State volleyball: Apple Valley upsets East Ridge in 4A quarters

posted in: All news | 0

Apple Valley rolled into the postseason with the opposite of momentum.

The Eagles lost seven of their final 11 regular-season matches.

“That can definitely set some teams back,” said Apple Valley junior outside hitter Sophia Cowan, “but we know who we are.”

The Eagles still made the state tournament, despite their sputtering finish, and were seeded seventh heading into the Class 4A state tournament. No matter. Coaches agreed Seeds No. 2-7 can all beat one another in this year’s Class 4A tournament.

That came to fruition Wednesday, as the Eagles upset second-seeded East Ridge in a five-set quarterfinal thriller in St. Paul.

The Eagles (19-9) will next face third-seeded Prior Lake in the semis at 11 a.m. Thursday. Apple Valley was swept by Prior Lake on Oct. 9, part of that difficult season-closing stretch.

Apple Valley claimed the first set Wednesday to announce its presence. But East Ridge responded by winning the second set and then the third, with the latter coming in comeback fashion.

Apple Valley led the third set 23-21, but the Raptors closed strong to take it 27-25. At that point, East Ridge appeared to have seized control. That’s usually enough to stunt any upset bid.

But Apple Valley reached state a year prior. And coach Hannah Specktor preached consistency ahead of Wednesday’s match.

“When we’re a little bit more calm and steady, we’re controlled and make good decisions,” she said of her pregame message. “Just making sure everybody is taking a breath, calming down and staying the same way, mentality-wise, whether we’re up or down.”

And when they got down, they rallied back. The Eagles dominated the fourth set 25-10 and controlled the fifth from start to finish to complete the upset.

Cowan led the Eagles with a whopping 26 kills — including the match clincher — while Ginny Gores added 17 of her own. Apple Valley went to Cowan again and again throughout the match, and the star hitter never seemed to tire.

“You don’t really think about it. You don’t think about yourself and how you’re hurting,” Cowan said. “You’re focused on your team and what can I do for my team. … Just giving everything.”

Of course, preparation helps in those instances.

“She’s literally in the weight room 365 days a year,” Specktor said.

Apple Valley beat East Ridge 2-1 in the Eagle Invitational in mid-September. Players noted that added confidence ahead of Wednesday’s match. But it’s also simply a team that loves and believes in one another.

Gores said the Eagles were “never doubting ourselves.”

It was a classic duel between the two teams, one in which East Ridge simply found itself on the wrong side of. Lauren Bunge had 15 kills for the Raptors (22-8), while Peyton Dornfeld added 14.

East Ridge rallied from down two sets to one to edge Eagan in its section final to reach this point. The Raptors were on the other side of the coin Wednesday.

“I just felt that they executed better,” Raptors coach Steve Anderson said of Apple Valley. “They were the more confident team, the more aggressive team and we got rattled and couldn’t get out of it.”

Related Articles


State volleyball: Lakeville South begins 4A title defense with win over Sartell


State volleyball: Roseville rolls with quarterfinal sweep of Rogers


Girls state cross country: Wayzata’s Gullickson wins 3A title, Forest Lake’s VanAcker second


Class 2A cross country: Como Park sweeps individual, team boys titles


3A boys cross country: Minnetonka’s Fries sets new record

Utah university where Charlie Kirk was killed is expanding its police force

posted in: All news | 0

By HANNAH SCHOENBAUM, Associated Press

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — The Utah university where conservative activist Charlie Kirk was assassinated is expanding its police force and adding security managers after the school received harsh criticism for its lack of key safety measures on the day of the shooting.

Utah Valley University is in the process of hiring eight additional campus police officers and two new safety managers who will help coordinate security for future events on campus, spokesperson Ellen Treanor said Wednesday.

Kirk was fatally shot from a campus rooftop on Sept. 10 while debating students in an outdoor courtyard surrounded by several tall buildings. An Associated Press review found that the Orem campus did not implement several public safety practices that have become standard safeguards for security at events around the country. Police staffing also fell far below recommended margins for a school of its size.

FILE – Crime scene tape surrounds Utah Valley University after Turning Point USA CEO and co-founder Charlie Kirk was shot and killed, Sept. 13, 2025, in Orem, Utah. (AP Photo/Lindsey Wasson, File)

Campus police did not fly a drone to monitor rooftops or coordinate with local law enforcement to secure the event attended by about 3,000 people. There were no bag checks or metal detectors, and several students who bought tickets told the AP they were never checked.

Chief Jeffrey Long said just after the shooting that only six officers had staffed the event. Kirk also had an eight-person private security detail present.

The university has 23 police officers, or one for every 1,400 on-campus students, according to a 2024 university report. Its planned expansion to just over 30 officers still falls short of police staffing at other large public schools nationwide.

