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BadgerBlitz – No.6 Wisconsin Prepare For Nebraska's Home Cooking

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BadgerBlitz  –  No.6 Wisconsin Prepare For Nebraska's Home Cooking


MADISON, Wis. – The second-ranked team in the country is looming on Wisconsin’s schedule, a home tilt against Purdue in front of a national television audience Sunday afternoon. That’s the furthest thing from the mind of head coach Greg Gard and his players.

With the way Nebraska has lit up opponents at Pinnacle Bank Arena, the Badgers have enough to worry about heading into their Thursday road contest against the Huskers.

“I’ll have enough sleepless nights worrying about Keisei Tominaga running around shooting threes,” Gard quipped Tuesday.

Most Big Ten teams are better at home than on the road, but Nebraska (15-6, 5-5 Big Ten) takes it to the extreme. In 14 home games, the Huskers are averaging 80.6 points on 46.2 percent shooting, including 37.2 percent from three-point range. In their seven games away from Lincoln, the Huskers’ numbers dip to 70.3 points per game on 42.7 percent shooting and 31.9 percent from the perimeter.

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It’s even more dramatic in conference games, as Nebraska has shot 48.7 percent from the perimeter in five conference home games and 32.5 percent in its five conference losses.

It’s no surprise that the Huskers are undefeated against Big Ten opponents with an average margin of victory of 11.8 points with no game closer than six.

Wisconsin (16-4, 8-1) has experienced raucous games at “the Bank” before. The Badgers 2014 Final Four team’s last regular season loss after February 1 was at Nebraska. Last season, Wisconsin led by 17 points with 16 minutes to play, but Keisei Tominaga hit four 3-pointers to force overtime.

Nebraska proceeded to outscore Wisconsin, 12-2, in overtime to register its largest comeback since 2013. It’s a loss that’s still cringeworthy to returning UW players.

“Playing in Lincoln is a whole different environment,” said point guard Chucky Hepburn, an Omaha native. “They are more locked in when they are playing at their crib, so you got to really lock in defensively.

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“Last year we let them come back in the game from little mistakes that we did. We let Tominaga get loose and let him get hot. That’s what really sparked their energy. They got going and it seemed like they were hard to stop.”

Tominaga is the leading sharpshooter on Nebraska, attempting 30 more three-pointers than anyone on the team and making 2.2 three-pointers per game (fourth in the Big Ten). The senior has proven to shoot well anywhere, shooting 45.1 percent overall and 45.9 percent at home.

The same can’t be said for forward Rienk Mask. The transfer from Bradley is averaging 8.6 points in conference road games and 15.4 at home, boosted largely by his career-high 34 points and 10 rebounds against Ohio State and 18 points against No.1 Purdue. He made a third of his 24 three-pointers on the season in those two games.

“We knew he would shoot the ball, but he’s gotten a lot more confident these last few weeks,” forward Tyler Wahl said of Mask, who had 16 points (6-for-14) in Madison. “He’s kind of been up and down, but he’s been playing really well. That’s something that’s been a little different, as we haven’t seen too many five men that are kicking out shooting threes.”

Toss in guard C.J. Wilcher (38-for-82, team-best 46.2 percent), who Is averaging 12.4 ppg over his last 10 games dating back to Dec. 20 with splits of .577/.563/1.000, and the Huskers are ninth in the country in three-point per game (9.6) and tops in the conference in attempts (552, 60 ahead of second-place Illinois).

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The Badgers are last in the league in three-point defense (36.2), but Gard said players have done a better job at minimizing attempts from the perimeter than in past seasons.

“Some teams we don’t run off the line as much, aren’t quite as aggressive with as long as contest shots,” Gard said. “Nebraska is a team you want to minimize attempts … You try not to make mistakes on screens. You try not to let Wilcher and Tominaga get loose on you.”

That will be the challenge Thursday in an arena where Nebraska seems to be near invincible.

“Most teams if you look at them, they have a tendency to play a little better at home,” Gard said. “More comfortable environment, energy from the crowd, etc., so I don’t think there is anything schematically that’s different. They are a very confident group at home.”



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A look behind the scenes of what could be Google’s biggest test of carbon capture

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A look behind the scenes of what could be Google’s biggest test of carbon capture


This story is made possible through a partnership between Grist and The Flatwater Free Press, Nebraska’s first independent, nonprofit newsroom focused on investigations and feature stories.

