Wisconsin
Wisconsin’s top teams reach pinnacle during action-packed WIAA state boys basketball tournament

The Wisconsin (WIAA) state high school boys basketball tournament crowned its five worthy champions at the Kohl Center on Saturday.
Wisconsin Lutheran (Division 1), Wauwatosa West (Division 2), Milwaukee Academy of Science (Division 3), Aquinas (Division 4), and Cochrane-Fountain City (Division 5), each hoisted a prestigious, glistening gold ball trophy.
It was a tension-filled tournament with three of the five championship games decided by three points or less.
Junior small forward Zavier Zens scored a team-high 19 points as top-seeded Wisconsin Lutheran defeated third-seeded Marshfield 57-55 in the WIAA Division 1 state championship game.
Senior forward Alex Greene followed with 11 points and sophomore small forward Kager Knueppel had 10 points for the Vikings, who captured their second consecutive title after moving up from Division 2 this year.
The team finished with a 10-game winning streak and ended the season 28-2 overall.
It was the fourth state title in program history for Wisconsin Lutheran, which shot 61 percent from field-goal range, and maintained a critical 34-18 scoring advantage in the paint. The Vikings completed the back-to-back championship run with a combined 58-2 record.
Senior guard Landon Lee contributed a game-high 22 points with four 3-point baskets, four assists, and three rebounds for Marshfield, which ended the season 23-7 overall.
Congratulations to Wisconsin Lutheran, the 2025 WIAA Division 1 State Champions! After winning the D2 State Title last year, they came back to win the D1 gold ball! 🏀🏆 #wiaabb #statechamps pic.twitter.com/3FGkhWQqRr
— WIAA State Tournaments (@wiaawistate) March 23, 2025
Junior forward Matthew Kloskey scored a game-high 29 points and grabbed nine rebounds as second-seeded Wauwatosa West upset top-seeded Racine Park 60-57 in overtime to claim the WIAA Division 2 championship.
Sophomore guard Jalen Brown followed with 14 points, seven assists, and five rebounds for the Trojans, who outscored Racine Park 6-3 in the extra period to clinch the first state title in program history, secure their 14th-straight victory, and finish the season 24-6 overall.
Senior post player Jaxon Moss scored 19 points and pulled down six rebounds for Racine Park, which ended the season 27-3 overall. Senior guard Isaiah Robinson chipped in 13 points with a game-high eight steals, and sophomore guard Zare Gwinn had 12 points for the Panthers. Robinson established a D2 state tournament record for steals with a two-game combined total of 15.
The contest featured 13 lead changes and seven ties with neither team leading by more than a seven-point margin.
Congratulations to Wauwatosa West, the 2025 WIAA D2 Boys Basketball State Champions! The Trojans defeated Racine Park in an overtime thriller to earn their program’s first gold ball! 🏀🏆 #wiaabb #statechamps pic.twitter.com/x6L8tQZ11r
— WIAA State Tournaments (@wiaawistate) March 23, 2025
Senior forward Devin Brown finished with 17 points and 19 rebounds as second-seeded Milwaukee Academy of Science upset top-seeded Freedom 57-54 in the WIAA Division 3 state championship game.
Senior guard Jamarion Batemon contributed 16 points and senior small forward Amare Jackson had 10 points for the Novas, who captured their first state title in program history and ended the season 25-1 overall.
Senior guard Drew Kortz scored a game-high 29 points for Freedom, which finished the season 28-2 overall. Sophomore forward Donovan Davis added a double-double with 19 points and 16 rebounds for the Irish.
Congratulations to Milwaukee Academy of Science, the 2025 WIAA D3 Boys Basketball State Champions! The Novas defeated Freedom 57-54 in a thrilling championship to earn their program’s first gold ball! 🏀🏆 #wiaabb #statechamps pic.twitter.com/cn7AJQcycb
— WIAA State Tournaments (@wiaawistate) March 22, 2025
Senior guard Trey Bahr scored a game-high 20 points with nine assists as third-seeded Aquinas upset top-seeded Bonduel 74-45 in the WIAA Division 4 state final.