Related Articles


Federal agents drive off with 1-year-old girl after arresting her father in Los Angeles


IRS Direct File won’t be available next year. Here’s what that means for taxpayers


States sue Trump administration over restrictions put on FEMA emergency grants


Trump nominates former New Mexico lawmaker to lead Bureau of Land Management


Trump’s HHS orders state Medicaid programs to help find undocumented immigrants

The average public university in the U.S. has around one officer for every 500 students — the ratio recommended by campus safety advocates — according to a 2024 Department of Justice study. To meet that threshold, Utah Valley would need at least 64 officers for its on-campus student body of about 32,000.

The school has a policing budget of $2.1 million for the new fiscal year that began Oct. 1, down slightly from its $2.2 million operating budget at the time of the shooting, according to public records obtained by the AP.

Treanor did not immediately respond to a request for comment on how the university was funding the planned additions to its police force.

Tyler Robinson, 22, has been charged with aggravated murder and is awaiting trial.

Hegseth and Rubio share classified details on boat strikes with congressional leaders

posted in: All news | 0

By STEPHEN GROVES and MATT BROWN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Top Trump administration officials briefed a small group of congressional leaders Wednesday on the growing military campaign to destroy alleged drug-smuggling vessels in the waters off South America, providing one of the first high-level glimpses into the legal rationale and strategy behind the strikes.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth met with a bipartisan group of lawmakers who oversee national security issues for roughly an hour in a secure facility in the Capitol.

Republicans emerged either staying silent or expressing confidence in President Donald Trump’s campaign, which has killed at least 66 people in 16 known strikes in the Caribbean Sea and eastern Pacific Ocean.

Democrats said Congress needs more information on how the strikes are conducted and the legal justification for actions that critics say violate international and U.S. law by killing alleged drug smugglers on the high seas.

“What we heard isn’t enough. We need a lot more answers. And I am now asking for an all senators briefing on this issue,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Schumer said as he left the meeting.

The briefing occurred the day before senators are expected to vote on a resolution that would require congressional approval for any strikes directly on Venezuela.

The Trump administration has provided a trickle of information to Congress since it began destroying vessels in the Caribbean two months ago, but outside of a few classified briefings, much of the information has come from informal talks with members of Trump’s Cabinet and other officials. Despite Congress’ constitutional responsibility to authorize the use of war powers, the administration has sidestepped lawmakers and declared that members of drug cartels are unlawful combatants that it can kill as terrorists.

At the same time, the U.S. military is building up its naval force off South America, raising the specter of an invasion of Venezuela and the prospect that Trump is trying to depose President Nicolás Maduro, who faces charges of narcoterrorism in the U.S.

U.S. Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, left, talks to staff as he leaves the U.S. Capitol building on day 36th of the government shutdown, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Mariam Zuhaib)

What lawmakers learned

The classified briefing was open to the top leaders of both parties in the House and Senate, as well as the Republican chair and ranking Democrat for the committees in both chambers that oversee the military, U.S. intelligence and foreign relations. The Trump administration also made available to senators this week the document in which it explains the legal basis for the campaign.

While lawmakers are not allowed to disclose the details of the briefing, they described it in broad terms.

Sen. Jim Risch, the Republican chair of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, said, “The administration has kept me, other members fully advised. (I’m) fully satisfied with what they’re doing. They’ve got good legal justification for what they’re doing. The president really ought to be congratulated for saving the lives of young American people.”

But Democrats ripped into the administration last week when it provided a classified briefing only for Republican senators, saying it was dangerous to inject partisanship when national security and the lives of Americans are put at risk. Following Wednesday’s briefing, Sen. Mark Warner, the top Democrat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, who had leveled the harsh criticism, expressed some sympathy to the idea that the U.S. should be more aggressive toward Maduro.

But he added that it is a “huge mistake” to carry out the strikes on the boats “without actually interdicting and demonstrating to the American public that these are carrying drugs and full of bad guys.”

Rep. Jim Himes, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, said U.S. intelligence assets are being used to confirm that the vessels are carrying cocaine, but added that “lots of mistakes could get made.” He said he wasn’t confident that U.S. forces are using the same “architecture” as with counter-terrorism strikes to make sure innocent people aren’t inadvertently killed.

Himes added that the officials gave no indication that the strikes would be stopping but also indicated they were targeting cocaine traffickers and not overtly intending to overthrow Maduro.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio arrives to brief lawmakers on the U.S. military strikes on alleged drug boats ordered by President Donald Trump, at the Capitol in Washington, Wednesday, Nov. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

The secret legal opinion for the strikes

Senators have been able to review a secret opinion from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel that gives a legal rationale for the strikes. It runs 40 pages and includes a thorough explanation, according to Sen. Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat.

But Kaine criticized the opinion as having “logical fallacies.”

“There is nothing in there about the rationale for Venezuela strikes, so it’s a very elaborate legal rationale for why you can strike a boat in international waters,” he added. Warner also said the document does not specifically mention Venezuela.

Rep. Gregory Meeks, the top Democrat on the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said nothing in the opinion or the briefing convinced him that the strikes are legal.

“They made statements and explanations. I still believe, after all of their statements, that the acts are illegal,” he said.

