Mississippi
Report: Mississippi River’s St. Cloud watershed sees progress, ongoing threats
A new report finds a Mississippi River watershed northwest of the Twin Cities shows signs of improving water quality, but still faces challenges.
The Mississippi River-St. Cloud watershed northwest of the Twin Cities drains parts of seven counties, including fast-growing Wright and Sherburne.
About 40 percent of the land in the watershed is agricultural. There are also 374 lakes and more than 900 miles of rivers and streams.
“It’s a very dynamic watershed, and one that contains four of the fastest growing communities in the state of Minnesota either within or on the edge,” said Phil Votruba, watershed project manager with the Minnesota Pollution Control Agency.
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The St. Cloud stretch of the Mississippi River is designated as wild and scenic and is popular for recreation, including canoeing and fishing. St. Cloud is the most upstream city to draw its drinking water from the Mississippi.
The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency first monitored the watershed in 2009. A decade later, a second round of monitoring found some hopeful signs.
“It’s a watershed that we have really made good strides positively going forward from the previous cycle,” Votruba said. However, “we stepped back in a few areas as well,” he said.
Eight lakes and streams are no longer on the state’s list of impaired waters, and 17 lakes are showing positive trends, Votruba said. The overall health of fish and macroinvertebrates has improved.
But the watershed still faces threats, including the loss of shoreline buffers and habitat to development, and excess levels of phosphorus, sediment and bacteria due to runoff from farms and urban areas.
One of the biggest challenges, Votruba said, will be to manage growth and agriculture in the watershed to protect rivers, lakes and groundwater as much as possible.
The MPCA is accepting public comments on the report until June 12. A virtual public meeting is scheduled for 9-11 a.m. Thursday.
Mississippi
Death investigation underway after Columbia Academy graduate taken off life support in Florida
PANAMA CITY, Fla. (WDAM) – A death investigation has been opened after deputies in Florida responded to a life-threatening call involving a recent Columbia Academy graduate.
WDAM’s sister station, WJHG, reported that the Bay County Sheriff’s Office said Shannon Thomas Tanner, 19, was expected to be taken off of life support Wednesday after being declared brain dead.
According to the incident report obtained by WJHG, on Sunday, May 18, deputies arrived at a home in Panama City Beach and were told that Tanner had been drinking alcohol.
The report says an investigator asked someone at the home what happened, with the person telling the investigator that Tanner was “drinking too much.” EMS reportedly treated Tanner on scene.
BCSO is investigating the death of a 19-year-old from Mississippi
The cause of the medical emergency has not been confirmed, and the investigation is ongoing.
According to a GoFundMe set up to help with funeral expenses, Tanner was on his senior trip after graduating from Columbia Academy.
Columbia Academy made a Facebook post expressing its condolences for the family, saying the recent graduate was “the kind of person who can make anyone laugh, light up a room with his personality and dance moves, and make others feel valued simply by being himself.”
Return to WDAM 7 for updates on this developing story.
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Copyright 2026 WDAM. All rights reserved.
Mississippi
Mississippi State softball vs Oklahoma prediction: Can Bulldogs shock OU?
Mississippi State softball is one step away from reaching the program’s first Women’s College World Series.
But to get there, the Bulldogs (41-18) will have to get through one of the top programs in the sport.
MSU is facing Oklahoma (51-8), the No. 3 national seed, in the NCAA Tournament super regional. The best-of-three series begins May 22 (noon, ESPN2) at Love’s Field in Norman, Oklahoma.
Here is a scouting report and prediction for the super regional.
Oklahoma easily won its regional
The Sooners breezed through the Norman Regional, outscoring Binghamton, Kansas and Michigan 28-1 in three games.
That wasn’t much of a surprise for a team that’s made nine consecutive Women’s College World Series and hasn’t missed a super regional since 2009. Oklahoma has won eight national championships, seven of them since 2013.
Oklahoma is 27-1 at home this season, with the only loss to Arkansas on April 18.
Mississippi State coach Samantha Ricketts played at Oklahoma from 2006-09 and then was a graduate assistant at Oklahoma from 2009-11.
MSU is 0-11 all time against Oklahoma.
