Wisconsin
Planning for Wisconsin's LA Swing Was No Easy Task
Planning for Wisconsin’s LA Swing Was No Easy Task
LOS ANGELES – The addition of four championship-level athletic programs expanded the Big Ten conference from coast to coast, adding a new dimension and competitiveness to college sports’ new super conference.
It brought more of a headache for Marc VandeWettering.
“It creates some new hurdles,” VandeWettering said. “I’ve been here a handful of years, and you get familiar with the places you go, and all them being quick in-out trips. This feels more similar to a multi-team event over the holidays or an NCAA Tournament where you have longer stays, more meals, and more people coming along. It’s different for a Big Ten regular season trip.”
The Kaukauna, Wis., native wears many hats for Wisconsin as its chief of staff of basketball operations, but nonconference scheduling is his big job during the summer, and organizing team travel is one of the top priorities during the season.
Entering his eighth year in the program, VandeWettering has most campus trips down to a science. Leave for the city the day before the game, head for home right after, and rely on the same vendors and hotels that have taken care of them in past years.
VandeWettering deals with everything from who gets on the team bus or plane to who stays at the hotel, who caters the team meals, and who gets game tickets. It’s a lot to deal with an overnight trip, let alone one that will span a week.
So, adding Oregon, Washington, UCLA, and USC into the fold this past summer has required more than the usual prep work for VandeWettering and his staff with No.24 Wisconsin (14-3, 4-2 Big Ten) on its first West Coast swing, playing USC (11-6, 3-3) at the Galen Center tomorrow afternoon and UCLA (11-6, 2-4) at Pawley Pavilion Tuesday night.
All 18 Big Ten men’s basketball directors of operations share a spreadsheet they can access that gives details on travel, hotel, and arena accommodations in their respective city. With no guidelines on travel given by the Big Ten, how each school gets to the venues and where they stay is entirely up to the discretion of people like VandeWettering.
“With these new schools, how we’re going to travel there is a topic of conversation we lean toward when we get a chance to catch up,” VandeWettering said. “Iowa was here a few weeks ago, I talked to Kyle Denning pre-game and we talked through different things about where they were practicing, where they were staying, all those little details. With them being on the front end of us being out there, it’s nice for them to give us the lay of the land before we get there and know what we’re walking into.”
The Planning Stages
Wisconsin started planning this trip as soon as the staff got their hands on the schedule in September, only a few days before it was released to the public. Booking flights and hotels was simple enough but scheduling them for what days became the topic of conversation.
Because of the flight’s length, duration of the stay, and game times (noon Pacific Saturday and 6:30 p.m. Pacific Tuesday), flying in the day before and leaving on a red-eye after wasn’t ideal. After conversations with head coach Greg Gard and strength and conditioning Jim Snider, the Badgers decided to leave yesterday to get acclimated to the environment. With UW not scheduled to play again until a home game Sunday, the staff felt it’d be best to get a full night’s sleep Tuesday and return Wednesday early evening.
“With that game on Sunday, we felt that was best for us and the team to get us most ready for that game,” VandeWettering said.
There was also the matter of what to do with the amount of free time the players have between games and where to secure a practice facility. VandeWettering said they decided to switch hotels during the week, moving from near USC’s campus to Beverly Hills and UCLA’s campus to eliminate some traffic concerns and break up the monotony of living in the same hotel room for seven days.
Finding gym space was a bigger hassle. The Badgers had to be flexible for their Friday practice at USC’s Galen Center due to a men’s volleyball game later that night. UCLA’s Pawley Pavilion was equally limited with availability for practices and a shootaround. VandeWettering said he even reached out to the LA Clippers to see about availability of their new practice facility but that wasn’t available due to a game day.
“We had to figure out what was the next best space,” VandeWettering said. “We ended up going back to UCLA and taking its practice facility on Sunday. There is a lot of flexibility and things you have to work through with the different contacts. Getting out there that extra day early allows us to get settled and not rush from anything to get to those early practices. It allows us to get into both facilities ahead of time, which gives us a little familiarity with each arena being the first time out there.”
Lengthy stays aren’t new for Wisconsin. The Badgers have stayed on the road for multiple road games periodically over the last four seasons, including flying from Michigan to Rutgers last season. VandeWettering said the biggest takeaway from those trips was to try and limit time in the hotel room, so the Badgers are scheduled to do some community service work and possibly attend an LA Clippers game.
“You got to make sure the day is broken up as much as we can,” VandeWettering said. “It gives guys a different vibe, a different energy to get out moving a little bit. There are things we’ve learned along the way and that’s one of the big ones to keep guys fresh and engaged.”
