South Dakota
Four takeaways from South Dakota football's 2024 early signing day class
VERMILLION — The past few weeks have been a whirlwind for the South Dakota football coaching staff.
Following USD’s loss to North Dakota State in the FCS quarterfinals, the Coyote coaches immediately hit the road, looking to fine tune the recruiting class it spent the season building.
A week-and-a-half later, the team released its final product, an early signing day group which consists of 19 high school recruits and four four-year transfers.
“We’re very excited,” coach Bob Nielson said in an interview Wednesday. “We feel like we added an excellent group of young men to our program today.”
From the continuation of the Miami-to-Vermillion pipeline, to the rebuilding of the linebacker core, here are four takeaways from South Dakota’s 2024 class.
Rebuilding the linebacker group
With the graduation of All-American linebacker Brock Mogensen, all-MVFC linebacker Stephen Hillis and linebacker Jonathan Joanis, the team’s strongest position group this season entered the offseason shorthanded.
In turn, USD signed more linebackers than any other position Wednesday, bringing on West Central’s Crew Heier, Omaha, Nebraska product Beau Ryan, Illinois recruit Lincoln Adams and Florida product Quinton Moore Jr.
“(There is) a need there to build back the numbers,” Nielson said. “That was a position group that was hit pretty hard by graduation. And you’re always trying to keep your roster in balance, positionally. So that position group had a little higher, I don’t want to say priority, but had a higher need of getting more players as part of this class.”
Additionally, USD acquired former St. Thomas linebacker and graduate transfer Jonathan Bunce. The two-time all-Pioneer League first team player is expected to make an immediate impact for the Coyotes. Bunce had six tackles and three quarterback hurries on Sept. 9 in Vermillion when the Tommies played the Coyotes.
“He’s a guy that I think will come in and hit the ground running and be a guy that brings that experience,” Nielson said. “You try to make sure, when you’re identifying any transfer, that you are bringing somebody who is going to be a player but also be a great addition from a team chemistry standpoint. And we feel that that’s the case.”
Miramar pipeline continues
Beneath the east stands at the DakotaDome lies a classroom, and within it, a refrigerator with a sticker on it that reads “Vermillion: The Miami of South Dakota.”
The phrase, which perhaps is a reference to Vermillion being in the southeast part of the state, is fortuitously becoming a reality thanks to a growing pipeline between Miramar High School, located just 20 miles north of Miami, and the University of South Dakota.
Three defensive backs on the Coyotes’ 2023 squad, Myles Harden, Josiah Ganues and Tim White, are all Miramar products, and on Wednesday, a fourth was added to the bunch: Jaheim Williams. The 5-foot-10, 165-pound Hollywood, Florida native passed up offers from FBS schools Appalachian State and Western Kentucky to come to Vermillion.
“Really good players, and I think it tells you something when you have young men from a high school that far away that are having such a good experience that they’re encouraging other guys from that school to come,” Nielson said. “And we couldn’t be happier to keep that connection going.”
Though time will tell, the Coyotes appeared to have an impressive haul of offensive line talent in its Wednesday signing class. Of the three high school signees and one four-year player who joined the USD’s line Wednesday, the average height is just over 6-foot-7, and the average weight is 287 pounds.
The highest-rated signee in the Coyotes’ class,
per 247 Sports
, was three-star tackle Jacob Arop, a Bellevue, Nebraska native who received an offer from Wyoming and a preferrred walk-on offer from Nebraska. Sam Hawker, a high school prospect from Wisconsin, had a preferred walk-on offer from Wisconsin, and Adrian Hawkins, a transfer from Monmouth, held an offer from North Texas. Rounding out the group is Brendon Crispe, who was an all-state player at the 5A level in Colorado.
“We got some size and length in that position group, guys that are going to develop,” Nielson said. “And that’s one of the things we want our program to be about is development and taking young men and helping them move forward from a physical development standpoint. It’s important every year that you’re bringing in a group of guys in a position group where you’re going to play five guys on the field at the same time … we feel like we’ve got a really good group of those types of young men in this class.”
Quarterback signee brings intrigue
USD signed a single quarterback in this year’s class. Blue Island, Illinois native
Nick Mayfield will join the Coyotes
after producing gaudy on-field numbers that smashed the records book at Eisenhower High his senior season. Mayfield went 101 of 185 passing for 1906 yards and 26 touchdowns, and ran for 835 yards and 12 touchdowns on 61 carries.
According to Nielson, it wasn’t just Mayfield’s talent, but his personality that impressed the Coyotes’ staff.
“With quarterbacks, it’s a position where I think you have to do a good job of evaluating the individual both from an athletic standpoint, and from a fit standpoint,” Nielson said. “ I think he was really a guy that provided great leadership for his team.”
South Dakota
Campaign finance reports reveal high-stakes spending in key legislative races • South Dakota Searchlight
South Dakota Republican legislative leaders are directing extra money toward a handful of competitive races in the state, while a few Democrats are outspending or nearly keeping pace with their Republican opponents ahead of the Nov. 5 general election.
