Minnesota
Randle scores 30 as Timberwolves beat Hornets 122-105
Julius Randle scored 30 points to lead the Minnesota Timberwolves past the Charlotte Hornets 122-105 on Saturday night, their first victory since All-Star Anthony Edwards was sidelined with an injury.
Without Edwards, who has a right hamstring strain, Minnesota had lost home games to Denver and the Los Angeles Lakers.
Donte DiVincenzo and Naz Reid added 18 points each, Rudy Gobert had 14 points and 15 rebounds and Jaden McDaniels added 14 points for Minnesota.
Miles Bridges had 30 points and LaMelo Ball had 18 points, seven rebounds and eight assists to lead Charlotte, which has lost its last three games.
Charlotte led 56-50 at halftime before Minnesota dominated the third quarter 36-18 to take and 86-74 lead into the final quarter. The Timberwolves’ strong play extended into the fourth quarter as they eventually built a 20-point lead.
Minnesota made 17 of 36 3-pointers (47.2%) , getting conversions from DiVincenzo (5 of 12), Randle (3 of 6), Rei (3 of 5), McDaniels (2 of 2), Johnny Juzang (1 of 1) and Bones Hyland (1 of 3).
The Hornets were 13 of 45 (28.9%)from 3-point range.
This was the first game since the Hornets announced they had exercised their fourth-year team option on guard Brandon Miller and third-year team option on forward Tidjane Salaun.
Miller, the second overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft, has appeared in 103 career games, but missed 65 games last year after needing right wrist surgery and missed his fourth straight game Saturday with a left shoulder injury.
Timberwolves guard Rob Dillingham was playing in his second career game near his hometown of Hickory, North Carolina, 60 miles northwest of Charlotte. He had four points and three assists in 15 minutes.
Timberwolves: Play at Brooklyn on Monday night.
Hornets: Host Utah on Sunday night.
Minnesota
Speculation Swirls Around Vikings Sale, but Evidence Falls Short
Speculation is brewing about Minnesota Vikings owners Zygi and Mark Wilf possibly preparing to put the franchise up for sale, though reader beware, it seems like wild conjecture.
The buzz has roots in St. Paul Pioneer Press reporter Charley Walters’ Saturday column.
Why does he think the Wilfs could be on the verge of selling? He appears to be connecting dots, noticing how Minnesota reduced its player spending from $350 million in the 2025 offseason to $226 million so far this offseason.
It is significant to go from spending more money on the roster than any other team to the second-lowest one year later, but there are logical reasons for it that don’t point to a sale. More on that in a moment, but Walters suspects the Wilfs could get $8 or $9 billion for the Vikings, which is just a sliver more than the $600 million they bought the team for in 2005.
Why the speculation doesn’t add up
Selling the team doesn’t make much sense when you stop and consider how hard the Vikings and Minnesota leaders are pushing to host the 2028 NFL Draft. Minnesota is reportedly the favorite to win the bid for the ’28 draft, which could provide an economic boom to the Vikings, Twin Cities, and entire state.
A more logical reason the Vikings have slashed payroll from 2025 to 2026 is that they whiffed on their aggressive move to win a Super Bowl. They were all-in last year, but quarterback J.J. McCarthy didn’t live up to lofty expectations as a first-year starter, and the offensive collapse was too much to overcome. They had to hit the reset button.
Cutting big-money players like defensive tackles Jonathan Allen and Javon Hargrave, who are in the later stages of their careers, allowed the Vikings to draft Caleb Banks and Domonique Orange in the first and third rounds of the draft, respectively. They got younger, more athletic, and cheaper on the interior defensive line.
Another reason to second-guess reporting about a sale is that the Vikings just picked up wide receiver Jordan Addison’s fifth-year option that’ll pay him $18 million 2025. That’s an indicator that they want to re-sign him, and that could cost them upwards of $30 million annually.
That’s far from a cost-cutting move, and it could very well be the reason why the Vikings traded edge rusher Jonathan Greenard instead of giving him a new contract. The NFL has a salary cap, and the Vikings were pressed up against it after last year’s spending spree. Giving Greenard a more lucrative extension would’ve made the salary cap situation even more difficult in 2027 and beyond. If they believe 2024 first-round pick Dallas Turner replace Greenard, then the move makes sense.
Minnesota also has to be prepared to pay Kyler Murray a big-money quarterback contract. He’s playing for the league minimum of $1.3 million in 2026, but if he succeeds and the Vikings want to re-sign him, then it’s going to be expensive.
Everything the Vikings have done looks to be aimed at getting younger and cheaper ahead of a potentially expensive 2027 offseason. The cost-cutting moves aren’t anywhere close to the fire sale and payroll slashing the Minnesota Twins owners did last year before they put the team up for sale and then abruptly changed their minds when their price wasn’t met.
The Wilfs have been committed to building a championship team for 21 years, and there’s really nothing to indicate they’re considering a sale beyond wild guesswork.
