Darrel Dupit’s signature mustache feels out of place next to his unassuming Northwestern quarter-zip and black sweatpants. It’s all business for Northwestern’s veteran in-game host. He’s got his work cut-out for him.
Nebraska
Northwestern sees ghosts in blowout loss to No. 8 Nebraska
Traveling fans of undefeated No. 8 Nebraska outnumber the home Northwestern crowd 2-to-1 in the paid seats, and a sleepy Saturday afternoon student section does not look like it can make up the difference at tip-off.
By the second half, Welsh-Ryan Arena is loud in all the wrong ways. Dupit enters a hostile environment at the under-eight media timeout with the Cornhusker faithful bursting at the seams after an 11-0 Nebraska run. ’Cats trail by 19.
“Northwestern needs you now more than ever,” he pleads to the home fans not already rushing for the exits. “Lets – go – ‘Cats! Let’s – go – ‘Cats!”
Dupit’s voice on the arena loudspeakers holds back the away fans for a moment, but he’s ultimately powerless against the wall of traveling Cornhuskers, who are loud in their pride as they watch what already feels like the best team in program history.
“Go – Big – Red!” overwhelms Dupit and Welsh-Ryan. Nebraska shoots 10 quiet second half free throws. Northwestern falls 77-58 in its largest home loss since an 87-58 loss to Pittsburgh on Nov. 28, 2022. You have to go back a full five years to find a worse home loss in the Big Ten — a 96-73 loss to No. 8 Iowa on Jan. 17, 2021.
“I walked out of the tunnel pregame, I looked up and the whole balcony looked like it was red,” said Nebraska head coach Fred Hoiberg postgame. “It’s just incredible to have that support…I know we get a good group on the road and we play like that makes a difference. It really matters and helps us.”
Northwestern and Nebraska have long been sister programs in the Big Ten, bound by record-setting mediocrity. For years, the ‘Cats were the only Power Five program to never qualify for the NCAA tournament, breaking the 78-year long cold streak in 2017. The Cornhuskers still hold the unfortunate distinction as the only Power Five program without a single NCAA tournament win. It’s coming.
The similarities extend beyond the ugly histories. Both Hoiberg and Chris Collins pride themselves as developmental head coaches. They win with upperclassmen — Northwestern with Nick Martinelli, Boo Buie and Bryant McIntosh; Nebraska with Rienk Mast, Pryce Sandfort and Keisei Tominaga. What their teams lack in talent, they make up with hustle and hard, disciplined defense.
Hoiberg and Collins even look alike, if you squint. Two former all-conference college hoopers who still look like they could give you an efficient ten points on the right night. Hoiberg has a little bit more hair, but Collins has more years in the Big Ten. It’s easy to keep stress levels low when you’re undefeated through 18 games.
“We were never 18-0, but watching how they played today reminded me a lot of our best teams,” said Collins postgame.“ Everybody was just locked in, helping each other out, playing off of each other. And we haven’t been able to find that with this group. Ultimately that’s my responsibility, and we’re going to keep at it.”
Nebraska is a ghost of good Northwestern teams past. Hoiberg started five upperclassmen on Saturday afternoon, all but one of whom have been with the program for at least two years. Collins didn’t start one underclassman in either tournament run in 2023 or 2024.
The 2025-26 ‘Cats are younger than this juggernaut Nebraska side. Collins started two true freshman, one true sophomore and a transfer junior. Only two of the five — Nick Martinelli and Angelo Ciaravino — were on the team last year.
That inexperience cost Northwestern in the second half, as Pryce Sandfort and Braden Frager gleefully torched the ever-sloppy Wildcat defensive rotations. The two Nebraska sharp-shooters made as many second half threes (five) as Northwestern made all game.
“[Defensive execution] in the second half of games seems to be a little bit of a bugaboo,” said Collins. “Part of that is a little bit of fatigue. Part of it is mental toughness, finding a way to get spots. We haven’t been as dialed in with some of our rotations and our schemes, and we work on them every single day.”
Northwestern’s second half unraveling occurred mostly without Arrinten Page on the court. Page finished with his first goose egg in a Northwestern uniform, playing a season-low nine minutes and failing to even attempt a shot. He didn’t play after the 17:35 mark in the second half.
Page’s future in the Wildcat rotation is in serious jeopardy if he continues to struggle offensively because his defense has become a genuine liability. In the last two games, the transfer big man’s defense has regressed from below average to Friday the 13th if Jason traded his machete for an M-16. Per Inside NU’s Eliav Brooks-Rubin, Northwestern’s defensive rating was a full 50-points worse with Page on the court against Illinois and 28-points worse in his nine minutes of tick on Saturday.