Junior guard Logan Becker contributed 16 points and sophomore guard Calvin Bahr had 15 points for Aquinas, which shot 59 percent from field-goal range to claim its first D4 state championship and fifth title in school history. The Blugolds were riding the momentum of a six-game winning streak and finished the season 26-3 overall.
Junior power forward Ryan Westrich and sophomore guard Carter Moesch each had 11 points for Bonduel, which ended the season 28-2 overall.
Congratulations to Aquinas, the 2025 WIAA Division 4 State Champions! The Blugolds defeated Bonduel in the title game to earn their program’s fifth gold ball. 🏀🏆 #wiaabb #statechamps pic.twitter.com/qIfMkvedT3
— WIAA State Tournaments (@wiaawistate) March 22, 2025
Senior forward Porter Ehrat scored a team-high 18 points and senior guard Cameron Lipinski followed with 17 points as top-seeded Cochrane-Fountain City defeated second-seeded Sheboygan Lutheran 60-54 in the WIAA Division 5 championship game.
It was the first title in program history for Cochrane-Fountain City, which shot 56 percent from field-goal range in the momentum-building first half, finished the season with a 10-game winning streak, and ended the year 28-2 overall.
Junior forward Brennen Hackbarth registered a double-double for Sheboygan Lutheran, which ended the season 25-5 overall.
Congratulations to Cochrane-Fountain City, the 2025 WIAA Division 5 State Champion! The Pirates earned their program’s first gold ball by defeated Sheboygan Lutheran 60-54. 🏆🏀 #wiaabb #statechamps pic.twitter.com/KOjk4allMk
— WIAA State Tournaments (@wiaawistate) March 22, 2025
To get live updates on your phone — as well as follow your favorite teams and top games — you can download the SBLive Sports app: Download iPhone App | Download Android App
— Jeff Hagenau | jeffreyhagenau@gmail.com

Wisconsin
Former Badgers player takes lead after first round of Wisconsin State Women’s Open

Drone view of Erin Hills Golf, the site of the 2025 U.S. Women’s Open
Check out a drone view of Erin Hills Golf Course, the site of the 2025 U.S. Women’s Open May 29-June 1
The Wisconsin State Women’s Open began play on June 9 at La Crosse Country Club in Onalaska, and former University of Wisconsin golfer Chloe Chan was the only player to break par with a 1-under 71.
Chan made four birdies against three bogeys. She completed her senior year with the Badgers in the spring, with her best finish being a tie for fifth at the Diane Thomason Invitational. She was also a two-time Academic All-Big Ten honoree.
Her round gave her a one-shot advantage over defending champion Elise Hoven. Hoven, from Grafton, won the Open last year as an amateur.
The other 60 players in the field who finished were all above par.
The field will be cut to the low 24 scores and ties after the second round on June 10. The final 18 holes of play will take place on June 11.
Madison’s Kate Brody is in third place after shooting a 1-over 73.
Menomonie’s Sophia Connett, Brookfield’s Payton Haugen and Menomonee Falls’ Addison Roesch are tied for fourth at 3-over. Madison’s Bobbi Stricker is alone in seventh place at 4-over.
The top 10 was rounded out with Taitum Beck (Waterford) and Jessica Krattiger (Hartland) tied for eighth place at 5-over and Carly Moon (Baraboo), Allison Herring (Skillman, New Jersey), Madison Haugen (Brookfield) and Lauren Lupinek (Oconomowoc) tied at 6-over for 10th.
Wisconsin
2026 defensive line recruit commits to Rutgers, days after cancelling official visit to Wisconsin Badgers

The Wisconsin Badgers had built a “great” relationship with 2026 defensive line recruit Jermaine Polk this spring.
Then in a span of a week, he cancelled his official visit to the school and committed to a different Big Ten program instead.
The three-star recruit Toledo St. Francis de Sales in Ohio had been scheduled for his summer visit to Madison this past weekend.
On June 2, Polk tweeted that he was no longer taking his planned OV. That announcement came just days after Wisconsin landed two other commitments on the defensive line.
