North Dakota
Michigan State football adds veteran QB in North Dakota transfer Tommy Schuster
How Michigan State coach Jonathan Smith quickly assembled 2024 class
Michigan State football coach Jonathan Smith speaks to the media on Wednesday, Dec. 20, 2023, in East Lansing.
Jonathan Smith landed his first in-state quarterback prospect.
No, not Bryce Underwood. Rather, someone who can give Michigan State football valuable experience at the college level and fill an immediate short-term need.
Tommy Schuster is heading from North Dakota of the Football Championship Subdivision to East Lansing as a graduate transfer. Schuster, a 2019 Chippewa Valley High product, announced his move Sunday on social media.
Shortly after, the Spartans picked up another experienced transfer in center/guard Tanner Miller, who is following Smith to MSU from Oregon State. The 6-foot-1, 287-pound native of Valencia, California, has one year of eligibility remaining.
Schuster, a 6-foot, 195-pounder from Macomb, started all 42 games over the past four seasons for the Fighting Hawks, setting UND records with 9,073 passing yards, 63 touchdowns and 843 completions. He also added five rushing scores the past two seasons. Schuster has a career 67.3% completion percentage and just 23 interceptions in 843 attempts. He was 24-18 as a starter, also playing in three games as a true freshman in 2019 to preserve a redshirt.
This season for UND, Schuster was 208-for-294 – a sizzling 70.7% – for 2,256 yards with 19 touchdowns to five interceptions. The Fighting Hawks made the FCS playoffs for the third time in his four seasons starting at QB, suffering a first-round loss to Sacramento State. Schuster was sacked four times and went 11-for-17 for 137 yards, a touchdown and an interception.
Schuster was the 2018 AP Player of the Year and led Chippewa Valley to the Division 1 state title as a senior that season, completing all 14 of his passes for 209 yards and two touchdowns in the championship game victory over Clarkston.
The addition of Schuster, who has one year of eligibility remaining, helps shore up a quarterback room that lost all three scholarship players from 2023 to the portal – Noah Kim to Coastal Carolina, Katin Houser to East Carolina and Sam Leavitt to Arizona State.
Smith, hired Nov. 25 to replace Mel Tucker, brought in transfer Aidan Chiles, who is expected to be the starter this season but will be pushed by Schuster. Chiles played in nine games as a backup for Smith at Oregon State in 2023 as a true freshman and was considered the third-best player overall and top quarterback in the portal according to 247Sports.com.
MSU also added two incoming freshmen in the 2024 class with Alessio Milivojevic from suburban Chicago and Ryland Jesse from San Diego, both of whom are expected to start classes Monday as early enrollees.
Contact Chris Solari: csolari@freepress.com. Follow him @chrissolari.
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North Dakota
Stampede stay alive with 2-1 OT win in Fargo
FARGO, N.D. (KELO) — The Sioux Falls Stampede staved off elimination with a 2-1 overtime win over the Fargo Force in game four of the USHL Western Conference Finals Saturday night.
Thomas Zocco scored the game-winner 12 minutes into the extra period. Arseni Marchenko put Fargo on the board first in the first period. Noah Mannausau tied the game for the Herd in the second period.
Sioux Falls outshot Fargo 53-49, including 9-5 in overtime. Linards Feldbergs made 48 saves.
Three of the four games of the series have gone to overtime. The winner-take-all game five is Tuesday at the Premier Center.
North Dakota
New ballot measure guide to be mailed to North Dakota voters ahead of election
New ballot measure guide to be mailed to North Dakota voters ahead of election
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North Dakota
Federal judge agrees to toss $28M judgment related to Dakota Access Pipeline protests
BISMARCK (North Dakota Monitor) — A federal district court judge indicated he will nullify a nearly $28 million judgment against the federal government related to costs North Dakota incurred during the Dakota Access Pipeline protests so the parties can reach a settlement.
North Dakota is still set to receive a payment Attorney General Drew Wrigley described as satisfactory, but attorneys would not disclose the amount during a Friday hearing.
Attorneys for the United States and North Dakota said the settlement would allow the parties to avoid litigating the case in appeals court,putting the nearly seven-year-old lawsuit to rest.
“We’re hoping we really don’t need to fight any further,” Department of Justice attorney Jonathan Guynn said during the hearing.
The lawsuit, filed in 2019, concerns demonstrations against the construction of the crude oil pipeline, also known as DAPL, that took place in rural south-central North Dakota in 2016 and 2017.
North Dakota claims the federal government caused the protests to grow in size and intensity by unlawfully allowing demonstrators to camp on federal land. The state says it had to pay millions of dollars on policing and cleaning up the encampments as a result. The United States denies the state’s allegations.
North Dakota U.S. District Court Judge Daniel Traynor in April 2025 sided with the state and ordered the executive branch to pay North Dakota the $28 million sum, a decision the U.S. Department of Justice later appealed to the 8th Circuit.
If the settlement moves forward, North Dakota would receive a “substantial monetary payment” from the United States, attorneys said Friday. As a condition of the agreement, the Department of Justice wants Traynor’s judgment and three other orders in which he ruled against the United States to be voided. That includes the court’s 120-page ruling from April 2025.
Both parties said Friday that having the rulings nullified wouldn’t have a significant negative impact on the public, since the documents could still be cited even if they no longer hold the weight of court orders.
At the same time, Guynn said the Department of Justice wants the orders vacated because it doesn’t want the legal conclusions Traynor made to influence the outcome of future lawsuits.
“The downstream consequences of keeping these on the books is troublesome for the United States,” he said during the hearing. If Traynor does not agree to axe the rulings, the United States would likely no longer be willing to settle and move forward with its appeal instead, Guynn added.
Traynor’s orders make findings about the federal government’s responsibility under the Federal Tort Claims Act — the law North Dakota filed the suit under — which the state noted previously in court filings “could have utility holding the federal government to account” in the future.
Still, attorneys for the state said they believe this trade-off is outweighed by the time and money the public would save by not going through the appeals process. North Dakota would also avoid the risk of having Traynor’s judgment overturned by higher courts.
Wrigley said the settlement will be made public once it’s finalized.
The United States’ appeal of Traynor’s decision has been on hold since last summer, when the state and federal government informed the 8th Circuit Court of Appeals they had started settlement negotiations and wished to pause the case.
The 8th Circuit will have to first send the case back to Traynor before he could grant the parties’ requests.
The case went to trial in Bismarck in early 2024. During the four-week trial, the court heard from witnesses including former governors Doug Burgum and Jack Dalrymple, Native activists, federal officials and law enforcement.
The Dakota Access Pipeline carries crude oil from northwest North Dakota to Illinois. It crosses the Missouri River just north of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, which prompted the tribe to begin protesting the pipeline on the grounds that it poses a threat to its water supply and sovereignty.
North Dakota’s lawsuit originally requested $38 million in damages from the federal government. Traynor ordered the executive branch to pay $28 million since the U.S. Department of Justice previously gave the state $10 million as compensation for costs it spent related to the protests.
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