Whereas it was removed from the debut any Iowa fan was in search of, in the end, the Hawkeyes did win their opener over South Dakota State, 7-3. There’s loads of trigger for concern with Iowa’s offense and grades have already been doled out right here.
Nonetheless, even with among the good marks that Hawkeyes Wire handed out, that area actually didn’t lend itself to completely rewarding among the good play that followers did the truth is witness. Let’s do this now with the 5 greatest positives for the Hawkeyes in opposition to South Dakota State.
Jack Campbell, Tory Taylor
Joseph Cress/Iowa Metropolis Press-Citizen / USA TODAY NETWORK
Combining these two standouts collectively as a result of each have been featured in our Report Card as gamers that acquired prime marks. Simply to reiterate what was written there, linebacker Jack Campbell and punter Tory Taylor are each simply incredible at what they do.
Advertisement
Taylor was known as upon repeatedly in a sport the place his crew’s offense couldn’t ever get something going and time and time once more he delivered for the Hawkeyes. The Aussie had seven punts downed contained in the 20-yard line, and 5 that have been downed contained in the 10-yard line.
In the meantime, Campbell illustrated why he was a preferred preseason Huge Ten Defensive Participant of the 12 months and first-team All-American decide. The dude was in all places with a team-high 12 tackles and 1.5 tackles for loss. He additionally registered what proved to be the game-winning security. Iowa has among the finest gamers in America in Campbell and Saturday was simply one other reminder of that.
Joe Evans
Bryon Houlgrave/The Register / USA TODAY NETWORK
Defensive finish Joe Evans tied for the crew lead with seven sacks in 2021. After one sport in 2022, he’s already registered a pair of sacks. In fact, considered one of his sacks went for Iowa’s second security on Saturday. Evans was one of many two Hawkeyes that finest showcased rapidly this season why there’s a lot buzz surrounding Iowa’s defensive position.
Logan Lee
AP Picture/Charlie Neibergall
Logan Lee was the opposite participant alongside the Hawkeyes’ defensive position that basically flashed in week one. The 6-foot-5, 275 pound Orion, In poor health., product completed with six tackles and 1.5 sacks versus the Jackrabbits. Terrific begin to the season for him. It’s a deep unit for Iowa, and Lee is one other large a part of why that’s the case.
Quinn Schulte
AP Picture/Charlie Neibergall
Out of all people sporting black and gold, Quinn Schulte had far and away the very best debut. The previous walk-on registered 4 move breakups in his first profession begin. Changing Jack Koerner’s 32 profession begins and manufacturing was by no means going to be simple, however, now, it appears to be like like Iowa followers can chill out about this security spot. The Hawkeyes seem like they’ve one other good one in Schulte.
Advertisement
Leshon Williams
Jeffrey Becker-USA TODAY Sports activities
I do know, it’s sacrilegious proper now to incorporate an offensive participant on this listing, proper? Particularly a participant that was straight chargeable for killing Iowa’s finest likelihood to punch in a drive with an offensive landing, proper? Unsuitable. I actually favored what we noticed from Leshon Williams sans the fumble. He ran arduous, compiling 72 dashing yards on 24 carries on a day the place the offensive line actually struggled.
Iowa completed the day averaging 1.6 yards per carry. Clearly, there’s loads of trigger for concern offensively and that dashing ineptitude is considered one of them. Nonetheless, one of many encouraging indicators was how Williams ran it. If the offensive line comes collectively, Iowa goes to be simply high-quality at operating again with Williams squared.
Bonus: The followers
Bryon Houlgrave/The Register / USA TODAY NETWORK
The fan base wants a pick-me-up after that offensive letdown to start out 2022. Give yourselves a spherical of applause. Iowa followers and that Kinnick issue pressured South Dakota State into a number of procedural miscues. In a sport that completed 7-3, the Iowa followers have been legitimately one of many distinction makers within the sport. Kudos to you, Hawkeye Nation.
Contact/Observe us @HawkeyesWire on Twitter, and like our web page on Fb to observe ongoing protection of Iowa information, notes, and opinions.
In case you missed Monday’s NYT Mini, you can find the answers here:
ForbesNYT Mini Crossword Clues And Answers For November 25By Kris Holt
Advertisement
Wondering what an official state sport of South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming is? Not sure what a phone pop-up might be? Don’t worry, because I’m here to help you with the answers for today’s NYT Mini crossword.
The NYTMini is a quick and dirty version of the newspaper’s larger and long-running crossword. Most days, there are between three and five clues in each direction on a five by five grid, but the puzzles are sometimes larger, especially on Saturdays.
Unlike its larger sibling, the NYTMini crossword is free to play on the New York Times website or NYT Games app. However, you’ll need an NYT Games subscription to access previous puzzles in the archives.