Rick Wheatley owns a property with about 80 acres in Nebraska’s Otoe County — an area east of Lincoln known for its farmland, apple orchards, and Arbor Day celebrations. Wheatley’s land, a portion of which is used for growing corn and soybeans, has been in his family for generations. Sometime last fall, a representative from a private energy developer Tenaska approached Wheatley about possibly purchasing the land.

Wheatley said the representative mentioned the company was trying to assemble and secure the right to purchase 2,000 acres near a gas pipeline for a power plant that could serve an AI data center. 

“At first he kind of slipped and said for AI, they need their own generating stations for AI,” Wheatley said. “But then they kind of backpedaled it.” According to Wheatley, the Tenaska representative then told him that the company planned to have a business park. 

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“And I thought, ‘What do you mean it’s a business park? Who’s going to build out there in the middle of nowhere?’” Wheatley said. In the end, he chose not to deal with the company. However, he wasn’t the only one to get a knock on his door.

Since December, Tenaska has entered into agreements with landowners for over 2,600 acres across southeast Nebraska under two different LLC names, according to county deed records. The agreements allow Tenaska the exclusive option to buy the land. Tenaska did not respond to requests for comment about the land deals. 

According to documents obtained by the Flatwater Free Press and Grist, Tenaska appears poised to build a utility-scale natural gas plant to power one of the largest data centers in the country. The documents suggest that Google would operate the data center and that the project may also be one of the largest test cases for carbon capture and storage, a controversial way to deal with runaway emissions that has not yet proven effective as a solution for climate change.

Nebraska, like many other states, is approaching a tipping point as it relates to energy demand, who can afford to supply it, how practical its emissions goals are, and the desire for economic activity to steadily grow. A recent report by the energy research and development nonprofit Electric Power Research Institute found that Nebraska is one of seven states that is on track to have data centers use over 20 percent of their total electricity consumption by 2030.

At the same time, a bill intended to allow for the creation of privately owned and operated power plants that serve large industrial facilities and are hooked up to the grid is being considered by the state legislature. Tenaska has publicly supported the bill, which was proposed by Governor Jim Pillen. The proposal could hinge on this bill’s passage. 

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According to the documents, which were shared at a private meeting of a Nebraska public power district in January, the proposed data center would use between 1,000 and 3,000 megawatts of power from a combined cycle natural gas plant. If the facility were to operate at the higher end of that range, it would generate more power than the largest power plant in the state. 

As outlined in the documents, the proposed project names three companies: Google, Tenaska, and natural gas and carbon dioxide pipeline company Tallgrass Energy. Tenaska, an Omaha-based company, would be responsible for powering the new data center, while Tallgrass would potentially supply both the natural gas and transport the captured carbon.

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The documents state that the proposed project could be online as soon as 2029, though it’s unclear how close this proposal is to becoming a reality. Neither Google nor Tenaska responded to multiple inquiries and requests for comment. Tallgrass, in a statement to Flatwater, denied being involved in the project. 

Kenny Zoeller, director of policy research for Pillen’s office, acknowledged that the companies tied to the proposed project have been part of discussion that ultimately led to the legislation. But they are not the only ones, he said. The governor’s office also consulted with the state’s public power districts, he said.

If the bill passes, private power plants for large industrial facilities would then be able to hook up to their local power district’s grid and sell excess power back. The state’s public power districts have endorsed the measure, and the Omaha Public Power District, or OPPD, said it is aware of a potential project that could be impacted by the bill — though the power district reiterated it doesn’t comment on specific projects. OPPD, Nebraska Public Power District, and Lincoln Electric System said in statements they do not discuss potential customers until they’re announced publicly, noting those proposals can involve nondisclosure agreements. 

According to Zoeller, the bill was not drafted for any single industry or project. The goal, he said, is to make Nebraska economically competitive while ensuring ratepayers don’t have to pay for a large user’s power needs. 

“There have been multiple companies that have indicated to the Governor and his office that legislation like this would make Nebraska a competitive place for investment,” Zoeller said in a statement. “However, no investment has ever predicated on the passage of LB1261.”

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Governor Jim Pillen.
Tom Williams / CQ Roll Call via Getty

Google’s parent company, Alphabet, plans to continue ramping up its overall data center investments in 2026, spending up to $185 billion on what it calls technical infrastructure, according to the company’s earnings call in February. Google already has three data center locations in Nebraska. From 2021 to 2023, the company claims that it has supported about 13,300 jobs, and since 2019 has invested over $3.5 billion in the state’s digital infrastructure.

