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Ed Beyer’s grandsons start up basketball camp in memory of North Dakota coaching legend’s long-time camp

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Ed Beyer’s grandsons start up basketball camp in memory of North Dakota coaching legend’s long-time camp


HILLSBORO, N.D. — The Red River Valley Basketball Camp, run by legendary Hillsboro basketball coach Ed Beyer, was a staple in the area for decades through the 1980s, 1990s and 2000s.

Hosted at Mayville State, the week-long camp brought hundreds of athletes together to learn and play.

By the mid-2000s, as the late Beyer stepped away from the camp, the Red River Valley Basketball Camp eventually dissolved and became a team camp.

Five years ago, Beyer’s grandsons and son-in-law — an accomplished basketball family in their own right — had an idea to recreate grandpa’s camp, an annual summer event — that started in 1982 — of which they shared fond memories.

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So Craig Nelson, Brad Nelson and their dad Dave Nelson started the Love of the Game camp in 2019. The camp has grown from 150 campers in Year 1 to 625 this summer.

“(Beyer) gave us a blueprint of what a really good camp looks like,” said Craig Nelson, a two-time (2003, 2002) North Dakota Class B all-state basketball player at May-Port-C-G. “He showed me what a fun and good camp looks like. We had that blueprint to be able to take and do something with. To see a lot of parents come to (our camp), sending their kids or stopping by after, and saying I remember (Beyer’s) camp … there’s those memories and relationships.”

Ed Beyer
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Beyer coached the Hillsboro boys basketball team for 37 years, retiring after the 1997 season. He had a 688-195 won-loss mark at Hillsboro, a state record for boys basketball coaching wins when he retired.

Craig, who was a North Dakota Mr. Basketball finalist in 2003 and later played at Northern State, now coaches high school basketball in the Sioux Falls area.

His dad, Dave Nelson, was a first team all-state selection in 1977 for Hillsboro. After a lengthy coaching stint at Ashby, Minn., Nelson coached nine years at May-Port-C-G, where he took teams to five Class B state tournaments and won two B boys state championships.

“When my oldest son (Brad) moved back from California, the boys started talking about how neat it would be to somewhat model a camp after the camp grandpa started,” said Dave, who helped Beyer with the Red River Valley Camp for nearly 20 years. “That talking wound up with us putting together a camp. We use both gyms in Hillsboro and both gyms in Central Valley. The first couple of years the numbers were such we only needed a couple of gyms. As word got out what kind of camp we were running and how we were running it, the numbers grew the last three, four years.”

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Craig Nelson (left), Dave Nelson (middle) and Brad Nelson started the Love of the Game Basketball Camp in memory of Craig and Brad’s grandpa Ed Beyer’s Red River Valley Basketball Camp.

Submitted photo

As summer basketball trends moved toward players attending team camps or strictly playing in games, the Nelsons wanted to stand out by focusing on skill development and instruction.

“We felt less and less kids were going to individual camps,” Dave said. “They weren’t getting solid fundamentals taught to them and getting that experience of learning the game through direct instruction … the finer aspects of the game.

“We’re sticklers for the fundamentals. Some of the other things we focus on are team skills and how to be a good teammate and how to handle adversity and be coachable. Those are stressed strongly during our camp. We not only want you to be a better basketball player but a better person and teammate, as well.”

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Before the Love of the Game camp started, Craig was traveling the camp circuit for years as a coach, but he wanted to put his stamp on a camp gameplan.

“I wanted the curriculum fun and fundamental based,” Craig said. “It’s in the name. The Love of the Game. We need to laugh, giggle and smile and make sure kids are loving this thing.”

The growth of the camp has been a grassroots effort.

“When we started, we’d get Hillsboro kids, Central Valley, May-Port, Hatton-Northwood,” Dave said. “It was pretty local, small schools. We’d use Facebook to get the word out and coaches to encourage kids. Now, it’s more word of mouth. We’ll get kids from Fargo, Grand Forks and more and more are coming from Minnesota. It’s slowly grown and developed, and it’s important to us to have coaches actually coach.”

As the camp has grown, so has the coaching staff.

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“Us three can’t run a very good camp all by ourselves,” Craig said. “We bring in 20-30 coaches. I brought up coaches from Sioux Falls this year. They can’t believe the relationships that are built with some of these Class B towns.”

