Surging Wild dominate Pittsburgh start to finish

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PITTSBURGH – The night before Halloween, the Wild lost a disheartening home game versus Pittsburgh, finishing October with three wins in their first 12 games.

A clear sign of their ongoing November resurgence came Friday night in Pittsburgh, where Minnesota dominated those same Penguins on both ends of the ice, winning 5-0 and running their record to 8-1-1 in the season’s second month.

Matt Boldy had a pair of goals and an assist for the Wild, who got 19 saves from Filip Gustavsson and improved to 11-7-4 overall this season. Joel Eriksson Ek and Kirill Kaprizov each added a goal and assist for Minnesota. It was the Wild’s most dominant performance since a 5-0 win in St. Louis on the opening night of the regular season.

For Kaprizov, it was nothing new, as he now has at least a point in all eight of his career games versus the Penguins.

The game was not four minutes old when Boldy deposited the rebound of a Brock Faber shot. It was the franchise-record 11th consecutive game in which Minnesota has scored first.

A few minutes later, while battling Jake Middleton behind the Wild net, Blake Lizotte’s stick blade caught Middleton under the visor. The Wild defenseman dropped to the ice immediately, then went to the bench and down the tunnel with the aid of team trainers. Lizotte — the former Chisago Lakes and St. Cloud State standout — received a four-minute, high-sticking penalty.

The Wild needed all but 14 seconds of the extended man advantage to double their lead, when Eriksson Ek tipped a Zeen Buium shot between the Pittsburgh goalie’s pads.

Marcus Johansson made it 3-0 for the visitors later with his eighth goal of the season, firing a wrist shot through a crowd.

Pittsburgh did not get a puck through to Gustavsson on their only power play of the opening period, and managed just two shots on goal in the initial 20 minutes, including a wraparound by Sidney Crosby on the game’s opening shift.

Middleton returned for the start of the second period and made his presence felt right away, firing a shot that Kaprizov tipped to give the Wild a four-goal lead. That was all for Penguins starter Arturs Silovs, who was pulled after allowing a quartet of goals on 10 shots.

Sergei Murashov played the final 39 minutes in the Penguins’ net, finishing with nine saves.

The Wild lost winger Vinnie Hinostroza in the second period after he was hauled down from behind while skating behind the Wild net. He left the game with some assistance and did not return.

Pittsburgh had been off the previous four days following a 1-0-1 trip to Stockholm, Sweden, where they played the Nashville Predators twice.

The Wild’s three-game, pre-Thanksgiving road trip makes its next stop in Winnipeg, where they will face the Jets on the road for the first time this season at 3 p.m. Sunday.

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Prep Bowl: Minneota, Orono, Jackson County Central win state championships

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Class 4A

Orono 21, Kasson-Mantorville 14: Orono senior quarterback Griffin Mauer rushed for a pair of first-half touchdowns as his team built a 21-point halftime lead before withstanding a second-half, Kasson-Mantorville rally to earn the Class 4A crown.

Senior Jeremiah Peterson scored on a 38-yard touchdown catch with 2:02 to play in the third quarter to get the KoMets on the board, then junior Parker Richards scored on a 1-yard run with 7 minutes to go in the fourth to cut the gap to seven.

Kasson-Mantorville had another chance late but turned the ball over on downs after an incomplete pass at the Orono 31-yard line with 1:19 remaining.

Richards finished with 22 carries for 104 yards. Senior Dane Kanwischer scored on a 13-yard run in the first quarter to start the scoring for the Spartans (10-3).

Class 2A

Jackson County Central 20, Goodhue 15: Goodhue pushed the top-ranked team to the brink with Luke Roschen hitting Alex Loos for a 4-yard scoring strike to put the Wildcats up 15-12 with 8:57 to play.

But Gophers commit Roman Voss answered, scoring on a 2-yard touchdown run with four minutes left to put Jackson County Central (13-0) up for good.

Voss, who plays quarterback for Jackson County Central, ran for 252 yards and three scores in the win.

Roschen threw for 209 yards for the Wildcats (12-1).

Class A

Minneota 49, Breckenridge 14: Junior quarterback Tristen Sussner threw for a touchdown and rushed for three more as Minneota rolled past Breckenridge to repeat as Class A state champion for the fourth-straight season.

Senior Kellen Bradley also rushed for a pair of touchdowns for the Vikings (13-0), who have now won 46 games in a row.

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Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, former Trump loyalist, says she is resigning from Congress

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By MICHELLE L. PRICE, LISA MASCARO and JEFF AMY

WASHINGTON (AP) — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, a loyal supporter-turned-critic of President Donald Trump who faced his political retribution if she sought reelection, said Friday she is resigning from Congress in January.