The scope of the company’s proposal, as outlined in the documents, is massive. The data center itself would be among the largest in the country, according to Kenneth Gillingham, a professor of environmental and energy economics at Yale University.

The amount of power would be significantly more than the 800 megawatts needed across Lincoln Electric System’s service area in the summer when energy demand is at its highest. The gas plant would be the largest power plant in Nebraska. And if the project does incorporate carbon capture and storage, it would be the largest operation of its kind in the country, Gillingham said.

“In the U.S., there’s nothing that large with CCS,” he said, using the acronym for carbon capture and storage.

Nebraska is a public power state, and under current state law, private power generation from fossil fuels is allowable, but those facilities cannot connect to the grid. The governor’s bill would make it possible for private energy developers and operators, like Tenaska, that want to generate more than 1,000 megawatts of power specifically for a large industrial customer to connect to the grid and sell any excess electricity back to the local public power district. 

While the developer can use any energy source, Joshua Fershée, dean of Creighton University’s law school, said this bill would make it easier to use fossil fuel generation. 

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The power plant would have to be on the same property or next to the industrial user, and would have to be approved by the power review board. The private generator would have to have an agreement in place with the local utility before Jan. 1, 2032, and the customer would have to pay all fees and costs tied to hooking up to the public power district’s grid.

Google has three data centers in Nebraska, including this one in Papillion.
Naomi Delkamiller / Flatwater Free Press

Google announced its first carbon capture and storage project last October for a 400-megawatt gas plant in Illinois that will support its data centers in the region. The project in Nebraska would be significantly larger. 

“Google has very ambitious net-zero targets, and they have the money and they could do it,” Gillingham said. “This would be a huge investment by Google, fundamentally, to see if it can be done at a larger scale and more cost effectively than it’s ever been done before.”

Much like the overall proposal, though, it’s unclear if the carbon capture piece will actually materialize. Although the documents obtained by Flatwater and Grist specifically mention Tallgrass as the potential natural gas supplier and transporter of the captured carbon, Steven Davidson, Tallgrass’ senior vice president of government and public affairs, said the company currently does not have partnerships for a new data center or a Tenaska gas plant in Nebraska.

“While we are not in a partnership with anyone to build a data center in Nebraska,” Davidson said in a statement, “Nebraska is an exceptional state for investing and growing in a manner that respects local communities, expands opportunities for families to succeed, and focuses on long-term collaboration to improve people’s lives.”

Davidson expressed support for the governor’s bill.

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Over the last several months, as Tenaska scoured southeast Nebraska for land to house the potential data center and power plant, the company found several landowners willing to sell — including one state lawmaker.

Senator Myron Dorn, whose district spans Gage County and parts of southeast Lancaster County, signed an agreement with Tenaska earlier this year, allowing the company the exclusive right and option to purchase about 80 acres he owns in Gage County. Dorn said during their conversations, representatives mentioned both data centers and a power plant and had talked about a pipeline, but they didn’t outright say the land would be used for a data center powered by a gas plant. 

Dorn, who is in his eighth year in the legislature, had not publicly disclosed the potential land deal as a conflict when he was contacted by the Flatwater Free Press and Grist last week. He said he had not looked at the governor’s bill and was unsure if the agreement he reached with Tenaska posed a conflict of interest that would require disclosure.

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“Hadn’t thought of it. Didn’t realize the bill was out of committee and up that quick,” Dorn said.

Scott Danigole, executive director of the Nebraska Accountability and Disclosure Commission, said that if passing LB1261 would increase the likelihood of the sale, Dorn should file a conflict of interest form before any discussion or vote on the bill. 

Last Tuesday, he filed a disclosure noting the agreement and potential conflict of interest it posed. That filing came the same day the legislature began debating the bill. 

Filing the form does not preclude the senator from voting on the bill. On his disclosure form, Dorn explained his decision not to abstain from voting.

“My vote is only one of 49,” he wrote. “This bill will benefit the entire state and any landowner who may contract with a private entity. It is not exclusive to my property.”

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The bill advanced through its first of three votes last week, after which it would head to the governor’s desk.






