Indiana
Mackenzie Mgbako is the key to IU’s fortunes. And he’s starting to unlock his game.
BLOOMINGTON – This looked like a tricky game for Indiana.
Rolling Minnesota, early tipoff on a Friday night with weather expected, five days before Purdue and three days after a fiasco of turnovers and missed free throws at Rutgers. The Gophers arrived on a seven-game win streak, surprising the conference with their dangerousness across a 3-1 Big Ten start and with nothing really to lose as road underdogs in one of the league’s toughest venues.
Indiana, still smarting from that Rutgers loss, arrived knowing a bigger game lay in wait over the hill. Both because of the weight of rivalry in this sport in this state, and also because that game might by itself have the capacity to turn the Hoosiers’ season for better or for worse, permanently.
IU won wire-to-wire vs. Minnesota. But hears why you could hear Hoosiers’ fans groans.
More: IU beats Minnesota behind balanced scoring, stout defense
Friday night’s game should have been difficult for Mike Woodson’s team.
Friday night’s game was over in eight minutes.
And no one was more important to the manner of victory — or frankly the victory itself — than Mackenzie Mgbako, the player who more than any other Hoosier holds his team’s fortunes between now and the end of this season in his hands.
“I thought he was aggressive right from the start. I thought our whole team was aggressive on both ends of the floor,” IU coach Mike Woodson said. “(Mgbako) got some good looks early that he made. I ran a couple plays for him that he was able to knock shots down, and the way they double-team, it opened him up.”
Mgbako scored a game- and career-high 19 points, in a 74-62 win over Minnesota that was scantly even that close. The Gophers were second best in every way in what turned out to be the most important phase of the game: the first two media-timeout segments, when IU (12-5, 4-2) opened a 25-8 lead, put inarguably Minnesota’s two most important players in foul trouble and, with downhill aggressiveness and relentless pressure, buried the visitors.
The Hoosiers, who didn’t actually make it home from New Jersey until Wednesday morning because of the weather, left their turnover problems in Piscataway, and any pity they felt for themselves on the floor of the Rutgers Athletic Center (known contractually as Jersey Mike’s Arena).
Minnesota (12-4, 3-2) looked like a gopher hole — pun absolutely intended — for Indiana’s horse to step into, a hot team with virtually nothing to lose facing up to one that could be forgiven its concerns and doubts.
The Gophers typically score the ball efficiently, and share it remarkably well, and yet this game was never close. Minnesota’s best effort cut the deficit to five, late in the first half. The only 18 seconds of the game Indiana did not lead were the 18 seconds Indiana needed to score its first basket, a Trey Galloway 3-pointer, Assembly Hall, sold out and rowdy despite the impending weather.
“Once we started the game aggressive, it carried over on to our defense, and then defense creates offense,” Mgbako said. “Just being aggressive on both sides of the floor is what created the win tonight.”
This is the formula for the Hoosiers, if they are to make this season into what they want it to be. Branch McCracken Court must be a fortress. Road teams must be required their best effort and their hardest fight just to make anything of a trip to Bloomington, against an undeniably imperfect but — as Friday night showed — still remarkably talented team.
Make Bloomington a difficult place for opponents to come across these next two months, and this team can scrap out for itself the results necessary to demand a place in the NCAA tournament.
But it will take all of what the Hoosiers showed Friday, and precious little of what they showed Tuesday, this week providing a remarkably timed juxtaposition of IU at its worst, compared to IU at its best.
“We’ve got to somehow convert how we play here at home on the road,” Woodson said. “That’s going to be the difference moving forward.”
And while Mgbako need not do most or all of it himself, Friday night provided the latest and perhaps most convincing evidence he is the as-yet-undefined number that changes the calculus for this team.
Kel’el Ware and Malik Reneau (33 points, 20 rebounds Friday) will always produce in the post. Xavier Johnson can be mercurial, even frustrating, and Tuesday reminded us his game will at times cross certain lines. But he is also remarkably creative, and when his focus is properly trained he is dogged on defense.
Friday was the best of Galloway, Kansas game excepted, his 10 points, two 3s, three rebounds and seven assists all crucial. There were important contributions from Gabe Cupps, Anthony Walker, CJ Gunn — that looks like Indiana’s bench for the foreseeable future, Woodson paring his rotation down earlier in the calendar, perhaps, than he did in either of his first two years.
There’s so much that feels, if not settled, then at least proven about these Hoosiers, good and bad. The one open question is perhaps the biggest of the season, even dating back as far as June and July, when this team came together to begin the process of making something of itself.
Mgbako is — not just because of his five-star billing or his All-American status in high school but simply his obvious gifts, traits and abilities — the player with both the greatest ceiling, and the clearest ability to raise his team’s as well.