“I just didn’t feel like he was playing that well,” said Collins of his decision to sit Page for most of the second half. “Tough matchup, they were playing five guards…We’re going to stick with him and hopefully get him ready to play on Wednesday night.”
Without Page’s offense — or really anyone else’s offense outside of Tre Singleton and Nick Martinelli —Northwestern failed to reach 60 points for the first time in the 2025-26 campaign. True freshman guard Jake West had his flashes but looked altogether overwhelmed in his second career start. Jayden Reid, playing the sixth-man role for the second straight game, never found his rhythm after dropping a season-high 28 points against Illinois on Wednesday night, scoring just seven in 27 minutes.
Singleton and West are reasons for optimism. Collins fawned over his freshman point guard after the loss — scrappy, competitive, tough, hard-nosed all found their way into one sentence.
“[West’s] got to get more experienced and seasoned and learn how to continue to run a team, and all those things that it takes for a freshman point guard,” he said. “I’m not comparing him, but I remember playing against Braden Smith as a freshman, and now what he looks like as a senior. It’s a vastly superior player, and you get that by experience.”
It’s all about experience. Northwestern’s true freshman are getting a crash course what it takes to win in the Big Ten. Saturday’s loss showed to Nebraska them everything this Northwestern team can be — and everything it’s not.
Nebraska
Inside America’s Only Federal Quarantine Unit for Hantavirus Cruise Passengers
Sixteen passengers evacuated from the cruise ship linked to the growing Andes hantavirus outbreak are now being monitored inside Nebraska Medicine’s highly specialized federal quarantine unit—the only facility of its kind in the United States. The unit, designed to contain some of the world’s deadliest infectious diseases, previously treated Ebola patients and some of the first Americans infected with COVID-19 aboard the Diamond Princess cruise ship.
As health officials race to contain the outbreak, one repatriated passenger has tested “mildly PCR positive” for the Andes strain of hantavirus, according to the Department of Health and Human Services, while another has developed mild symptoms. The Andes strain is the only known hantavirus capable of spreading from person to person.
TIME spoke with Dr. Michael Ash, CEO of Nebraska Medicine, about how the quarantine unit operates, how staff prevent the virus from escaping containment, and what experts currently understand about the risks posed by the Andes strain.
The conversation below has been edited for clarity.
What happens to these passengers in the first 24 hours at the biocontainment unit?
MA: Currently, anyone who developed symptoms would be transported to one of the other biocontainment units to maintain our capacity. Our quarantine unit can host 20 asymptomatic individuals with individual oxygen air exchange systems, so each person is very safely monitored in that room. If they become ill, they are transferred to the health system and to our biocontainment unit that is able to provide care all the way up to intensive care. That is a smaller unit, and it’s a much more intensive unit. So we wanted to protect as much capacity as we could.
Of the sixteen Americans that came to University of Nebraska Medical Center, one had tested positive in another country. That individual is displaying no symptoms. Out of an abundance of caution, they were transferred to our biocontainment unit. The 15 asymptomatic patients who tested negative were put into quarantine. Each individual has their own room with a dedicated air supply, and all air exiting the room passes through HEPA filtration. All waste and water lines are protected and separate. The 15 patients are being individually monitored.
How are the pilots, crew members, and other staff involved in transporting the passengers protected from exposure to the virus?
MA: No commercial airlines were used. The American citizens were wearing personal protective equipment, so wearing gowns, masks, eye protection. The staff that flew and traveled on and [handled boarding and deplaning], all had additional training and protective equipment. This is part of a well-coordinated effort that has routine drills, education and competencies.
If, during those 42 days, the person is determined to be negative and asymptomatic and can be monitored in their home state, they would not travel commercially. Instead, they would use private air or ground transportation. That will all be done in conjunction with ASPR (Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, an operating agency under the HHS that responds to public health emergencies).
How worried are you about the Andes strain’s capability to transmit person to person?
MA: Hantavirus itself is not new and has been known for decades. Of the known strains, only the Andes variant has been shown to spread from person to person, which is the strain involved in this case.
Transmission of Andes hantavirus has only been documented from symptomatic individuals, people who are actively ill, to others who have had prolonged, close contact, generally defined as at least 15 minutes within six feet. There are no documented cases of transmission from an asymptomatic person.