The Badgers had been in his Top 5 schools he narrowed down to on May 23, along with Iowa, Iowa State, Michigan State and Boston College.
On Sunday, he committed to Rutgers.
Polk announced an offer from the Scarlet Knights on June 2. The next day, he tweeted he would be taking an official visit to Rutgers this weekend, the same time he had been scheduled to visit Wisconsin.
We don’t know for sure whether the Badgers’ other defensive line commitments contributed to his change of plans, but Rutgers sure swooped him up in a hurry.
Credit to Greg Schiano. He went from outside of Polk’s Top 5 to an offer, a visit and a commitment in about a two week span.
Wisconsin
Rubin: A place, a price tag and an owner for RoboCop statue — but when will we see it?
RoboCop statue coming to Detroit’s Eastern Market
After over a decade in the making, the 11-foot-tall bronze RoboCop statue will finally be displayed in Detroit’s Eastern Market.
Mike Wiza says he has the perfect location for that long-anticipated statue of RoboCop, which remains carefully wrapped and horizontal in an Eastern Market storeroom.
Unfortunately, it’s in Stevens Point, Wisconsin.
Wiza is the mayor of Stevens Point, which may have a more sensible claim to the character than Detroit does. Detroit’s primary role in 1987’s “RoboCop” was to be a toxic urban sludge pit, after all, and the movie was filmed in Dallas.
His offer is meant more as a helping hand than a hostile takeover, though, and as senior grants manager Ryan Dinkgrave of Eastern Market put it in a chat with the Free Press, “That won’t be happening.”
As for what will be happening, or has happened, we have news.
We know where in the market RoboCop will be displayed when he finally clobbers his way out of storage.
We know how much the project has cost, and it’s a startling number — but fear not, citizen, because unless you personally wrote a check, none of the money was yours.
And we know which giant corporation has come to own the 11-foot-tall, 3,500-pound bronze statue, 14 years after the most organic of grassroots campaigns brought the concept to life.
What nobody knows for certain is when we’ll see RoboCop on display. The latest fond hope is September, coinciding with the 10th anniversary of Murals in the Market, but that’s much more a wish than a prediction.
Increasingly long experience has taught Dinkgrave that “It’s never as simple as getting a statue, digging a hole and standing him up.”
But another $50,000 might be all it takes to bring out the shovels.
Star power in Stevens Point
The star of “RoboCop” and “RoboCop 2” was Peter Weller, now 77. The start of Peter Weller came in Stevens Point, smack in the middle of Wisconsin, where he grew up on North Preserve Street.
Wiza, 58, is a close friend and former high school classmate of a Weller cousin, and he governs in what’s probably the only mayoral office anywhere with a signed “RoboCop” movie poster and a RoboCop arcade game.
He first offered to adopt the statue in early 2021, when the Michigan Science Center rescinded its offer to berth the cyborg police officer. That was after earlier word had supposedly cemented the statue’s future at Wayne State University’s Tech Town.
Amid pandemic grumpiness, Wiza said, the notion “really rallied our community. It was all anyone was talking about for weeks.”
Then the RoboGuy landed at Eastern Market, whose good intentions were blunted by annual unforeseen circumstances, the worst of them a bizarrely tragic shooting at a Detroit Lions tailgate last September in which an aggressor and a peacemaker were killed with the same bullet.
“That put everything on pause,” Dinkgrave said, and noting from afar the continued inaction, Wiza reached out to the Free Press to see whether the hulking artwork was once again in the wind.
Taking a stand
To the contrary, it now has a destination.
Dinkgrave confirmed that RoboCop will alight in the northwest reaches of the 24-acre market, near a former fire station at Russell Street and Erskine, amid a welcoming patch of grass and loveliness.
All that’s standing between him and, well, standing, is $50,000, a final chunk of construction fundraising that will boost overall donations to $260,000.
The grand total includes corporate pledges of six figures last year and $50,000 so recently it hasn’t arrived yet, and most of it has been devoted to installation, Dinkgrave said.
