinois coach Bret Bielema, who contacted the Big Ten about the play, was that Rucci wore a different number during the game than in warmups.

Fickell said the number switch wasn’t an attempt to be deceptive.

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“The numbers thing was as unintentional as anything else I’ve ever done,” Fickell said while noting there were other more pressing rules matters that needed attention.

The rule in question wasn’t clear. Now it is spelled out more specifically. It says if a player enters the game after changing a jersey number or wears a number different from what is listed on the game day roster then he must report the change to the official, who then informs the opposing sideline. Failure to do so results in a 15-yard unsportsmanlike conduct penalty.

The new language covers the individual who changes a jersey number during the game as well as the player who doesn’t change his number during the game but appears in a contest wearing something other than his listed number.

Fickell said Rucci, who transferred to Penn State after the season, had been given two jerseys on game day for weeks in case he was needed as an extra tight end.

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“I had been saying to do that for four weeks just for goal line purposes to have bigger guys out there,” Fickell said. “It wasn’t intentional in that they said we didn’t warm up in the number and then went inside (and changed). … The jersey was in his locker from the get-go. It wasn’t like we were like, ‘Warm up in a different number (and then) switch it.”

More: Wisconsin football coach Luke Fickell says leadership is No. 1 thing he will stress to his team

More: Why Wisconsin’s Jake Chaney changed his jersey number, other highlights from Big Ten media day



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Illinois

Illinois man exonerated of 1992 murder downstate after more than 30 years in prison

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Illinois man exonerated of 1992 murder downstate after more than 30 years in prison


Danny Davis will be home for Thanksgiving, a dream for many, but for him, a goal three decades in the making after he was wrongfully convicted of murder in downstate Illinois.

Davis was just 20 years old in 1992 when he was coerced into confessing to a gruesome murder. It took more than 30 years to prove he didn’t do it, just in time for the holidays with his family.

Michael Jordan is Danny Davis’ favorite basketball player, and was still playing for the Bulls when Davis went to prison.

“I was in prison with their second championship,” Davis said.

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That’s why he requested dinner at Michael Jordan’s Steak House on Monday night to celebrate his exoneration.

“I ate me a big steak,” Davis said.

In prison for more than three decades, Davis said he had learned to ignore the holidays.

“At one point, I just said all holidays are out, and focused on what needs to be done for me to get out,” he said.

Davis was convicted of the March 1992 murder of Mildred Smith, who was discovered stabbed to death in her apartment in Cairo at the far southern edge of Illinois.

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“There’s nothing else to tie them. There’s no forensics tying them to the crime, no eyewitnesses, nothing like that,” said Davis’ attorney, Lauren Myerscough-Mueller, with the Exoneration Project at the University of Chicago Law School.

Myerscough-Mueller said Davis and his younger brother were coerced into a guilty plea.

“They said, ‘If you go to trial, Danny will get the death penalty, and he will die.’ So they were at jury selection, they pull him into a room, they threaten them with this, and so they say, ‘Okay, we’ll plead guilty,’” she said.

Davis was sentenced to life in prison without parole, but he and his legal team never stopped fighting. In 2018, Smith’s fingernail clippings were finally tested for DNA. The male DNA found did not match Davis.

His conviction was vacated and he was released from custody last year, but he was still a long way from truly free.

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His case was expected to go back to trial next month, until – out of nowhere – prosecutors filed a motion to dismiss the case altogether earlier this month.

“I knew we would be here at this point one day. We didn’t know how long,” Davis said. “Man, it’s just a blessing that I don’t have to go through that.

Now 53 years old, Davis spent more of his life behind bars than on the outside. On Tuesday, he got a special visit from three men who understand that better than anyone.

Jimmy Soto, Darien Harris, and Robert Johnson also spent years in prison for murders they did not commit. Between the four of them, Davis, Soto, Harris and Johnson spent more than 115 years behind bars before they were able to clear their names.

“They’ve lived the same things, they’re going through the same things, and can be a good support for each other,” Myerscough-Mueller said.

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Davis said he said he’s ready to make up for lost time with his supportive family.

“Now I don’t take anything for granted in life; nothing,” he said. “I enjoy every bit of whatever that I’m able, the good Lord is able to give me the strength to do, I enjoy,” he said.

Davis’ attorney said the last step for them is the obtaining a certificate of innocence. They will file a court petition to get it.



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Two killed in Aurora, Illinois, restaurant shooting were previously in dating relationship, police say

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Two killed in Aurora, Illinois, restaurant shooting were previously in dating relationship, police say



Two people who were killed in a shooting inside a restaurant in Aurora, Illinois, over the weekend were identified on Tuesday evening.

Police responded to the shooting Saturday just after 9 p.m. at the Two Brothers Roundhouse, at 205 N. Broadway. Three people were found inside with gunshot wounds.

A woman was taken to Mercy Hospital, where she was pronounced dead. A 33-year-old man was hospitalized in critical condition and remains in the intensive care unit. The shooter was pronounced dead at the scene, Aurora police said.

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The Kane County Coroner identified the two killed as 24-year-old Jazmine Barclay of Aurora and 43-year-old Bryan Heineman of Naperville.

A preliminary investigation indicated that Heineman and Barclay had been in a dating relationship.

Barclay and the 33-year-old man were together on the upper-level balcony of the music room when Heineman entered the business. Evidence suggests he went there to confront two after possibly learning of their location from social media. 

Police said moments after approaching them, Heineman shot them both before turning the gun on himself.

No bystanders were struck by gunfire or injured. A firearm was recovered near Heineman.

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Witnesses on social media said that the shooting happened while the band Beyond the Blonde was performing, and moments after the shots, people ran for their lives.

The singer of the band, Charity Benevelli, said, “It’s a crazy feeling going from everyone is having a great time, happy, smiling, dancing, and then all of a sudden it is absolute fear.”

The Aurora Police Department is encouraging anyone affected by the shooting to contact their Crisis Intervention Unit at 630-256-2483.

The investigation into the incident remains ongoing. Anyone with information is asked to call the Aurora Police Department’s Investigations Division at 630-256-5500.

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Woman convicted in Slender Man stabbing taken into custody in Illinois

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Woman convicted in Slender Man stabbing taken into custody in Illinois


The Madison Police Department says Morgan Geyser was taken into custody Sunday night in Illinois.

Police say just after 10:30 p.m. Sunday, they received information that Geyser was located and there was no longer a need to search for her.

WMTV in Madison says Geyser was located in Posen, Illinois.

She was at a truck stop in the area with another person.

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An effort to find Geyser began Saturday after police say she cut off her monitoring bracelet and left her group home.

The Madison Police Department was notified of Geyser’s disappearance on Sunday morning.

Geyser was one of two people convicted in the Slender Man stabbing of Peyton Leutner in Waukesha during a sleepover in 2014.

She pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree intentional homicide in 2018 for the incident.

She was sentenced to 40 years in a psychiatric hospital.

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Geyser had been held at the Winnebago Mental Health Institute near Oshkosh before being released to the Madison group home.

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Details of the release plan are sealed, after a previous plan for her to move into a group home in Sun Prairie fell through due to community backlash.



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