Nebraska
Minnesota Returns to The Barn to Host Nebraska Thursday – University of Minnesota Athletics
Minnesota (18-6, 9-4 Big Ten) vs. Nebraska (16-8, 5-8 Big Ten)
TV: Big Ten Network (Jack Kizer, Shimmy Miler)
Tip Time: 7 p.m. CT
Radio: KFAN+ 96.7 FM, and the iHeartRadio app (Justin Gaard and Lynnette Sjoquist)
Location: Williams Arena
STARTING FIVE
- The Golden Gophers return to Williams Arena on Thursday after picking up Big Ten road wins over No. 10 Iowa on Thursday and Rutgers on Sunday.
- Minnesota extended its win streak to six following Sunday’s 63-52 win over the Scarlet Knights. It’s the team’s longest win streak overall since opening the 2024-25 season with 10 consecutive victories. In addition, it’s tied for the Gophers’ second longest win streak within the Big Ten. They last won six in a row during the 2018-19 campaign, while the only longer streak was 11 games from Feb. of 2003 to January of 2004.
- After struggling offensively in the first half against the Scarlet Knights, the Gophers bounced back in the second half. An 8-0 run by Mara Braun, who ended the game with 12 points, in the third quarter was the turning point. Sophie Hart secured her second double-double of the season with a team-leading 17 points and 10 rebounds. Tori McKinney had 16 points, marking the 15th time she’s hit double figures this season.
- The Rutgers win improved the Maroon and Gold’s record to 18-6 overall and 9-4 in Big Ten play. It marks the best 13-game start in conference play since the 2017-18 season when the team also started 9-4. That season was also the last time Minnesota made the NCAA Tournament.
- Against Iowa, Minnesota was 10-of-14 on 3-pointers, setting a program record by shooting 71.4% from 3-point range and breaking a mark that had stood since 2015.
NEBRASKA SERIES HISTORY
- Nebraska leads the all-time record, 18-14, in a series that began in 1977.
- The Maroon and Gold lead at Williams Arena, 10-3.
- The Huskers have a two-game winning streak over Minnesota. Last season, The Gophers traveled to Lincoln and lost 84-65.
WHERE THEY RANK
- Minnesota is ranked No. 9 in the NET and is one of 10 Big Ten teams in the top 25. The Maroon and Gold’s NET ranking is the third highest in the Big Ten, only behind No. 2 UCLA and No. 6 Michigan.
- While not ranked in either top 25 poll, Minnesota was the first team out of the AP Poll and WBCA USA Today Coaches poll, receiving 42 and 39 votes, respectively.
- The Gophers lead the NCAA in fewest turnovers per game, averaging 10.1. The next closest Big Ten team is Illinois at 12.4 turnovers per contest.
- Minnesota’s 1.64 assist-to-turnover ratio ranks third nationally and second in the Big Ten, only behind No. 2 UConn (1.88) and No. 3 UCLA (1.72).
- The Maroon and Gold’s defense allows only 55.9 points per game, ranking them 18th in the nation he NCAA and first in the conference.
- Minnesota leads the Big Ten and is third in the NCAA with 11 games this season holding opponents to 50 points or fewer. The only teams with more such games are Connecticut (13) and Fairleigh Dickinson, while UCLA (8) is the next closest Big Ten school.
DOWN GOES No. 10
- The Maroon and Gold are coming off a 91-85 upset of No. 10 Iowa on Thursday night. The win marked Minnesota’s second victory over an AP Top 25 opponent this season, its first outright win over a top-10 team since a 93-74 victory over No. 10 Maryland at Williams Arena in 2018 and its first top-10 road win since 2003, when the Gophers defeated No. 9 Stanford 68-56 in the second round of the NCAA Tournament.
- It was also Minnesota’s first regular-season top-10 road win since beating No. 5 Wisconsin 92-85 in 2002.
- Minnesota snapped an 11-game losing streak against Iowa, earning its first win over the Hawkeyes since a 90-89 victory in the 2018 Big Ten Tournament.
THE ORIGINAL G-MONEY
- This season, Grace Grocholski leads Minnesota with 316 points and averages 13.2 points per game.
- The guard-forward is shooting 49.8% from the field, 46.3 from 3-point range and 82.3% from the free throw line.
- The North Prairie, Wis., native has 205 career made 3-pointers, ranking No. 8 all time in Minnesota program history.
- Grocholski is ranked No. 7 in the nation and third in the Big Ten in 3-point percentage.
- Grocholski ranks second on the Gophers’ roster with 65 assists.
- Against No. 7 Maryland on Dec. 7, Grocholski knocked down a career-high nine 3-pointers on her way to a career-best 31 points, tying for the second-most 3-pointers made in a single game in program history.
BATTLE TIME
- Amaya Battle is the only active NCAA player (playing from 2022-present) with more than 1,000 career points, 600 career rebounds and 500 career assists.
- Battle’s career totals stand at 1,404 points, 707 rebounds and 573 assists.
- Along with Battle, Rachel Banham is the only other Golden Gopher to record at least 1,000 points, 600 rebounds, and 500 assists in a career.
- Battle ranks third all-time in career assists in Minnesota’s record book. She is six away from surpassing Lindsay Whalen (578) for second all-time.
