Connect with us

South Dakota

TIMELINE: How Mitchell High School boys basketball reached 20 consecutive wins

Published

on

TIMELINE: How Mitchell High School boys basketball reached 20 consecutive wins


MITCHELL — It’s been nearly a full calendar year since the Mitchell High School boys basketball team last lost a game.

Since its last loss on Jan. 2, the Kernels have rattled off 20-straight victories — 17 in a row to end their championship run last season, plus a 3-0 start to the current campaign.

Mitchell is the first Class AA boys basketball program with a 20-game win streak since Sioux Falls Roosevelt won 35 in a row between the 2020-21 and 2021-22 seasons.

During the current streak, Mitchell has defeated 16 different programs. The only current Class AA teams Mitchell hasn’t beaten during the streak are Harrisburg, Douglas and class newcomer Tea Area. Included in the 20 wins are 13 double-digit victories, including five of 20-plus points. Nine wins came against Eastern South Dakota Conference foes, with seven against Metro Conference opponents and four against West River squads.

Advertisement

Here’s a closer look at how the Kernels reached 20 wins in a row:

No. 1: Mitchell 49, Yankton 45

Jan. 5, 2024, at the Corn Palace
Three days following an overtime loss to Harrisburg on the same court, Mitchell went to an extra period again to survive a stern test from ESD rival Yankton in the first meeting since the 2023 state title tilt. Landen Soulek’s 12 points, including a go-ahead 3-pointer in overtime, carried the day for the Kernels.

No. 2: Mitchell 67, Huron 56

Jan. 9, 2024, at the Corn Palace

Advertisement

No. 3: Mitchell 57, Sioux Falls Lincoln 51

Jan. 18, 2024, at the Corn Palace

Mitchell’s Landen Soulek (3) leads a fastbreak up the court as Sioux Falls Lincoln’s Jack Smith (11) gives chase during a Class AA high school basketball game on Thursday, Jan. 18, 2024, at the Corn Palace.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

Advertisement

No. 4: Mitchell 68, Brookings 55

Jan. 25, 2024, at Brookings

No. 5: Mitchell 71, Sioux Falls Jefferson 58

Jan. 30, 2024, at Jefferson H.S.
One week after taking over the No. 1 ranking in the South Dakota Prep Media poll for the first time in 12 years, the Kernels won a fifth-straight game by taking out an eventual state tournament team on the road. Mitchell led by eight points at halftime but ballooned the cushion to 22 points in the second half. Colton Smith had a big night with 20 points, nine rebounds, five assists and three steals.

Advertisement

MitchellBoysBasketball_atSFJefferson-2.jpg

Mitchell’s Colton Smith (5) powers up a shot near the rim through the contest of Sioux Falls Jefferson’s Dawson Sechser during a Class AA boys basketball game on Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2024, at Jefferson High School in Sioux Falls.

Landon Dierks / Mitchell Republic

No. 6: Mitchell 71, Sturgis 42

Feb. 2, 2024, at Sturgis

No. 7: Mitchell 59, Spearfish 45

Advertisement

Feb. 3, 2024, at Spearfish
In the last of four consecutive road games after claiming the top spot, Mitchell cemented its place atop the rankings. The Kernels won the third quarter 24-9 to turn a three-point halftime lead into an 18-point advantage entering the final frame. Gavin Soukup tossed in 21 points to lead the way.

No. 8: Mitchell 68, Aberdeen Central 56

Feb. 6, 2024, at the Corn Palace

020624.Mitchell.vs.AberdeenCentral_BoysBasketball-4.jpg

Mitchell’s Gavin Soukup attacks the basket against Aberdeen Central during an Eastern South Dakota Conference boys basketball game on Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2024, at the Corn Palace.

Landon Dierks / Mitchell Republic

Advertisement

No. 9: Mitchell 60, Sioux Falls Washington 55

Feb. 13, 2024, at Washington H.S.

No. 10: Mitchell 74, Pierre 50

Feb. 16, 2024, at Pierre
With a blowout road win over another ESD rival, the win streak reached 10 games in a row. Colton Smith posted a 23-point, 10-rebound double-double with five assists, and Markus Talley added 20 points, six rebounds and six assists.

Advertisement

No. 11: Mitchell 75, Sioux Falls Roosevelt 53

Feb. 17, 2024, at Roosevelt H.S.
Capping a stretch of three road games in five days, the Kernels dominated. Colton Smith scored 14 points in each half to spur Mitchell’s season-high scoring output. It was also the Kernels’ first win at Roosevelt High School in 20 years

No. 12: Mitchell 59, Brandon Valley 54

Feb. 20, 2024, at the Corn Palace
A preview of the eventual state championship contest, Mitchell overcame an early 12-point deficit to snap the Lynx’s own 12-game win streak. Gavin Soukup, Markus Talley and Colton Smith all provided 15 points for the Kernels, while Parker Mandel tossed in 10 points off the bench. Mitchell clinched a share of the Eastern South Dakota Conference title.