You saw it Friday night.
The downhill assertiveness against defenders incapable of managing Mgbako’s blend of length, size and athleticism on the drive. The reach and instincts that, finally applied consistently on defense, make him a frustrating matchup. The 3-point shot that has not-so-quietly come around — Mgbako is shooting 38.9% from behind the arc over his past 12 games, and 45.5% (10-of-22) from range in Big Ten play.
This isn’t meant to suggest none of his teammates can or will improve across the coming weeks. Reneau clearly already has. Ware remains somewhere south of his prodigious and almost certainly NBA-ready ceiling. Should Galloway find more of the offensive and creative consistency he’s shown beginning with the Kansas game (when he scored 28 points), he can be a difference maker for this team.
The list goes on. But it starts and it stops with Mgbako. Indiana will insist upon playing him at the three, unless in case of emergency, for the rest of this season. That will certainly challenge him again defensively, but it will also present more nights like Friday, when he faces a cover so much shorter, so much less athletic and so clearly overmatched Mgbako will find, if he works for them, stretches of the game which he can very simply dominate.
Earlier this season, Woodson flatly disagreed with the notion a player of Mgbako’s top-10 billing should simply be expected to arrive in college the finished article. Woodson promised his freshman forward would continue to improve, both technically and tactically, as he spent more time at the college level, an improvement Mgbako now both shows and, crucially, recognizes.
“He’s put the work in,” Woodson said. “He’s continuing to work, along with the rest of our young players. All we can do as coaches is continue to teach and push and try to get as much out of them as we can as we continue this journey.”
For one of the most distinct players — because of his position, his skills and his role within his team — in the Big Ten, the curve finally appears to be steepening toward Mgbako’s best.
The more that curve climbs, the better Mgbako gets, the more he understands what he’s capable of and what’s required of him and why he makes such a remarkable difference for his team, the higher Indiana’s own ceiling climbs. No player currently enjoys greater influence over either the course, or the outcome, of this season in Bloomington.
Follow IndyStar reporter Zach Osterman on Twitter: @ZachOsterman.
Indiana
Elderly couple identified as the 2 killed in Lake Village, Indiana, during suspected tornado touchdown
An elderly couple died after a possible tornado ripped through the town.
The couple’s family said they’re shocked that Tuesday night’s tornado leveled their grandparents’ home and took their lives.
“Obviously, we’ve never seen anything remotely resembling this,” said son-in-law Steve Rhefeldt.
A place that Ed Kozlowski, 89, and his wife, Arlene, 86, once called home is now gone.
“They were wonderful, just really wonderful human beings. You know, tough old guy and sweet old lady,” he said.
The Indiana Urban Search and Rescue team was spotted on Wednesday sifting through the debris along with Rhefeldt and his son, Matthew, who traveled from Peotone to see the damage.
The elderly couple was unable to get out of the debris alive. Relatives believe that everything happened within the blink of an eye.
“They’ve lived a good life, and boy, you kind of… I have to imagine this was just “hey, what’s going on?” and it was over that quick,” Steve said.
The family said they were in the process of planning Ed’s 90th birthday at the home the couple had lived in for years. Everything the couple built is now gone.
“We were talking on the way here. These cars, there’s big heavy V8 engines in big trucks, and the wind is literally taking his car, which was parked somewhere, maybe right there, and taking it and flipping it upside down,” Steve said.
The couple had four kids, seven grandchildren, and great-grandchildren.
Lake Village was left with extensive damage that crews are just starting to clear. Steven Travis said he survived the tornado but lost everything.
“Roof’s gone all in 20 seconds. I walked in the bedroom, got knocked down, climbed in the closet, and it was over. Come back out, climbed out, and the roof’s gone, everything. Trees are down, windows blowed out. Lost everything,” Steven said.
North Newton High School in Lake Village is serving as an emergency shelter for anyone displaced by the storm. The Lake Village Fire Department is also serving as a rallying point.
Newton County officials confirmed that more than 100 buildings were damaged in Lake Village and more than 30 were destroyed.
Indiana
At least 4 tornadoes suspected of leaving trail of damage in Illinois, Indiana, NWS says
CHICAGO (WLS) — Suspected tornadoes have left extensive damage in Kankakee County in Illinois and into neighboring Indiana Tuesday.
The storms also produced hail ranging in size from two to four inches, the National Weather Service said. The NWS said the largest hailstone produced was six inches in diameter, which fell in Kankakee. The NWS said the hailstone may be a state record for Illinois.
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The NWS said a supercell that went from Pontiac, Illinois to Pontiac, Indiana spawned at least four tornadoes in Pontiac and south of Kankakee in Illinois and Lake Village an Wheatfield in Indiana.
