Wyoming
Football Frenzy Is In The Air As Wyoming’s High School Teams Hit The Field
The start of the 2025 Wyoming High School football season is a mix of games and scrimmages during Week 0. WyoPreps will post game scores, but we will not be ‘live tracking’ due to various circumstances. All Class 4A teams play their first game of the season. The other four classes have the option to play an official ‘game’ or not. Eight Class 3A teams will play, and a handful of Class 2A and 1A 6-man teams will play games. Several teams will scrimmage, and a few will continue with practice.
2025 WYOPREPS WEEK 0 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
WyoPreps confirmed with the Wyoming High School Activities Association (WHSAA) that 6-man games against Guernsey-Sunrise or St. Stephens will not count in the standings.
Here is the Week 0 schedule. If you encounter an error, please email david@wyopreps.com.
Out-of-State Opponent
Final Score: 3A Jackson 24 Linfield Christian (Temecula, CA) 22 – Cooper Kintzler had a TD run and a TD catch for the Broncs.
Class 4A
Final Score: #1 Sheridan 59 Cheyenne South 0
Final Score: #2 Cheyenne East 55 Laramie 0
Final Score: #4 Campbell County 28 Kelly Walsh 10
Final Score: Cheyenne Central 32 Rock Springs 6
Final Score: #3 Natrona County 37 #5 Thunder Basin 14
Class 3A
Final Score: #3 Riverton 52 #5 Powell 14 – Wolverines scored 6 TDs and 1 FG on 7 first-half possessions.
Class 1A 6-Man
Final Score: Casper Christian 28 Kaycee 14
Final Score: #3 Encampment 29 #2 Burlington 8
Final Score: H.E.M. 60 Midwest 12
Interclass
Final Score: 2A Burns 48 3A Rawlins 3
Out-of-State Opponent
Final Score: Malad, ID 6 2A Lyman 0
Final Score: 3A #1 Star Valley 33 Shelley, ID 7
Final Score: 3A Evanston 53 Ben Lemond, UT 6
Final Score: Gering, NE 42 3A Torrington 15 – game shortened due to lightning in the 3Q
Final Score: Mitchell, NE 44 2A Wheatland 14 – game was delayed by weather for 90 minutes.
Class 1A 6-Man
Dubois at Riverside, noon
Interclass
3A Green River at 2A #2 Mountain View, 11 a.m. – Mylocalradio.com Watch Live
Non-Varsity Opponent
2A Tongue River at Sheridan JV, 9 a.m.
St. Stephens at 1A 6-man Ten Sleep, 5 p.m. (does not count in the standings)
Read More Football News From WyoPreps
WyoPreps Coaches and Media Preseason Football Poll 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Big Piney 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Pinedale 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Shoshoni 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Wyoming Indian 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Wind River 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Dubois 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Riverton 2025
WyoPreps Preseason Football Tour: Lander 2025
Jamborees and Scrimmages
#4 Cokeville at Kemmerer
2A #1 Big Horn at Natrona County Sophs
3A Lander & 2A Glenrock at 3A #2 Cody
#5 Newcastle vs. Thermopolis (in Buffalo)
Worland at Upton-Sundance (in Upton)
2A Pinedale at 1A 9-Man #3 Big Piney
Lusk vs. Wyoming Indian (in Glenrock)
Southeast 9-Man Jamboree: #5 Lingle-Ft. Laramie, #1Pine Bluffs, Southeast
1A 6-man #1 Little Snake River at 1A 9-man #2 Saratoga
Saturday, Aug. 30
3A Buffalo at 2A #3 Lovell
Shoshoni at Wright
Rocky Mountain at #4 Greybull
Open Date: 3A #4 Douglas, 1A 6-man #5 Farson-Eden, 1A 6-man #5 Hulett, 1A 6-man #4 Meeteetse, Moorcroft, Wind River.
Lander Valley Tigers Preseason Football Practice 2025
Lander has started football practice ahead of the 2025 season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Riverton Wolverines Preseason Football Practice 2025
Riverton’s fall camp has started, as the Wolverines prepare for the 2025 season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Dubois Football Practice 2025
The Dubois Rams are just starting to prep for the 2025 high school football season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Wind River Football Practice
Wind River has started to prepare for the 2025 season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Wyoming Indian Preseason Football Practice 2025
The Chiefs are preparing for a new season with a new head coach and a new direction.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Shoshoni Preseason Football Practice 2025
The Wranglers are getting ready for the new high school football season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Pinedale Preseason Football Practice 2025
The Wranglers are busy prepping for the new season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Big Piney Preseason Football Practice 2025
The Punchers are getting ready for the new high school football season.
Gallery Credit: David Settle, WyoPreps.com
Wyoming
Forty-six arrested for immigration violations during ‘Truck Around And Find Out’ detail in Wyoming
The Laramie County Sheriff’s Office (LCSO) arrested dozens of people during an operation targeting commercial vehicle violations.
On April 25, 2026, LCSO shared details on a recent three-day commercial vehicle operation dubbed “Truck Around And Find Out: Operation Spring Break,” which was conducted in partnership with federal authorities.
During the detail, LCSO made 85 criminal arrests, including 46 arrests for immigration violations.
“Many of these folks are operating without commercial driver’s licenses (CDLs),” said Laramie County Sheriff Brian Kozak. “Unsafe trucks, bald tires, their trucking companies have been revoked or suspended and shouldn’t be operating at all. And so, we’re taking that serious, and we’re trying to help keep our roads safe in this county.”
