Nebraska
Wisconsin vs. Nebraska: Four things to watch as both teams try to become bowl eligible
Wisconsin coach Luke Fickell looks ahead to Senior Day, Nebraska
Badgers football coach Luke Fickell met with the media Monday at the McClain Center in advance of the team’s final home game of the season.
WISCONSIN (5-5, 3-4 BIG TEN) VS. NEBRASKA (5-5, 3-4)
When: 6:30 p.m. Saturday.
Where: Camp Randall Stadium.
TV: NBC with Noah Eagle (play-by-play), Todd Blackledge (analysis) and Kathryn Tappen (sideline).
Radio: FM-97.3 and AM-920 in Milwaukee and a state network with Matt Lepay (play-by-play), Mark Tauscher (analysis) and Patrick Herb (sideline).
Line: Wisconsin by 6½.
Series: Wisconsin leads, 12-4, including 6-1 in Madison.
Coaches: Luke Fickell (6-5, first full season; 69-30, seventh season overall) vs. Nebraska’s Matt Rhule (5-5, first season; 52-48, eighth season overall).
FOUR THINGS TO WATCH
Will Luke Fickell’s players come out flying or will they get off to another slow start?
In the last five games, UW has been outscored, 72-23, in the first half. That led to losses to Iowa, Ohio State, Indiana and Northwestern. UW overcame a 14-7 halftime deficit to defeat Illinois, 25-21. UW hasn’t held a halftime lead since its 24-13 victory over Rutgers on Oct. 7. When Northwestern took control early last week, the Wildcats drained all the energy from the Camp Randall Stadium crowd and UW never recovered. Nebraska is banged up and limited on offense. But the Cornhuskers play sound defense and if they stymie UW early, the home crowd could grow restless and players could be frustrated.
With UW’s offense sputtering, the defense needs to take the ball away to help Phil Longo’s unit
UW enters the game with a minus-two turnover margin – 13 takeaways and 15 turnovers. Since forcing three turnovers in the loss to Ohio State, UW has gone two games without a takeaway. The Badgers have to take the ball way from Nebraska, which is 129th nationally out of 130 FBS teams in turnover margin (minus-14). The Cornhuskers have more interceptions thrown (14) than they have takeaways (13). Add 13 lost fumbles and you can understand why Nebraska is averaging just 16.0 points per game in Big Ten play, No. 12 in the league.
The Badgers struggle to score TDs in the red zone; Nebraska’s defense is stingy in the red zone.
Big Ten teams have reached the red zone a total of 20 times in seven games against the Cornhuskers. That means the Cornhuskers have allowed a touchdown on just 35% of opponents’ red-zone trips. That is the No. 2 mark in the Big Ten behind Michigan (22.2%). That isn’t good news for the Badgers, who have scored 12 touchdowns on 22 trips (54.5%). UW took the opening kickoff last week against Northwestern and drove from its 28 to a first down at the Wildcats’ 16. Tanner Mordecai threw an incompletion on first down; Jackson Acker gained 2 yards on second down; and Mordecai was sacked for a 1-yard loss on third down. UW settled for a 33-yard field goal and the Badgers reached the red zone only two more times. The second chance ended with an incompletion on fourth and 4 from the 8, and the final chance ended when Acker scored on a 3-yard run with 11 seconds left.
No matter which running backs are available, UW must find a way to spark its ground game
UW rushed 46 times for 212 yards in the 24-13 victory over Rutgers the fifth game of the season. In the last five games, the Badgers have rushed a combined 140 times for 524 yards, an average of 3.7 per carry and 104.8 per game. Braelon Allen (ankle) wasn’t fully recovered last week and got just three carries. Will he be able to give UW more this week? “It didn’t click at all,” Fickell said after UW was limited to 86 yards on 24 carries by Northwestern. “The reality is we couldn’t run the football, regardless of whatever the situation was, whether they were bringing safeties down, whether they were running linebackers. We have to be able to run the football.”
