D3 Football: Patience, persistence paid off for Matt Walker and Wisconsin-River Falls

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Matt Walker stepped onto the University of Wisconsin-River Falls campus in 2011 as a newly-hired, 33-year-old head coach with secret ambitions that, at the time, would have been best described as insane.

He thought the Falcons could win a national championship.

At River Falls? The school lacking the resources of the private schools to its West and the student enrollment of the Wisconsin Intercollegiate Athletic Conference competitors to its East. The program that hadn’t been to the Division-III playoffs since the mid-1990s and won one game prior to the new coach’s arrival.

Walker thought he could win big … here?

“I honestly wouldn’t have taken the job if I didn’t think we had a shot to do it,” he said this week. “I had some options (for jobs). I was in a nice spot to be picky and choosy. I wanted into the best league in the country if I could get in, but it had to be a situation where I thought we could win it all one day.”

Walker knew it required a build, one that could take some time. You don’t go from the WIAC cellar to the penthouse at a moment’s notice, or even in a decade.

The Walked-led Falcons won one game in 2011. Then two, then back to zero. Even in the years River Falls felt it had a solid team, the result was only a few wins.

Three-straight four-win campaigns from 2015-17 were followed by three wins in 2018, and two in 2019. The Falcons were 23-67 over Walker’s first nine seasons. Championship contention didn’t appear to be in the cards.

“I definitely had moments of hesitation and frustration in those early years,” Walker said. “It’s like, ‘Did I do the right thing? Am I doing the right thing? Did I screw up?’ I questioned, at times, ‘Can I ever do it?’ ”

His boss believed otherwise.

Wisconsin-River Falls athletics director Crystal Lanning received correspondence from frustrated alums and program followers over the years asking if a change might be necessary. Such is life in college athletics. But her response was always the same: “We are doing everything the right way. The wins will come.”

“It was just stressing patience and please stick with us and please continue to support the program,” Lanning recalled. “There certainly were times when people were reaching out and questioning. I was just steadfast in my response that we believed things were going to improve.”

Undated courtesy photo of Wisconsin-River Falls football coach Matt Walker, who was recently again named the WIAC Coach of the Year. (Carly Lynch / University of Wisconsin-River Falls)

“Fortunately,” she added with a laugh, “they have improved.”

To put it mildly.

Walker was recently named the WIAC Coach of the Year for the second time in five seasons. The Falcons have five straight seven-plus win campaigns, with this season serving as the best to date. River Falls claimed the conference crown this fall and notched a playoff win last week — both firsts in a three-decade span.

The third-ranked Falcons host seventh-ranked St. John’s in a third-round playoff game at noon Saturday. The winner will be well-positioned for a deep postseason run at, yes, a potential national title.

Creativity

Lanning came to the university as an instructor and assistant athletic trainer in 2004. Five years later, she was elevated to a senior administrator and assistant athletics director. That job still came with training duties.

She jokes that big moment in her career came when her office moved from the dungeon to the main floor of the severely-outdated, and since demolished, Karges Center building that was lowlighted by red-brick colored floor tiles. No one knows the realities of the Falcons’ athletics department better than Lanning, who became the department’s interim athletic director in 2016 and had the interim tag removed two years later.

Success requires folks willing and able to work hard, wear multiple hats and get creative — maybe be a little insane. Perhaps that’s what drew Lanning, who headed the search committee for the next football coach in 2011, to Walker.

He was once the head baseball and football coach at his alma mater, DePauw, in Greencastle, Ind., while also teaching classes. When Walker first arrived in River Falls, he taught and advised on top of coaching. Those other duties are no longer in Walker’s job description, but you still have to find ways to close gaps on inherent competitive disadvantages.

“We need people who can think creatively and outside the box,” Lanning said, “and he certainly has done that in so many ways.”

Of Wisconsin-River Falls’ 118 players, 105 hail from Wisconsin and Minnesota. But Austin Rush, who leads the team in receptions (59) and is tied for the team lead in receiving touchdowns (six) is a product of Yuma, Ariz.., one of seven Arizonans on this year’s roster.

The Falcons heavily recruit the area. But the same is true of every area college. And many of River Falls’ WIAC counterparts are within driving distance of Illinois, which expands their recruiting territory. What would be the Falcons’ counter to level the playing field?

Walker knew River Falls had to take advantage of its one major benefit:  Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport. The Arizona area was targeted as a state with talent but no Division-III football programs.

Success wasn’t immediate. It took years to build relationships with local high school coaches and uncover which kids were good fits for the program. Stones were being turned. But never more so than in 2020.

A reset

Football was the only WIAC sport to not play a game during the 2020-21 school year amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Walker called the gap year “an important reset” for him to take a breath and re-evaluate. The university’s $63.5 million, largely state-funded athletics complex was helpful, but it wasn’t producing instant dividends. More was required to flip the script.

“We were five, six, seven, eight (years) in, and still struggling even when we thought we had some decent teams,” Walker said. “It gave me an opportunity to take a step back and make those creative and bold decisions. We’ve been a little different since then with our decision making and what we have become.”