There have also been costs for engineering, design, permits and legalities; complications ensue, it turns out, with a massive reproduction of a copyrighted character.
That all follows a 2011 Kickstarter campaign that followed a simple tweet. Someone in Massachusetts reached out to Dave Bing, Detroit’s mayor at the time, to suggest a tribute to RoboCop, on the theory that Philadelphia has a statue of Rocky Balboa and “RoboCop would kick Rocky’s butt.”
Bing dismissed the idea, but experimental filmmaker Brandon Walley and his friends at the arts nonprofit Imagination Station were amused enough to post a pitch online.
In short order, they had raised $67,436, which turned out to be slightly less than $60,000 after commissions and unfulfilled pledges. Detroit sculptor Giorgio Gikas of Venus Bronze Works agreed to accept $65,000 to turn movie fans’ whims into a monument.
Within the last few years, Walley said, Imagination Station gave the statue to Eastern Market. The title now rests with MGM Studios, Dinkgrave said, which is part of the licensing agreement.
“They have to own it,” he explained, “so that if it fell into disrepair, they could reclaim it, not that they have any intention of doing that.”
After assorted mergers, purchases and corporate devouring, MGM is no longer a stand-alone company. Bottom line, the ultimate populist project is now owned by Amazon — but the original spirit should shine.
Something to talk about
For Walley, as an artist, RoboCop will spark conversations about topics like class, design and race. Wayne State professor David Goldberg, speaking to the Free Press in July, dismisssed the movie as a cult classic “only for certain groups of people,” and not the ones who have to defend Detroit as “actually having human beings in it.”
To Mayor Wiza, it’s both more and less than that — a tribute to his city’s most prominent past resident, a reminder of a good and enduring movie, and an 11-foot-tall portrait of joy.
“If they still have the molds,” he said, “I’d settle for a resin replica,” to stand watch in front of city hall or in the roundabout at the north end of town.
He’d still love the original for Stevens Point, he said, but he’ll be part of the throng of tourists posing in front of it once it’s unveiled here, and there’s darned sure space for that photo on his wall.
Reach Neal Rubin at NARubin@freepress.com.
The Free Press welcomes letters to the editor via freep.com/letters.
Detroit Robocop statue’s journey from tweet to bronze to almost home
February 2011
- It started with a tweet from an account named @MT to then-Mayor Dave Bing: “Philadelphia has a statue of Rocky & RoboCop would kick Rocky’s butt. He’s a GREAT ambassador for Detroit.” Bing was not amused.
- Fundraising started with a Kickstarter campaign aiming to raise $50,000 to: “Build a life size-monument of RoboCop in Detroit! Part man, part machine, all crowd funded.” Organizers raised more than $67,000 from 2,718 donors.
- Peter Weller stars in a “Funny or Die” video rebutting Bing’s disinterest in a Robocop statue: “I don’t find it silly at all.”
March 2011: Weller releases another video under the theme “RoboCharity” to raise money for Forgotten Harvest.
August 2011: Organizers say they hope to host the statue at TechTown and to reveal it in spring 2012
January 2013: Organizers target spring 2014 to unveil statue.
February 2014: Giorgio Gikas, owner of Venus Bronze Works in Detroit, is chosen to lead building of statue.
May 2018: Organizers announce that Michigan Science Center will host statue.
January 2020: Casting of the statue’s parts is complete with the goal of unveiling it in spring or summer of 2020.
February 2021: The science center can no longer take the statue amid pandemic-era financial challenges. Organizers look for a new home for the statue.
November 2022: A new home for the Robocop statue emerges: Eastern Market.
November 2023: Robocop star Peter Weller is indifferent about the statue, telling the Free Press’ Julie Hinds that he “cannot endorse or dis-endorse the Robocop statue.”
July 2024: Robocop sits in an undisclosed location close to Eastern Market as organizers continue to raise money for the statue’s public installation.
June 2025: Organizers secure a spot in Eastern Market and continue to raise money for it.
Compiled by Free Press intern Allana Smith from Free Press archives
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