More: What is the Freedom Trophy? How Wisconsin-Nebraska Big Ten football game honors military
HISTORY LESSON
We’ll look back at the teams’ meeting last season in Lincoln.
UW was 3-4 in the Big Ten and 5-5 overall and needing to win one of its final two games to qualify for a bowl berth.
Playing less than a week after former teammate Devin Chandler was shot and killed in Virginia, the Badgers scored two touchdowns in the final 10 minutes to rally for a 15-14 victory.
Graham Mertz and Skyler Bell capped a 10-play, 75-yard touchdown drive with a 10-yard pass to help UW pull within 15-9.
The two-point play failed, but Mertz capped a seven-play, 50-yard drive with a sneak from 2 yards to put UW ahead, 15-14, with 35 seconds left.
The two-point play failed again, but UW’s defense held on the final series and the Badgers had a critical, emotional victory.
Chez Mellusi (21 carries, 98 yards), Allen (18-92) and Isaac Guerendo (9-42) combined to rush for 232 yards.
Mertz passed for just 83 yards. But he hit Bell for a touchdown and then hit Guerendo for 27 yards to the Nebraska 7 to set up the winning score.
DID YOU KNOW?
The Badgers are a perfect 15-0 in night games at Camp Randall against unranked opponents. They are 20-6 overall in home night games. The last loss came earlier this season, 24-10, to then No. 3 Ohio State.
Nebraska
Detective speaks out about Nebraska teen’s 1969 murder case
(WOWT) – Stabbed at least a dozen times, the body of 17-year-old Mary Kay Heese was discovered along a country road in 1969.
In an update to an exclusive First Alert 6 investigation, the detective who helped solve the decades-long cold case is speaking out.
“It’s been a dark cloud over Wahoo for a long time. There’s a lot of people who remember that,” Saunders County Attorney Investigator Ted Green said.
For nine years, Detective Green has learned much about the victim’s life and how it came to an end.
“She fought some, there was a struggle,” Green said.
The suspect, Joseph Ambroz, was 22 years old in 1969 and paroled from prison for about six months when he came to live with his mom in Wahoo.
“I still don’t understand how she got in the car because that wasn’t Mary Kay’s personality,” Kathy Tull, the victim’s cousin, said in an interview.
Detective Green believes a party grove was the destination.
“And she’s just thinking its ok a couple of guys I know from the restaurant and we’re going out for a ride,” Green said.
Green reveals that Mary Kay likely got in the car with the suspect and another young man who was with them.
“He committed suicide in 77 so if he wasn’t an active participant or just didn’t realize what was going to happened all of a sudden it just happened,” Green said.
A tip line set up by the victim’s cousin led to a lake west of Wahoo where the suspect’s car may have been dumped in 1969 where dive teams found a large metal object.
“It’s everybody’s hope the golden nugget you hope had been there. But there’s evidence I can’t discuss that there’s something there,” Green said.
Evidence that remains in the lake because Green got estimates of up to $400 to pull it from the muddy, murky water.
But Green said he has plenty more evidence, including an autopsy after exhuming the body of the victim with a forensic pathologist from the Offutt Military Identification Lab adding expertise.
“There’s DNA available, its just I’ve got to go off of we have available to us,” Green said.
Though forensics will play a part in this case, it appears solved the old-fashioned way.
“This is a case that didn’t have anything glaring but had small pieces along the way. This is all gum shoe, all gum shoe work,” Green said.
Green would not respond when asked if he has found a murder weapon.
The 1969 murder of a small town high school Junior led to hundreds of interviews and tips over 55 years, and the investigation narrowed from ten suspects to one.
“Well been able to exclude everybody mentioned as a suspect way back when except for this guy,” Green said.
Even though the suspect is in custody, the case is not closed.
If you have information on the murder of Mary Kay Hesse, call the Saunders County Attorney’s Office at 402-443-5613.
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Nebraska
Seven behavioral health care providers tapped for new program that helps Nebraskans in crisis • Nebraska Examiner
LINCOLN — Seven behavioral health care providers have been selected to launch a new certification program designed to improve mental health and substance use care across the state — and provide around-the-clock crisis help for Nebraskans.
