North Dakota
Iowa State wrestling rolls North Dakota State in Sunday road dual
Iowa State’s Kevin Dresser discusses dual win over Iowa
VIDEO: Iowa State’s Kevin Dresser discusses dual win over Iowa, the first since 2004
Iowa State wrestling left little to chance on the road against North Dakota State, rolling to a 36-3 win over the Bison on Jan. 11.
The Cyclones won nine of 10 bouts against NDSU, including two by major decision, two by technical fall and a win by fall for MJ Gaitan. Iowa State left the dual with four ranked wins as well.
The highlight bout of the dual was the opener at 125 pounds between Iowa State’s Stevo Poulin and No. 17 Ezekiel Witt. Poulin got a nice 7-1 win by decision over Witt, with a takedown into a two-point turn in the second period helping decide it. At 5-5 entering the dual, it was a good sign for No. 14 Poulin as he looks to get back on track.
Evan Frost earned the second ranked win of the day at 133 vs. No. 30 Tristan Daugherty. He walked away with a 9-0 major decision with two takedowns and a two-minute ride in the second period. Anthony Echemendia followed it up with a 21-6 technical fall vs. Michael Olson at 141.
To close the first half of the dual, Jacob Frost hung on for an 11-5 win by decision over No. 25 Max Petersen. Frost got out to an early lead with two takedowns in the first period, but had to fend off a late surge in the third period with a takedown to put the match away at 11-5.
Vinny Zerban had a nice bounce-back effort at 157, defeating former NCAA All-American Gavin Drexler at 157. After taking a loss earlier in the week vs. Arizona State, Zerban went wire-to-wire vs Drexler in a 12-5 decision and nearly had a major decision had he not conceded a takedown late in the third period.
Iowa State came out of intermission still rolling. Connor Euton earned a 11-2 major decision over Boeden Greenley at 165, followed by a win by fall for Gaitan at 174 over three-time Iowa state champion Max Magayna and a gritty 4-1 sudden victory for Isaac Dean over No. 26 Aidan Brenot at 184.
CJ Carter was unable to help secure a shutout win for ISU with a 10-4 loss by decision to Devin Wasley at 197, but Yonger Bastida ended the dual on a high note with a 19-4 technical fall over Shilo Jones. at heavyweight.
Iowa State moved to 6-1 in duals. Kevin Dresser’s team has the Cyclone Open up next on Jan. 18, but no dual until Jan. 23 vs. Northern Colorado.
Iowa State wrestling vs. North Dakota State results
- 125: Stevo Poulin (ISU) over Ezekiel Witt (NDSU) (Dec 7-1)
- 133: Evan Frost (ISU) over Tristan Daugherty (NDSU) (MD 9-0)
- 141: Anthony Echemendia (ISU) over Michael Olson (NDSU) (TF 21-6 4:11)
- 149: Jacob Frost (ISU) over Max Petersen (NDSU) (Dec 11-5)
- 157: Vinny Zerban (ISU) over Gavin Drexler (NDSU) (Dec 12-5)
- 165: Connor Euton (ISU) over Boeden Greenley (NDSU) (MD 11-2)
- 174: MJ Gaitan (ISU) over Max Magayna (NDSU) (Fall 1:39)
- 184: Isaac Dean (ISU) over Aidan Brenot (NDSU) (SV-1 4-1)
- 197: Devin Wasley (NDSU) over CJ Carter (ISU) (Dec 10-4)
- 285: Yonger Bastida (ISU) over Shilo Jones (NDSU) (TF 19-4 4:53)
Eli McKown covers high school sports and wrestling for the Des Moines Register. Contact him at Emckown@gannett.com. Follow him on Twitter at @EMcKown23.
North Dakota
Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library reaches final stages of construction
MEDORA, N.D. — The Theodore Roosevelt Presidential Library (TRPL) in Medora, North Dakota, is in its final stages of construction and is expected to finish in time for the grand opening on July 4.
Roughly 100,000 square feet and sitting on 93 acres outside of Medora, the TRPL has been under construction since the summer of 2023. It has been a long journey for the TRPL team to get where they are now. Getting the project off the ground has involved many steps throughout the years: choosing architecture firm Snøhetta in 2020 to design the library, getting approval from Congress later that year to acquire the land and finalizing the purchase in 2022. The library is expected to be finished no earlier and no later than the current deadline.
