Connect with us

Nebraska

Nebraska routs Southern, takes care of business ahead of UCLA showdown

Published

on

Nebraska routs Southern, takes care of business ahead of UCLA showdown


The rout was on as soon as Brice Williams drained his first shot of the night, a 3-pointer with 19:04 showing on the game clock.

Nebraska didn’t waste much time gaining a sizable lead on the Southern Jaguars and putting them away in the first half inside a packed Pinnacle Bank Arena on Monday night.

The Huskers turned a 24-point halftime lead, 39-15, into a 77-43 win to improve to 11-2 on the season while the Jags out of the Southwestern Athletic Conference dropped to 5-8.

It wasn’t all pretty. NU gave up a whopping 17 offensive rebounds and committed 14 turnovers. Southern just didn’t have the talent to do anything with it.

Advertisement

“I’ve liked how we’ve gone out and competed on that end. Got to get better on the glass,” Nebraska head coach Fred Hoiberg said after the game. “They got 17 (offensive boards), but they missed a lot of shots. I think it’s about 30 percent, that’s the number. We want to keep them under 30 percent on on their offensive rebound percentage. So clean that up. Clean the turnovers up. And hopefully we’ll have chance to have a good season.”

Southern was not at full strength on Monday night. Guards Michael Jacobs and Tidjian Dioumassi — two of the team’s best players — didn’t make the trip to Lincoln. Jacobs is averaging a team-best 10.6 points per game while Dioumassi is averaging 9 points and 3.8 assists.

But even if Southern had Jacobs and Dioumassi, there was little evidence it would have made much of a difference. Hoiberg’s team was flying around on defense and had media members looking up what the record is for fewest points allowed.

The answer is 26 points, which was set by Bethune-Cookman on Dec. 20, 2003, when NU beat the Wildcats 70-26.

“Our defense has to be our constant. We’re not a real pretty team, obviously. So defense has to be our calling card,” Hoiberg said after the game. “Every time we step on the floor, that has to be what gets us going. And we had a little bit of a rhythm. We shot the ball, I think we made 13 threes. But if we go out there and guard like we have been, then we’re going to have a chance to win most nights that we step on the floor.”

Advertisement

While Husker assistant Nate Loenser’s defense was scrambling around like mad men and forcing Southern to an abysmal 22% from the field and 0-of-11 from 3 in the first half, Hoiberg’s offense was getting contributions from several players in the first 20 minutes.

In the first half NU shot 46.2% from the field while connecting on 42.9% from 3-point range (6-of-14) and 81.8% (9-of-11). NU’s biggest 3-point threat, Connor Essegian, came off the bench to score nine points and go 3-of-6 from deep.

Essegian finished his night with a game-high 20 points and tied his career-high from the South Dakota game earlier this season with six made 3s on 12 attempts. Two other Huskers scored in double-figures: Brice Williams with 11 points and Andrew Morgan with 10.

Nine total Huskers found the scoring column and moved the ball well for most of the night— NU dished out 22 assists on 26 field goals.

A sloppy turnover-filled start to the second half didn’t matter much for Nebraska, which still went on to cruise to the victory in the final 20 minutes and outscored Southern 38-28.

Advertisement

“It was important for us to get off to a really good start, and that’s what we did defensively,” Hoiberg said after the game. “Not real thrilled how the offense was in the second half. I thought we got stalled. I thought we got stagnant and held the ball too much after a really good couple days of getting that thing moving around and playing point-five basketball. But tonight, in the second half, we just didn’t have it.”

One bright spot in what was mostly a forgettable second half? Gavin Griffiths came off the bench and scored eight points in four minutes.

The 6-foot-7 transfer wing from Rutgers who’s had a slow start to his Husker career didn’t miss a shot when he was out there — he went 3-of-3 from the field and 2-of-2 from 3. He also grabbed two rebounds and blocked a shot.

Each of his makes had the PBA crowd — what was left of it — cheering loudly.

“I’m going to give Gavin a lot of credit for keeping himself ready,” Hoiberg said. “He had a good week of practice. And that’s what this thing’s all about, is taking advantage of your minutes and going out there and playing to the best of your ability. And I thought he did that on both ends, not only offensively, but I thought he had a couple good defensive possessions out there as well, and that’s what leads to more time.”

Advertisement

NU didn’t have backup point guard Ahron Ulis in Hawaii for the Diamond Head Classic because he sprained an ankle at practice before the Huskers even played a game on the islands.

After the game, Hoiberg said Ulis is making progress.

“He’ll get a light workout in tomorrow, and then most likely do some non-contact work on Wednesday and we’ll see how he responds to that,” Hoiberg said.