Called the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinics initiative, the effort has been described as “transformational.” To start, it will involve: CenterPointe, Community Alliance, Heartland Counseling Services, Heartland Family Services, Lutheran Family Services, South Central Behavioral Health Services and The Well.
“This is a significant step for Nebraska,” said Matt Ahern, interim director of the Department of Health and Human Services’ Medicaid and Long-Term Care division. “We’re really excited about this model because it incentivizes a more integrated care — a whole person approach rather than segmenting behavioral health from physical health and everything else happening in a person’s life.”
Serves all
Selection of providers, announced Wednesday, follows passage last year of Legislative Bill 276, the Certified Community Behavioral Health Clinic Act, sponsored by State Sen. Anna Wishart of Lincoln and signed into law by Gov. Jim Pillen.
This is a monumental step toward building healthier and stronger communities.
– State Sen. Anna Wishart of Lincoln
CCBHCs emerged from the Excellence in Mental Health Act, a federal law signed in 2014 to improve the nation’s mental health system. The model ensures that clinics provide a wide array of services, such as crisis response, medication management, psychotherapy and community and peer support.
In return, providers are allowed to participate in a restructured payment model that better accounts for costs associated with services, according to a DHHS news release. Certified clinics are required to serve anyone who requests care for mental health or substance use, regardless of their ability to pay, place of residence or age.
Over the next year, the Nebraska DHHS divisions of Behavioral Health and Medicaid and Long-Term Care will work with the seven provider organizations to develop services needed to meet the state requirements and federal criteria determined by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.
Programs are to be up and running by January 2026.
“The CCBHC model allows a clinic to truly focus on delivering the quality of care and breadth of services a person needs,” said Thomas Janousek, director of DHHS Behavioral Health. “It focuses on reducing administrative barriers for providers which ultimately results in better care for the individuals it serves.”
‘No-brainer’
By launching the initiative, Wishart said, the state is “transforming” the way Nebraskans access mental health and substance abuse care, in a coordinated and comprehensive way that fills service gaps.
“This is a monumental step toward building healthier and stronger communities,” she said Wednesday.
Wishart has said she expects the CCBHCs to reduce emergency room visits and incarcerations. Data from other states that have implemented such clinics have shown reductions in law enforcement involvement and hospital usage, state officials have said.
Pillen has called the legislation a “no-brainer” for Nebraska. His testimony at a legislative hearing in early 2023 surprised some, as the Republican governor stepped across the political aisle to speak on behalf of a bill introduced by a Democrat, Wishart.
At the time, Pillen said that Nebraskans “must come together to solve tough problems.”
After completing the certification program, a provider is to be recognized as a CCBHC, offering integrated physical and behavioral health services to Nebraska families. Services are to include: around-the-clock crisis support; easy access to mental health and substance use care; tailored treatment plans; specialized care for veterans and military personnel; peer support; comprehensive psychiatric rehabilitation.
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Nebraska
Nebraska votes against second ballot measure that would have introduced new abortion protections
Scripps News and Decision Desk HQ project voters in Nebraska will not pass a measure that would have enshrined stronger abortion protections in the state constitution.
Nebraska’s Initiative 439 would have amended the state’s constitution to provide access to abortion until fetal viability, which is at the end of the second trimester around 24 weeks. It would have also included life of the mother exceptions and very clearly stated that it’s up to the practitioner to determine viability.
The measure narrowly failed. Counting of ballots continued for weeks after election night.
The measure, along with Nebraska Initiative 434, were both on Nebraska’s ballot in the November election.
RELATED STORY | Nebraska votes to ban abortion after first trimester
Voters passed Initiative 434, which bans abortion after the first trimester. It includes exceptions for medical emergencies, rape and incest.
Nebraska law will continue to ban abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy. That law went into effect in June of 2023. It includes exceptions for saving the life or health of the mother and for rape or incest.
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