Related Articles


Democrats are hopeful again. But unresolved questions remain about party’s path forward


IRS Direct File won’t be available next year. Here’s what that means for taxpayers


States sue Trump administration over restrictions put on FEMA emergency grants


Trump nominates former New Mexico lawmaker to lead Bureau of Land Management


Congressional stalemate creates chaos for Obamacare shoppers

Will Congress weigh in on Trump’s Venezuela strategy?

The resolution to be voted on Thursday, offered by Kaine and other Democrats, would require congressional approval before Trump makes any strikes directly on Venezuela. Kaine says it’s important for Congress to take back its authority over war powers and have a full debate before deploying U.S. troops to use deadly force.

While similar legislation aimed at the strikes in international waters previously failed on a mostly party line vote, it did show there is some skepticism among Republicans about the president’s campaign. There is also growing friction between congressional Republicans and the Pentagon over a number of recent policy decisions, including a decrease of U.S. troops in Romania and new limitations on how information can be shared with Congress.

Still, a number of GOP senators said this week they were comfortable with taking action directly in Venezuela.

Sen. Bernie Moreno, an Ohio Republican who was born in Colombia, said he “absolutely” believes the Venezuelan government is a narco-state and said he wanted the administration to pursue a policy of regime change against the Maduro government.

“If he’s hitting drug labs, I think I would certainly be open to that, but I don’t know what he’s got planned,” said Sen. John Cornyn, a Texas Republican.

Democrats, however, called for an open hearing on the administration’s plans. They also expressed worry about what they see as no cohesive strategy at all.

Sen. Chris Coons, a Delaware Democrat, said, “I’m concerned about the lack of clear strategy and policy and paths forward.”

The intensity of J.J. McCarthy and where it could take the Vikings

posted in: All news | 0

If there’s anything head coach Kevin O’Connell has learned about being around young quarterback J.J. McCarthy after a game, it’s how to handle himself when the 22-year-old is still very clearly fired up and in the zone.

The intensity was on display in the visitor’s locker after the Vikings earned the 27-24 win over the Detroit Lions.

A video clip posted on social media provided a peek behind the curtain. O’Connell is shown giving a speech, while McCarthy looks like a rabid animal ready to pounce.

His head nodding up and down. His eyes peering straight ahead. His nostrils flaring with each breath.

“It never catches me off guard,” O’Connell said with a laugh. “I know to give him the football, deliver the message that I’d like to deliver, and then get the hell out of the way for my own personal safety.”

As his teammates erupted around him, McCarthy gathered everybody in a circle and delivered a message.

“We can’t let this (expletive) be an emotional letdown,” McCarthy said. “We’ve got to come back stronger and keep (expletive) getting better at every little detail, in every little phases.”

That anecdote perfectly encapsulated how McCarthy is able to go to different place in his mind for a few hours.

The war paint he wears on his face became synonymous with him amid his rise up the ranks. The mean mug he unleashes before, during, and after a game is becoming synonymous with him at the highest level.

It’s all part of McCarthy’s alter ego — he refers to that version of himself simply as “9” — that he’s able to channel when he puts on the pads and laces up the cleats. Though he’s always carried himself with a level of intensity, McCarthy’s alter ego was developed last year as a rookie while he was on injured reserve recovering from a torn meniscus.

“It started to show up this year,” McCarthy said. “You want to be out there so frickin bad. It was this built up anger that was kind of ready to explode. I chose to harness it instead of letting it go into a self destructive kind of way.”

It’s a little bit of a change compared to how McCarthy has gone about it in the past. He typically focused on being happy on the field when he was at Nazareth Academy in high school and the University of Michigan in college. He never let himself fully lean into being angry on the field.

“I kind of love feeding that wolf,” McCarthy said. “There’s a lot of power that comes from that built up anger that I can transmute into my performance.”

What do his teammates think of McCarthy’s alter ego?

“A dawg,” running back Aaron Jones said after the Vikings beat the Lions. “He’s somebody who wants it. He’s hungry for more. He’s out to prove a lot of people wrong.”

There’s an authenticity about McCarthy that has gotten his teammates to believe in him. They know it’s not an act when McCarthy’s alter ego comes out. They know it’s simply McCarthy being himself.

“The guys were excited,” O’Connell said of the scene in the visitor’s locker room. “It was a cool moment. We’ve had a couple of them so far. We hope to have more.”

Briefly

There were a number of players who did not participate in practice on Wednesday afternoon at TCO Performance Center, including Jones (shoulder/toe), tight end Josh Oliver (foot), cornerback Jeff Okudah (concussion), and safety Theo Jackson (concussion).

Related Articles


The Loop Fantasy Football Report Week 10: First half filled with underachievers


Did the Vikings make any moves ahead of the NFL trade deadline?


Mizutani: J.J. McCarthy is just scratching surface for Vikings


Takeaways from the Vikings’ 27-24 win over the Lions


How a team meeting in Detroit helped the Vikings turn it around