Wisconsin
Wisconsin Pride in the Park event stays strong amid Neo-Nazi protest
WATERTOWN, Wis. — Organizers say a group of neo-Nazis protested their LGBTQ event in Wisconsin.
They said it was scary when members of “the blood tribe” showed up at “Pride in the Park” over the weekend, WKOW reported.
“Surreal to see it,” said Julie Janowak, one of the Watertown Pride in the Park organizers. “They marched in waving swastika flags, covered, you couldn’t see they had sunglasses on. You couldn’t see their face. I think they had gloves on, long sleeves, long pants.”
SEE ALSO: Wicker Park Lutheran Church plants hundreds of Pride flags after months-long vandalism
Watertown’s Pride in the Park is no stranger to pushback.
Last year, an opposing group in the town tried to have the event canceled completely.
When they couldn’t — they protested.
“This year, there was a lot less of the local talk, they kind of realized that they couldn’t stop it last year, so they weren’t going to try this year,” said Trent Kangas, another Pride in the Park organizer.
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Organizers say many of the original protesters Saturday were similar to those in 2022.
Then they heard chanting from the Blood Tribe.
“It was intimidating the way they were waving the flags around, and they had a big banner that said something about pedophiles, and then they were just chanting ‘blood, blood, blood,’” Janowak said.
Organizers said there was a mix of confusion, disbelief and fear as they saw swastika flags flying just on the other side of the fence.
“Individuals who were waving those flags and had those weapons, they don’t have scruples,” said Elizabeth Boxell, a Pride in the Park organizer. “They’re not thinking about us as people. They’re thinking about us as enemies, targets, inhumane.”
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Organizers said they’re thankful to have a good relationship with the Watertown Police Department, which had officers there for protection.
They said the neo-Nazi group wasn’t there for long, so after the initial shock and fear dissipated, they turned their attention back to pride.
“We experienced it. We were scared, but then that fear turned into this like fierce kind of love and acceptance, and like forget them. We’re louder. We can be louder. We can be stronger,” Boxell said.
Organizers said they know what happened Saturday could be hard for some attendees to process.
They’re working with clergy and others to provide support for those who need it.
Wisconsin
Preview: No.18 Wisconsin Looks for LA Sweep When It Takes On UCLA
Preview: No.18 Wisconsin Looks for LA Sweep When It Takes On UCLA
No.18 Wisconsin (15-3, 5-2 Big Ten) vs. UCLA (12-6, 3-4 Big Ten)
Date/Time – Tuesday, January 21, 8:30 p.m.
Arena – Pawley Pavilion (13,800)
Watch – Peacock (Ted Robinson and Darren Collison)
Radio – Badgers Radio Network (Matt Lepay and Brian Butch), Sirius 106 or 195, stream online on iHeartRadio.
Series – UCLA leads 5-2 (UCLA leads 2-1 in Los Angeles)
Last Meeting – UCLA won, 72-70, on November 21, 2017, in Kansas City, Mo.
Follow Online: The Badgers’ Den
Twitter: @Badger_Blitz
Betting line: UCLA -3.5
Projected Starting Five (Wisconsin)
Player to Watch: During UW’s seven-game win streak, Crowl is averaging 15.2 ppg & 6.0 rpg while shooting 71.4 percent (7-15 3FGs).
Projected Starting Five (UCLA)
Player to watch: Bilodeau has scored in double figures in 13 of 18 games, having reached the 20-point plateau in three contests. Last month in New York City, he totaled a career-high-tying 26 points in a loss to North Carolina. He is shooting 50.5 percent from the field and 38.8 percent from 3-point distance.
Series Notes
Tuesday will mark the eighth meeting between Wisconsin and UCLA in a series that dates back to 1948, but this will be the first meeting since the Bruins joined the Big Ten.
The Bruins have won the last 5 meetings including neutral wins in the 1995 Maui Invitational and the 2017 Hall of Fame Classic most recently.
UW and UCLA haven’t played at either school’s home site since a 94-53 UCLA win in Los Angeles in 1972.
UW has won 6 straight in Los Angeles, including Saturday’s 84-69 win at USC.
Wisconsin Notes
The Badgers have matched their best 18-game start under Greg Gard, also doing so in the Sweet 16 2016-17 season and UW’s 2021-22 Big Ten championship season.
