Wisconsin
Wisconsin volleyball scores four-set win over Georgia Tech, advances to 12th straight Sweet 16

Wisconsin volleyball unveils Final Four banner inside UW Field House
The Badgers unveiled the banner from their 2023 Final Four appearance before their exhibition match against Bradley on Aug. 20.
MADISON – The Wisconsin volleyball team is heading back to the Sweet 16.
The Badgers dropped the first set, but bounced back to score a four-set victory over Georgia Tech on Friday night at the UW Field House.
The 25-27, 25-20, 25-23, 25-21 victory sets up a regional semifinal next week that will most likely be played at Nebraska. UW (25-6) will face the winner of the Arizona State/Texas A&M second-round match that will be played Saturday in Tempe, Arizona.
Senior Sarah Franklin finished with 20 kills and 10 digs. The Badgers also got a big night from senior Anna Smrek, who totaled 13 kills and tied junior Carter Booth for the team high in kills (eight). Booth also finished with 10 kills and a .300 hitting percentage.
Freshman Charlie Fuerbringer posted 49 assists and 21 digs and tied her second high with four aces. Two of those aces came late in the second set and helped the Badgers even the match.
Georgia Tech, which had late-season five-set losses to No. 1 Pitt and No. 6 Stanford, finished 21-10.
Check jsonline.com later for more on the match.

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Wisconsin
Wisconsin Democrats reintroduce gun regulations after Republicans pull them from budget

Wisconsin Democrats are reintroducing gun regulations after Republicans stripped those measures from the state budget.
Sponsors say they hope to prevent gun violence, which typically spikes during the summer months. The proposals now circulating for cosponsors include expanded background check requirements, a mandatory waiting period for handgun purchases and a red flag law designed to remove weapons from people deemed to be high risk.
The bills mirror measures included by Democratic Gov. Tony Evers in his latest budget request — before GOP lawmakers on the Joint Committee on Finance removed them.
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Now, Democratic lawmakers are reintroducing the measures as standalone legislation.
Although the Republican-controlled Legislature has repeatedly blocked similar bills in years past, state Sen. LaTonya Johnson, D-Milwaukee, said she’s urging her GOP colleagues to advance at least some of the bills in the package to public hearings this session.
“Year after year, I’ve watched Republicans cut every single gun safety proposal from the state budget. And year after year, we see more victims and families burying their babies,” Johnson said, while flanked by gun safety advocates and Wisconsin’s Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul at a news conference on Tuesday.
But in a written statement, Wisconsin’s top Republican lawmaker was critical of the proposals.
“People should be concerned about those who don’t want to lock up criminals committing serious crimes,” said Assembly Speaker Robin Vos, R-Rochester. “Passing more restrictions on law-abiding gun owners is typical overreach by the Democrats that doesn’t solve the problem.”
One of the proposals would reinstate a 48-hour waiting period before someone could buy a handgun from a federally-licensed firearms dealer.
That waiting period had been on the books in Wisconsin for decades — until former Gov. Scott Walker, a Republican, signed a law repealing it in 2015.
State Sen. Chris Larson, D-Milwaukee, said in addition to preventing homicides that result from impulsive decisions, a waiting period would help stop suicides. Suicides make up a majority of firearm-related deaths in Wisconsin and across the country.
“Every suicide is preventable, and adding a waiting period … puts a barrier between somebody making an irrational decision and an irreversible harm,” Larson said.
Larson was a friend and colleague of Jonathon Brostoff, a former Democratic state representative who died by suicide using a firearm last year.
Another bill circulating this week would allow family members, household members and law enforcement agencies to petition a court for what’s known as an “extreme risk protection order,” against someone who’s deemed to be “substantially likely” to harm themselves or another person. If the order’s granted, that person would have to surrender their firearms.
Those laws, often referred to as red flag laws, are in effect in 21 states.
That includes California, where a judge recently ordered a man to surrender his guns after law enforcement said he was messaging about mass attacks with a 15-year-old student from Wisconsin. That student used her father’s legally purchased handgun to kill two other people and herself at the Abundant Life Christian School in Madison in December, prosecutors say.
Also included in the package is a proposal to ban manufacturing, transporting, selling, possessing and carrying what are known as “ghost guns,” which are guns that can be assembled at home from parts purchased online. Those guns often lack serial numbers, making it difficult for law enforcement to trace them. And they’re often made from polymers that aren’t picked up by metal detectors.
Additionally, one of the re-introduced bills would expand background check requirements to more types of gun sales. Currently, background checks are required for anyone who buys a gun from a federally licensed firearms dealer.
But Wisconsin Democrats say background checks should also be mandatory for private party transactions, including guns bought at gun shows, flea markets or from pick-ups scheduled in response to classified ads. That bill includes some exceptions to background check requirements, including weapons classified as antiques or guns given as gifts or bequests by a family member.
If you or someone you know is considering suicide, call the suicide prevention lifeline at 988 or text “Hopeline” to 741741.
Wisconsin Public Radio, © Copyright 2025, Board of Regents of the University of Wisconsin System and Wisconsin Educational Communications Board.
Wisconsin
Wisconsin gets commitment from 4-star TE Jack Sievers, but OLB Carmelow Reed flips to SEC program

An aerial view of Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wis.
An aerial view of Camp Randall Stadium in Madison, Wis., home of the Wisconsin Badgers.
MADISON – Recruiting season can be a roller coaster.
It took University of Wisconsin fans on a ride during the evening of June 2 when in the span of an hour the program lost a previously committed prospect then scored a commitment from another.
With that the Badgers celebrated the addition to tight end Jack Sievers, while absorbing the loss of outside linebacker Carmelow Reed.
Sievers’ commitment was the fourth for the Badgers in 36 hours. Like the three commitments that preceded him, Sievers made the call after an official visit at Wisconsin last weekend.
The 6-foot-4½ , 230-pound prospect plays for Archbishop Murray High School just outside of Seattle. The multi-sport athlete recently ran the 100 meters in a personal best 11.1 seconds and during basketball season received all-conference distinction after averaging 12.1 points and 11.2 rebounding per game and posted 13 double-doubles.
ESPN lists him as a four-star prospect. Rivals, 247sports and One3 give him three stars.
Sievers announced his commitment on X.
“I would like to announce I am 100% Committed to The University of Wisconsin!,” he wrote.
Sievers joins defensive lineman Arthur Scott and Djidjou Bah and linebacker Ben Wenzel in the recent run of commitments. Sievers made his decision before scheduled official visits to Boise State, Minnesota and San Diego State.
In addition to Minnesota, he announced Power Four offers from Oklahoma and Northwestern this spring.
Sievers commitment brings the Badgers 2026 class back to 10.
Carmelow Reed changes mind, commits to Ole Miss
Earlier in the evening Reed, a 6-7, 250-pound outside linebacker from Rich Township High School in Illinois, announced his intention to play for Ole Miss. The three-star prospect had been committed to UW since April 7.
Wisconsin was the first Power Four program to offer the three-star prospect a scholarship. Seven others followed.
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