To help you avoid getting stuck and having to reveal missing letters, here are the NYT Mini Crossword answers for Tuesday, November 26 (spoilers lie ahead, of course):
Advertisement
NYT Mini Crossword Clues And Answers
NYT Mini Across Answers
1 Across: Joint that can be “flicked” — WRIST
6 Across: Official state sport of South Dakota, Texas and Wyoming — RODEO
7 Across: Phone pop-up — ALERT
8 Across: First thing you typically get at a buffet — PLATE
9 Across: Poetry event — SLAM
Advertisement
NYT Mini Down Answers
1 Down: Sandwich alternative — WRAP
2 Down: Toilet paper units — ROLLS
3 Down: Best-case — IDEAL
4 Down: Big name in mattresses — SERTA
5 Down: Ancestral emblem — TOTEM
Advertisement
It took me 0:43 to complete today’s NYT Mini.
Not a bad time at all, especially considering that I missed the first few Across clues at first. WRIST and RODEO should have been obvious in hindsight. I spent a good 10 seconds mulling over ALERT too before cutting my losses and moving on.
I flew through the Down words except for SERTA — not a brand I’m familiar with. But the Across answers were all pretty clear at that point with just a few letters left to fill in.
Advertisement
If you need some help with Wednesday’s NYT Mini, make sure to check out my blog. Meanwhile, if you play other NYT games such as Wordle, Connections and Strands, be sure to check out Forbes Games for our guides to each daily puzzle
GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands (AP) — Javan Buchanan’s 28 points off of the bench led Boise State to an 83-82 victory against South Dakota State on Monday.
Buchanan went 11 of 17 from the field (4 for 8 from 3-point range) for the Broncos (5-1). Alvaro Cardenas Torre added 16 points while going 6 of 13 (3 for 6 from 3-point range) while they also had seven assists. Julian Bowie went 4 of 4 from the field (3 for 3 from 3-point range) to finish with 13 points.
Advertisement
Oscar Cluff finished with 19 points and 14 rebounds for the Jackrabbits (5-2). Joe Sayler added 19 points for South Dakota State. Kalen Garry had 13 points and five assists.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
MITCHELL, S.D. – Several cranes tower above a busy construction site along state Highway 37 south of Mitchell where work is rapidly progressing on a $500 million grain plant that will be the latest addition to South Dakota’s growing agricultural processing industry.
For generations, the state has served as an agricultural production hub in the Great Plains, growing millions of bushels of corn and soybeans and raising millions of cows and hogs annually. For many years, most of the state’s high-output food producers shipped their goods to be processed at plants elsewhere.
As those commodities left the state, so too did the businesses and jobs needed to process agricultural products into their final form. Rural communities in South Dakota lost the potential for growth in local employment, housing and economic development generated by agricultural processing plants.
“Historically, for some reason, here in South Dakota we’ve been content to raise commodities — corn, soybeans, cattle and hogs – and ship them out of state for processing,” said Scott VanderWal, president of the South Dakota Farm Bureau.
Advertisement
But over the past 30 years, and with increasing frequency in recent years, the state agricultural industry has begun to take advantage of what insiders refer to as “added value.” The term refers to the ability of those in the agriculture industry to generate more revenue from a single product. For instance, growing corn and then using it for food products, animal feed and in ethanol production.
By processing soybeans closer to where they are grown, South Dakota farmers can grow and sell more grain, which leads to spin-off revenues for a host of businesses, including in transportation, fuel, feed and machinery.
“We’re now finding out that we can make a little more money, generate local economic activity and create more jobs if we start adding value to the things we produce,” VanderWal told News Watch.
Details reveal size, scope of new plant
The High Plains Processing plant, now under construction 2 miles south of Mitchell, is being built by South Dakota Soybean Processors, a farmer-owned business that has a soybean plant in Miller and another in Volga, where the company is headquartered.
CEO Tom Kersting said the new plant will provide good-paying jobs now and well into the future and create new revenues for a host of businesses and farmers throughout the region. It will also generate significant new property taxes for local governments and sales taxes for state government, he said.
Advertisement
Construction costs are estimated to be about $500 million, and the target date for operations to begin is October 2025, Kersting told News Watch. The plant will be able to process soybeans as well as sunflower seeds and other grain products if market conditions warrant, he said.
Finished products will mainly include oils and animal feed. The plant will have capacity to process 100,000 bushels of soybeans a day (about 35 million bushels a year), which makes it the second-largest plant behind the AGP soybean plant in Aberdeen, which has an annual capacity of 50 million bushels.
The Mitchell plant has about 300 construction workers on site now and expects to employ 75 to 85 full-time employees once operational. The expansion will create another dozen or so positions that will work at the company offices in Volga in support of the plant.
Kersting said the addition of new, consistent capacity for grain products at the Mitchell plant should not only stabilize but also increase the prices paid to local soybean and sunflower farmers.