A win at UCLA would be Wisconsin’s sixth-consecutive Big Ten win, the longest conference win streak since ending the 2019-20 season with eight straight Big Ten wins.
The Badgers are 8-3 against the top 2 quadrants of the NET rankings, including 3 Quad 1 wins and zero losses outside of Quad 1.
Wisconsin is 5-2 away from home.
Including a Kohl-Center record 116 points vs. Iowa (1/3) and the 84 points Saturday at USC, Wisconsin had hit at least 80 points in 11 of 18 games, the team’s most since the 2014-15 season (11 times).
UCLA Notes
The Bruins have gone 8-1 in Pauley Pavilion this season, now in their 59th campaign playing in the longtime UCLA basketball venue.
UCLA has gone 1-4 in January after compiling a 5-1 record through December.
UCLA ranks No. 6 in the nation in turnovers forced per game (17.0) and eighth in turnover margin (+5.1).
The Bruins rank No. 19 in the nation in scoring defense (63.7 ppg), limiting the opposition to 65 points or fewer in eight of 18 games this season.
A Pac-12 All-Defensive team honoree the last two seasons at USC, Johnson has totaled 190 steals in 109 career games (1.74 spg) since traveling this season. The Milwaukee native enters tonight with a team-best 34 steals (Skyy Clark has totaled 23), having registered 1.9 steals per game in 18 contests as a senior
Prediction
USC coach Eric Musselman is new to the Big Ten and new to playing Wisconsin, but he perfectly encapsulated why this version of the Badgers is giving teams headaches.
“It’s really hard to rotate when you have all red shooters out there,” Musselman lamented. “When they go in the first 7 of 15 (from three), you have to stay attached to the shooters … It’s the first team we’ve played, including Iowa, that we felt had five guys who can all make a three whether they had their starters in or their subs. So you give and take something. You can’t take away the three and the dribble drive unless you are a great defensive team in the NBA. You got to decide what you’re going to do.”
“When you come into a game, you do have to game plan for their leading scorer. Well, he has zero points. I can’t plug 99 holes in a 40-minute game. I’d love to, but I’m not that smart.”
Tonje was held scoreless for the first time in his Wisconsin career, but the Badgers were leading by 15 points at halftime and calmly rebuilt that lead after the Trojans made things interesting in cutting the deficit to three. Blackwell had 28, Klesmit had 18, UW’s starting frontcourt combined for 22 on 9-for-11 shooting, and the bench contributed 17 points and seven assists. Without Tonje’s 18.2 ppg, the Badgers averaged 1.254 points per possession.
“It shows leadership,” Blackwell said. “When Tonje is not scoring, the next man up steps up.”
The Bruins are offensively comparable to the Trojans. Both are separated by 1.23 points in scoring average and 0.4 points in adjusted offensive efficiency, but the Bruins are far superior defensively. UCLA has the top-scoring defense in the conference at 63.72 points per game and is ranked 12th nationally in adjusted defensive efficiency. Despite ranking ninth in the league in field goal defense and 12th in three-point defense, the Bruins play a slower tempo (260th nationally) to limit possessions. The Bruins held Iowa on Friday to 70 points (the second-fewest of the season for the league’s top-scoring team), only 1.148 points per possession, and 38.1 shooting percentage in the first half, leading to a 33-point halftime edge.
UCLA coach Mick Cronin has made headlines recently with his comments railing against the conference’s scheduling and the challenges his team is having with traveling to road games and unbalanced days off. But Cronin was blunt with his team entering the Iowa game, saying that they haven’t adequately adjusted to the play in the league compared to the old Pac-12.
“We have struggled in Big Ten basketball,” Cronin said. “Our two wins were against teams we were familiar playing against (Oregon and Washington). The truth of it is, Big Ten basketball is different. It’s a much more physical game.”
UCLA has struggled to defend without fouling (295th nationally in fouls per game (18.5)), isn’t great at rebounding, (averaging a league-worst 22.11 per game), and has struggled guarding pick-and-roll actions
This game sets up well for Wisconsin defensively and should allow the Badgers to expose some things offensively. And considering Tonje is too good of a player to get shutout in consecutive games, the Badgers have a great chance to complete the LA sweep.
Worgull’s Prediction: Wisconsin by seven
Record: 15-3 (13-5 ATS)
Points off Prediction: 149 (8.3 per game)
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Wisconsin
Nebraska Women’s Basketball Hammers Wisconsin, Wins Fifth Straight
Nebraska women’s basketball left no doubt Monday night.