Advertisement

2-20-24PrepBasketballBrandonValleyvsMitchell(boys)-1.jpg

Mitchell’s Abe Gunnare (34) puts up a shot near the basket against Brandon Valley during an Eastern South Dakota Conference high school boys basketball game on Tuesday, Feb. 20, 2024, at the Corn Palace.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

No. 13: Mitchell 60, O’Gorman 50

Feb. 23, 2024, at O’Gorman H.S.
Powered by 23 points and seven rebounds from Gavin Soukup, the Kernels polished off a 19-1 regular season record and secured the No. 1 seed in the Class AA postseason.

No. 14: Mitchell 60, Yankton 46

Advertisement

March 2, 2024, at the Corn Palace — Class AA SoDak 16
Facing a postseason rematch of the 2023 Class AA state title game to reach the state tournament, Mitchell roared out to a 20-point halftime lead and didn’t let Yankton closer than eight points the rest of the way. Six Kernels scored at least six points as Mitchell punched its tournament ticket, paced by Markus Talley’s 25 points, four rebounds and four assists. The win secured a fourth-straight state tournament berth for the program.

3-2-24SoDak16MitchellvsYankton(boys)-37.jpg

The Mitchell High School boys basketball program celebrates its SoDak 16 win over Yankton with a team photo in front of the MHS student section on Saturday, March 2, 2024, at the Corn Palace.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

No. 15: Mitchell 69, Sioux Falls Jefferson 61

Advertisement

March 14, 2024, at the Premier Center, Sioux Falls — Class AA quarterfinal
Mitchell’s championship charge received a stern test in the opening round, as the Cavaliers chopped down a double-digit deficit to just two points in the fourth before the Kernels put the game away.

3-14-24PrepBasketballClassAAStateQuarterfinalMitchellvsSFJefferson(boys)-26.jpg

Mitchell’s Parker Mandel (10) goes up for a layup in the midst of several Sioux Falls Jefferson defenders during a Class AA state quarterfinal boys basketball game on Thursday, March 14, 2024, at the Premier Center in Sioux Falls.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

No. 16: Mitchell 72, Sioux Falls Washington 51

Advertisement

March 15, 2024, at the Premier Center, Sioux Falls — Class AA semifinal
Following a sweat-inducing quarterfinal, the Kernels’ semifinal affair was never in doubt. Mitchell’s lead was 13 or more points the entire second half, growing as large as 27 points. Gavin Soukup propelled the effort with 22 points and eight assists.

3-15-24PrepBasketballClassAAStateSemifinalMitchellvsSFWashington(boys)-6.jpg

Mitchell’s Gavin Hinker (40) battles Sioux Falls Washington’s Jhace Woods (left) for a loose ball during a Class AA state semifinal boys basketball game on Friday, March 15, 2024, at the Premier Center in Sioux Falls.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

No. 17: Mitchell 46, Brandon Valley 45

Advertisement

March 16, 2024, at the Premier Center, Sioux Falls — Class AA championship
Markus Talley found Gavin Hinker for the title-winning layup with _ seconds to play, and the Kernels came up with a pair of defensive stops on the final possession to capture the program’s first state championship since 2005. Mitchell’s 17th state championship all-time, the most in state history, ended with a 23-1 record.

3-16-24PrepBasketballClassAAChampionshipMitchellvsBrandonValley(boys)-102.jpg

Mitchell head coach Ryker Kreutzfeldt waves the net in the air after winning the Class AA boys state championship game against the Brandon Valley Lynx on Saturday, March 16, 2024, at the Premier Center in Sioux Falls.

Adam Thury / Mitchell Republic

End of 2023-24 season; start of 2024-25 season.

Advertisement

No. 18: Mitchell 70, Watertown 44

Dec. 17, 2024, at Watertown
Kernels open title defense with a blowout road win in ESD play. Markus Talley drops in 27 points, while Gavin Hinker nets a career-high 14 points in the victory.

No. 19: Mitchell 55, Rapid City Stevens 52

Dec. 30, 2024, at Stevens H.S.
After trailing for much of the second half, the Kernels went on an 8-0 run late in the fourth quarter to swipe a road win. Markus Talley led the way with 26 points, including the last five to clinch it for MHS.

No. 20: Mitchell 61, Rapid City Central 47

Advertisement

Dec. 21, 2024, at Central H.S.
Tackling a third road game in five days to open up the new season, Mitchell pulls away late behind 19 second-half points from Colton Smith. All told, Smith (24) and Markus Talley (26) combined for 50 points in the win. It was coach Ryker Kreutzfeldt’s 60th career head coaching win in 75 games, a win percentage of .800.





