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South Dakota vs South Shore in 2024 Little League World Series: Time, TV channel, schedule

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South Dakota vs South Shore in 2024 Little League World Series: Time, TV channel, schedule


The Little League World Series began on Wednesday in Williamsport, Pa., with the Midwest region represented by South Dakota’s team from Sioux Falls.

The team fell to Florida’s squad 2-1, so Saturday will be a win-or-go-home contest for Sioux Falls as it faces the Metro regional representative − South Shore from Staten Island, New York.

Check below for information on South Dakota’s elimination game and how to follow the tournament:

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Recap: Florida holds off South Dakota in Little League World Series opener

What channel is South Dakota LLWS game on today? Time, TV channel

Time: 2 p.m. CT

TV: ESPN (Watch on FUBO with 7-day free trial)

South Dakota LLWS schedule

  • Game 4 – Southeast (Florida) 2, Midwest (South Dakota) 1
  • Game 14 – vs. Metro: 2 p.m. CT Saturday on ESPN, Fubo

2024 Little League World Series bracket

Where is Sioux Falls Little League?

Sioux Falls is a city located in the southeast corner of South Dakota, near the northwest border of Iowa.



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Staten Island stays alive in Little League World Series thanks to dramatic fourth inning

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Staten Island stays alive in Little League World Series thanks to dramatic fourth inning


Staten Island South Shore Little League has comeback before on their road to the Little League World Series, and on Saturday afternoon they did it again to rally back for a 6-3 win over South Dakota Sioux Falls. 

The win helped move Staten Island to the next round of the Little League World Series elimination bracket and a date with Great Lakes champion Hinsdale, Illinois on Sunday morning at 9 a.m.

It was the bat and base running of Vincent Ruggiero that kick-started a four-run fourth inning that catapulted Staten Island safely into the lead, after they mustered just one run in their first game in Williamsport, Pa. on Thursday.

Staten Island, N.Y.’s Peter Giaccio, right, celebrates on second base after driving in a run with a double during the fourth inning of a baseball game against Sioux Falls, S.D., at the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa., Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. AP

Ruggiero hit a screaming liner to center field to get on base and then a Stephen Grippo single set up a dramatic play at the plate. 

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Ruggiero decided to try and score from first on the hit and the throw from centerfielder Manny Kortan reached the plate, but catcher Kinnick Noble appeared to not have the ball controlled in his glove and the Staten Island infielder was ruled safe.

A video review confirmed the call on the field and changed the course of the game. 

Nicholas McLean singled to center to score Grippo on the next at-bat to give Staten Island the lead and an RBI double by Peter Giaccio drove in their third run of the game.

Chace Curro’s single to left field made it a 4-1 game. 

State Island’s Chace Curro catches a fly ball during the fourth inning of a baseball game against Sioux Falls, S.D., at the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa., Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. AP

South Dakota managed to get a run back in the top of the fifth, but the Staten Islanders added two more runs in the bottom half of the inning thanks to a Dean Scarangello double and a Dylan DeGaeta groundball single to increase their lead to 6-2.

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They added a third run on a Noble single in the sixth. 

Staten Island starter Jake Romero nearly threw a complete game, giving up three runs on two hits and striking out six batters in the process. 

Ruggiero took over for Romero after he walked the first batter of the sixth inning and struck out three batters. 

Staten Island’s Vincent Ruggiero (10) scores ahead of the tag attempt by Sioux Falls, S.D.’s Kinnick Noble during the fourth inning of a baseball game at the Little League World Series in South Williamsport, Pa., Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. AP

Romero showed he could shake off a rough start to the game after walking the first batter of the afternoon, hitting the next and then walking another to load the bases.

Despite the clear frustration on his face after the third batter had gotten on, Romero settled in to strike out  South Dakota’s Luke Fenton in four pitches for the first out. 

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The Staten Island pitcher got Kortan to pop out in foul territory in the next at-bat – helped by a heads-up catch by Giaccio – and Romero got out of the bases-loaded jam by getting Agust Vortherms to strike out swinging. 

Romero retired six of the next seven batters he faced before South Dakota drove in a run in the top of of the fourth to take a 1-0 lead briefly before Staten Island’s offensive onslaught. 

Staten Island’s Jake Romero (8) delivers a pitch against Sioux Falls, S.D., during the first inning of a baseball game at the Little League World Series tournament in South Williamsport, Pa., Saturday, Aug. 17, 2024. AP

Staten Island keeps its Little League World Series dreams alive with the win along with the hopes of the five boroughs.

They will still need to win four more games to claim the U.S championship.

The last time a team from New York City won the Little League World Series was back in 1964, which also happened to be a team from Staten Island. 

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South Dakota FFA sending 21 agri-scientists to national competition

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South Dakota FFA sending 21 agri-scientists to national competition


South Dakota FFA sending 21 agri-scientists to national competition | DRGNews











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How South Dakota, Michigan took different paths to 'election integrity'

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How South Dakota, Michigan took different paths to 'election integrity'


DETROIT, Mich. – Justin Roebuck can recall the exact moment that distrust of 2020 presidential election results impacted his status in the Republican Party.

The top election official of Ottawa County in western Michigan was speaking to a GOP women’s group when he was asked who won the race between Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Joe Biden in the Midwest battleground state.