Tom Miller

Miller has covered sports at the Grand Forks Herald since 2004 and was the state sportswriter of the year in 2019 and 2022.

His primary beat is UND football but also reports on a variety of UND sports and local preps.

He can be reached at (701) 780-1121, tmiller@gfherald.com or on Twitter at @tommillergf.

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Applications now available for 2024 North Dakota swan license

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Applications now available for 2024 North Dakota swan license


BISMARCK – Hunters can now apply for a 2024 North Dakota swan license

on the Game and Fish Department’s website

at gf.nd.gov, the department said Monday, July 22.

North Dakota residents and nonresidents are eligible to apply. The resident swan license is $10, while the nonresident fee is $30. The application deadline is Aug. 21.

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North Dakota’s statewide tundra swan hunting season opens Sept. 28, and 2,200 licenses are available. Successful applicants will receive a tag to take one swan during the season. Since swans are classified as waterfowl, nonresidents may hunt them only during the period their nonresident waterfowl license is valid.

All swan hunters, regardless of age, are required to have a general game and habitat license when applying. In addition, nonresidents must have a waterfowl license, and residents 16 and older need a small game or combination license.





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Zebra Mussels In North Dakota Lakes: Will It Really Be That Bad?

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Zebra Mussels In North Dakota Lakes: Will It Really Be That Bad?


Zebra mussels are going to ruin all of our lakes right?

Okay, I know I’m going to take some heat on this, but here goes.  We’ve been hearing about zebra mussels for a long time now.  How they will destroy ecosystems, ruin beaches, clog up water intakes, compete with native species, etc.

You’ve seen the commercials and billboards from North Dakota Game and Fish, “Clean, Drain and Inspect.”  Zebra mussels are a problem, but is it really all doom and gloom?  More on that in a moment.

Zebra mussels are now in several North Dakota lakes and rivers, and you can bet more will be added in the future. 

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They include the Red River, Lake LaMoure, Lake Ashtabula, Lake Elsie, the James River, and the Sheyenne River all in eastern North Dakota.

So far western North Dakota has been spared, but you can bet zebra mussels are coming.  Here’s a map and more on ANS-infested waters in North Dakota.

Humans are considered the primary transporter of zebra mussels, but there are other spreaders.  According to Researchgate, waterfowl can transfer zebra mussels at the larvae stage.

What are we going to do about millions of migrating waterfowl each year?  Not to mention other shorebirds, reptiles, and even mammals.

I’m very familiar with zebra mussels.  I have a cabin on Enemy Swim Lake in northeast South Dakota.  We’ve had zebra mussels present in the lake now going on for 3 years.

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(A very small zebra mussel that was found on our beach this past weekend.)

Enemy Swim is located about 5 miles south of Pickerel Lake in South Dakota.  Pickerel Lake has had zebra mussels for a few years longer than my lake.

Despite joint efforts from Fish and Game, cabin owner volunteers, and interns from Fish and Game with inspection points at the boat ramp, zebra mussels still found their way into my lake. I know we all did our part to prevent it, but I sometimes think that eventually, nature will take its course.

Will zebra mussels really ruin a lake? 

There’s a lot of big claims and theories out there.  No doubt it will affect your beach life.  You will have to wear water shoes because zebra muscles can be sharp and could cut your feet.  I know I swim with my water shoes normally anyway, as I don’t like creepy crawlies touching my feet in the water.

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Will zebra mussels cause your lake property values to crash? 

To be honest, no sign of that anywhere.  Much of Minnesota’s lakes are infested with zebra mussels.  People are still spending millions of dollars for cabins on Minnetonka, Pelican, or Detroit Lakes area lakes.

Even Pickerel Lake, next to my lake has people snatching up some very expensive million-dollar cabins. You can’t even find a cabin for sale on my lake.  According to swnewsmedia, there’s no link between a drop in property values and zebra muscles.

Zebra mussels will actually clear up the water they infest.

This might improve the fishing, depending on the lake.  Species like Smallmouth Bass, Perch, Walleyes, and even panfish are known to gorge on zebra mussels.  You might catch bigger fish because of this.

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With cleaner water means you will have more sunlight and more vegetation in the lake.  Again, this is thought to improve the size of the fish.  Fish will have more places to hide and grow bigger.  It may cause anglers to adapt to new strategies to catch fish.  In some cases, it could make fishing more difficult.