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UNK to host Nebraska State Patrol Experience Day March 25, increased presence planned

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UNK to host Nebraska State Patrol Experience Day March 25, increased presence planned


Students at the University of Nebraska at Kearney will get a close-up look at state law enforcement work during a Nebraska State Patrol Experience Day planned for Wednesday, March 25.

The University of Nebraska at Kearney Department of Criminal Justice will host the educational event on campus, which will bring an increased Nebraska State Patrol presence beginning that morning and lasting throughout the day. The activity is planned and coordinated with the university, and there is no emergency.

Inside the Ockinga Conference Center, students will participate in a crime scene investigation walkthrough and a “day in the life” station highlighting the role and responsibilities of a state trooper.

Outdoor demonstrations are scheduled in the parking lots between the College of Education and West Center. Those demonstrations will include displays from the Nebraska State Patrol SWAT team, bomb squad, canine unit and drone operations, along with multiple patrol vehicles. Troopers will also provide ride-along demonstrations as part of the experience.

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A Nebraska State Patrol helicopter is also scheduled to land on the practice field just east of the parking lots.

Community members may notice law enforcement vehicles, specialized equipment and aircraft activity during the event, but all activities are part of the planned Experience Day programming.



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NCAA Tournament Big Ten report— Nebraska makes first Sweet 16

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NCAA Tournament Big Ten report— Nebraska makes first Sweet 16


The Big Ten dominated Saturday in the NCAA Tournament with four wins. Michigan and Illinois both looked like teams that were far superior to their opponents. Nebraska still has some magic left in what has been a very magical season.

Here are the scores and the rest of my analysis from the Big Ten games in the NCAA Tournament from second-round Saturday:

No. 1 Michigan 95-72 vs No. 9 Saint Louis

The Wolverines defense held Robert Avila in check and the rest of Saint Louis’s top guys. Yaxel Lendeborg for the Wolverines went in takeover mode, and it added a dangerous element to Michigan’s offense. Lendeborg went off for 25 points, shot 3-5 from 3, and had 6 rebounds. To complement Lendeborg’s great showing, Michigan held in 40 rebounds and shot 47.8% from 3. It was another game where Michigan looked miles ahead of its competition. It’s hard not to view this team as one that will be one of the final teams left at the end of March.

No. 3 Michigan State 77-69 vs No. 6 Louisville

Without star guard Mikel Brown Jr. for Louisville, it was going to be a steep hill to climb to get this victory. Coen Carr and Jeremy Fears Jr. make things even worse with stellar performances. Carr had 21 points, 10 rebounds, and 2 blocks. Jeremy Fears Jr. had a solid scoring night but was still an elite facilitator with 16 assists. The Spartans’ offense was on par, even with 34 rebounds, and as an offense, shooting 42.3% from 3. Tom Izzo and the Spartans keep the momentum high with another big tournament win.

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No. 3 Illinois 76-55 vs No. 11 VCU

VCU played better than in this game than they did in their prebopsi win over North Carolina. Losing Nyk Lewis early in this game was a tough blow, but even with an improved showing, they needed another 30-point masterclass from Terrence Hill Jr., and they didn’t get that. Hill Jr. only posted 17 points off the bench, while Illinois dominated VCU. Tomislav set the game on fire with his poster dunk, and that really sealed the fate of this game. He also chipped in 14 points and played a huge part in the Fighting Illini’s dominant performance on the glass. Andrej Stojakovic led the way with his 21-point performance. Illinois now heads to the Sweet 16.

No. 5 Vanderbilt 74-72 vs No. 4 Nebraska

Just another game showing why college basketball is amazing in March. 8 seconds left in the game, and the Cornhuskers do not call a timeout and immediately take the ball up and get a game-winning layup. Vanderbilt gets two seconds for a half-court heave, and it is as close as it gets to sinking in before rattling out. What a game. The perfect season keeps going for Nebraska. This game was too close for comfort all the way through, and down the stretch, both teams were trading buckets. The Cornhuskers got 4 of their players to reach double figures, and it was their shooting 47.4% and 55.8% from the field that made the difference. The Cornhuskers made the shots, and they head to the sweet 16 now after getting their first tournament win ever.

Overview

The momentum is still high in the Big Ten as the top teams from the regular season are having similar success in the NCAA tournament. Nebraska’s dream season has yet to come to an end, and they top their only tournament win in program history with a thrilling win over Vanderbilt.



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