All 105 seats in the South Dakota Legislature are on the ballot. Republicans had locks on roughly half of the seats before any votes were cast, because of Democrats’ failure to field a full slate of candidates in many districts.
Following are summaries of some races where campaign finance reports filed ahead of an Oct. 21 deadline indicated a potentially competitive contest, based on money raised and spent since last spring.
Senate District 32 (Rapid City)
The Senate race in District 32, which covers portions of central Rapid City, has shaped up as a proxy war for factions within the Republican Party.
Incumbent Republican Sen. Helene Duhamel faces a challenge from Karen McNeal, who is running as an independent while campaigning as a conservative. There is no Democrat in the race.
Duhamel raised about $72,000 and spent over $43,000. Nearly $24,000 came from individual donors, with another $40,000 from political action committees representing industries such as health care, corn growers, utilities and chambers of commerce.
Of the political action committee money, $25,000 came from the Senate Republican Campaign Committee, which is chaired by Republican Senate Majority Leader Casey Crabtree, R-Madison, and reported spending a total of $80,000 to support various candidates ahead of this election.
McNeal collected about $17,000 in donations and spent the same. About $15,000 came from individual supporters, while Republican Rep. Scott Odenbach’s Liberty Tree PAC contributed $2,000. Odenbach’s committee targeted Republicans in the June primary that he deemed insufficiently conservative, helping to defeat 14 Republican incumbents.
House District 32 (Rapid City)
In the District 32 House race, Duhamel’s husband, incumbent Republican Rep. Steve Duffy, is in a three-way race for two seats with Republican Brook Kaufman and Democrat Nicole Uhre-Balk. Republican Rep. Kristin Conzet is not running.
Kaufman spent about $31,000, followed by Duffy’s spending of $23,000 and Uhre-Balk’s spending of $20,000.
Kaufman received $18,000 from political action committees and $12,000 from individuals, while Duffy received $19,000 from PACs and $2,000 from individuals. Uhre-Balk received $4,000 from PACs and $18,000 from individual contributions.
Senate District 34 (Rapid City)
Democrat Kehala Two Bulls is well-funded in her race against Republican former legislator Taffy Howard for the District 34 Senate seat vacated by the retiring Republican Mike Diedrich. The district covers western Rapid City and adjacent outlying areas.
Two Bulls has taken in $7,000 in contributions of $100 or less, and $16,000 in contributions over $100. In total, she’s taken in $29,000 and spent $21,000.
Howard has raised $3,500 in contributions of $100 or less, and $15,000 in contributions over $100. She’s taken in a total of $23,000 and spent $40,000, after starting with $33,000 from past campaigns.
Toby Doeden’s Dakota First Action political action committee gave Howard $3,800. The group recently held a gala criticized by some Republicans for its inclusion of a speech from North Carolina Republican gubernatorial nominee Mark Robinson, who was outed by CNN for racist and sexually explicit remarks more than a decade ago on a pornographic website’s message board.
Senate District 12 (Sioux Falls)
In District 12, which covers a portion of southwest Sioux Falls straddling Minnehaha and Lincoln Counties, Republican incumbent Sen. Arch Beal has been out-fundraised and outspent by Democratic challenger Clay Hoffman.
Beal took in $48,000 and spent $30,000. Of his campaign contributions, $250 came from individuals giving $100 or less, and $14,250 came from people giving over that amount. Another $1,000 came from Anheuser-Busch and $1,000 from TRGU LLC, his company. Other political action committees gave another $29,000, including $15,000 from the Senate Republican Campaign Committee.
He also received $3,900 worth of campaign material and travel expenses during door-knocking events from the Students for Life Action committee, which is a group of student anti-abortion advocates.
Hoffman took in $66,000 and spent $45,000. Of the contributions, $12,000 came from individuals giving $100 or less, and another $32,000 came from people giving over $100. Former Democratic candidate for governor Jamie Smith, who is running for Senate in District 15, contributed $1,000 from his campaign to Hoffman’s.
The Majority PAC, run by Sioux Falls Democratic state Sen. Reynold Nesiba, of Sioux Falls, who is not seeking reelection in District 15, made the largest donation to Hoffman, contributing $5,000.
Senate, District 14 (Sioux Falls)
Another Republican state Senate incumbent being outspent by a Democratic challenger is Larry Zikmund in District 14, which covers a portion of southeast Sioux Falls.
Democrat Sandra Henry has raised $58,000 and spent $39,000. Zikmund has raised $42,000 and spent $34,000.
Zikmund was helped by $15,000 from the Senate Republican Campaign Committee. Another $12,000 of Zikmund’s campaign chest came from individuals.
For Henry, the vast majority of contributions came from individuals, including $13,000 in contributions of $100 or less. Another $1,000 came from Nesiba’s PAC.