Maybe Walters knows something everyone else doesn’t, but his latest writings seem to be connecting dots more than reporting facts. Consider that Walters, when he has inside info, is known for using the phrase “a little birdie says.” Although he used it while talking about the Twins later in this column, he didn’t when talking about the Wilfs and selling the team.
Move forward with caution. There’s no hard evidence to support the notion that a sale is coming.
Follow
Minnesota
WWII soldier from Minnesota laid to rest more than 80 years after his passing
On a pristine Saturday afternoon, there was a Blackhawk helicopter flyover, and American flags were everywhere.
“It was hard today in some ways,” Scott Torpey said quietly. “But it was also a joyous occasion that we got to bring him home.”
At the New Ulm City Cemetery, it was a long-awaited homecoming as U.S. Army Captain Willibald Bianchi — ‘Uncle Bill’ to his family — was laid to rest with full military honors.
“You know, the sense of closure,” says Steve Marti, one of Bianchi’s nephews. “Who would have thought, after all these years, we get the call that guess what? They’ve identified his remains.”
Bianchi, 29 years old, previously awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor, was killed on a POW transport ship when it was bombed and sunk by an American plane in January 1945.
His remains were buried in a mass grave in a military cemetery in Hawaii.
For decades, Bianchi’s family didn’t know if he would ever be formally identified.
“He was lost to the war,” explains Joseph Marti, another nephew. “He was Uncle Bill, who left and never came back.”
Until a phone call last September: the Defense POW-MIA Accounting Agency had painstakingly searched through remains in the cemetery and used family DNA samples for a match.
“My cousin Scott, my Aunt Mary Louise, his sister and another cousin donated DNA, and they used that to use some of his bones to extract mitochondrial DNA and get the match,” Joseph Marti explains.
After a dignified transfer at MSP, Bianchi’s remains were brought to New Ulm.
Dozens and dozens of people from across the country — brothers, sisters and cousins attended the burial ceremony.
The American flag on Bianchi’s coffin was given to his family.
“They gave it to my sister Sue, who was so deserving,” Steve Marti says. “She’s done so much to keep Uncle Bill’s legacy alive in our home, here in her home.”
For years, family members had passed down Bianchi’s story.
Now, they say, it has an ending befitting his service, and after an 80-year journey, Bianchi is now at honored rest.
His family says their hearts, once empty, are now full.
“So, to have him back home, I think, is so special for everybody associated,” Joseph Marti exclaims. “We’re overwhelmed and humbled.”
Minnesota
Kids in Need Foundation provides $1 million in school supplies to Minnesota teachers
The Kids in Need Foundation gifted $1 million worth of school supplies to teachers in need.
Taking place at the Kids in Need Foundation’s headquarters in Little Canada, the “Thanks a Million” event brought together teachers from across the state, who were each gifted around $1,000 in school supplies to take back to their classrooms.
The group said the supplies went to teachers at higher-needs schools, districts where 50 percent or more of students would qualify for free or reduced-price lunch.
Rachelle Oxborough, the foundation’s director of public relations, said school supplies can make a major difference for students, some of whom do not begin classes with the materials they need.
“School supplies can be completely transformative for a child and their education, when a student can walk in on that first day of school,” Oxborough said. “A majority of students in these schools do not start the school year with school supplies, so when they can start with everything they need, they can step into their education in a totally different way.”
Sabrina Jones, a social worker at Harambee Elementary School in Maplewood, came to pick up supplies for teachers at her school on Saturday.
“But a lot of just writing materials, from the markers to the crayons to just the writing pads, which is just amazing…and also cleaning supplies, because you can’t have enough cleaning supplies for all seasons,” Jones said.
Programs like “Thanks a Million” support teachers financially by providing free classroom materials, rather than having teachers pay out of pocket for their students.
The National Education Association said teachers spend an average of $500 to $900 a year out of pocket on classroom supplies.
“I mean it’s one in a million, this really shows the support that Kids in Need have for teachers in general, school, everything…you can’t like buy this….this is just amazing,” Jones said.
-
Kentucky1 minute agoKentucky makes the final three for 2027 offensive lineman
-
Louisiana7 minutes agoLouisiana baseball claims doubleheader sweep over GSU
-
Maine13 minutes agoUSM awards degrees to MaineHealth Maine Track medical school graduates
-
Maryland19 minutes agoMaryland Gov. Wes Moore’s Army records show training delays, gaps
-
Michigan25 minutes agoDiesel fuel posts record high in Michigan on Sunday
-
Massachusetts31 minutes agoWhy backyard beekeeping in Massachusetts is so important
-
Minnesota37 minutes agoSpeculation Swirls Around Vikings Sale, but Evidence Falls Short
-
Mississippi43 minutes agoWhy Texas Longhorns Are Facing Must-Win Game vs. Mississippi State