New Mexico
Fires hit Southwest, New Mexico’s season ‘dangerously early’
Up to date April 23, 2022 at 5:26 PM ET
New Mexico faces a protracted and probably devastating wildfire season, Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham mentioned Saturday, as Southwestern wildfires trigger destruction and pressure individuals from their houses.
A whole lot of constructions have been misplaced in a rising variety of wind-driven blazes throughout drought-stricken New Mexico, Lujan Grisham mentioned Saturday.
Over 20 energetic wildfires have been burning in at the least 16 of the state’s 33 counties, within the wake of winds that gusted as much as 90 mph (145 kph) on Friday, Lujan mentioned throughout a briefing streamed on-line. “So half the state has a hearth problem.”
With so many fires burning in April, nicely earlier than the conventional Could or June begin of the wildfire season, “our danger season is extremely and dangerously early,” Lujan Grisham mentioned.
Wildfire has change into a year-round menace within the West given altering circumstances that embody earlier snowmelt and rain coming later within the fall, scientist have mentioned. The issues have been exacerbated by a long time of fireside suppression and poor administration together with a greater than 20-year megadrought that research hyperlink to human-caused local weather change.
New Mexico as of Saturday had probably the most main wildfires burning of any state, although neighboring Arizona additionally had massive fires that included one which burned 30 houses close to Flagstaff on Tuesday.
Winds and temperatures in New Mexico diminished Saturday however remained sturdy sufficient to nonetheless fan fires, and dozens of evacuation orders remained in place.
Over 200 constructions have burned, Lujan Grisham mentioned, not offering specifics on areas or the numbers of houses included in that depend.
With fires nonetheless burning and charred areas too harmful to enter, “it is not secure for you or us to have a whole evaluation so far,” she mentioned, indicating that the variety of misplaced constructions would rise.
She appealed to residents to chorus from utilizing fireworks or burning trash and to evacuate when hearth warnings are issued. “It’s essential to depart. The dangers are too nice,” she mentioned.
The most important blazes have been concentrated in northern New Mexico, the place two main fires merged and quite a few villages have been threatened by advancing flames as residents heeded calls to go away.
Maggie Mulligan mentioned Friday her canines might sense the panic whereas she and her husband packed them up, agonized over having to go away horses behind and fled a fast-moving wildfire barreling towards their residence.
“We do not know what’s subsequent,” she mentioned. “We do not know if we will return to the horses.”
Mulligan and her husband, Invoice Gombas, 67, have been among the many anxious residents who hurriedly evacuated their houses Friday forward of ominous wildfires fueled by tinder-dry circumstances and ferocious winds.
The merged fires burned some constructions however no figures have been accessible, mentioned hearth info officer Mike Johnson. “They have been in a position to avoid wasting constructions and we all know we misplaced different constructions that we weren’t capable of defend.”
Wind-blown clouds of mud and plumes of smoke obscured the skies close to the fires, mentioned Jesus Romero, assistant county supervisor for San Miguel County. “All of the ugliness that spring in New Mexico brings — that is what they’re dealing in.”
An estimated 500 houses in San Miguel have been in rural areas of Mora and San Miguel counties lined by evacuation orders or warning notices, Romero mentioned.
Elsewhere within the area, the hearth hazard within the Denver space on Friday was the best it had been in over a decade, in accordance with the Nationwide Climate Service, due to unseasonable temperatures within the 80s mixed with sturdy winds and really dry circumstances.
Lena Atencio and her husband, whose household has lived within the close by Rociada space for 5 generations, obtained out Friday as winds kicked up. She mentioned most individuals have been taking the menace severely.
“As a neighborhood, as an entire, everyone is simply pulling collectively to assist one another and simply care for the issues we have to now. After which at that time, it is in God’s fingers,” she mentioned because the wind howled miles away locally of Las Vegas, New Mexico, the place evacuees have been gathering.
Areas ordered Saturday to evacuate due to one other massive hearth nonetheless rising in northern New Mexico included Philmont Scout Ranch. In the meantime, the close by city of Cimarron remained on discover for potential evacuation, in accordance with Colfax County officers.
The scout ranch, owned and operated by the Boy Scouts of America, attracts hundreds of summer time guests, however officers mentioned no scouts have been on the property and employees have been beforehand evacuated due to poor air high quality.
The Flagstaff-area hearth additionally burned quite a few different buildings when the flames blew by means of rural neighborhoods Tuesday.
A shift in wind had crews working Saturday to maintain the hearth from shifting up mountain slopes or towards houses in rural neighborhoods close to areas that burned Tuesday, hearth info officer Dick Fleishman mentioned. “It’s got us a bit of involved.”
Copyright 2022 NPR. To see extra, go to https://www.npr.org.
New Mexico
Sophomore star shows he can dunk, leads Rebels to win — PHOTOS
There’s only one thing UNLV forward Jalen Hill didn’t believe his teammate Dedan Thomas Jr. could accomplish on the basketball floor, and it’s going to cost him a steak dinner.
Thomas found himself ahead of the pack late in the first half and flashed a big smile as he started to measure his dribbles and steps toward the rim.
“I got the ball and thought I saw someone chasing me to block it, so I was like, ‘Yeah, I have to go dunk this,’” Thomas said.
The first slam of his collegiate career highlighted the Rebels’ 72-65 win over New Mexico State on Saturday at the Thomas & Mack Center.
A preseason discussion between Hill and Thomas resulted in the promise of the meal should Thomas throw one down in a game this season. Hill may not be the only one on the hook.
“He never shows that he can dunk at practice,” Hill laughed. “It’s exciting, because for a guy that doesn’t really dunk to get his first one, a lot of people owe him stuff.”