The NWS is sending survey teams to the area Wednesday to investigate the damage.
Search crews worked late into the night looking for people who may have been left trapped by the storm damage as severe weather hit the Kankakee area.
Apparent tornado in Kankakee, Illinois – March 10, 2026
The area in Aroma Park along Sandbar Road was one of the places hardest hit.
Dangerous weather ripped through the area leaving a path of destruction.
The powerful storms driving rain and gusting winds downed at least a half dozen power lines that were snapped in half by gusting winds.
One homeowner says the storm blew out windows and leveled a two-story barn.
A concrete silo was also destroyed.
The fire lieutenant says a man did have to be rescued from the basement of a home with heavy damage. But otherwise, I have not heard of any serious injuries from the storm.
The American Red Cross has set up a shelter at Kankakee Community College for those impacted by the storms.
The tornado damage stretches into Indiana.
There has also been major damage across the state line in Indiana. Most of the damage is in the town of Lake Village.
Video shows a number of homes and buildings destroyed.
The local fire department says a tornado had a wide path of destruction and continued for several miles.
So far, officials said there have been only a few minor injuries.
They said the tornado sirens went off with plenty of time to alert people in the area.
People impacted by the storm can go to North Newton High School for support.
People living in Kankakee described the hail as almost as large as their hands, pounding the pavement and causing extensive damage.
“As if I have a bulletproof car and somebody was, like, shooting a machine gun or something like that. That’s how hard it was hitting,” Jon Robicheaux said.
Some car windows were left shattered.
“It just kept tearing into my front windshield,” Robicheaux said. “The back went out first, and it kept hitting the front. And it constantly got damaged.”
He had to pull over to find shelter.
“And I was kind of scared a tornado would’ve came over me while I was parked because I couldn’t see anything,” Robicheaux said.
Some cars in the west suburbs were damaged, as well, after golf ball- to baseball-sized hail fell.
One large chunk of hail came down on Gabrielle Zinkel’s car as she was driving home to Homer Glen from work in Downers Grove, shattering her back windshield.
“It sounded exactly like bullets hitting your car. Like, I was like, did my windshield just get shot through? Like what just happened? Because I did not think. I was like, OK, I’m going to come through this with some dents. But I didn’t think that this thing would hit my windshield and crack it right open,” Zinkel said.
There was also heavy rain and hail in parts of the city.
The hail sent people scrambling around dusk.
ComEd said as of 5 a.m., about 27,000 customers were impacted by the storm, with power restored to all but about 4,000 customers. Those without power were mainly in Kankakee County.
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Indiana
Severe storm risk into tonight through early Wednesday morning
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — We are monitoring the potential for severe weather into early Wednesday morning.
Tornado Watch in effect until EDT midnight March 10, 2026, for Benton, Newton, and Jasper counties.
Tuesday night: Please make sure you have your safety plan on standby into tonight through pre-dawn Wednesday morning. There is now a level 4/5 severe risk in northwest Indiana. Much of central Indiana remains in a level 2/5 risk.
The risk for significant tornadoes (EF2+) and very large hail (2″+) is greatest north of I-70 with any discrete cell(s) that maintain their-selves into mainly northern Indiana. There is also potential for a max expected intensity of an EF-3+ tornado within much (if not all) of the level 3 & 4 risk zone.
This does not mean that every storm will produce a tornado of that magnitude. It is simply highlighting area of highest concern for the possibility of such occurrence.
Now, given a modestly unstable environment into the pre-dawn hours Wednesday with stronger wind flow aloft, all hazards will remain possible into central Indiana. The significant severe threat here is much lower.
Overall, you need to have multiple ways of being able to get alerts tonight. Do not be scared, be prepared and you will be ok.
Wednesday: Beyond sunrise Wednesday, we will continue to track more in the way of showers and storms. The main area of the strong-severe storm risk looks to shift mainly southeast of Indy with damaging winds the primary concern through the morning into afternoon hours.
Rainfall amounts through Wednesday may amount to 1-2″ with locally higher amounts.
Highs to occur earlier in the day with numbers in the mid to upper 60s. Non-thunderstorm winds will also be quite breezy with gusts up to 30-35 MPH.
Thursday: Be prepared for quite a temperature shift into Thursday. We will start the day off with temperatures in the low 30 with 20s wind chills. Yeah, that will not feel great considering our recent stretch of more mild days. Highs will only get into the upper 40s.
7-Day Forecast: We look to warm back up into this weekend, but it will come with more active weather and breezy winds. Friday will feature highs in the mid to upper 50s with wind gusts up to 25-30 MPH. Highs look to tick back into the low 60s Sunday with more chances for rain. Then, temperatures really take a tumble into next Monday with highs only in the 30s and a chance for a rain/snow mix.
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