As far as whether zebra mussels will destroy the ecosystem of lakes?

I’m going to come right out and say it.  I think this is highly exaggerated.  I’m not a biologist and don’t claim to be one.

Zebra mussels have been in the Great Lakes since the 1980’s.  The Walleyes and Smallmouth Bass have never been bigger.  People are still catching fish and lakes are still alive.

Zebra mussels have been in Minnesota lakes now for decades and the cabin owners I know say nothing has changed except a little extra cleaning on the docks when they pull them out each year.

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Lakes like Lake of the Woods, Mille Lacs, and all of the lakes around Detroit Lakes are still alive and well.

Let’s face it: Even the highly prized Walleye is an invasive species to lakes in our area. 

In conclusion:

When zebra mussels reach your favorite lake it will certainly change the ecosystem. Your “lake life” will likely have to adapt to some necessary changes.

However, will zebra mussels turn your lake into a barren wastewater? I don’t think so.  Adapt or die.  That’s life in a nutshell.

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Do I want zebra mussels in our lakes?  No, of course not.  However, I’m being realistic.  Sometimes you have to look for the good with the bad.

North Dakota’s Top 11 Lakes According To Our Fans

Plant Some Of These In Your Garden to Keep Mosquitoes Away

As we previously told you, mosquitoes are the most dangerous creatures on earth. If you want to keep them away from you’re yard, these plants can help!

Gallery Credit: Michelle Heart





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Color of Hockey: Rangers prospect Emery 'comfortable' heading to North Dakota | NHL.com

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Color of Hockey: Rangers prospect Emery 'comfortable' heading to North Dakota | NHL.com


Murphy played quarterback for North Dakota from 1960-62 and was its coach from 1978-79. He left a lasting impression on Eric Emery, especially after Cal Fullerton went 12-0 in 1984. Murphy died Oct. 29, 2011.

“I guess I kind of transported into EJ, the sense of respect I have for Gene Murphy and what he did for us at Cal Fullerton,” said the elder Emery, who went on to become a linebacker for the BC Lions, Calgary Stampeders and Ottawa Rough Riders of the Canadian Football League from 1985-87.

“He brought us together and he actually told us that we were going to be champions because he saw the capability in us. I just had to have him (EJ) go look at North Dakota because Gene came from there and a lot of his coaches that he brought with him came from there and they were such good guys. So I figured North Dakota must have something going on.”

There’s also a North Dakota connection between the younger Emery and NTDP coach Nick Fohr, who was born and raised in Grand Forks and regularly attended UND games with his father Roger, who was an off-ice official right up until when he died of cancer in January 2023.

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“Oh yeah, we talked about it, for sure,” Fohr said. “Pretty cool place for me and it’s pretty cool to have somebody like EJ interested in that place.

“When people think of an EJ Emery, a Black kid that that’s looking to play hockey, rarely are they going to place him in North Dakota, right? We had some really good conversations about the city, the town and what it’s like. From talking to EJ and his family, they (UND) did a really, really, really good job in the recruiting process in making him feel comfortable, letting him see what it’s like and meeting some football players and other people. It just felt like home to him is how I took it.”

North Dakota hockey coach Brad Berry said Emery had been on the team’s radar since he played for Yale Hockey Academy in Abbotsford, British Columbia, in 2021-22.

“When we got to the recruiting process, he got to know us, we got to know him and it felt comfortable,” Berry said. “When we recruit players, we have a criteria of what we want in a player: It doesn’t matter where you come from or who you are. It matters what you are as a person, and he checked every box that we had.”

Emery (6-foot-3, 183 pounds) is UND’s first Black player since Akil Adams, a defenseman who appeared in 18 games from 1992-94.

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North Dakota has had diverse rosters since. Washington Capitals forward T.J. Oshie, a United States-born player who is Indigenous, played there from 2005-08. Center Jordan Kawaguchi, a Canada-born player of Japanese ancestry, played for UND from 2017-21 and was team captain in his final season.

Emery’s selection by the Rangers and commitment to North Dakota delighted Adams, who played in the minor leagues and Germany after he left the university.

“I’m still a North Dakota guy through and through,” said Adams, who lives in Detroit. “He’s definitely in the right place and I’m happy to see that there’s actually somebody else there. I just think it probably speaks volumes about the kind of player he is.”



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