“When I told them that Biden won Michigan by about 154,000 votes, the gasp was audible in the room,” said Roebuck, adding that he was castigated by other party members for legitimizing the results. “I think it hit home for me at that point.”

Roebuck was among a group of election officials who spoke to journalists as part of the National Press Foundation 2024 Elections Fellowship in late July, assessing the state of American voting systems ahead of November.

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They illustrated how unfounded claims of voter fraud, exacerbated by public frustration over social restrictions during the COVID-19 pandemic, emboldened electoral activists seeking to overturn results and erode trust in the democratic process.

These reverberations were felt in South Dakota, where grassroots efforts from organizations such as South Dakota Canvassing Group put pressure on state legislators to address election security through post-election audits and the banning of unmonitored drop boxes.

But the heightened scrutiny of casting and counting votes was hardly unique to the Republican-run Mount Rushmore State.

Michigan, a Democratic-controlled swing state that voted for Trump in 2016 and Biden four years later, was at the center of civil unrest before, during and after the tumultuous 2020 presidential race.

The way the two states handled the fallout – with Michigan expanding voting opportunities through ballot measures and South Dakota restricting access with legislative action – reveals disparate strategies to defend the sanctity of the vote.

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South Dakota House Majority Leader Will Mortenson told News Watch that, in the case of restricting drop boxes, there were questions about the “susceptibility of abuse” and whether that justified changing the law. “Or do we have to wait until there’s actual abuse that we see before we address the susceptibility?” he asked.

Poll workers wait for the next South Dakota primary voter at the Instructional Planning Center in Sioux Falls, S.D., on Tuesday, June 4, 2024.

Stu Whitney / South Dakota News Watch

Ballot measure expands voter access

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In June 2021, after months of investigation, a Republican-controlled Senate Oversight Committee in Michigan issued a report that found “no evidence of widespread or systematic fraud” related to the 2020 presidential election in Michigan.

But GOP lawmakers still pointed to vulnerabilities in the system and moved to pass nearly 40 bills aimed at restricting voter registration, absentee ballots, voter ID and drop boxes. Whitmer vetoed the bills and overcame a narrow Republican legislative majority, which has since shifted to a slim Democratic advantage.

In 2022, Michigan voters adopted Proposal 2, a constitutional amendment that established at least nine days of early voting, provided voters with a right to request an absentee ballot, and enshrined voter ID rules that Republicans had sought to restrict.

The measure also mandated at least one state-funded drop box for each municipality, with additional boxes for every 15,000 voters, building on absentee voting reforms passed in a similar Promote the Vote amendment in 2018.

Proposal 2, lauded by supporters as Promote the Vote II, passed with 60% of the vote, a notable mandate at a time of election-related angst in the state.

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Message matches the moment

South Dakota’s own introspection on election access was accelerated by groups such as South Dakota Canvassing, whose founders were inspired by My Pillow founder and conspiracy theorist Mike Lindell’s 2021 Cyber Symposium in Sioux Falls.

Lindell, who campaigned for Trump alongside South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem, claimed to have incriminating 2020 election data showing that China hacked into U.S. voting systems to help elect Biden. He offered $5 million to anyone who could prove him wrong, which did indeed happen, forcing him into a court battle as he tried to avoid honoring the bet.

“Fair elections equal a representative republic, but stolen elections equal slavery,” Canvassing Group co-founder Jessica Pollema told followers, who put county auditors and commissioners on the defensive by echoing accusations from conservative media and demanding proof of secure systems, even in a state that Trump won by 26 points in 2020.

For some Republicans, the message matched the moment. In a May 2024 poll co-sponsored by News Watch, more than 6 in 10 South Dakotans said they were dissatisfied with how democracy is working in the United States, including 32% who said they were “very dissatisfied.”

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The same poll found that 58% of Republican respondents said they accepted the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.

‘Make sure that it’s done right’

That was the political climate in which South Dakota’s Republican leadership, in consultation with county auditors, explored the issue of election security during the 2023 state legislative session in Pierre.

Those seeking major overhauls included Rick Weible, a computer analyst and Canvassing Group adviser who supports the hand counting of ballots and criticizes South Dakota’s 46-day early voting period, tied for longest in the nation.

Opportunity Solutions Project, a conservative nonprofit that advocates restrictions to absentee voting, also worked with legislators and county auditors to make it “easier to vote but harder to cheat,” a mantra newly adopted by election reformists.

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Some of the testimony included allegations of people dumping unauthorized ballots into drop boxes in other states, without providing proof that it happened or how it was connected to South Dakota.

An Associated Press survey of election officials in each state revealed no cases of fraud, vandalism or theft involving drop boxes that could have affected the results of the 2020 election.

That didn’t mean it couldn’t impact South Dakota in future elections, said Mortenson, who along with Senate Majority Leader Casey Crabtree helped pass a package of 10 election reform bills in 2023.

“Some of the news we heard inspired legislators to kick the tires and figure out if some of the allegations seen in other states would show a vulnerability in our system,” said Mortenson.

“What we found is that we started out with a very secure, trustworthy system. The steps we took were to shore up security and acknowledge that if we’re going to have this really long early voting window, we’ve got to make sure that it’s done right.”

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EDITOR’S NOTE: 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 Stu Whitney at stu.whitney@sdnewswatch.org





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