“We will be squeaking into the deadline,” said Jenn Carroll, director of facilities, grounds and sustainability at the TRPL. “We’ll be working right up until the very end.”
Construction of the library is almost complete with workers already starting to polish the floors to the entrance of the TRPL’s west building. The library will be split into two halves: an east building and a west building connected together by a roof. The east building will house the employee offices, classrooms for visiting students on field trips, and an auditorium that meets all the requirements to host a presidential debate. The TRPL team hopes that a presidential debate will take place there in 2028, but until then they’re excited to invite children from across the state to visit.
“We have a goal of getting every fourth grader in North Dakota out to visit the library,” said Marcie Woehl, manager of public programs and education at the TRPL.
Dorvall Bedford / The Dickinson Press
The west building will be where the museum portion of the library will be. Part of the space will be a more traditional exhibit section detailing former president Theodore Roosevelt’s life along with experiential galleries meant to immerse visitors in specific moments. The latter will include a full-scale model of Elkhorn Ranch to recreate his time in the Badlands and an obstacle course for visiting children to represent how the children living in the White House at the time turned the attic into their own little playroom.
One of the most important rooms of the museum will be the one showing the reason why Roosevelt decided to live in the Badlands. In a dark room where nothing else is displayed, visitors will be able to see the journal that Roosevelt kept and the entry he wrote the day that both his mother and wife died. Having been kept away from the public at the Library of Congress, this will be the first time the journal has ever been on public display.
Woehl said that she’s looking forward to that room specifically.
“That’s definitely one of my favorite components because it’s so representative of T.R.,” she said. “It recreates the feelings he was working through.”
Roosevelt’s journal will be one of many artifacts that the library is gathering from organizations such as the Smithsonian, Library of Congress, and National Park Service. Yet, the TRPL will not only be important for its role in teaching history. The TRPL team has emphasized that they want the library to be sustainable and make a contribution to preserving the environment. Above the parking lot are canopies with solar panels and below are geothermal wells. Together, they produce more energy than the library will need to function, allowing the TRPL to feed extra electricity back into the grid.
Dorvall Bedford / The Dickinson Press
Even the roof will contribute to preserving the environment. The library will have a walk-able green roof planted with native flora, which involved six years of people gathering the plants and propagating the seeds, according to JE Dunn Construction vice president Marc Mellmer.
Preserving the Badlands is something that the TRPL team takes pride in.
“It’s going to be one of those places that is breathtaking to be at when all of this is in bloom in the summer,” Marcie Woehl said. “We’re really doing whatever we can to create a better environment across western North Dakota.”
While JE Dunn, a construction company headquartered in Missouri, has been leading the TRPL’s construction, the creation of the library has involved the partnership of other companies local to North Dakota. Among the many contributors include West Dakota Oil, Roughrider Electric Cooperative, Prairie Lumber Company and Dickinson Ready Mix. Mellmer, a Dickinson-native, said it was necessary for JE Dunn to work with local companies since it’s not viable for a single company to dig, pour concrete, do the roofing and accomplish everything else by itself.
“Those days are really gone — almost completely,” Mellmer said. “No construction companies are coming in and doing all of that work themselves anymore.”
“Our pitch to all of the contractors was ‘this is your opportunity to create history,’” Mellmer added. “This is our legacy that will live on for generations to come, and we got to be a part of it.“
Dorvall Bedford / The Dickinson Press
But creating history is no easy task, Mellmer realized. Working on top of the plateau, construction workers had to deal with wind, rain, mud, snow, extreme cold and extreme heat. Mellmer worried about the construction every day since the start.
“It’s like you’re building a jewel box in one of the roughest conditions you possibly can,” Mellmer said.
The TRPL team sees the library as an opportunity to bring more traffic to Medora and attention to the region. While Medora might be one of the most popular tourist destinations in North Dakota in the summer, most stores close down in the winter and the town becomes quiet. The TRPL is expected to be a place people can visit in Medora year-round, providing new jobs, a place to eat, and educational opportunities.
“Our vision is that we would have people visiting from around the world,” Carroll said. “We hope to really be an asset to the community moving forward.”
“It’s going to be life changing for so many people,” Woehl added.