Greene, in a more than 10-minute video posted online, explained her decision and said she didn’t want her congressional district “to have to endure a hurtful and hateful primary against me by the president we all fought for,” she said.

Greene’s resignation followed a public fallout with Trump in recent months, as the congresswoman criticized him for his stance on files related to Jeffrey Epstein, along with foreign policy and health care.

Trump branded her a “traitor” and “wacky” and said he would endorse a challenger against her when she ran for reelection next year.

She said her last day would be Jan. 5, 2026.

The White House did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment Friday night.

In a brief phone call Friday night, Trump told ABC News that Greene’s resignation is “great news for the country.” He said had no plans to speak with Greene but wishes her well.

Greene was one of the most vocal and visible supporters of Trump’s Make America Great Again politics, and she embraced some of his unapologetic political style.

Her break with him was a notable fissure in his grip over conservatives, particularly his most ardent base. But her decision to step down in the face of his opposition put her on the same track as many of the more moderate establishment Republicans before her who went crosswise with Trump.

The congresswoman, who recorded the video announcing her resignation while sitting in her living room wearing a cross necklace and with a Christmas tree and a peace lily plant behind her, said, “My life is filled with happiness, and my true convictions remain unchanged, because my self-worth is not defined by a man, but instead by God.”

A crack in the MAGA movement

Greene had been closely tied to the Republican president since she launched her political career five years ago.

In her video Friday, she underscored her longtime loyalty to Trump except on a few issues, and said it was “unfair and wrong” that he attacked her for disagreeing.

“Loyalty should be a two-way street and we should be able to vote our conscience and represent our district’s interest, because our job title is literally ‘representative,’” she said.

Greene swept to office at the forefront of Trump’s MAGA movement and quickly became a lightning rod on Capitol Hill for her often beyond-mainstream views. In her video Friday, Greene said she had “always been despised in Washington, D.C., and just never fit in.”

As she embraced the QAnon conspiracy theory and appeared with white supremacists, Greene was initially opposed by party leaders but welcomed by Trump. He called her “a real WINNER!”

Yet over time she proved a deft legislator, having aligned herself with then-GOP leader Kevin McCarthy, who would go on to become House speaker. She was a trusted voice on the right flank, until McCarthy was ousted in 2023.

While there has been an onslaught of lawmakers from both parties heading for the exits ahead of next fall’s midterm elections, as the House struggles through an often chaotic session, Greene’s announced retirement will ripple throughout the ranks — and raise questions about her next moves.

Greene was first elected to the House in 2020. She initially planned to run in a competitive district in northern Atlanta’s suburbs, but relocated to the much more conservative 14th District in Georgia’s northwest corner.

The opening in her district means Republican Gov. Brian Kemp will have to set a special election date within 10 days of Greene’s resignation. Such a special election would fill out the remainder of Greene’s term through January 2027. Those elections could take place before the party primaries in May for the next two-year term.

Conspiracy-minded

Even before her election, Greene showed a penchant for harsh rhetoric and conspiracy theories, suggesting a 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas was a coordinated attack to spur support for new gun restrictions. In 2018, she endorsed the idea that the U.S. government perpetrated the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and mused that a “so-called” plane had hit the Pentagon.

Greene argued in 2019 that Reps. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., and Rashida Tlaib, D-Mich., both Muslim women, weren’t “official” members of Congress because they used Qurans rather than Bibles in their swearing-in ceremonies.

She was once a sympathizer with QAnon, an online network that believes a global cabal of Satan-worshipping cannibals, including U.S. government leaders, operates a child sex trafficking ring. She eventually distanced herself, saying she got “sucked into some of the things I had seen on the internet.”

During the pandemic, she drew backlash and apologized for comparing the wearing of safety masks to the horrors of the Holocaust.

She also drew ridicule and condemnation after a conspiracy she speculated about on Facebook in 2018, in which she suggested a California wildfire may have been caused by “lasers or blue beams of light” controlled by a left-wing cabal tied to a prominent Jewish family.

When Trump was out of power between his first and second terms, Greene was often a surrogate for his views and brash style in Washington.

While then-President Joe Biden delivered his State of the Union address in 2022, Greene stood up and began chanting “Build the wall,” referring to the U.S.-Mexico border wall that Trump began in his first term.

Last year, when Biden gave his last State of the Union address, Greene again drew attention as she confronted him over border security and the killing of a nursing student from Georgia, Laken Riley, by an immigrant in the country illegally.

Greene, wearing a red MAGA hat and a T-shirt about Riley, handed the president a button that said “Say Her Name.” The congresswoman then shouted that at the president midway through his speech.