A big measuring-stick game against No. 15 UCLA (11-2) on Saturday at 1 p.m. in what’s sure to be a jam-packed and loud PBA is what’s next.

The Bruins have two top-15 wins already this season: against No. 12 Oregon (73-71) and No. 14 Gonzaga (65-62). UCLA beat the Zags on Saturday while Nebraska was beating Boston College in the Pinstripe Bowl and have been off since, so they’ll have some fresh legs, just like the Huskers will.

Advertisement

Can’t be said loud enough: this is a huge game for Hoiberg and crew.

“It’s very important we have good days of preparation. Guys can’t go out and get crazy for New Years. You can have fun after the season,” Hoiberg said. “We got two days of prep — Wednesday, Thursday — to get ready for an early game on Saturday. So we got to put this one behind us, this non-conference portion of our schedule, and get ready for an unbelievably skilled, talented, tough UCLA team.”



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Nebraska

FBI now believes New Orleans attacker acted alone, posted videos • Nebraska Examiner

Published

on

FBI now believes New Orleans attacker acted alone, posted videos • Nebraska Examiner


NEW ORLEANS — The man who sped down Bourbon Street early New Year’s Day in a pickup truck, killing at least 14 people and injuring 37 more, is believed to have acted alone in the terror attack, an FBI official said.

Shamsud-Din Jabbar, a 42-year-old military veteran from Texas, was killed in a shootout with police after barrelling down nearly three blocks of the French Quarter’s main thoroughfare. Two New Orleans police officers were wounded in the exchange.

Christopher Raia, the FBI’s deputy director of counterterrorism, said Jabbar did not have any accomplices, stressing that it is still “early in the investigation.” He also said there is “no definite link” between the New Orleans attack and Wednesday’s explosion of a Tesla Cybertruck in Las Vegas.

An active member of the U.S. Army was killed inside the truck in that incident outside the Trump International Hotel.

Advertisement

Raia joined Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry, New Orleans Mayor LaToya Cantrell and other officials for a news conference Thursday morning at Benson Tower.

“This was an act of terrorism,” Raia said. “It was premeditated and an evil act.”

Tips pouring in

The FBI has received more than 400 tips from New Orleans and outside the state in regards to the Bourbon Street incident, and hundreds of hours of surveillance video has been recovered from the French Quarter and other locations, Raia said.

Video footage shows Jabbar placing a homemade bomb at the intersection of Bourbon and Orleans streets and another two blocks away. The improvised explosive devices (IEDs) were placed inside small coolers, and investigators want to speak to anyone who saw them in the French Quarter.

Advertisement

Raia said the video also shows other people noticing the coolers, but they are not suspected of being involved in the terror attack.

The FBI would like to speak to these people and any other witnesses, and investigators plan to explore Jabbar’s life history, Raia said.

“We are looking at everything in his life,” he said.

Two other suspicious items in the French Quarter were determined not to be explosive devices. Raia confirmed bomb-making materials were found at a short-term rental home roughly two miles from where the terror attack occurred. It is believed this was where Raia assembled the devices. The FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms continue to investigate the house.

ATF Special Agent in Charge Josh Jackson confirmed that a small fire at the rental home in the St. Roch neighborhood ignited after the terror attack and said investigators are still on the scene to gather more evidence.

Advertisement

The Bourbon Street crime scene has been cleared, according to Raia. The New Orleans Police Department will determine when closed portions of the French Quarter will be reopened to the public. The city is hosting thousands of college football fans in town for the Sugar Bowl, which was rescheduled from Wednesday night to 3 p.m. Thursday.

Cleaning crews have swept up the crime scene and trash from other areas of the French Quarter that have been closed off since Wednesday morning. Vehicle access will first be provided to delivery trucks.

Videos detail timeline, background

Jabbar rented the Ford F-150 pickup truck he used in the attack Monday in Houston and drove to New Orleans on New Year’s Eve. From just after 1 a.m. Jan. 1 until just minutes before he turned onto Bourbon Street, Jabbar posted five videos on his Facebook page in which he claimed his support for Islamic State, Raia said.

Police recovered an ISIS flag that was hung from a plastic flagpole on the trailer hitch of Jabbar’s truck. In one of the videos, Jabbar said he “joined” Islamic State before the summer, according to Raia.

“Jabbar explains he originally planned to harm his family and friends but was concerned the news headlines would not focus on the ‘war between the believers and the disbelievers,’” Raia said.

Advertisement

Investigators have also recovered three cellphones and two laptop computers linked to Jabbar.

Raia encouraged anyone with information about Jabbar or the terror attack to use the 1-800-CALL-FBI tip line or share information online at fbi.gov/BourbonStreetattack.

This article first appeared in the Louisiana Illuminator, a sister site of the Nebraska Examiner in the States Newsroom network. 

