Women’s hockey: Tommies blanked by No. 10 UMD

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The St. Thomas women’s hockey team was unable to put up much of a fight at No. 10 Minnesota-Duluth Friday night, falling 3-0 to the Bulldogs on the shore of Lake Superior.

After a scoreless first period, Tommies goaltender Julia Minotti continued to keep UMD off the board until the hosts netted a power-play tally at 5:53 of the middle frame. That goal proved to be the game winner, yet the Bulldogs popped in two more in the final period — the first coming short handed at 2:50, the second on an empty net at 18:11.

Minotti finished the game with 32 saves, while her teammates put 24 shots on the UMD goal to no avail.

With the loss, the Tommies (12-18-1 overall, 7-17-1 WCHA) were passed by St. Cloud State and fell into seventh place in the conference standings after the Huskies beat WCHA cellar dweller Bemidji State on Friday. The Bulldogs (16-12-3, 12-10-3) have already clinched a fourth-place regular-season finish in the circuit, 17 points ahead of fifth-place Minnesota State, 14 points behind third-place Minnesota.

St. Thomas and UMD finish their weekend series at 3 p.m. Saturday.

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Gophers hockey: Men win in shootout, women fall in 2 vs. 3 battle

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It was a split result for the Minnesota hockey teams in their respective road matchups on Friday night, with the men winning at Notre Dame while the women fell at Ohio State.

Men squander lead, win in shootout

It was a matchup featuring two of the three teams bringing up the rear in the Big Ten Conference, and the Gopher men teetered falling even further in the circuit standings before pulling out a shootout win.

After squandering a 2-0 lead they’d held for the better part of two periods, Minnesota recovered to claim the extra point with a shootout win after recording an official 2-2 tie against the Irish.

John Mittlestadt put the visitors on the board at 11:09 of the opening period, with Brodie Ziemer increasing the advantage to 2-0 just 26 seconds later.

The score remained static through the second stanza before Notre Dame struck 46 seconds into the third frame to cut the lead in half. The Irish knotted the count at 2-all just under seven minutes later to send the game through a scoreless overtime and into the shootout, where the visitors pulled out the victory though the game officially ends as a tie in the standings.

Goaltender Luca Di Pasquo made 28 saves for the Gophers (10-18-2 overall, 6-12-1 Big Ten), while opposing netminder Nicholas Kempf made 31 saves for Notre Dame (5-20-4, 1-15-1).

The two teams play again at 5 p.m. Saturday in South Bend, Ind. in a game televised on NBCSN and Peacock.

Women doubled up in battle of No. 2 vs. No. 3

While the Gopher men languish near the bottom of the Big Ten standings, the Minnesota women remain near the top of the WCHA order.

However, this weekend looked to be a tall task as the third-ranked women’s squad took on No. 2 Ohio State on its home ice.

The Buckeyes proved just how tough it will be to earn a point in Columbus, Ohio by taking a 4-0 lead through two periods before the visitors managed to notch two goals of its own in the final frame.

Unfortunately for the Gophers, scores by Anabella Fanale and Ava Lindsay got them just halfway there before the final horn as Ohio State claimed the 4-2 win.

Goaltender Hannah Clark made 35 saves for Minnesota (24-6-1 overall, 18-6-1 WCHA) as her counterpart, Hailey Macleod, made 26 saves for the Buckeyes (27-4, 21-4).

While the Gophers have clinched at least a third-place finish in the regular-season race, the loss dropped the team six points behind second-place Ohio State and eight points back of conference-leading Wisconsin with three games remaining until the playoffs.

The first of those games comes at 2 p.m. Saturday afternoon in the series finale against the Buckeyes in a game televised on both BTN+ and Fox 9+.

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Immigration officials plan to spend $38.3 billion to boost detention capacity to 92,000 beds

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By HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTH

Federal immigration officials plan to spend $38.3 billion to boost detention capacity to 92,600 beds, a document released Friday shows, as U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement quietly purchases warehouses to turn into detention and processing facilities.

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Republican New Hampshire Gov. Kelly Ayotte posted the document online amid tension over ICE’s plans to convert a warehouse in Merrimack into a 500-bed processing center.

It said ICE plans 16 regional processing centers with a population of 1,000 to 1,500 detainees, whose stays would average three to seven days. Another eight large-scale detention centers would be capable of housing 7,000 to 10,000 detainees for periods averaging less than 60 days.

The document also refers to the acquisition of 10 existing “turnkey” facilities.

Plans call for all of them to be up and running by November as immigration officials roll out a massive $45 billion expansion of detention facilities financed by President Donald Trump’s recent tax-cutting law.

More than 75,000 immigrants were being detained by ICE as of mid-January, up from 40,000 when Trump took office a year earlier, according to federal data released last week.

The newly released document refers to “non-traditional facilities” and comes as ICE has quietly bought at least seven warehouses — some larger than 1 million square feet — in the past few weeks in Arizona, Georgia, Maryland, Pennsylvania and Texas.

Warehouse purchases in six cities were scuttled when buyers decided not to sell under pressure from activists. Several other deals in places like New York are imminent, however.

City officials are frequently unable to get details from ICE until a property sale is finalized.

Tensions boiled to the surface after interim ICE Director Todd Lyons testified Thursday that the Department of Homeland Security “has worked with Gov. Ayotte” and provided her with an economic impact summary.

Ayotte said that assertion was “simply not true” and the summary was sent hours after Lyons testified.

The document mistakenly refers to the “ripple effects to the Oklahoma economy” and revenue generated by state sales and income taxes, neither of which exist in New Hampshire.

“Director Lyons’ comments today are another example of the troubling pattern of issues with this process,” Ayotte said. “Officials from the Department of Homeland Security continue to provide zero details of their plans for Merrimack, never mind providing any reports or surveys.”

DHS did not respond to questions about Ayotte’s comments or the new document. But it previously confirmed that it was looking for more detention space, although it objected to calling the sites “warehouses,” saying in a statement that they would be “very well structured detention facilities meeting our regular detention standards.”

Associated Press writer Holly Ramer contributed.