McKINNEY MAGIC
- In the Maroon and Gold’s last five games, Tori McKinney has averaged a team-leading 17.6 points per game and has tallied nine steals during that stretch.
- McKinney recorded back-to-back 20-point games, scoring 23 points against Penn State on Jan. 28after posting 20 against Wisconsin on Jan. 25.
- It marked the first time a Gopher scored 20 or more points in consecutive games since Mara Braun did so against Purdue (21 on Dec. 10, 2023) and Grambling (26 on Dec. 13, 2023).
- Against the Nittany Lions, McKinney set a career high threes made in a game, going 5-of-7.
MINNESOTA MARA
- In Minnesota’s last five games, Mara Braun has been a spark on offense averaging 13 points per game.
- She led the Gophers and scored a season high 22 points at Penn State on Jan. 28.
- At Iowa, she had 16 points and went 4-of-4 from the 3-point line.
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Nebraska
How a centuries-old legal tool helped Nebraska immigrants leave ICE detention
A man who fled an uprising in the Middle East decades ago, and whose son serves in the U.S. Air Force, was taken into custody during a routine immigration appointment in Des Moines, Iowa.
Another man brought to the country as a child in 1999, who now has a U.S.-born child, was arrested after a minor traffic stop in southwest Missouri.
And a man from El Salvador with no criminal record spent weeks in a Nebraska prison that had been converted to hold immigrants fighting to stay in the country.
In each of these cases, a federal judge ruled that their confinement, detailed in what’s called a habeas corpus petition, violated their rights and they were released.
As President Donald Trump’s administration dramatically expanded who was subject to mandatory detention, more than 45,000 habeas corpus cases have flooded federal courts across the country. Petitioners have alleged that their detention was illegal and asked to be returned to their families so they can continue their civil immigration cases from home. An analysis by The Marshall Project and The Midwest Newsroom found that habeas corpus filings in four Midwestern states have been overwhelmingly successful thus far.
In Iowa, Kansas, Missouri and Nebraska, more than 450 cases have been filed since Trump’s inauguration last year. The vast majority of people in the roughly 160 cases that had been resolved through mid-April were granted a hearing to determine if they could be let out of detention on bond, or in some cases, were released outright.
“It’s actually really remarkable,” said Suchita Mathur, an attorney with the American Immigration Council, a D.C.-based nonprofit that advocates for immigrants. “I’ve never heard or seen any legal issue with this much consensus among district court judges.”
But as the Trump administration files appeals to attempt to narrow the discretion of judges in habeas corpus cases about immigration, the legal landscape is in flux.
Habeas outcomes
The legal concept of habeas corpus dates back over 800 years to the Magna Carta in England. For centuries, people in prison have used it to challenge confinement. Today, petitioners in civil immigration cases have used the legal mechanism to fight the Trump administration’s mandatory detention policy. Noncitizens have argued they should be released because of prolonged detention, a lack of access to bond hearings or inhumane conditions in the facilities where they are held.
We reviewed nearly 160 case filings in the four states covered by The Midwest Newsroom, but are not naming the immigrants who filed the petitions because nearly all of them still have immigration claims pending, and many expressed a fear of retaliation from Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security.
The Trump administration has justified its large-scale arrests and mass raids on immigrant communities in several major cities by saying it is targeting the worst of the worst, but a review of the filings in habeas corpus cases undercuts those claims. Among the people held in ICE detention in these Midwestern states were people with pending asylum cases, no criminal history and parents of U.S.-born children.
The Department of Homeland Security, for example, recently contended in court documents that a man from Spain should be subject to mandatory detention and then deportation. He filed a habeas corpus petition while he was being held in the Cass County jail south of Omaha, Nebraska, after being arrested in January during ICE’s Operation Metro Surge in Minneapolis.
In 2022, under the Biden administration, the Department of Homeland Security had granted the man permission to stay in the U.S. because he was a minor who had suffered physical and emotional abuse by a parent.
Nebraska
Recent rain may fall short for parts of drought-stricken Nebraska
LINCOLN, Neb. (KOLN) — Recent rainfall across Nebraska may not have done enough to alleviate the state’s persistent drought, with many areas that needed moisture most receiving insufficient amounts.
The southeast region received the most rain over the past few days, where conditions are abnormally dry or in moderate drought.
The southern panhandle, where conditions are most severe, received minimal rainfall.
Last Thursday’s drought monitor showed exceptional drought in portions of the panhandle, including Morrill and Garden counties, where nearly 1 million acres burned in February.
Two-thirds of the state was in extreme drought, according to the map released last Thursday.
“Conditions are probably about as bad as a dust bowl. The map that was released last Thursday shows that two-thirds of the state were in extreme drought, which basically means that if you combine factors, that’s the worst 5% we’ve ever seen,” said Dr. Eric Hunt, a climatologist at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln.
Hunt said it would take multiple good rains in a row with cooler temperatures over the span of a month to pull some areas out of their drought conditions.
Pasture conditions around the state are poor, with only 4% considered very good to excellent—dead last in the nation.
“Some of the northern panhandle and northeast Nebraska did okay, but there’s large sections of north central and northeastern Nebraska that did not pick up as much. And the southern panhandle generally got the shaft yet again,” Hunt said.
The University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s drought monitor will update again Thursday morning. It will give scientists a better idea of how much this weekend’s storms made a difference in the state’s drought.
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