Oklahoma led by Kendall Wells’ 37 home runs
The offense has been Oklahoma’s strength, especially from a power standpoint. The Sooners have hit 182 home runs in 2026, the second most in the country behind UCLA and 80 more than the next best SEC team.
Freshman Kendall Wells has 37 home runs, the most in program and SEC history. Four other players have at least 19 home runs.
The Sooners also rank first in the SEC in batting average and runs scored.
Oklahoma’s pitching staff ranks eighth in the SEC with a 3.02 ERA.
Can Alyssa Faircloth continue dominance vs Oklahoma?
A big part of Mississippi State winning the Eugene Regional was Alyssa Faircloth’s dominant pitching. She threw 15⅔ shutout innings in the regional. That included a no-hitter against host Oregon and then another complete-game shutout against Saint Mary’s in the regional final.
The Troy transfer and SEC Newcomer of the Year has a 2.28 ERA and 16-7 record. Her 261 strikeouts are a single-season program record.
The Bulldogs, who rank third in the SEC in team ERA at 2.15, also have Peja Goold, who started the first game of the Eugene Regional. She has a 2.12 ERA and 15-10 record.
Mississippi State vs OU softball super regional prediction
Oklahoma wins super regional 2-0: The Sooners are a big step up in competition. Faircloth and Goold give MSU a chance, but the offense will need to keep up.
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for The Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@usatodayco.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
Mississippi
Mississippi State baseball vs Missouri in SEC Tournament game time, TV set
HOOVER, AL — There was an upset in the first game of the SEC Tournament.
No. 8 seed Mississippi State (39-16) will play No. 16 Missouri (24-30) in the second round after the Tigers defeated No. 9 Ole Miss 10-8 on May 19.
First pitch on May 20 will be at 9:30 a.m. The game will air on SEC Network.
The Bulldogs, led by new coach Brian O’Connor, did not play Missouri this season. They swept the Tigers last season, scoring 50 runs in the series.
When is Mississippi State baseball vs Missouri?
Mississippi State versus Missouri in the SEC Tournament is at 9:30 a.m. CT on May 20. It is the first of four SEC Tournament games for the day.
The winner will play No. 1 Georgia (43-12) on May 21 at 3 p.m..
Mississippi State baseball vs Missouri TV channel
Mississippi State versus Missouri will air on SEC Network.
Streaming is available via Fubo.
SEC Tournament schedule
All times Central
Tuesday, May 19
- Game 1: 16-seed Missouri 10, 9-seed Ole Miss 8, 9:30 a.m. on SEC Network
- Game 2: 12-seed Vanderbilt vs. 13-seed Kentucky, approx. 1 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 3: 10-seed Tennessee vs. 15-seed South Carolina, approx. 4:30 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 4: 11-seed Oklahoma vs. 14-seed LSU, approx. 8 p.m. on SEC Network
Wednesday, May 20
- Game 5: 8-seed Mississippi State vs. 16-seed Missouri, 9:30 a.m. on SEC Network
- Game 6: 5-seed Florida vs. Game 2 winner, approx. 1 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 7: 7-seed Arkansas vs. Game 3 winner, approx. 4:30 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 8: 6-seed Auburn vs. Game 4 winner, approx. 8 p.m. on SEC Network
Thursday, May 21
- Game 9: 1-seed Georgia vs. Game 5 winner, 3 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 10: 4-seed Alabama vs. Game 6 winner, approx. 7 p.m. on SEC Network
Friday, May 22
- Game 11: 2-seed Texas vs. Game 7 winner, 3 p.m. on SEC Network
- Game 12: 3-seed Texas A&M vs. Game 8 winner, approx. 7 p.m. on SEC Network
Saturday, May 23
- Game 13: Game 9 winner vs. Game 10 winner, noon on SEC Network
- Game 14: Game 11 winner vs. Game 12 winner, approx. 4 p.m. on SEC Network
Sunday, May 24
Championship Game: Game 13 winner vs. Game 14 winner, 1 p.m. on ABC
Sam Sklar is the Mississippi State beat reporter for The Clarion Ledger. Email him at ssklar@usatodayco.com and follow him on X @sklarsam_.
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