That said, we’re not taking any chances. Everyone currently in quarantine will remain there until authorities are confident they are no longer transmissible. The incubation period for the Andes virus is believed to be up to 42 days. Those individuals will be monitored closely for at least 72 hours while officials conduct additional interviews, proximity [assessments] and epidemiology evaluations.
The Davis Global Center at the University of Nebraska Medical Center campus, which holds the National Quarantine Unit, is seen on May 11, 2026 in Omaha, Nebraska. Dylan Widger—Getty Images
How will patients in quarantine be monitored and tested for hantavirus, and how does it differ from COVID procedures?
MA: Two things will happen. At a minimum, individuals will be monitored throughout the day for any symptoms. If they develop symptoms at any point, they will undergo hantavirus testing, including PCR testing. Unlike a simple positive-or-negative home COVID-19 test, PCR testing can measure how much of the virus is present in the bloodstream. If individuals remain asymptomatic and are considered to have little to no exposure risk, they would not undergo routine testing.
We worked in conjunction with the CDC and the public health labs to be able to test for the specific [Andes] strain. Because the strain is rare in the United States, such testing is not widely available across the country. That’s something that we’ve worked to be able to provide in our facility, in order to provide rapid turnaround times.
Does the presence of the virus in someone’s blood mean they are certain to become symptomatic later on?
MA: That is part of the reason we placed them in the biocontainment unit for closer monitoring. As this trip was an expedition and it went on for quite some time, it is possible they were exposed, and their own immune system was able to fight off the hantavirus. That is why they will undergo routine testing.
It is possible they may never become symptomatic, and we certainly hope that is the case. But out of an abundance of caution, we placed them in the treatment area and will continue to monitor them very closely.
How is Nebraska Medicine making sure medical staff don’t get infected?
MA: Each room has what is called negative pressure, with its own air supply. Water and waste are also specially treated to help ensure that, if a patient becomes symptomatic and is moved to the biocontainment unit, nothing is released back into the general population. Even the water is autoclaved. Everything is disposed of in an incredibly safe way.
Staff members use additional personal protective equipment that provides an independent air supply to ensure they are not at risk of exposure to the virus. So that unit is completely compartmentalized from other patients. It is a very, very specialized unit—that’s why there’s so few of them in the country.
Can you explain what autoclave means?
MA: If you go to your dentist, all of the surgical instruments are autoclaved. The same thing for any instrumentation within the hospital. It’s very high heat that destroys everything, and it destroys the virus. Even waste products that come from the person are autoclaved.
Are you confident about Nebraska Medicine’s ability to handle the hantavirus outbreak?
MA: The highest confidence. Going back to 2014, we have safely treated highly infectious patients, including Ebola patients. We received patients with some of the first COVID patients in our country coming off of the Diamond Princess cruise ship. We have worked with our federal partners with ASPR, with the White House, Health and Human Services.
We’ve prepared for this. We run drills, we train our staff very carefully. This is part of our identity. We are one of the best prepared centers on the planet for situations like this.
Nebraska
Nebraska makes an aggressive push for class of 2027 linebacker
Nebraska football went out to visit class of 2027 linebacker target, Matthew Brady. Brady posted about the visit on social media earlier this week.
The linebacker is the 44th overall player in the state of Illinois according to the Rivals Industry Rankings. Brady is a three-star linebacker.
The Huskers have been busy in this recruitment over the past couple of months. Brady has had three visits in total. He was first visited by the program on April 28. Wednesday’s visit was unofficial, the second of this cycle. He is also due to come to Lincoln on June 12 for an official visit. It’s clear that the program is making him a priority.
Brady would be part of a class that presently ranks 15th overall in the country, according to the Rivals Industry Rankings. This recruitment has been picking up steam over the past couple of weeks. The Illinois native is certainly rising in terms of overall interest and recruitment.
Contact/Follow us @CornhuskersWire on X (formerly Twitter) and like our page on Facebook to follow ongoing coverage of Nebraska news, notes and opinions.
Nebraska
American passengers from hantavirus-hit cruise ship to stop at Nebraska facility before heading home. Here’s what we know | CNN
As passengers of the cruise ship at the center of the hantavirus outbreak disembark in Tenerife, in Spain’s Canary Islands, Americans who were onboard will be assessed, transferred to an airport and brought back to the United States — with a first stop in Nebraska, home of the highly specialized National Quarantine Unit.
The virus, typically associated with rodents, may have passed from human to human aboard the MV Hondius cruise ship, according to the World Health Organization. Since April 11, three people from the ship have died while a handful of others are sick.
