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Tea Area clamps down on Kernel boys for overtime win

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Tea Area clamps down on Kernel boys for overtime win


MITCHELL — For the second time in the first three games at the new Mitchell High School Gym, the Kernel boys basketball team went to overtime.

Unlike the first occasion, Mitchell came up short on Thursday night.

After forcing an extra frame on a basket in the final seconds of regulation, the Kernels went quiet, as Tea Area won the overtime 11-2 and the game 57-48 in a defensive Eastern South Dakota Conference battle.

While both squads entered the contest receiving votes in the Class AA South Dakota Prep Media poll, Tea Area (9-2, 5-1 ESD) was No. 4 in the seed-point standings with Mitchell (5-4, 3-2 ESD) at No. 7, presenting the Kernels with an opportunity for a big win. Instead, head coach Ryker Kreutzfeldt was left feeling they squandered the chance.

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“We’re heading in the direction of a should have, could have, would have season,” Kreutzfeldt said. “We’ve got a lot of season left, and nothing’s taken away from this team because of tonight, but the difference between great teams and good or average teams is they find a way to win games like this. We’re struggling to do that.”

Mitchell’s Owen Raml (35) dribbles past a Tea Area defender during an Eastern South Dakota Conference high school boys basketball game on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at the MHS Gym.

Landon Dierks / Mitchell Republic

After a quick start, steady offense was hard to come by for the Kernels. Mitchell sprinted out to a 16-6 lead 5 1/2 minutes into the game, but a quick switch to zone defense by the Titans caused all sorts of problems for the home squad. According to Kreutzfeldt, the Kernels were ready to see a zone defense from Tea, but they were unable to attack the scheme’s weaknesses and therefore never put any pressure on the Titans.

The Kernels committed 22 turnovers, including 14 across during the middle two quarters where they were outscored 23-13, and shot 16-for-55 (29.1%) from the field.

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“You’re never, ever going to beat a good team if you turn it over that many times. You’ve just got no shot. And that’s not including shooting under 30% from the field. There’s just no way,” Kreutzfeldt said. “We shouldn’t have even been in the game, but it was a heck of a defensive effort.”

For as disjointed as Mitchell’s effort was on offense, it was equally good on defense, led by a standout performance from Kendan Skinner on that end of the floor. The Kernels’ senior guard was key to limiting Tea Area’s Gavin Shawd, one of the top scorers in Class AA so far this season at more than 23 points per game, to six points in regulation. In overtime, Shawd shook loose for nine of his 15 points.

012226.HSBBB_Mitchell-TeaArea-1.jpg
Mitchell’s Kendan Skinner (2) handles the basketball while Tea Area’s Gavin Shawd (4) defends during an Eastern South Dakota Conference high school boys basketball game on Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at the MHS Gym.

Landon Dierks / Mitchell Republic

“Kendan was a warrior. He’s not a guy we look to for many points, but we told him he can go win a game on the defensive side,” Kreutzfeldt said. “We didn’t deserve to win the game, but based on his effort defensively, we should have won the dang game. A guy like Shawd is going to get his points eventually, but six points in regulation and no 3-pointers all night is an unbelievable effort.”

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Colton Smith posted 16 points, 21 rebounds, seven assists and four steals, while Owen Raml offered 11 points for the Kernels. Lincoln Bottum scored nine points, as Collin Weier chipped in five points, five rebounds and two steals. Skinner made a 3-pointer on his only shot attempt of the night to go with four rebounds and two assists.

For Tea Area, Grifin Wiebenga and Mitch Grant each dropped in 16 points, and Wiebenga added four rebounds, three assists and eight steals to his tally. The Titans shot 21 of 51 (41.2%) from the field and had just nine turnovers, helping them overcome a 40-23 Mitchell advantage in rebounding.

Next time out, Mitchell faces archrival Huron as part of the Throwback Classic at the Sanford Pentagon in Sioux Falls on Tuesday, Jan. 27.

Tea Area 57, Mitchell 48 (OT)

Tea Area (9-2, 5-1 ESD): Gavin Shawd 4-17 7-8 15, Mitch Grant 7-11 1-2 16, Grifin Wiebenga 5-12 5-7 16, Kayden Williamson 1-2 0-2 2, Lane Sieber 2-3 0-1 4, Daschle Lowery 0-0 0-0 0, Blake Lundin 2-6 0-1 4. Totals 21-51 13-21 57.

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Mitchell (5-4, 3-2 ESD): Colton Smith 5-18 6-7 16, Owen Raml 4-15 2-2 11, Lincoln Bottum 3-7 0-0 9, Collin Weier 2-8 1-2 5, Kendan Skinner 1-1 0-0 3, Owen Schelske 1-5 1-2 3, Carter McCormick 0-1 1-2 1, Luke LeBrun 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 16-55 11-15 48.

3-point field goals: TEA 2-13 (Grant 1-2, Williamson 1-4, Shawd 0-4, Sieber 0-1, Lundin 0-2), MHS 5-19 (Bottum 3-7, Skinner 1-1, Raml 1-6, Smith 0-2, Weier 0-2, McCormick 0-1). Rebounds: TEA 23 (Williamson 5), MHS 40 (Smith 21). Assists: TEA 6 (Wiebenga 3), MHS 11 (Smith 7). Steals: TEA 15 (Wiebenga 8), MHS 7 (Smith 4). Blocks: TEA 6 (Lundin 4), MHS 0. Total fouls: TEA 15, MHS 20. Fouled out: Lundin.

Junior varsity: Mitchell 64, Tea Area 56. Kyson Herrmann tallied 21 points, joined in double figures by Ethan Plamp (15), Carter McCormick (12) and Lawson LeBrun (10).

Sophomore: Mitchell 53, Tea Area 23. Stratton Forst and Ethan Plamp each had 12 points.

Freshman A: Tea Area 61, Mitchell 49. Oliver Raml scored 15 points, as Regan Collins added 12 points and Bryson Schlimgen had 10 points.

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Landon Dierks

Dierks covers prep and collegiate athletics across the Mitchell Republic’s coverage region area. His focus areas include: Mitchell High School football and boys basketball; area high school football, volleyball, basketball, baseball and track and field; and South Dakota State football. He is also at the forefront of the Mitchell Republic’s podcasting efforts. Dierks is a Mitchell native who graduated from South Dakota State University with his bachelor’s degree in journalism in May 2020. He joined the Mitchell Republic sports staff in August 2021. He can be reached at ldierks@mitchellrepublic.com and found on Twitter at @LDierksy.





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Nature: Prairie chickens in South Dakota

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Nature: Prairie chickens in South Dakota




Nature: Prairie chickens in South Dakota – CBS News

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We leave you this Sunday morning with prairie chickens and sharp tail grouse near Ft. Pierre, South Dakota. Videographer: Kevin Kjergaard.

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Democrats fail to field candidates for a majority of South Dakota legislative seats

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Democrats fail to field candidates for a majority of South Dakota legislative seats


(SOUTH DAKOTA SEARCHLIGHT) – Democrats are running for 46 of South Dakota’s 105 legislative seats — leaving 56% of seats without a Democratic candidate.

That doesn’t bode well for the party ahead of November, said Michael Card, professor emeritus of political science at the University of South Dakota.

“It doesn’t put them in a position to actually put forward their ideological policy preferences and have much of a success at getting those enacted,” Card said.

In the state Senate alone, Democrats have failed to field a candidate for 22 seats, which is nearly two-thirds of the chamber. In the House, Democrats have failed to field a candidate for 38 seats, which is 54% of the chamber.

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There is only one Democratic legislative primary in the state: a state Senate race in District 26, which includes the Rosebud Reservation.

There are no statewide Democratic primaries, after announced candidates for governor and U.S. House dropped out or failed to gather enough petition signatures to make the ballot, leaving one Democrat in each of those races.

Statewide candidates will have less name recognition than Republican candidates ahead of the general election, since they didn’t have primaries, Card said. In the Legislature, Card said Democrats “are guaranteeing they won’t get a majority.”

In contrast, Republicans have primary races for governor, U.S. House and U.S. Senate. Five legislative districts do not have Republican primaries, but do have Republican candidates. There is a Republican candidate running for every legislative seat, except for one House seat in District 27, which includes the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Card said there are several factors leading to poor candidate turnout among Democrats, including a self-fulfilling cycle of failure.

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“A lack of winning makes fewer people willing to take a chance on running for office,” Card said. “Why run if I think I’m going to lose?”

Democrats haven’t held a statewide office since 2015, and they haven’t held a majority of either legislative chamber since 1994.

Joe Zweifel, deputy executive director of the South Dakota Democratic Party, said the organization worked “really, really hard” to convince Democrats to run for office.

“But you can’t force people to run for office,” said Zweifel, of Sioux Falls, who’s running for a legislative seat himself in District 12.

He’s heard the open seats called a “failure.” But he disagrees, choosing to focus on the Democrats who did step forward.

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“We’re running quality, good candidates in those races,” Zweifel said.

The South Dakota Democratic Party hopes to build on legislative successes, such as a new law from Rep. Kadyn Wittman, D-Sioux Falls, that commits state funding to cover the family portion of reduced-price school meals.

“That specifically is a return on investment for our donors, and it shows that Democrats are doing good things for the people of South Dakota,” Zweifel said.

Wittman’s success helped inspire Democratic District 13 House of Representatives candidate Ali Rae Horsted, of Sioux Falls, to take a second run at the Legislature. Horsted ran unsuccessfully for the Senate against Sen. Sue Peterson in 2024, garnering 42% of the vote.

Horsted plans to build on that success and the name recognition she already has in the district. She hopes she’ll have “better odds” in this election, since there are two House seats for every district.

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Horsted said it would better serve South Dakota if the state had a more balanced Legislature. While the latest Legislature was 92% Republican, 52% of voters in South Dakota are Republican. South Dakota has the lowest percentage of Democrats, 7.6%, in the Legislature nationwide.

“I think it’s important that people have options on the ballot,” Horsted said, “and people are able to vote for candidates that represent their values and their vision for the future of South Dakota.”

Makenzie Huber is a lifelong South Dakotan who regularly reports on the intersection of politics and policy with health, education, social services and Indigenous affairs. Her work with South Dakota Searchlight earned her the title of South Dakota’s Outstanding Young Journalist in 2024, and she was a 2024 finalist for the national Livingston Awards.

South Dakota Searchlight is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

See a spelling or grammatical error in our story? Please click here to report it.

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Copyright 2026 KOTA. All rights reserved.



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From Big Ideas to Better Places: Building Livable Communities Across South Dakota

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From Big Ideas to Better Places: Building Livable Communities Across South Dakota


From East River to West River, South Dakota communities share a common goal: creating places where people of all ages can live, work and thrive. AARP’s Domains of Livability provide a framework to help communities do just that. Through the AARP Community Challenge grant program—designed to spark quick, impactful local projects—South Dakota communities are turning big ideas into visible, people-centered improvements.

Read the South Dakota Community Challenge Grant Report, which showcases grant-funded projects across the state designed to build more livable communities.

What Are AARP’s Domains of Livability?

AARP’s approach to livable communities is rooted in eight interconnected domains that together support quality of life at every age:

  1. Outdoor Spaces and Buildings – Safe, accessible parks, streets and public buildings
  2. Transportation – Affordable, accessible options for getting around
  3. Housing – A range of choices that support independence
  4. Social Participation – Opportunities to connect, learn and have fun
  5. Respect and Social Inclusion – Communities that value people of all backgrounds and ages
  6. Civic Participation and Employment – Meaningful ways to engage and contribute
  7. Communication and Information – Clear, accessible ways to stay informed
  8. Community Support and Health Services – Access to services that support well-being

These domains work best when addressed together—something South Dakota communities are embracing.

bike lane in neighborhood being separated by wire

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Turning Vision into Action with Community Challenge Grants

AARP Community Challenge grants fund short-term, “quick-action” projects that can ignite long-term change. Across South Dakota, these grants have helped communities pilot ideas, build momentum and demonstrate what’s possible when residents put people first.

Here’s how local projects are bringing the Domains of Livability to life:

  • Outdoor Spaces and Buildings: Communities have used grants to enhance parks, create pop-up public spaces, add benches and shade and install wayfinding signs. These improvements invite people to linger, gather, and enjoy shared spaces—supporting both physical activity and social connection.
  • Transportation: Small, thoughtful transportation projects can make a big difference. Community Challenge grants have supported safer crossings, improved walkability and bikeability around key destinations and the planning or installation of transit amenities like shelters and seating—especially important for older adults and people with mobility challenges.
  • Housing and Community Support: Some projects focus on helping residents age in place by improving access to information about home modification resources or by testing neighborhood-level solutions that connect people to services. These efforts strengthen independence and peace of mind.
  • Social Participation and Inclusion: Murals, community events and creative placemaking projects funded by AARP grants have sparked community pride and social connection. By involving residents in design and implementation, these projects foster respect, inclusion and a strong sense of belonging across generations.
  • Communication, Civic Participation and Opportunity: From hosting community conversations to creating new tools for sharing local information, South Dakota communities are using grants to engage residents in shaping their future. These efforts elevate local voices and encourage ongoing civic participation.



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