With the TRPL nearly reaching completion, staff are looking forward to working in their offices soon. According to sustainability coordinator Addison Olson, the team has worked in trailers and even in a local restaurant over the years. She said: “We’re excited to have our home base finally.”
Woehl, who has been part of the team since September and has been watching the project since 2014, is excited that the countdown to the grand opening is now in the double digits. She’s proud to have played a part in the building of something that she believes will last centuries.
“What a gift, what an honor, it’s so cool,” Woehl said. “How often do you get that privilege in your lifetime?”
North Dakota
North Dakota punches ticket to 23rd Frozen Four in SF
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — The NCAA men’s ice hockey Sioux Falls regional came to a close Saturday night as North Dakota claimed a 5-0 win over Quinnipiac to punch the program’s 23rd trip to the Frozen Four and first in a decade.
The Fighting Hawks jumped on the board early with three goals in the first and added two more in the second.
“It’s one thing to give guys a game plan, but they had to execute it,” North Dakota head coach Dane Jackson said. “You got enough sharp guys that have hockey sense and puck poise and selflessness. We have high-end players. They kind of want to do better because they can, but we just said, ‘hey, let’s take what the game gives us and kind of let the puck do the work.’”
The Fighting Hawks open the Frozen Four against Wisconsin on April 9 in Las Vegas.
North Dakota
Balanced Attack Leads Team North Dakota to Youth Tier II 16U 1A Championship
IRVINE, Calif. — Team North Dakota (ND) coach Jared Cowan didn’t have many words to share after he had just witnessed his program’s first title.
“Not many words so far here, it was a great tournament,” Cowan said. “The kids played hard, resilient and they put in the work. They deserve it.”
His kids played nearly perfect in the 1A title game of the 2026 Chipotle-USA Hockey Youth Tier II 16U National Championship at Great Park Ice, taking down Team Wyoming 9-0 on Sunday.
A four-goal second period helped North Dakota take control of a game that featured 36 total penalties.
Asher Straus scored twice for North Dakota, while Nathan Fogarty, Ray Sjule, Tyler Dub, Carson Hogness, Keegan Brenno and Colton Lehn rounded out the team’s goals. There was one goal unaccounted for on the final stat sheet.
Balanced scoring has been a theme for North Dakota in this tournament. Sjule and Lehn became the 13th and 14th players to score a goal for North Dakota at nationals. Lehn led the tournament with eight assists, while Straus and Hogness tied for the team lead with five goals.
Unlike some other teams at nationals, the North Dakota roster came back together following the high school season and made a run to the national championship, just the third in state history.
“You’ve got to relearn how people play,” said Hogness, a co-captain. “People play differently in high schools, different systems, all that. So it’s a different aspect when you come back together and play. But it was fun.”
North Dakota’s 32-9 advantage in shots didn’t leave much work for goaltender Alex Straus, who had a nice kick save during a Wyoming power play midway through the first period that might have been the toughest he had to make Sunday. It was his second shutout of the tournament.
“It means a lot,” Alex Straus said. “Three weeks ago, I was on the other side, losing in the state championship, so this means a lot to me.”
Alex Straus gave a lot of the credit to his defense, which was fantastic throughout nationals. North Dakota allowed four goals in five games.
“I think they’re pretty good,” Alex Straus said. “They block a lot of shots. Get the puck out deep and I think they listen to me pretty well when I give them some communication.”
Cowan said he had to shift two forwards back to defense for this tournament due to injuries and they kept the standard high.
“They put pressure on everything, and they don’t give up too many odd-man rushes and they block shots when they need to,” Cowan said.
It’s just a good system to play in.”
Fogarty got the scoring started when, after the Wyoming goaltender had seemingly stopped the puck following a point-blank shot, he stuffed the puck into the goal 2:18 into the game.
“That’s what we try to do,” Cowan said. “We try to get that first one quick, and then just keep building on that with pressure and playing our position and playing connected in all three zones.”
Wyoming had two shutouts en route to the championship game, the second straight for several members of this roster. Wyoming dropped the Tier II 14U national championship game a year ago.
“I can’t give enough props to two teams from the Northern Plains both being here and that one of us gets to walk away a national champion,” Wyoming coach Kasey Kiel said. “But the fact is, out of everybody across the whole country, we’ve got two Northern Plains representatives. That’s fun.”
Story from Red Line Editorial, Inc.
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