Lanning recalls conversations with Walker in which the coach told his boss, “I’m going to make a radical change … and it’s going to seem crazy to a lot of people.”

The move was two-fold. Long-time offensive coordinator Jake Wissing was moved to defensive coordinator, a side of the ball completely new to him. Joe Matheson, a student-assistant at the University of Minnesota under Jerry Kill who was just 28 years old at the start of the 2021 campaign, would be elevated to offensive coordinator.

Insanity.

River Falls introduced Matheson’s “top gun” offense, which utilized run-pass options and various formations, all while running a play every 20 seconds.

“That’s made us very, very unique to anybody across the country at any level,” Walker said of the high-tempo approach. “We go faster than anybody.”

The Falcons have run 947 plays this season, 51 more than any other team. They’re averaging a Division-III best 575 yards per game. St. John’s is second at 526. Senior quarterback Kaleb Blaha, a Fridley High School alum, is a frontrunner to win the Gagliardi Trophy awarded to the Division-III player of the year.

Wissing’s defense has gone nine straight games without surrendering more than 21 points.

“It’s some bold stuff. It’s not your grandpa’s football. It can’t be found in the manual of how to coach college football. We do it a very unique way here,” Walker said. “Maybe it took COVID for me to take a deep breath to make those hard decisions that maybe I never would’ve that made us unique and, I think, led to success.”

The grand experiment has born fruit.

“I knew there’d be a possibility that we’d fail at it. You can look pretty dumb sometimes doing it the way we do it. I knew we could look foolish if it didn’t work out,” Walker said. “But the opposite has happened, and it’s been pretty fun.”

Partnership

Walker noted it’s easier to take such risks when you have a support system like he has with Lanning. Not once did the AD ever consider making a change at the top of the football program. Walker said he and Lanning have been “arm in arm” throughout the process, each bringing similar demeanors and big-picture views.

“I would call us normal people in a profession of people that aren’t that normal all the time,” Walker said.

That type of relationship is empowering, and rare.

“I’m pretty blessed. In our profession, having the early, rough years that I did, it’s becoming uncommon to hold onto your job with some of those records that we were spitting out there for a while,” Walker said. “I feel pretty blessed that she hung in there with me.”

The faith wasn’t blind. Lanning described herself as “hands on” in her role. She communicates with each of her head coaches — via text, calls and often in-person visits — on a daily basis. Of course, she always gives processes proper time to play out, but after a couple years “you know whether things are going in the right direction or not.”

Everything outside of the win-loss record suggested the football program was on track.

“I could see everything else behind the scenes was building and he was doing everything the right way and he was taking chances with recruiting in different areas and thinking creatively about, ‘How can I help the program in other ways?’ ” Lanning said. “We knew he was the right person. … When you know you have the right person, just sticking with it, I think, is critical.”

The program’s success has Walker feeling happy for so many people, with current players and coaches atop the list. But he’s filled with joy when he receives messages from alumni, or even sees them at games. Walker notes that everyone who was a part of the program played a role in pushing the ball forward.

Lanning shared a similar sentiment. But as for what’s been most rewarding, she said, it’s been “for  Coach Walker to finally have the success.”

“We work so closely on so many of these things,” she said, “and in the down years leading up to COVID, we would talk about it — what can we do differently? To see the patience and to see the consistency and to see the hard work paying off, I just feel so proud for them.”

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Grammy-winning Mexican band Los Tigres Del Norte to headline Grand Casino Arena

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Long-running Mexican band Los Tigres Del Norte will make their local arena debut when they headline St. Paul’s Grand Casino Arena on April 18.

Tickets go on sale at 10 a.m. Friday via Ticketmaster.

Jorge Hernández, his brothers and their cousins formed the band in the mid-’60s while living in Mexico. They began recording after moving to San Jose in 1968.

Three years later, the group heard a Los Angeles mariachi singer perform a number about a pair of drug runners. There had been ballads about the cross-border drug trade for decades, but this song was more cinematic. Los Tigres del Norte went on to cover “Contrabando y traición” (“Contraband and Betrayal”) in 1974. It was a hit on both sides of the border, inspired a series of movies and served as the launching pad for a successful career.

The band is one of the biggest acts in regional Mexican music and has become famous for its political ballads. They’re the only Mexican group to win seven Grammy Awards and 13 Latin Grammys.

The current lineup features three founding members in Jorge Hernández, Hernán Hernández and Óscar Lara.

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Nico Sturm a greater asset for Wild as he gets up to speed

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More than just about any major sport, rust seems to be a factor in hockey. If a player goes two days without hitting the ice, the results can be rough; for a time anyway.

So, it’s not at all surprising, after missing the season’s first two months, that Wild center Nico Sturm would take some time to get up to speed.

Acquired in the free-agent market over the summer, Sturm suffered a back injury on Day 1 of Minnesota’s training camp, and after a surgery to repair the damage, did not see game action until a Nov. 23 game in Winnipeg. Sturm himself admitted that it was taking him some time to get his groove back.