This is everything we know about how the American passengers will get back to the United States and what will happen once they’re home.
Assessment in the Canary Islands
The passengers were seen wearing blue protective clothing and masks aboard smaller boats transporting them from the cruise ship to shore.
The 17 US passengers from the MV Hondius cruise ship, along with one British national who resides in the US, will be evaluated by US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention staff in Tenerife, according to a CDC official. The CDC will conduct a risk assessment on each American passenger.
None of the US passengers is experiencing symptoms so far.
One source familiar with the matter told CNN the Americans will be brought back to the US aboard a charter aircraft with a biocontainment unit, similar to those used during Covid-19 evacuations.
Once back in the US, the passengers will be brought for further assessment to the National Quarantine Unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha.
The facility is “the only federally funded quarantine unit in the United States, designed specifically to safely house and monitor people who may have been exposed to high-consequence infectious diseases,” according to Nebraska Medicine.
There are 20 single-person, 300-square-foot rooms fitted with negative air pressure systems to contain any possible viruses. Doctors there describe them like hotel rooms, designed with en-suite bathrooms, exercise equipment, food delivery and Wi-Fi for patients staying for long periods.
A CDC official said the agency is not considering this a quarantine for the cruise ship passengers, but rather a brief visit to monitor their health.
The 18 passengers will be checked for symptoms signaling the early stages of hantavirus, including fever, muscle aches and diarrhea, the interim chancellor of the hospital, Dr. H. Dele Davis, told CNN.
The passengers will not be tested for hantavirus, as testing is not recommended for those without symptoms, according to a CDC official.
If anyone does fall ill, they could be transferred to the Nebraska Biocontainment Unit, which is a specialized unit on-site that has previously treated patients during the Ebola outbreak in 2014 and some of the first Covid-19 patients from the Diamond Princess cruise ship in 2020, according to Nebraska Medicine officials.
What you need to know about hantavirus
The passengers will be given the option to go home after their assessment in Omaha if safety protocols allow, National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday.
Bhattacharya, who is also acting director of the CDC, said the agency will interview the passengers to determine their risk. They will be deemed “low risk” if they were not in contact with someone who was symptomatic.
Bhattacharya said the CDC’s advice to the travelers would include “an offer to stay in Nebraska if they’d like, or if they want to go back home and their home situation allows it, to safely drive them home without exposing other people on the way, and then be put in the control … under the auspices of their state and local public health agencies.”
Once the passengers get back to their own homes, they will undergo daily home-based monitoring for the next 42 days, according to a CDC official.
The goal, according to Nebraska Medicine, is to monitor the passengers during the virus’ incubation period, which can last up to six weeks, and to reduce the risk of spreading the disease.
Health officials reiterated the passengers will not be quarantined but will be advised to take certain precautions.
“If it’s a high-risk exposure … there will be some modified activities that we would recommend, limiting activities outside the house that don’t involve extensive interactions with other people,” a CDC official said. “Also, they need to be working with their departments of health … with regards to the nature around other activities.”
Bhattacharya said the agency is following the safety protocols previously used successfully during a 2018 outbreak of the same hantavirus strain.
How we got here and what’s next
The hantavirus outbreak was first reported to the WHO on May 2 and remains a low risk to the general public, the organization says.
Hantavirus typically spreads to humans through contact with rodent urine or droppings, though this strain, the Andes virus, can in rare cases spread person-to-person through very close, prolonged contact with an infected person.
The CDC has classified its hantavirus response as Level 3, the agency’s lowest level of emergency, according to a person involved in the situation.
As of May 8, there were eight total cases connected to the MV Hondius cruise ship — six lab-confirmed plus two probable cases.
Passengers were screened Sunday after the ship docked in Tenerife, and all were asymptomatic, according to Spanish health authorities. One French passenger later showed symptoms while flying home, and all five evacuees on that flight will enter isolation protocols, the country’s prime minister said.
As of May 9, three passengers — a Dutch couple and one German national — have died after contracting hantavirus, according to WHO.
Seven other American passengers who previously disembarked the ship are being monitored in five states — Arizona, California, Georgia, Texas and Virginia, officials said.
New Jersey said it is also monitoring two people who were exposed, and Utah reported that at least one passenger was from that state.
None of these people are exhibiting signs of the illness, officials said.
Symptoms can include fever, muscle aches, chills, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, cough, difficulty breathing and chest pain.
Hoping to quell concerns before the passengers disembarked, WHO Director General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said this hantavirus outbreak is “not another Covid-19.”
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