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

Advertisement



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Nebraska

Insurance must now cover all parts of Nebraskans’ colorectal cancer screenings • Nebraska Examiner

Published

on

Insurance must now cover all parts of Nebraskans’ colorectal cancer screenings • Nebraska Examiner


LINCOLN — In the summer of 2002, Margaret Stamp returned home to Sarpy County from college four weeks after her 74-year-old grandmother, Phyllis Behm, had died from a short battle with colorectal cancer. 

Stamp found her dad, Mark Behm, a former northeast Nebraska county attorney and private practice lawyer, wincing in pain on the living room floor. Stamp described him as in shape and thin. She said he looked healthy and didn’t drink or smoke.

But that weekend, Stamp’s father was doubled over, and he told his daughter, “Call your mom.”

“I’d never seen him like that,” Stamp recalled. “Never even remember him getting the flu or sick. Next thing we know, he’s in emergency surgery — it’s stage IV [colorectal] cancer, and there’s nothing they can do.”

Advertisement
Margaret Stamp. (Courtesy of Margaret Stamp)

Behm grew up in Olde Towne Bellevue and graduated from the University of Nebraska College of Law in 1976. He served as the Cedar County attorney from 1977 through 1993 and had a private practice in Wausa for many years, later a private practice with other attorneys in Randolph. Behm was also a 1980 delegate to the Republican National Convention for Ronald Reagan and was president of Out Front Properties, a local property management company where his daughter is now vice president.

Stamp said her father’s doctors did what they could to prolong his life and make conditions less painful, and he continued practicing law until about a week before he died in April 2004, at the age of 52.

Twenty years later, Stamp and others have successfully pushed for new state laws that expand insurance coverage for colorectal cancer screenings and associated procedures. The latest law took effect this week.

Stamp recalled losing her father as different from cancer deaths she had seen in some movies, where someone closes their eyes and goes to sleep. She said it was awful and that her father said over and over he couldn’t breathe, had muscle spasms and felt his body shutting down.

“To me, anything you can do to stop that is worth every penny,” Stamp said. “It’s worth going in, getting your colonoscopy, even though I know it can be literally a pain in the butt for some people, but you don’t want that message, ‘It’s too late,’ because then there’s nothing to do but plan the funeral.”

Advertisement

‘We can save lives’

Legislative Bill 829 from State Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue took effect Jan. 1. It requires insurance companies to cover each “integral part” of performing a colorectal cancer screening, including:

  • Removing polyps (abnormal cell growths in the underlining of the colon or rectum) found as part of a colonoscopy.
  • Any pathology examination of a polyp biopsy.
  • Required specialist consultation prior to the screening.
  • Bowel preparation medications prescribed for the screening.
  • Anesthesia services performed in connection with the preventive colonoscopy.
State Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue. July 25, 2024. (Zach Wendling/Nebraska Examiner)

Its adoption followed passage of LB 92 in 2023, which included a provision from State Sen. Eliot Bostar of Lincoln that required insurance plans to cover screening colonoscopies, as well as an annual stool-based preventative screening test designed for patients with minimal to average risk of colorectal cancer.

Nebraska is ranked in the lower half of states for colorectal cancer screening rates, according to the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services.

Blood told the Nebraska Examiner she came up with the idea for her LB 829 when she was getting a colonoscopy and was handed a release before her procedure saying most insurance companies wouldn’t cover part of a colonoscopy should they find something, like a polyp, which can grow into cancer over time.

“Why would you want somebody to be put under anesthesia and look for something and just leave it there?” Blood said. “It made no sense whatsoever.”

Blood said her colonoscopy found something that her insurance didn’t cover, which left her on the hook for a procedure that cost $800 to $900.

Advertisement

Congress has closed this “loophole” for people on Medicare and Medicaid as part of the Affordable Care Act, Blood said, while others with private insurance were told they “could just go pound sand.”

“I thought, well, we can save lives with this one tweak,” Blood said of her Nebraska law, which passed 41-5 in the spring.

What is colorectal cancer?

Jungyoon Kim, Ph.D., who does colon cancer screening research at the University of Nebraska Medical Center’s College of Public Health, said colorectal cancer develops in the large intestine areas like the colon or rectum that are part of the digestive system.

Most colorectal cancers start with a polyp, Kim said, most of which are benign. However, some polyps can change into cancer over time, mostly over many years, like 10-15 years.

Jungyoon Kim, Ph.D., who does colon cancer screening research at the University of Nebraska Medical Center’s College of Public Health. (Courtesy of Jungyoon Kim)

Symptoms can include blood in the stool or toilet after a bowel movement, constipation over a long period, abdominal pain or cramping, changes in the shape or size of stool and sudden or unexplained weight loss. If observed, Kim said a doctor should be consulted immediately.