Source link

South Dakota

Tornado watch in effect as severe storms target South Dakota

Published

on

Tornado watch in effect as severe storms target South Dakota


A tornado watch has been issued for much of central and eastern South Dakota as forecasters warn conditions are favorable for tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds Wednesday evening.

The National Weather Service’s Storm Prediction Center issued the watch at 4:05 p.m. CDT, and it will remain in effect until 11 p.m. It includes dozens of counties across central and eastern South Dakota, as well as parts of southeastern North Dakota and western Minnesota.

Forecasters expect thunderstorms to develop along and ahead of a cold front moving southeast across the Dakotas. The strongest storms could become supercells capable of producing all severe weather hazards.

Advertisement

The severe weather threat is expected to continue Thursday, when another round of strong to severe thunderstorms could develop across parts of South Dakota. Large hail, damaging winds and tornadoes will again be possible.

What are expected impacts of South Dakota storms?

Storms that remain isolated could produce tornadoes and very large hail before merging into a line of thunderstorms later in the evening, according to the Storm Prediction Center. Once storms organize into a line, damaging winds are expected to become the main threat, although brief tornadoes and hail will remain possible.

The National Weather Service office in Sioux Falls said portions of southeastern South Dakota face a Level 2 out of 5 risk for severe weather Wednesday evening. Atmospheric conditions include high instability, increasing wind shear and abundant moisture, creating an environment supportive of severe thunderstorms.

In addition to severe weather, some areas could receive heavy rainfall. Most locations are expected to receive between a quarter-inch and three-quarters of an inch of rain, although isolated areas could see more than an inch. Widespread flooding is not expected, but localized flooding could occur in areas that recently received heavy rainfall.

Advertisement

Where will storms hit in South Dakota?

Storms are expected to develop in central South Dakota between late afternoon and early evening before moving east through the night. Forecasters expect the strongest storms to reach the Interstate 29 corridor between about 10 p.m. and midnight.

Radar: Severe weather in South Dakota

South Dakota weather watches and warnings

Stay informed. Get weather alerts via text

Brandi D. Addison covers weather across the United States as the Weather Connect Reporter for the USA TODAY Network. She can be reached at baddison@gannett.com.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

South Dakota

South Dakota primary results leave Legislature seats in limbo

Published

on

South Dakota primary results leave Legislature seats in limbo


play

Advertisement
  • Ten Republicans who lost their seats in the Legislature in 2024 are trying to win them back this year.
  • Incumbents and lawmakers who gave up House seats to run for Senate fell to challengers in several places.
  • Votes are still being tallied across the state.

The makeup of the Legislature was up in the air as of 1 a.m. after South Dakota’s primary election. 

Ten Republican state lawmakers ousted in 2024 are angling to get their seats back in 2026. Results were mixed for the nine who had primaries on Tuesday, with results still coming in for several races and others set for possible recounts.

Shawn Bordeaux of Rosebud won the state’s only Democratic primary, beating Troy “Luke” Lunderman for a chance to return to the state Senate.

Bordeaux will face Chamberlain Republican Rebecca Reimer in November’s general election. Reimer, who was term-limited in the state House of Representatives, beat Lower Brule Sen. Tamara Grove in Tuesday’s primary.

Advertisement

In Watertown’s District 5, Rep. Josephine Garcia fell in a state Senate primary to incumbent Sen. Glen Vilhauer. Garcia beat Byron Callies in the 2024 primary to earn her seat in the House of Representatives, but opted to challenge Vilhauer for his Senate seat instead of seeking reelection to the House. 

Callies, Vilhauer and Garcia are all from Watertown.

Vilhauer won with 59% of the vote. His was one of the first state legislative victories of the night reported on the Secretary of State’s website.

Vilhauer won handily, but he said he wasn’t necessarily expecting to as polls opened on Tuesday.

“I knew it was going to be a battle going in,” Vilhauer said. “She worked hard on her side, and I didn’t know what to expect.”

Advertisement

Callies was among the first to call Vilhauer to congratulate him, around 9:30 p.m.

“I’m happy, because Glen’s a solid legislator,” said Callies, who’s angling to win his seat back in the general election.

Garcia did not return a call seeking comment.

Advertisement

In District 21, Sen. Mykala Voita of Bonesteel beat former Sen. Erin Tobin of Winner in a rematch of their 2024 contest, which Voita won by a few dozen votes that year. This time around, Voita bested Tobin by 1,002 votes. 

In response to a request for comment, Voita sent a text reading “Glory to God!”