LCSO said that one of the truck drivers discovered to be present in the U.S. illegally had no CDL and had parked in a spot marked “Absolutely No Truck, Trailer, Or Semi Parking Anytime.”
Kozak said that recent commercial vehicle enforcement operations have lowered the number of fatal crashes in Laramie County. He also said that the county’s violent crime rate is half of the national average.
A previous “Truck Around And Find Out” detail conducted by LCSO in February 2026 resulted in 32 arrests for immigration violations.
Last fall, Kozak and 25 LCSO deputies were sworn in by ICE and authorized to enforce immigration law under Title 8, Section 287(g) of the Immigration and Nationality Act.
Wyoming
Wyoming officials break ground on $20 million shooting complex near Cody
CODY — A new $20 million, 2,000-acre statewide shooting complex broke ground Saturday south of Cody, with plans to officially open in 2027.
Community members and state representatives have worked on the project since 2022. Once complete, it will be Wyoming’s first-ever statewide shooting complex.
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Wyoming officials break ground on $20 million statewide shooting complex near Cody
The facility will be a first of it’s kind, with 8 different types of firing ranges open to both the public and for regional competitions. Hundreds gathered for the groundbreaking on Saturday, including longtime Cody-area resident Samuel Kuntz.
“I figured this is a historic event and I wanted to be part of it,” Kuntz said Saturday afternoon. “This is fantastic and it will fit right in with the spirit of this community.”
Kuntz said the facility belongs in his home state.
“Shooting is a very big passion of mine,” Kuntz said. “In my opinion, it is paramount to not only being a Wyoming citizen but a U.S. citizen. So, having this wonderful shooting range this close to home is going to be fantastic I am extremely pumped up about it.”
Wyoming Governor Mark Gordon and Wyoming Senator John Barrasso attended the groundbreaking and fired the first two ceremonious shots. The facility is being built on state land and required various legislation to approve $10 million in funding from the government.
MTN NEWS
That lengthy process began with State Senator Larry Hicks, who brought the idea forward four years ago.
“I just authored a bill called the Second Amendment Defense Act,” Hicks said.
That bill, followed by a phone call with the Governor, started the process in 2022. Hicks said it required many different community members and other entities but that he’s proud to see it become a reality because of what it represents.
“Part of it’s our culture, you know?” Hicks said. “Wyoming has the highest gun ownership in the nation. So, it’s consistent with I think the values and the philosophy that I think the vast majority of people in the state of Wyoming share.”
Board member James Klessens was among the many that helped bring the idea to life, focusing on the facility’s potential economic impact.
“The main premise of the project has been economic development,” Klessens said. “It was created to attract more people to the community as tourists, visitors to the community, but we also know that when we host these kind of events that the shooting industry will play closer attention to those communities.”
MTN NEWS
Klessens and Hicks both agreed that the facility could bring other businesses to the area, and with travelers coming from all across the competitions, it could provide a major economic boost.
“Ultimately, I just think this is going to be a win-win for Wyoming,” Hicks said.
Kuntz, and many others, couldn’t agree more.
“Whether it’s for self-defense, hunting or just for fun, it is part of the Wyoming spirit,” Kuntz said.
Wyoming
Wyoming court blocks fetal heartbeat abortion law
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A Wyoming judge temporarily blocked the state’s newest abortion limit, halting enforcement of a law that prohibits most abortions once a fetal heartbeat can be detected, generally around six weeks of pregnancy.
Natrona County District Judge Dan Forgey on Friday granted temporary injunctive relief against the Human Heartbeat Act while the case plays out in court.
The plaintiffs “made a sufficient showing of irreparable injury,” Forgey wrote, adding that “the state defendants did not persuasively argue otherwise.”
He also said the plaintiffs had made “a sufficient showing of probable success” under Article 1, Section 38 of the Wyoming Constitution, which protects individuals’ rights to make their own healthcare decisions.
VERMONT ACCUSED IN LAWSUIT OF TRACKING PREGNANT WOMEN CONSIDERED UNSUITABLE TO BE MOTHERS
Mark Gordon, governor of Wyoming, during the DC Blockchain Summit in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (Kent Nishimura/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
The ruling is the latest turn in Wyoming’s long-running abortion fight and comes just months after the Wyoming Supreme Court struck down two earlier abortion restrictions, finding they violated the state constitution’s healthcare autonomy protections. That January decision reshaped the legal landscape in Wyoming and prompted lawmakers to try again with a narrower ban tied to the detection of fetal cardiac activity.
The law, passed during the Legislature’s 2026 session and signed by Republican Gov. Mark Gordon on March 9, took effect in March. It bars abortion beyond roughly the sixth week of pregnancy, once a fetal heartbeat is detected. The measure includes exceptions for medical emergencies that threaten a woman’s life or health, but not for pregnancies caused by rape or incest.
“Where the act does not align to my pro-life stance is in the concern for specific vulnerable populations,” Gordon wrote in a letter to lawmakers Monday.
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It echoes his reservations and expected legal fight when signing the law in March.
“I resoundingly share the determination to defend the lives of unborn children and support the intentions behind the Human Heartbeat Act,” he wrote in a statement. “Regrettably, this Act represents another well-intentioned but likely fragile legal effort with significant risk of ending in the courts rather than in lasting, durable policy. Rather than finding a remedy that saves the unborn, I fear we have only added another chapter to the sad saga of repeatedly trying to force a specific solution.”
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Gordon’s signing made Wyoming the fifth state to bar most abortions at that stage of pregnancy, along with Florida, Georgia, Iowa and South Carolina. Thirteen other states bar abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with some exceptions.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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