Ready to Pivot If Needed
As if dealing with the logistics of a long regular-season trip to an unfamiliar part of the country was tough enough, the Badgers have kept watch on the devasting fires affecting the Los Angeles area. Thirty different fires have sparked since then, and while 26 have been extinguished, the Palisades Fire — the largest of three major fires ravaging Los Angeles County to the Northwest – burning across 23,713 acres and just 23 percent contained.
The Eaton Fire – the most destructive fire in Southern California history – is 55 percent contained as of Thursday. At least 25 people have died, and thousands of structures have been destroyed.
After various professional and college sporting events were postponed last weekend and an NFL playoff game was moved out of state, USC beat Iowa Tuesday night in its first home game since the fires. UCLA is scheduled to play the Hawkeyes on campus tonight, not far from where the Palisades Fire continues to rage.
“There’s a level of concern of something I’ve had to be tracking on for the last week or so,” VandeWettering said. “We need to be ready to adapt and adjust. We’ve had pretty consistent conversations with the Big Ten and people at UCLA who are on the ground giving us information. They’ve been super helpful and reassuring us that they’re good.”
After the UCLA women moved its Wednesday game to Long Beach State, VandeWettering said the Badgers are preparing for the contingency of their game being relocated.
“We’re ready to adjust,” VandeWettering said. “The safety of everyone out there continues to be top priority. Getting these games in is of the utmost importance for us, the league, and all the schools involved, but we want to make sure we do it right.”
Whenever UW is off-campus, VandeWettering must be on his toes. More than once in his tenure he’s had to deal with flight issues after games, causing delays and scrambles. It’s only when he’s on his drive back to the Kohl Center that he affords himself a moment … before thinking about the next road trip around the corner.
“When I can see that last bus is there ready to pick us up on the way to Kohl Center,” VandeWettering said, “that’s when I can exhale and say we pulled it off.”
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Wisconsin
WI lawmakers should support data center accountability bill | Letters
Data centers proposed in our area pose multiple threats to our water, wildlife, and wallets. We all can take action by asking our senators and representatives to back SB729.
Fly over the Microsoft data center construction site in Mount Pleasant
Take a flight around the Microsoft Corp. data center campus construction site in Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin as construction continues.
The data centers proposed in our area in Mount Pleasant, Port Washington, and Beaver Dam pose multiple threats to our water, wildlife, and wallets. The centers will require vast amounts of water to cool their equipment. Plus, 70% of the water consumed each year in Wisconsin goes to electric power generation, so the water needed for energy production adds to the millions of gallons these centers will need on peak days.
The massive energy infrastructure required to build and operate the data centers is expensive and threatens to burden customers for years with the huge costs. Also, at a time when the impacts of climate change make it clear that we should be transitioning to clean renewable energy sources, utility companies are using data centers as justification for building new fossil gas power plants, thereby keeping us from achieving the zero emissions future that we so desperately need.
Take action by backing Data Center Accountability Act
The Data Center Accountability Act, bill SB729, was introduced recently in the Wisconsin legislature. If passed, the bill would stipulate that:
- Data center must meet labor standards and use at least 70% renewable energy.
- All data centers must be LEED certified or the equivalent.
- Data center owners must pay an annual fee that funds renewable energy, energy efficiency, and a low-income energy assistance program.
We all can take action to prevent the worst impacts from data centers by asking our senators and representatives to vote for SB729. To find your legislators go to https://myvote.wi.gov/en-us/My-Elected-Officials.
Jenny Abel, Wauwatosa
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Wisconsin
Can ‘completely different’ Wisconsin volleyball upset Texas in NCAA tournament?
Texas coach anticipates ‘fun chess match’ against Wisconsin volleyball
Texas coach Jerritt Elliott had high praise for Wisconsin and explained why the Badgers have been playing their best volleyball at this time of year.
AUSTIN, Texas – Wisconsin volleyball’s first weekend of the 2025 season featured a high-profile match against Texas.
Wisconsin’s either final or penultimate weekend of the season – depending on whether UW can advance – also features a high-profile match against Texas.
But both sides will caution against reading too much into Wisconsin’s Aug. 31 loss to Texas ahead of a rematch in the NCAA tournament regional finals as each team seeks a return to the Final Four.
“We are completely different teams than what we saw however many months ago that was,” Wisconsin middle blocker Carter Booth said.
Texas coach Jerritt Elliott said almost the exact same thing in the Longhorns’ press conference, and his players echoed similar sentiments as well.
