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Tad Stryker: Even-Keeled Huskers Smack UNI

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Tad Stryker: Even-Keeled Huskers Smack UNI


Enough of the drama already. When you don’t shoot yourself in the foot, things seem a lot more normal, and Nebraska is thriving on normality to open Matt Rhule’s second season.

This is what it looks like when a team in withdrawal from years of self-defeating habits starts to embrace self-discipline instead. Going even-steven in turnover margin and committing just four penalties will keep a team out of a lot of bad situations.

A 34-3 win over FCS school Northern Iowa was a night of contentment, if not inspiration, in Memorial Stadium, although wrapping up the nonconference season with low blood pressure, a 3-0 record and only 20 points allowed by a stingy defense can be pretty exciting if you stop and think for a minute about the alternatives.

JC Roque Jr.

Sep 14, 2024; Lincoln, Nebraska, USA; Northern Iowa Panthers running back JC Roque Jr. (14) runs against Nebraska Cornhuskers defensive lineman Dylan Parrott (99) and defensive lineman Brodie Tagaloa (87) during the fourth quarter at Memorial Stadium. / Dylan Widger-Imagn Images

UNI (2-1), which kept the ball on the ground much of the night, balanced its offense enough to keep the Blackshirts off balance and moved the ball fairly effectively between the 20s, hung its hat on an impressive 10-minute first-quarter drive that ended in a field goal, seemingly satisfied to leave town with health and pride intact.

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Rhule seemed satisfied to wave goodbye to the visitors while presiding over a stable program that’s trending upward.

“We are trying to control games,” Rhule said. “That’s what good teams do. I felt some of that tonight.”

The Blackshirts recovered from a first half of sloppy tackling and did the “bend-but-don’t-break” routine that most people were anticipating last week against Colorado, allowing 301 total yards but no touchdowns. The Panthers’ main goal appeared to be avoiding getting pushed around by the Big Red, and they seemed content to burn clock in the second half even while trailing by three scores.

“The challenge was to come in here and go toe to toe with you,” said veteran UNI coach Mark Farley. “And I thought we did that.”

Meanwhile, NU scored on its first three possessions as quarterback Dylan Raiola tossed touchdown passes to Carter Nelson and Isaiah Neyor. The Raiola-to-Nelson score, a 24-yarder, was the Huskers’ first true-freshman-to-true-freshman touchdown pass since Adrian Martinez and Maurice Washington hooked up for a score in the season finale at Iowa in 2018. Raiola threw his first interception as a Husker, but now has five touchdown passes and a 73.7 completion percentage to more than make up for that pick. He has avoided pass rushers and problems like a seasoned veteran, and was up to the challenge when the Panthers forced him to throw to move the ball early.

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Offensive coordinator Marcus Satterfield appears to be willing to risk using Raiola as a ball carrier on a limited basis when the reward is high enough. Raiola crossed up the Panthers when he pulled the ball on a read option and dashed 15 yards and out of bounds for a first down on the opening play of the second quarter, just before throwing an 18-yard scoring pass to Neyor on a crossing route.

Heinrich Haarberg

Heinrich Haarberg completed all three of his pass attempts. / Amarillo Mullen

Raiola completed 13 of 16 passes in the first half and four of seven in the second. He used a host of pass receivers, including Nelson, who had four receptions, and Heinrich Haarberg, who appeared in the offense with Raiola, and also briefly ran the wildcat formation a couple of plays. Haarberg moved the ball better with his arm than his legs, but the wildcat is on film now for opponents to prepare for.

Nebraska rode its early lead and leaned on its defense, which went without starting linebacker Mikai Gbayor in the first half while he served his sentence for targeting against CU. Isaac Gifford and John Bullock led a steady defensive effort with 10 and nine tackles, respectively.

Meanwhile, Nebraska used more than 70 players. Rhule, who improved his record as Husker coach to 8-7, seemed most excited about the performance of his second-team offense, which scored a fourth-quarter touchdown on Emmett Johnson’s 36-yard run, and his second-team defense, which kept UNI out of the end zone in the game’s final minute.

Still, there are concerns for Nebraska, which likely will be a slight favorite when it hosts Illinois in a rare Friday night home game that most likely will be a four-quarter battle.

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The Huskers have a short-range field goal kicker. It’s hard to say what Tristan Alvano can do beyond 35 yards, because Rhule opted not to give him a 42-yard try when the Huskers’ two-minute drive bogged down. It didn’t appear to be an injury-related move, because he was used to kick off several times. Why Rhule and Ed Foley allow Alvano to kick off but not try 40-yard field goals is a mystery that can’t be blamed on an erratic long snapper.

Another concern for the Big Red is tight end Thomas Fidone’s ongoing absence from the vertical passing game. Fidone caught a pair of short screens, but has problems getting his body turned upfield in traffic. It’s said that a good tight end is a young quarterback’s best friend, but luckily, at this early stage in his career, Raiola appears to be comfortable mingling with his entire crowd of pass receivers. With maturity beyond his years, he comes just as advertised, which gives this Husker team a sense of calm purpose.