“Without it, you’d be much more dependent on the export markets for pricing,” he said. “By having the demand locally, and having it year-round, there’s an opportunity for higher prices for farmers.”
Advertisement
In addition to oils, used in biofuels and in some food products, the plant will also produce seed meal that is used to feed animals, mainly hogs and poultry, he said. Kersting said that once fully processed, a 60-pound bushel of soybeans will yield about 44 pounds of meal feed, 11 pounds of oil and 4 pounds of husks, with a slight amount of moisture loss making up the final pound.
The new plant will be strategically located just 2 miles from Interstate 90 and within shouting distance of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad line, Kersting said.
Benefit to Mitchell and well beyond
The excitement over the plant’s potential for economic benefits is palpable even in a brief conversation with David Lambert, regional development director for the Mitchell Area Chamber of Commerce.
“We’re just tickled,” he said. “From our perspective, we feel that the impact is going to be huge.”
Lambert said the plant’s economic impact will be felt most in Mitchell, where he expects many workers will live and spend money. The plant will create new revenue opportunities in several economic sectors, including housing, grocery, retail and transportation, he said. Nearby cities and towns will also see benefits, not only from increased capacity to sell grain but also in the same tangential ways Mitchell will benefit economically, he said.
The regional farm economy will also see a big boost, Lambert said. For instance, the new demand for soybeans created by the plant could raise the price of beans by 20 cents per bushel, which could generate $6 million a year in new income for area grain producers, he said.
“We know that when farmers have money, they spend that money, and they tend to do it locally,” Lambert said. “So the regional impact is so huge, and that is even after you take into account the 75 new, well-paid employees with an annual payroll over $4 million.”
Lambert said the chamber has already heard from businesses directly or indirectly related to the grain industry that are eyeing a potential move to or expansion within the regional Mitchell market.
“We’ve already started to see some new opportunities from folks who want to take advantage of the economic activity that will be created by the plant,” he said.
A value-added revolution in South Dakota
The South Dakota processing expansion began in earnest roughly 35 years ago when Poet biofuels began production of ethanol from corn in Scotland in the late 1980s. Since then, ethanol production has expanded to nine companies processing 740 million bushels into roughly 1.3 billion gallons of ethanol worth about $3 billion annually.
Advertisement
South Dakota could see a huge economic benefit from the $1 billion Net-Zero 1 plant proposed by the company Gevo for a site east of Lake Preston, where corn would be processed into sustainable biofuel for jets. Officials from Colorado-based Gevo said the proposed plant, which recently received a $1.46 billion commitment from the Department of Energy Loan Programs Office, could create thousands of jobs once operational.
The state has also seen rapid expansion of milk processing, with new or expanded cheesemaking plants in Milbank (Valley Queen Cheese), Brookings (Bel Brands) and Lake Norden (Agropur). The increased processing capacity has allowed the state’s population of milk cows to more than double over roughly the past decade, from 91,000 cows in 2012 to about 210,000 in 2023, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
According to the USDA, South Dakota dairy farmers produced 4.5 billion pounds of milk in 2023, up from 3.1 billion pounds in 2020 and 2 billion pounds in 2013.
Agricultural processing plants serve as major employers in several South Dakota cities. The Dakota Provisions pork and poultry plant in Huron has variable employment that can range from 600 to 1,000. The state’s largest soybean plant, the AGP plant in Aberdeen that opened in 2019 at a cost of $300 million, has about 60 full-time workers.
In addition to jobs in the plant and an increase in production capacity for individual farmers, increased processing of commodities closer to where South Dakota farmers produce them creates jobs and revenue for local trucking companies, parts and maintenance firms, fuel providers and sellers of machinery, VanderWal said.
Advertisement
“We’re providing jobs or creating economic activity because those processing plants need supplies and parts and people to run them, and all those things that go along with that,” he said.
VanderWal said recent efforts to expand in-state processing of beef cattle, as reported by News Watch in 2023, would also generate new income and reduce costs for South Dakota ranchers, who raised 3.5 million cattle and calves in 2023, according to USDA data.
On Nov. 13, 2024, a 30,000-square-foot beef plant proposed for a site just north of New Underwood in Pennington County was awarded a $600,000 South Dakota Works Loan from the Governor’s Office of Economic Development for first-year operational funding.
“In the cattle industry, especially years ago, most of our feeder cattle actually got shipped out of state for feeding even, and then further processing,” he said. “We’ve put a lot of effort in the last few years into feeding them here. So we’re using our own feed stuff, so corn, basically, and silage and things like that. So then the next step to avoid having to haul them so far when they’re finished and ready for market, is to process them here.”
Advertisement
This story was produced by South Dakota News Watch, an independent, nonprofit news organization. Read more in-depth stories at sdnewswatch.org and sign up for an email every few days to get stories as soon as they’re published. Contact Bart Pfankuch at bart.pfankuch@sdnewswatch.org.