Senate District 18 (Clay, Yankton counties)
District 18, which covers Yankton County and a portion of Clay County, has an open Senate seat after Republican challenger Lauren Nelson toppled Sen. Jean Hunhoff in the June primary, ending Hunhoff’s 24-year legislative career.
Nelson, of Yankton, has raised $23,000 and spent $30,000, after starting with $8,000 leftover from the primary. She took in $2,000 in donations of $100 or less. The campaign’s biggest donation was $8,000 from her and her husband. Odenbach’s Liberty Tree PAC kicked in $500.
The Democratic candidate, Sarah Carda, also of Yankton, took in over $28,000 and spent $24,000. She received $3,500 in donations of $100 or less, and $10,000 from Nesiba’s PAC.
House District 1 (Brown, Day, Marshall, Roberts counties)
In District 1, which covers the northeast corner of the state, six candidates are vying for the district’s two House seats: two Republicans, two Democrats and two Libertarians.
Incumbent Republican Joe Donnell did not run for reelection, and Republican incumbent Tamara St. John lost to two other Republicans in the June primary.
One of those Republicans, Logan Manhart, of Aberdeen, has taken in $14,500 and spent over $16,000. Of that, $30 came from individuals giving $100 or less and nearly $10,000 came from people giving over $100, though several names listed are companies. Manhart received $500 from Odenbach’s Liberty Tree PAC.
Fellow Republican Christopher Reder, of Warner, took in about $8,000 and spent $8,000. Of that, $170 came from individuals giving $100 or less and $3,200 came from those giving over $100. He also received funds from Liberty Tree PAC, as well as the South Dakota Freedom Caucus PAC, another group advocating conservative positions.
Reder and Manhart both received about $1,400 from Dakota First Action, and both attended the event that featured Mark Robinson. The House GOP PAC, chaired by House Majority Leader Will Mortenson, who criticized the Robinson event, gave Reder and Manhart $1,500 each.
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Democrat Steven McCleerey, of Sisseton, raised about $21,000 and spent $16,000. Of that, $2,000 came from individuals giving $100 or less. Another $11,100 came from people giving over over $100.
Fellow Democrat Mark Sumption, of Frederick, raised and spent $11,000. His biggest contribution was $1,500 from Bluestem Initiative, a political action committee chaired by state Rep. Erin Healy, D-Sioux Falls. That group gave a total of $15,500 to various candidates.
Libertarians Josh Dennert, of Aberdeen, and Tamara Lesnar, of Grenville, raised under $2,000 combined.
House District 3 (Aberdeen)
In District 3, which covers most of Aberdeen and surrounding areas, a Democratic challenger has raised more for her campaign than either of the two Republicans in the three-way race for two seats.
The Democrat, Erin Rudner, brought in over $46,000, including a $5,000 loan from herself to her campaign. She raised $4,000 from individuals giving $100 or less, and another $22,520 from people giving over $100. One 605 Victory Fund gave her campaign its greatest contribution, of $9,500. That funding predominately came from Steve Pfeiffer, of Aberdeen.
Term-limited Republican state Sen. Al Novstrup is attempting to switch from the Senate to the House. His campaign brought in $13,000, including a $3,700 loan from himself. Incumbent Republican Rep. Brandei Schaefbauer raised $21,000, including a $10,000 loan from herself.
Senate District 27 (Bennett, Jackson, Pennington, Oglala Lakota counties)
Sen. Red Dawn Foster, D-Pine Ridge, took in $13,000, and spent $19,000. Her committee already had $9,00 on hand. Her biggest donation was $5,000 from Nesiba’s Majority PAC.
Her Republican challenger, Anthony Kathol, took in about $8,000 and spent $12,000. His biggest reported contribution was $3,700 to his own campaign for food and gas. The second biggest was $1,250 from Foster’s 2022 Republican challenger David Jones.
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South Dakota
Creative ‘I Voted’ stickers branch out beyond the familiar flag design– including in South Dakota
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South Dakota
Four South Dakota filmmakers launch new projects
On today’s show…
Brian Bieber’s short film “The Events of That Night as Best I can Remember” explores the unexplainable. The director shares the real-life inspiration that took place at Marion and 26th St. in Sioux Falls (1:00 to 8:56).
Dalton Coffey’s “Fall is a Good Time to Die” was filmed on the prairies and pastures of Gregory County. He discusses the revenge story and the hunting allegory running through it (8:56 to 18:44).
Andrew Kightlinger’s biggest film yet premieres this weekend. “Lost on a Mountain in Maine” unfolds the true story of a 12-year-old boy and how his story of survival inspired a nation (18:44 to 40:28).
Kightlinger talks about building a mountain in a wedding venue and why he felt particularly drawn to the mother’s story in the movie.
Plus, the Whitestone Hill Massacre in North Dakota was one of the most violent attacks on mostly noncombatant Indigenous people by U.S. government soldiers.
Zeke Hanson shares what he learned while crafting his new documentary “Blood from Whitestone” (40:28 to 48:28).
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