Just what a recovering football program would like to see as it strives to put some distance between itself and a near-decade of bad memories. Rhule has said on multiple occasions that he doesn’t put much stock in curses or bad karma that many have claimed hovers around Lincoln. And it sure helps when your quarterback shares that belief.

Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, following HuskerMax on X, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.





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Bill expanding Iowa’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ law takes another step forward

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Bill expanding Iowa’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ law takes another step forward


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  • Iowa lawmakers are considering a bill to ban teaching about gender identity and sexual orientation in all K-12 public schools.
  • The proposal would expand a 2023 law that currently applies to students through the sixth grade. It is tied up in federal court.
  • Supporters argue the bill keeps schools focused on core academics, while opponents say it harms and isolates LGBTQ youth.

A bill prohibiting Iowa’s public K-12 schools from teaching students about LGBTQ-related topics at all grade levels is advancing in the House and Senate as GOP lawmakers consider expanding what critics call the state’s “Don’t Say Gay” law.

The measure would subject all of Iowa’s K-12 students to a law Gov. Kim Reynolds signed in 2023 that bans instruction on gender identity and sexual orientation through sixth grade. The wide-ranging education legislation also ordered schools to remove books that depict sex acts and remains tied up in court.

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The House Education Committee voted 14-9, to advance House File 2121, which would extend the prohibition on LGBTQ-related teaching through high school. Two Republicans, Reps. Chad Ingels, R-Randalia, and Tom Moore, R-Griswold, joined Democrats in voting no.

It advanced out of subcommittee in a 2-1 vote earlier Wednesday morning.

Rep. Helena Hayes, R-New Sharon, said the measure pushes educators to stick to core curriculum such as language, English, math and history. She voted with Rep. Wendy Larson, R-Odebolt, to move it forward.

“This very narrow bill, it simply says teachers, please focus on educational topics,” Hayes said. “Please talk about academics, and that’s what we’re asking our educators to do, and that’s as simple as it is. Stay focused on the topic at hand, and that is we want to graduate intelligent, articulate, critical thinkers in this world.”

Rep. Elinor Levin, D-Iowa City, who opposed the bill, questioned why lawmakers would further legislate something that’s already tied up in court and how it helps Iowans afford their daily living costs.

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“I am myself queer,” Levin said. “I have been since I was born. It is part of my existence. I experienced no great trauma or abuse growing up. In fact, I grew up in an incredibly healthy and happy family with no direct queer role models. … To pretend that queer people do not exist is neither remarkable nor wise in thinking about how we care for our kids.”

Republicans on a three-member Senate subcommittee advanced their proposal, Senate Study Bill 2003, on Jan. 21. Similar legislation has not advanced in past years, including in 2025 after a House proposal stalled once it passed out of subcommittee. There was no Senate companion bill in 2025.

The bill says that Iowa’s public school districts and charter schools cannot provide “any program, curriculum, test, survey, questionnaire, promotion or instruction relating to gender theory or sexual orientation” to K-12 students.

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GOP lawmaker pushes to allow discussion of gender as a ‘theory’

Rep. Jeff Shipley, R-Birmingham, who serves on the House Education Committee, proposed amending the bill and said it may be “fairly appropriate” to discuss gender identity as a theory.

He said there are many legal questions or works of art pertaining to trans people that high school students would be mature enough to debate in a classroom setting.

“I think there’s a lot of things that could sink your teeth into if gender theory is just debated as a theory in the classroom,” Shipley said.

Hayes said the committee would consider amendments but this was already “narrowly tailored to instructional time.”

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“A lot of those conversations still happen in other places and school grounds or outside of school grounds,” Hayes told reporters. “I mean, certainly people should have connections and networking beyond just their teaching and beyond just the classroom.”

Existing law still tied up in court

Iowa’s 2023 law, Senate File 496, is being challenged as unconstitutional in a federal lawsuit.

A federal judge initially granted an injunction blocking parts of the law, including the ban on teaching about gender orientation and sexual identity, while the lawsuit is decided.

But the U.S. Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals reversed his decision, allowing the law to take effect. Attorneys argued the law’s constitutionality in federal court in January.

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Iowa is one of several Republican-led states, including Florida, with similar prohibitions on classroom teaching about gender identity and sexual orientation.

Levin said it would be unwise to extend Iowa’s law while the state’s current court challenges are pending.

“I genuinely can’t think of a reason why we would move forward with this when the previous legislation is tied up in the courts,” she said.

Opponents say sexual orientation, gender identity are ‘immutable’ traits

Like in the Senate’s initial hearing, opponents of the bill outnumbered supporters as people warned lawmakers of the detrimental effects the legislation would have on LGBTQ youth.