But after his faceoff win in the first period Tuesday in Edmonton set up the game’s only goal in a 1-0 Wild victory, coach John Hynes admitted that Minnesota is getting exactly what it bought when the penalty-killing German came back for his second career stint in red and green.

“He’s been good. It’s really good to have him back in,” Hynes said, speaking to reporters following the team’s Thursday morning skate in Calgary. “He’s good on faceoffs, he’s such a responsible, strong, two-way player. Big, strong kid, highly competitive, adds to our penalty kill, so it’s nice to see.”

Sturm won 60% of his faceoffs versus the Oilers, which is around his career average, and makes him an important tool for Hynes to have on penalty kills and in the defensive zone, when starting with possession of the puck is so vital.

Versus the Oilers, Sturm won the faceoff and directed the puck back to Jonas Brodin at the blue line, who zipped a shot past the Edmonton goalie for the eventual game-winner.

“We had the shot called before, but obviously you don’t always get it on a tee for the D-man like that,” said Sturm, who has made his off-season home in the Twin Cities since he started his NHL career with the Wild in 2019. He wore jersey No. 7 in his first go-round in Minnesota. But with defenseman Brock Faber wearing that digit now, Sturm has switched to No. 78, which he wore in previous stints with the Avalanche and Sharks. Sturm wore No. 8 last season in Florida, where he won a Stanley Cup with the Panthers.

Whether or not it leads immediately to a goal, faceoff wins are Sturm’s specialty, which is becoming more evident as he shakes off any remaining rust.

“I think even coming back, he seems to be getting better and better,” Hynes said. “We’re starting to see more of his speed and he’s getting better in the faceoff circle, so he’s been a good addition for us.”

Rossi not yet ready

While injured center Marco Rossi did not join the team’s western Canada road trip from the start, with him skating more often as he recovers from a lower-body injury, there was hope that Rossi might meet the Wild in Vancouver or Seattle later in the trip. On Thursday, Hynes said that won’t happen.

“Rossi will not be on the trip. He’s skating on his own and he’s going to take a little bit more time, actually, than we originally thought,” Hynes said. “Originally, we thought maybe it would be a little bit quicker, like on this trip, but it’s not going to be on this trip. And then we’ll see where he’s at when we get back.”

Rossi, who had been an iron man the previous two seasons, last played on Nov. 11 in an overtime loss at home versus San Jose.

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Supreme Court allows Texas to use a congressional map favorable to Republicans in 2026

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By MARK SHERMAN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Thursday came to the rescue of Texas Republicans, allowing next year’s elections to be held under the state’s congressional redistricting plan favorable to the GOP and pushed by President Donald Trump despite a lower-court ruling that the map likely discriminates on the basis of race.

The justices acted on an emergency request from Texas for quick action because qualifying in the new districts already has begun, with primary elections in March.

The Supreme Court’s order puts the 2-1 ruling blocking the map on hold at least until after the high court issues a final decision in the case. Justice Samuel Alito had previously temporarily blocked the order while the full court considered the Texas appeal.

The justices have blocked past lower-court rulings in congressional redistricting cases, most recently in Alabama and Louisiana, that came several months before elections.

The Texas congressional map enacted last summer at Trump’s urging was engineered to give Republicans five additional House seats.

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The effort to preserve a slim Republican majority in the House in next year’s elections touched off a nationwide redistricting battle.

Texas was the first state to meet Trump’s demands in what has become an expanding national battle over redistricting. Republicans drew the state’s new map to give the GOP five additional seats, and Missouri and North Carolina followed with new maps adding an additional Republican seat each. To counter those moves, California voters approved a ballot initiative to give Democrats an additional five seats there.

The redrawn maps are facing court challenges in California and Missouri. A three-judge panel allowed the new North Carolina map to be used in the 2026 elections.

The Trump administration is suing to block the new California maps, but it called for the Supreme Court to keep the redrawn Texas districts in place.

The justices are separately considering a case from Louisiana that could further limit race-based districts under Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act. It’s unclear how the current round of redistricting would be affected by the outcome in the Louisiana case.

In the Texas case, U.S. District Judges Jeffrey V. Brown and David Guaderrama concluded that the redistricting plan likely dilutes the political power of Black and Latino voters in violation of the Constitution. Trump appointed Brown in his first term while President Barack Obama, a Democrat, appointed Guaderrama.

“To be sure, politics played a role in drawing the 2025 Map,” Brown wrote. “But it was much more than just politics. Substantial evidence shows that Texas racially gerrymandered the 2025 Map.”

The majority opinion provoked a vituperative dissent from Judge Jerry Smith, an appeals court judge on the panel.

Smith accused Brown of “pernicious judicial misbehavior” for not giving Smith sufficient time before issuing the majority opinion. Smith, an appointee of President Ronald Reagan, a Republican, also disagreed strenuously with the substance of the opinion, saying it would be a candidate for the “Nobel Prize for Fiction,” if there were such an award.

“The main winners from Judge Brown’s opinion are George Soros and Gavin Newsom,” Smith wrote, referring to the liberal megadonor and California’s Democratic governor. “The obvious losers are the People of Texas and the Rule of Law.”