One of the most common misconceptions, though, is that people think they must wait to see symptoms before getting screened, Kim said, which gives polyps time to grow. 

Advertisement

“Sometimes, if you see the symptoms and go to the doctor, it might be too late,” Kim said. “That’s why the United States Preventative Services Task Force recommends to get screening when people become 45, even if they do not have any symptoms.”

People with a family history or who have previously had cancer should be screened earlier, Kim said, such as in their 20s or 30s.

Kim said that when a doctor can find and remove polyps, it stops the growth in its tracks and is “like you’re preventing cancer before it even becomes cancer cells.” 

If colorectal cancer is detected early, Kim said, the chance of the cancer being cured is about 92%.

Some cancers can be prevented by regular screening, which includes breast cancer through mammograms at the age of 40 or other screenings for cervical or lung cancer.

Advertisement

Disparities include rural Nebraska

According to the Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, early-age colorectal cancer diagnoses are on the rise. By 2030, the cancer is predicted to be the leading cause of death in people younger than 50, according to DHHS.

It is already the second-leading cause of cancer deaths in men and women combined.

Kim said disparities exist among racial minorities, people living in rural areas, people who are low-income or people with limited access to insurance or certain doctors, who can’t access screenings.

Margaret Stamp, right, meets with State Sen. Carol Blood of Bellevue to talk about pending legislative proposals, including one of Blood’s bills to expand insurance coverage for colorectal cancer screening on Feb. 14, 2024. (Courtesy of Margaret Stamp)

Blood noted those disparities as a reason for the bill, as every medical procedure comes with a certain amount of risk, but that for some patients, they had to “play Russian roulette with what’s in their body” and decide whether they could pay or come back later, if needed.

“That just seems wrong, especially when you look at how much higher colon cancer rates are in our rural areas,” Blood said.

Kim and Stamp said the new law made sense. Stamp added it will help avoid costlier cancer treatments and help save lives.

Advertisement

Importance of prevention

Stamp said her father had found some blood in his stool about two years prior to discovering he had cancer. His doctor had said it was probably hemorrhoids but gave him an at-home testing kit just in case, as at the time he didn’t have a family history of the disease.

The day after Stamp’s father found out he had cancer, Stamp said her mother found the at-home test in her father’s drawer at home. Stamp noted that around 2000, colon cancer wasn’t talked about as much as it is today. She said some people are still embarrassed to talk about it.

Stamp, a University of Nebraska-Lincoln alum who is now 44 and lives in Omaha with her husband and two teenage daughters, got her first colonoscopy at the age of 24. 

She has had three more colonoscopies since, with a fifth planned in 2026, and encouraged others to get the procedure, which she described as a “walk in the park.” 

“You are taken such good care of, and it is nothing compared to getting cancer and having to have surgery or chemotherapy or one of those colostomy bags,” Stamp said.

Advertisement

Stamp said her father missed her getting married about six months after his death and her two daughters being born, all for not realizing he had cancer.

“It was two quick deaths in the family that got me starting to try to advocate for colon cancer and having colonoscopies,” Stamp said. “… Anything people can do for prevention, it is so worth it, because it’s one of those things you don’t see coming.”

YOU MAKE OUR WORK POSSIBLE.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Nebraska

22-year-old woman accused of leading high-speed chase in central Nebraska

Published

on

22-year-old woman accused of leading high-speed chase in central Nebraska


LINCOLN, Neb. (KLKN) — An Omaha woman was arrested Tuesday after a high-speed chase in central Nebraska.

The pursuit started about 10:30 p.m. on Highway 30 east of Central City, according to the Merrick County Sheriff’s Office.

A deputy saw a Chevrolet Impala driving recklessly near County Road 22, the sheriff’s office said, forcing other drivers to swerve out of the way.

The deputy tried to pull over the car, but authorities said the driver — 22-year-old McKenzie Hinderliter of Omaha — sped off.

Advertisement

Hinderliter topped 125 mph before getting off the highway and leading the deputy down county roads, according to the sheriff’s office.

She went off the road and rolled while trying to make a turn, deputies said.

Investigators found drugs in the car and discovered that Hinderliter had a revoked driver’s license, the sheriff’s office said.

They think alcohol and drugs contributed to the crash.

Hinderliter was taken to an area hospital, then transported to Bryan Medical Center in Lincoln with minor injuries.

Advertisement

Authorities are seeking a warrant for her arrest on two felony charges: possession of a controlled substance and operating a motor vehicle to avoid arrest.

She also faces several misdemeanors and infractions, including driving during revocation, obstructing a police officer and willful reckless driving.

Categories: Nebraska News, News





Source link

Continue Reading

Trending