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Annie Craven, of Urbandale, said she is openly bisexual and was homeschooled and raised Catholic so she didn’t know people with her sexual orientation existed growing up. Craven is running for the Iowa House District 46 seat held by incumbent Republican Rep. Dan Gehlbach.

“That didn’t make me any less queer,” Craven said. “It did make me feel very alone and isolated and different. I resent that gender identity is being touted as political or something that we can debate or theorize. It’s immutable. It caused great harm to me as a person and as a kid growing up to not know that there were other people like me and to think that I was so different and I didn’t understand why.”

Drake University law student Karrecia Crawley said the bill imposes a “sweeping ideology that rushes to conclusions about what is taught.”

“They don’t see the foresight of what happens or what occurs when this bill is passed,” Crawley said. “I don’t believe Republicans will be in power for all that much longer if bills like this keep getting pushed and introduced into the (Legislature).”

Rev. Lizzie Gillman, an Episcopal priest in Des Moines and mother of a high school and sixth grade student, shared with lawmakers that her children’s friends feel they have no adults with whom they can discuss LGBTQ topics after recent law changes targeting LGBTQ rights.

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“Jesus never said anything about gender or homosexuality,” Gillman said. “Jesus was all about love. And so what I want to know is that when we marginalize these students at a young age, they can pick it up. … I’d like you to understand whose dignity matters here.”

Supporters asks lawmakers to restore ‘focus’ on academics

Jeff Pitts, with the Iowa Faith and Freedom Coalition, supported the bill.

“Political indoctrination ought not to be done on the taxpayer dime at public institutions,” Pitts said.

Katherine Bogaards, with Protect My Innocence, supported the measure and said it “gives families confidence that schools will remain focused on academics and age appropriate research-based health education, not topics that confuse or overwhelm the students.”

“Supporting this bill is about preserving family values, respecting parental authority, and assuring minors are allowed to grow up without unnecessary pressure related to sexual orientation and gender identity,” Bogaards said.

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Marissa Payne covers the Iowa Statehouse and politics for the Register. Reach her by email at mjpayne@registermedia.com. Follow her on X at @marissajpayne.



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Iowa High School State Dual Tournament Pairings Revealed

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Iowa High School State Dual Tournament Pairings Revealed


The fields are set for the Iowa high school wrestling state dual tournament, which takes place this Saturday, February 7 from the Xtream Arena in Coralville, Iowa.

All three 2025 champions are back to defend titles this year including Southeast Polk in Class 3A. Algona qualified in 2A and Don Bosco seeks a seventh championship in 1A.

The Rams will open with Pleasant Valley, as either Dallas Center-Grimes or Dowling Catholic awaits in th semifinals. The other side of the 3A bracket features Indianola vs. Linn-Mar and Waukee Northwest vs. Iowa City West.

Algona is the No. 7 seed and will face North Central Conference rival Clarion-Goldfield/Dows in the quarterfinals. Eddyville-Blakesburg-Fremont meets Alburnett on the other half.

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Top-seed Decorah faces Glenwood and West Delaware wrestles Independene in the other 2A quarterfinals.

Don Bosco battles Logan-Magnolia, Woodbury Central faces Hinton, Jesup wrestles Nashua-Plainfield and Lake Mills takes on Riverside in the 1A duals.

Semifinals and finals will also take place on Saturday.

Here are the Iowa high school wrestling state dual tournament pairings.

Quarterfinals, 9 a.m.

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Quarterfinals, 10:45 a.m.

Semifinals, 2:15 p.m.

Championship, 6 p.m.

Quarterfinals, 9 a.m.

Quarterfinals, 10:45 a.m.

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Semifinals, 2:15 p.m.

Championship, 6 p.m.

Quarterfinals, 9 a.m.

Quarterfinals, 10:45 a.m.

Semifinals, 2:15 p.m.

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Championship, 6 p.m.



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Man causes explosion while smoking meth in Iowa City shelter, police say

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Man causes explosion while smoking meth in Iowa City shelter, police say


IOWA CITY, Iowa (KCRG) – A man is facing multiple drug charges after the Iowa City Police Department says he caused an explosion in a winter shelter bathroom.

Officers detained Abdiqani Haji Mohamud, 44, on December 4, 2025, after police and fire responded to the incident at the Winter Extreme Temperature shelter early that morning.

The Iowa City Fire Department found no active fire when they entered the shelter’s bathroom, but there was “charred spatter” on the wall, sinks and mirrors. One of the stalls had a “melted” backpack alongside some personal items.

First responders found the source of the explosion to be a butane cannister in the backpack. Haji Mohamud told officers the backpack was his.

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Officers say they found methamphetamine in Haji Mohamud’s sock during a pat down.

When questioned, Haji Mohamud told officers that he was smoking meth in the bathroom and started to put his lighter back in his backpack. The hot lighter ignited items in the bag, setting off the butane cannister.

He is facing repeat drug possession offenses.



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