“I feel like both teams are just a lot more developed at this point in the year,” Texas setter Ella Swindle said. “At the beginning of the season, we were kind of just figuring out who we are and who we want to be. So now at this point, I feel like we know our identities, and we’re ready to go out and battle.”
Here are three keys for the much-improved Badgers to have a better outcome against the also-much-improved Longhorns in the NCAA tournament:
How efficient can Wisconsin’s attack be against Texas’ physicality at net?
Wisconsin’s path to advancing in the Texas regional has already required defeating one team with outstanding physicality at the net, and it is unlikely to get any easier in the regional finals.
“I was watching Stanford warm up, and you’re like, ‘Jiminy Crickets,’” Sheffield said. “It’s like watching the NBA dunking contest. It’s like, ‘Holy cow.’ They’re just bouncing balls on the 10-foot line and just really dynamic and impressive. And Texas probably has it even more than that.”
Texas’ physicality was abundantly apparent in its three-set sweep over Indiana in the regional semifinals. The Longhorns had a 12-2 advantage in blocks, and Indiana committed 23 attack errors. Going back to when UW faced Texas in August, the Badgers committed a season-high 26 attack errors despite it lasting only three sets.
“But each team has their thing,” Sheffield said. “And if we try to play their game, we’re going to get whacked. And if they try to play ours, that’s going to be problems for them as well.”
Can Badgers keep Texas’ talented pin hitters in check?
The Wisconsin-Texas match will feature two of the best outside hitters in the country.
Wisconsin’s Mimi Colyer has averaged 5.38 kills per set, which is the highest among players who advanced to the NCAA regional finals and is destined to break the UW program record. Texas’ Torrey Stafford is ninth in the country with 4.78 kills per set while hitting .368.
“Both of them are fearless,” Sheffield said. “They’re extremely, extremely talented. I think volleyball fans are going to be following them for a long, long time. Both of them have tremendous careers in front of them.”
Stafford was virtually unstoppable in the Longhorns’ sweep over Indiana, recording 19 kills without any attack errors and hitting a video-game-like .679. But for as talented as the AVCA national player of the year semifinalist is, she is not the only pin that can give opponents fits.
Texas freshman Cari Spears has immediately stepped into a major role in the Longhorns’ attack as the starting right-side hitter in every match this season. In the second match of her career, she led Texas with 11 kills while committing only one attack error in the win over the Badgers.
“She was just trying to figure out how to breathe during that first match, and it just takes time,” Elliott said. “And now she actually understands our offense a lot more, she’s developed a lot of her blocking, her range has gotten better, and that applies to all of our team. Ella’s been doing the same thing. Her offensive system is completely different than it was the first week of the season.”
The Wisconsin match was the first of seven consecutive matches for Spears with at least 10 kills.
“Seeing that I can compete with one of the top teams in the nation and seeing the trust that my teammates had with me and the trust that the coaches had in me – it was a huge confidence boost for me,” Spears said.
As for how to stop Stafford, Spears and Co., Booth said it goes back to the Badgers’ fundamentals.
“I know I’m beating a dead horse, but that’s really what this is all about,” Booth said. “At the highest level, the margins are so thin that you’re not trying to reinvent the wheel again. You’re honing in on the details of what you already know to do. So it’s not necessarily about being perfect on the block. … Our focus is just going to be taking away good space for our defense and then trusting that the people around us have put in the work to be able to defend those shots.”
How do Badgers respond to adversity?
When Wisconsin defeated Stanford after an otherworldly offensive showing in the first set, Booth said it was “really an emphasis for us to always be the one throwing punches, not the ones taking them.”
The ability to punch first is far from a guarantee against a team as talented as Texas is, however. The Longhorns have only lost once this season at Gregory Gym, and that was against Kentucky, which is one of the other top seeds in the NCAA tournament.
Even in a neutral crowd situation, Wisconsin’s ability to not let Stanford’s momentum snowball was crucial in the four-set win. Now with the vast majority of the anticipated 4,500 people in attendance rooting against the Badgers in the regional finals, Wisconsin’s resiliency when Texas does pack a punch will be crucial.
“We are definitely more equipped to withstand those highs and lows of a set and able to step up after a mistake or come back after a battle,” Booth said. “You see yesterday, (we) come out very dominant in the first set, and then we dropped the second in a fashion that was a little bit uncharacteristic to the way we want to play. And being able to just step up and come back third and fourth playing our game – I think that goes to show how much we’ve grown in that sense.”