While the above-the-rim moment was a departure from the norm, it was business as usual otherwise for the sophomore point guard, who was once again the catalyst for much of what UNLV (4-1) was able to accomplish in a game in which it struggled from the field for long stretches.
He finished with 22 points, five rebounds and four assists as the Rebels held off the Aggies (3-2) in a physical affair that featured 50 fouls and a combined 33.3 percent shooting effort from the field.
Thomas got to the free-throw line 19 times and made 13 of the attempts.
“We knew they were a physical team, so I tried to use that aggression against them,” he said. “Just drawing fouls and trying to get to the line as much as possible.”
UNLV led by as many as nine points midway through the second half only to allow the Aggies to hang around. Julian Rishwain hit a pair of 3-pointers to help keep them at bay for a while, but they eventually grabbed a brief lead that proved to be short-lived.
New Mexico State used a late 6-0 run to take a 63-62 lead with 4:08 remaining, but UNLV got the ball inside to Jeremiah “Bear” Cherry for a dunk to recapture the lead for good.
Thomas got to the rim and was fouled in a one-point game with 2:22 remaining and made both free throws. The Aggies wouldn’t score again, as UNLV tightened up defensively down the stretch, forcing New Mexico State to miss its final six shots and eight of their last nine.
UNLV led 37-34 at halftime despite a miserable shooting performance from the field.
After a three-point play by Thomas in the opening minute, the Rebels missed their next eight shots and 13 of their next 15 as they went more than seven minutes without a basket from the floor.
They were able to stay in the game largely because of their defense and ability to get to the free-throw line. UNLV held the Aggies to 31.3 percent shooting in the first half and got into the bonus with more than 14 minutes remaining, going 20-for-23 from the line before the break.
“It just shows we’re really gutsy,” Hill said. “We didn’t shoot well, but we got to the free-throw line and got rebounds when we needed them.”
Eight New Mexico State players had two fouls in the first 20 minutes.
The Rebels did get hot toward the end of a first half that saw Thomas record 15 points and three assists while UNLV shot just 29.2 percent from the field.
None were more memorable than the ones scored by Thomas on the breakaway with 3:06 remaining in the first half.
Coach Kevin Kruger had more faith than Hill.
“I didn’t know if he was going to dunk or not, but I do know he can,” Kruger laughed. “I have seen it before.”
After the Thomas dunk brought the entire bench to its feet in celebration, he threw a lob to Cherry on a break that he finished with a highlight-reel jam and a foul. The three-point play completed a 7-0 run that put the Rebels up 37-30.
“A dunk isn’t always worth only two points,” Kruger said. “Sometimes it gets your team going, and I thought it did for us.”
Cherry finished with 10 points and eight rebounds, and Hill had 16 points and nine boards.
Contact Adam Hill at ahill@reviewjournal.com. Follow @AdamHillLVRJ on X.
New Mexico
NM State Parks offering free day use on Black Friday
New Mexico
What channel is MTSU football vs New Mexico State on today? Time, TV schedule for Week 13
MTSU football coach Derek Mason on matchup vs. New Mexico State
Middle Tennessee State football coach Derek Mason talks about the team’s upcoming game vs. New Mexico State.
Middle Tennessee State football will honor its seniors when the Blue Raiders play host to New Mexico State Saturday (1:30 p.m., ESPN+) at Floyd Stadium.
The Blue Raiders (3-7, 2-4 Conference USA) were eliminated from bowl contention with a 37-17 loss to Liberty two weeks ago. MTSU had an open date last week.
New Mexico State (2-8, 1-5) has lost three in a row and eight of nine, including a 38-3 loss to Texas A&M last week. A 33-30 CUSA win over Louisiana Tech is the only victory in that stretch.
Below is information on how to watch the game, betting odds and other information:
Watch MTSU football games live on Fubo
What channel is MTSU football vs. New Mexico State on today?
TV: ESPN+
Livestream: Fubo (free trial)
MTSU vs. New Mexico State will broadcast nationally on CBS Sports Network in Week 11 of the 2024 college football season. Jake Rose (play by play), Jeremy Kellem (color commentator) and Justin Beasley (sideline) will call the game from the booth at Floyd Stadium. Streaming options for the game include Fubo,, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
MTSU vs. New Mexico State football time today
- Date: Saturday, Nov. 23
- Start time: 1:30 p.m., CT
The MTSU vs. New Mexico State game starts at noon at Floyd Stadium.
Purchase MTSU football tickets on StubHub
MTSU football vs. New Mexico State prediction, picks, odds
Odds courtesy of BetMGM as of Thursday, Nov. 21
MTSU 24, New Mexico State 17: In a matchup involving two of the league’s lowest-scoring offenses and bottom two defenses, something has to give. MTSU will win its third home game of the season to finish 3-3 at Floyd Stadium.
ODDS: MTSU by 3.5
O/U: 51.5
MTSU football 2024 schedule
Aug. 31: MTSU 32, Tennessee Tech 25
Sept. 7: Ole Miss 52, MTSU 3
Sept. 14: Western Kentucky 49, MTSU 21
Sept. 21: Duke 45, MTSU 17
Sept. 28: Memphis 24, MTSU 7
Oct. 10: Louisiana Tech 48, MTSU 21
Oct. 15: MTSU 14, Kennesaw State 5
Oct. 23: Jacksonville State 42, MTSU 20
Nov. 2: MTSU 20, UTEP 13
Nov. 9: Liberty 37, MTSU 17
Nov. 23: vs. New Mexico State, 1:30 p.m., ESPN+
Nov. 30: at Florida International, 1 p.m., ESPN platforms
Dec. 6: Conference USA championship game, CBS Sports Network
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Cecil Joyce covers high school sports and MTSU athletics for The Daily News Journal. Contact him at cjoyce@dnj.com and follow him on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter, @Cecil_Joyce.
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