Frustration with the GOP

But this year, her first serving with Trump in the White House, cracks began to appear slowly in her steadfast support — before it broke wide open.

Greene’s discontent dates back at least to May, when she announced she wouldn’t run for the Senate against Democratic incumbent Jon Ossoff, while attacking GOP donors and consultants who feared she couldn’t win.

Greene’s restlessness only intensified in July, when she announced she wouldn’t run for Georgia governor, either.

She was also frustrated with the Republican leadership on Capitol Hill, which worked in lockstep with the president.

Greene said in her video that “the legislature has been mostly sidelined” since Republicans took unified control of Washington in January and her bills “just sit collecting dust.”

“That’s how it is for most members of Congress’ bills,” she said. “The speaker never brings them to the floor for a vote.”

Messages left with House Speaker Mike Johnson’s office were not immediately returned.

Republicans will likely lose the midterms elections next year, Greene said, and then she’d “be expected to defend the president against impeachment after he hatefully dumped tens of millions of dollars against me and tried to destroy me.”

“It’s all so absurd and completely unserious,” she said. “I refuse to be a battered wife hoping it all goes away and gets better.”

___

Amy reported from Atlanta. Associated Press writer Jonathan J. Cooper in Phoenix contributed to this report.

Flu activity is low, but experts worry about a new strain and vaccination rates

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By MIKE STOBBE and NICKY FORSTER

NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. flu season is starting slowly, and it’s unclear if it will be as bad as last winter’s, but some health experts are worried as U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data posted Friday shows a new version of the virus has emerged.

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An early analysis suggests current vaccines may still be somewhat effective against the new version of the flu, which has been the main driver of recent infections, CDC data shows.

Some scientists and medical professionals are more worried about disappointing vaccination rates, a main reason why flu hospitalizations and deaths were unusually bad during last year’s flu season — one of the deadliest this century.

“I think we’re going to see a really severe season,” said Asefeh Faraz Covelli of the George Washington University School of Nursing.

Last winter, the overall flu hospitalization rate was the highest seen since the H1N1 flu pandemic 15 years ago. Flu was the underlying or a contributing cause of more than 18,000 deaths, and one seven-day stretch early this year saw more than 1,800 deaths — the highest one-week spike in at least a decade. Child flu deaths also were far higher than usual.

CDC data posted Friday showed low flu activity so far, with only one state — Louisiana — reporting moderate activity. Most of the reported infections have been in children, said the CDC’s Alicia Budd, who tracks flu infections for the Atlanta-based agency.

Most also have been a new version of the type A H3N2 virus that historically has caused the most hospitalizations and deaths in older people. That type is responsible for most flu infections so far this year, and more than half have been a new subclade K variant that is different from the strain this year’s flu shots were built to fight.

A preliminary analysis from the United Kingdom suggests the shots do provide at least partial protection, although it will take some time for scientists to know exactly how effective they are. Experts say any protection that softens the blow of a flu infection is important to get.

Flu seasons tend to get bad between December and February, and illnesses likely will accelerate as people travel and gather for Thanksgiving, Covelli said.

“I think it’s going to start picking up here,” she said. “This is the ideal time to get vaccinated.”

Researchers this year have been facing an unusual struggle to get a handle on how respiratory infection and vaccination rates have been trending.

They usually rely on the CDC for data, but a recent government shutdown halted data collection and reporting just as respiratory infections started ramping up.

Meanwhile, government efforts to promote disease-preventing shots have been more limited since U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. was put in charge of the CDC and other federal health agencies. Kennedy, a leading anti-vaccine activist, has fostered uncertainty about the safety of vaccines, including flu shots that contained a preservative called thimerosal.

Indeed, vaccination rates against COVID-19 clearly continue to plummet, with about 6% of children and 14% of adults up to date on their shots, according to other CDC data posted Friday. Each figure is about 3 percentage points less than it was at this point last fall.

For the flu, vaccination trends are a little muddier. Some sources have suggested flu vaccinations are down. Over two million fewer flu shots were given at U.S. pharmacies through the end of October compared to last year, according to data from IQVIA, a health information and research company.

But the latest CDC data indicates that for children, the vaccination rate this year is about the same as it was at this point last fall, at 34%. And the vaccination rate for adults is up a few percentage points to about 37%, according to the CDC data, which relies on survey information.

It is early in the season and too early to know if the increase will be sustained or what is causing it, CDC officials said.

As of the beginning of November, the U.S. flu hospitalization rate is about the same as it was at the same point in 2024. Hospitalization rates for COVID-19 and another respiratory virus, RSV, are lower so far this season, according to another set of CDC data.

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.