Despite the frigid temperatures outside, the Huskers were red-hot inside Pinnacle Bank Arena in a 91-60 shellacking of Wisconsin. NU improved to 15-4 on the year and 6-2 in the Big Ten Conference while UW fell to 10-9 overall and 1-7 in the league.
Nebraska started the game iffy on the offensive end, needing to scrap in the back-and-forth affair. But a 6-0 run put the Big Red up late in the first quarter.
Wisconsin started the second quarter with back-to-back buckets, tying the game at 18. That’s when Nebraska unleashed hell on the visitors.
The Huskers rattled off an 18-1 and held the Badgers scores for a five-minute stretch. The game was never in doubt the rest of the way as the Big Red cruised to the 31-point victory.
The biggest difference in the game came from beyond the arc, as Nebraska fired off a barrage from deep. NU made 16-of-32 3s while the Badgers managed just 3-of-17 from deep.
Eight different Huskers made a triple in the contest, with Jessica Petrie, Britt Prince, and Kendall Moriarty all making a trio of shots from deep.
Nebraska shot 54.2% for the game, adding 11-of-12 free throws. Wisconsin made 37.9% of their shots, chipping in 7-of-11 from the line.
Moriarty scored a team-high 17 points off the bend. Also coming off the bench, Petrie added 15 points, seven rebounds, and three assists.
In total, Nebraska scored 35 bench points. The Huskers also had assists on 27 of their 32 made shots.
Big Ten Freshman of the Week Prince scored 14 points, adding seven rebounds, three teals, two assists, and no turnovers in 25 minutes of work.
Alexis Markowski grabbed seven rebounds, passing All-American and Husker Hall of Famer Jodan Hooper (2011-14) for No. 3 on Nebraska’s career rebound list. Markowski is up to 1,112, just two shy of Emily Cady (2012-25) for No. 2 on the list. The record holder is Janet Smith (1979-82) with 1,280 rebounds.
Nebraska stays home Sunday to host No. 12 Ohio State. Tip from Pinnacle Bank Arena is slated for 2 p.m. CST on B1G+.
Box score | Photos
MORE: Nebraska Women’s Basketball Just Outside of Associated Press Top 25 Rankings
MORE: Associated Press Top 25 Features Six Big Ten Men’s Programs
MORE: Michigan State, Purdue Flex the Big Ten’s Muscles
MORE: Nebraska’s Britt Prince Earns Big Ten Freshman of the Week
MORE: 2027 4-Star Athlete Ty Keys Calls Nebraska Football Offer a ‘Confidence Booster’
Stay up to date on all things Huskers by bookmarking Nebraska Cornhuskers On SI, subscribing to HuskerMax on YouTube, and visiting HuskerMax.com daily.
Wisconsin
Missing Apple Valley pizza delivery driver’s car found in Wisconsin
MINNEAPOLIS — The car of a missing 42-year-old Apple Valley pizza delivery driver has been found in Wisconsin, police say.
A witness told authorities they believe they saw Shuefuab “Shue” Xiong in the red Toyota Camry in Superior around 4 p.m. Saturday.
The Camry was found, unoccupied, by police in Superior on Sunday. Superior is around 170 miles north of Apple Valley.
Police also say a friend of Xiong spoke to him in Roseville Saturday around 8 p.m. It’s unknown how he traveled from Superior to Roseville.
Investigators believe Xiong may be having a mental health crisis. He is not believed to be a threat to others, but authorities say he is known to carry a firearm and has a permit to carry.
Xiong reported to work at Domino’s in Apple Valley on Jan. 14, but didn’t make four scheduled deliveries.
He is described as 5 feet 8 inches tall and 215 pounds. He is bald and has a black mustache, black beard and brown eyes, the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension says.
His family is offering a $20,000 reward for his safe return.
Anyone who has seen Xiong or knows his whereabouts is asked to call the Apple Valley Police Department 952-953-2700.
Note: The above video first aired on Jan. 17, 2025
Mental Health Resources: Crisis services are available around the clock if you or someone you care about is having a mental health crisis. Call **CRISIS (**274747) from a cell phone to talk to a team of professionals who can help you. Text “MN” to 741741. More info here.
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