The Badgers – already confident before the tournament and now with even more reason for confidence after the Stanford win – are not ceding the possibility of still throwing that figurative first punch either.
“We are the writers of our own destiny, and I think that we are always in a position to be able to throw the first punch, no matter who we’re seeing across the net,” Booth said.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin Lutheran boys basketball pursues three-peat with revamped lineup
Yusuf Gray Jr. highlights: Watch Iowa State recruit’s top plays
Yusuf Gray Jr.’s highlights as he led West Allis Central to a win over Dooney Johnson and Milwaukee Juneau
Over the first couple weeks of the WIAA high school boys basketball season, the Journal Sentinel will be checking in with the Milwaukee area’s three reigning state championship teams.
Our visits began with reigning Division 3 champion Milwaukee Academy of Science, which will compete in D2 in the WIAA postseason this year. The next check-in comes with a team that knows all about repeating in a higher division, the two-time defending state champions from Wisconsin Lutheran. The Vikings won their fourth WIAA state title and second consecutive after receiving a competitive balance elevation from D2 to D1 last season. The quest for a third straight title will also be in D1, and the Vikings look up to the challenge.
Here is what to know about Wisconsin Lutheran, which improved to 4-0 with a 69-20 victory over New Berlin West on Dec. 12.
Roles to fill around returning stars Zens, Knueppel
Wisco’s two leading scorers from the 2024-25 team return, but the surrounding cast looks a bit different this season. Northern Iowa commit and 6-foot-7 senior forward Zavier Zens (22.2 points per game last season) and 6-10 junior guard Kager Knueppel (13.5 ppg) are the two returning starters, while the three graduated starters include guard Isaiah Mellock (11.1 ppg, Wisconsin Lutheran College), forward/guard Alex Greene (10.9 ppg, Concordia) and forward Ben Langebartels (2.3 ppg).
Coach Ryan Walz said he wants to see Zens become a more vocal leader this year, while adding Knueppel can round out his ability as a three-level scorer.
“I think that’s a big step for any senior to make, to get outside of yourself, to be able to be engaged with other people on the team and not just always be worried about what you’re doing, but also being concerned for your teammates and showing that kind of leadership,” Walz said of Zens.
“From our standpoint, we want to see [Kager] be an effective basketball player at the basket, in the midrange and from three-point range. That’s the next step for guys who are on the cusp of being really, really good players, and that’s what Zavier did last year,” Walz added on Knueppel.
In place of the graduates this season have been former reserve 6-foot junior guard Riley Walz (4.2 ppg last season), former reserve forward and 6-6 senior Kinston Knueppel (5.0 ppg) as well as junior 6-7 forward Jamail Sewell.
“Riley’s going to have to handle the ball and distribute it, get us into offense and really control what we do, and Kinston is that versatile piece – kind of like Alex Greene last year – where he has to find ways where he can influence the game offensively with his intelligence, his skill level, his flexibility of being able to go inside and outside,” coach Walz said. “Jamail is 6-7, almost 6-8, and obviously anybody who saw him in football pads saw this enormous man, and he moves really, really well and has great hands. He needs to catch up on some of his basketball things and his skill and his understanding of the game, but he is an enormous presence on the floor.”
The Vikings again do not lack for size and will send one of the tallest starting fives in the state to the floor night-in and night-out between Zens, Kinston Knueppel, Kager Knueppel and Sewell. Kager Knueppel said teams will also have to watch out for Riley Walz on the perimeter as they crowd the paint.
“He’s been working really hard. I like him coming into the point guard role because he does not turn the ball over and he can shoot threes really well,” Kager Knueppel said.
As they learned with a late substitution in the D1 title game in March, every player needs to be ready for their moment.
“You don’t know when your time is going to come but you have to be ready, and so as coaches it’s our job to absolutely keep pushing them and moving them forward as best that we can,” coach Walz said.
Wisconsin Lutheran not shying from expectations
Returning top players to a team coming off consecutive state titles creates expectations around the program to compete for a three-peat. Zens said the team is embracing those expectations, while relying on the experience that has led them this far.
“We all know there’s high expectations for us, but those are our expectations for ourselves as well,” Zens said.
The pressure to defend a title is nothing new for Kager Knueppel, and something he thinks the team will be prepared for on a nightly basis.
“All of our guys understand that we have a target on our back, and people will want to come after us and beat us,” Knueppel said.
Coach Walz said the tone of keeping expectations in their proper framework is set by Zens.
“He is intrinsically motivated,” Walz said. “If your best player has no letdown and is leading by example, then that just brings everybody else along.”
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