Tobin did not return a call from South Dakota Searchlight about her race after it was called, but said earlier in the evening she would be “at peace” with the results regardless of what they might be.

Another rematch saw Yanktonites Lauren Nelson and Jean Hunhoff battling for District 18’s state Senate seat. Nelson was a newcomer in 2024 when she beat Hunhoff, who’d spent decades in the Capitol between stints in the House and Senate. On Tuesday, Nelson held off Hunhoff, winning by 243 votes.

Other notable races

  • District 4 Rep. Dylan Jordan of Clear Lake, first elected in 2024, finished fourth in a five-way race. As of 1 a.m. Wednesday, he trailed Ryan Kohl of Milbank and former Rep. Fred Deutsch of Florence, in first and second place, respectively. A recount is possible in that race, with 59 votes separating the top two vote-getters while Rep. Kent Roe, of Hayti, came in third place, with 72 fewer votes than Deutsch.
  • District 4 has two possible recounts. In the other, Bryant’s Stephanie Sauder beat Clear Lake’s Tim Begalka by 105 votes in the unofficial tally from the Secretary of State.
  • District 1 Rep. Logan Manhart of Aberdeen, elected in the 2024 primary, fell to Rep. Nick Fosness, a hospital administrator appointed by Gov. Larry Rhoden in 2025, and newcomer Daniel Kjos.
  • Another recount was possible as of Wednesday at 1 a.m., in the District 16 race for House of Representatives. Rep. John Shubeck of Beresford trailed Lisa Bogue of Beresford by 245 votes in unofficial results. Jason VanDenTop of Canton was in third place, trailing Shubeck by 68 votes.

Vote totals incomplete

  • Sen. John Carley of Piedmont, who won his first term in 2024, trailed William Meirose of Sturgis by 166 votes as of 1 a.m. Wednesday.
  • Former Rep. Tyler Tordsen led Rep. Tony Kayser by two votes in the District 14 primary, with results still coming in. The Sioux Falls men are vying for second place and a spot on the November general election ballot alongside Rep. Taylor Rehfeldt of Sioux Falls, who led by more than 600 votes early Wednesday.
  • District 28 Sen. Sam Marty of Prairie City was in a close race with former legislator Ryan Maher of Isabel.
  • Former Rep. Gary Cammack of Union Center, who lost his seat in 2024, and Gary Deering of Hereford, led Reps. Terri Jorgenson of Piedmont and Kathy Rice of Blackhawk in the District 29 race.
  • In District 30, Hot Springs Sen. Amber Hulse led former Sen. Julie Frye-Mueller of Rapid City by more than 1,300 votes.
  • Former Sen. David Johnson of Rapid City led Sen. Curt Voight of Rapid City in a rematch of their 2024 race for District 33 Senate in early results.
  • Rep. Heather Baxter of Rapid City has signaled her intention to challenge sitting Secretary of State Monae Johnson for the Republican nomination to that constitutional office at the state’s Republican Party convention this summer. In early results, Baxter trailed former Rapid City Rep. Becky Drury and Rep. Mike Derby in the District 34 primary.
  • Early results in the District 35 primary put Sen. Greg Blanc, elected in 2024, in a close race with fellow Rapid City resident Nicole Mitzel.

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



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

South Dakota

Republican businessman Toby Doeden advances to primary runoff in South Dakota governor’s race

Published

on

Republican businessman Toby Doeden advances to primary runoff in South Dakota governor’s race


Republican businessman Toby Doeden has advanced to a runoff in South Dakota governor’s race, NBC News projects.

Gov. Larry Rhoden, who replaced Kristi Noem last year when President Donald Trump nominated her to lead the Department of Homeland Security, was battling with Rep. Dusty Johnson and former state House Speaker Jon Hansen for a second spot in the July 28 runoff. The primary will go to a runoff because no candidate eclipsed 35% of the vote.

Trump did not issue an endorsement in the race. Doeden branded himself on his campaign website as “a total political outsider who’s tired of the government’s failure to deliver on its promises” and one of Trump’s “fiercest supporters.”

Rhoden, a former lieutenant governor, agriculture secretary and lawmaker, campaigned on property tax cuts and lowering crime in his bid for a four-year term.

Syndication: Argus Leader
Candidate signs outside a polling location in Sioux Falls, S.D., on Tuesday.Samantha Laurey / Argus Leader

Johnson is the state’s lone representative in the House, where he previously was chair of the Republican Main Street Caucus. Hansen, who was elected to the South Dakota House in 2010, held several leadership positions before he became speaker.

The Republican nominee will be the favorite to win the general election in the solidly red state this fall. A Democrat has not served as governor in South Dakota since the 1970s, and Trump carried the state by 29 points in 2024.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending