High School Football: Moorhead, Edina prove there’s more than one way to win in 6A

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Friday night’s Class 6A football final should be a fun one for all viewers, with two of the state’s elite big-school passing games squaring off for a state title in the weather-proof confines of U.S. Bank Stadium.

Moorhead junior quarterback Jett Feeney has played six full games this season and is averaging 287 passing yards in those contests. He has thrown for 25 touchdowns against just one interception and has completed 75% of his passes.

Moorhead junior David Mack pulls in a touchdown grab during the Spuds’ 26-14 victory over Lakeville South in the Class 6A state semifinals at U.S. Bank Stadium on Friday, Nov 14, 2025. (Jason Wachter/ MSHSL)

His top receiving target is 6-foot-1 junior David Mack, who has 114 catches for 1,499 yards and 25 — yes, 25 — receiving touchdowns this fall. He has scored at least once in every game, and has three-plus touchdowns in four games this season.

Mack has an offer from the Gophers, while Feeney has one from Wyoming.

Edina senior quarterback Mason West has offers from the likes of Kent State, Marshall and Miami (Ohio). But the 6-foot-5 signal caller won’t be suiting up for any of them next fall. The first-round draft pick of the Chicago Blackhawks is all hockey from here on out.

He will, however, wrap up his football career on a grand stage. West has thrown for 2,311 yards this season and 26 scores. That includes a masterful semifinal showing in which he threw for 314 yards and four scores in Edina’s upset of Minnetonka to set the stage for Friday’s scintillating showdown.

Wondering what to expect? These two teams met in mid-October. the final week of the regular season, and the Spuds won, 51-44.

West threw for 214 yards and three touchdowns, but the Feeney-Mack combo proved unstoppable. Feeney passed for 387 yards and four touchdowns, all of which went to Mack, who had 18 grabs for 202 yards.

Friday figures to provide plenty of fireworks, and also a welcomed changeup.

Class 6A football has largely become a contest of the trenches, where only the biggest and strongest survive. That’s the sport at its core. But the beauty of sports is that there is often more than one formula for success.

Yet a dominant running game — with a 2-to-1 rush to pass ratio, or higher — seemed to be a requirement to hoist the big-school trophy at season’s end. Here are the team passing and rushing totals for the Class 6A champions, dating back to 2018:

2024 Maple Grove: 3,047 yards rushing, 1,687 passing

2023 Centennial: 3,497 rushing, 1,138 passing

2022 Maple Grove: 3,114 rushing, 1,365 passing

2021 Lakeville South: 4,262 rushing, 655 passing

2019 Wayzata: 2,858 rushing, 1,656 passing

2018 Lakeville North: 3,805 rushing, 947 passing

It’s been 12 years since Roseville’s Jacques Perra and Rosemount’s Jackson Erdmann were dueling in a state semifinal at the Metrodome.

At a certain point, there only felt like one way to join the championship fraternity: Line it up and run the rock. The problem is, not every program has the size and numbers to successfully play that brand of football. And seemed the teams that didn’t had a ceiling on their seasons, either because they couldn’t execute their offense as the weather worsened or they simply couldn’t match the physicality of their opponents in the deeper rounds.

This year’s finalists buck the trend. Moorhead has passed for 2,863 yards this season while rushing for 1,569. Edina has 2,371 yards rushing to 1,796 rushing. Certainly, both teams still can run the ball; it’s how Edina beat Eden Prairie.

Moorhead and Edina aren’t exactly Cinderella stories, but they do things a little differently, and in the process have potentially provided a slightly more replicable road map for the programs who may never have the bodies to line up man to man, pound for pound, with some of the current big-school superpower programs. Now, they can legitimately believe they may just be a couple hyper-skilled kids away from giving themselves a puncher’s chance at their ultimate goal.

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Trump expands tariff relief on coffee, fruit and beef from Brazil

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WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump has further loosened tariffs on Brazil as part of his effort to lower consumer costs for Americans. The decision, released Thursday, affects coffee, fruit and beef, among other goods.

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The White House said last week that Trump was rolling back some worldwide tariffs that were originally announced in April.

However, Brazil said that didn’t affect levies that Trump had enacted in July to punish the country for prosecuting his political ally, former President Jair Bolsonaro.

Thursday’s decision harmonizes Trump’s plans, ensuring that neither the April nor July tariffs apply to certain products.

Trump and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva have been negotiating over trade, which could further reduce tariffs.

Judge to rule on whether to release Kilmar Abrego Garcia from immigration custody

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By BRIAN WITTE

GREENBELT, Md. (AP) — A federal judge in Maryland promised on Thursday to rule as soon as possible on whether to order the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from immigration custody.

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Abrego Garcia’s mistaken deportation to El Salvador in March, in violation of an earlier court settlement, has galvanized both sides of the debate over President Donald Trump’s immigration policies. Since his return to the United States in June, the government has been seeking to deport him to a series of African countries. His attorneys claim the government is illegally using the immigration system to punish Abrego Garcia for the embarrassment of having to admit that his earlier deportation was in error.

U.S. District Judge Paula Xinis of Maryland earlier issued an injunction that prevents his immediate removal. The government has asked her to lift the injunction. In court on Thursday, John Cantu, of Immigration and Customs Enforcement, testified in support of Homeland Security’s latest proposal to send Abrego Garcia to Liberia.

Abrego Garcia has an American wife and child and has lived in Maryland for years, but he immigrated to the U.S. illegally from El Salvador as a teenager. In 2019, an immigration judge granted him protection from being deported back to his home country, finding he faced danger there. Since he cannot be deported to El Salvador, the government wants to deport him to a third country.

He has said he is willing to be deported to Costa Rica, which earlier had given the U.S. government a guarantee that he would be allowed to live freely there. However, the government has made no obvious effort to deport him to the Spanish-speaking Central American country, instead notifying of their intent to send him to Uganda, Eswatini, Ghana and now Liberia.

In court on Thursday, Cantu told the judge that removal to Costa Rica is “not an option at the moment” but was short on details as to why.

Abrego Garcia’s attorneys argued that the government cannot simply hold him in immigration detention indefinitely. They also pointed out that there is no final order of removal for Abrego Garcia in the immigration record.

Xinis seemed to agree that without a removal order, he probably should not be in custody.

“You can’t fake it ’till you make it,” she said of the order. “You’ve got to have it.”

Xinis said she would rule on whether he can be released as quickly as she could, but noted, “These are weighty issues.”

Even if Abrego Garcia is released from immigration custody, the government will likely continue seeking to deport him. He has petitioned to reopen his immigration case to seek asylum in the U.S., but there is no guarantee that he will be successful.

After the hearing, Abrego Garcia’s attorney Simon Sandoval-Moshenberg told reporters that the government’s failure to state a reason why Costa Rica cannot accept him adds to the impression that the immigration system is being used for retaliation.

“I can’t think of any reason why we’re still fighting out this case, and why he’s still behind bars in a detention center in Pennsylvania, when the government could have sent him to Costa Rica months ago,” he said.

Travis Loller contributed to this report from Nashville, Tennessee.

Lawsuit filed on behalf of immigrants fined up to $1.8 million for remaining in the country

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By TIM SULLIVAN

A team of lawyers filed suit Thursday against federal authorities on behalf of immigrants facing what they called “ruinous civil fines” that reach up to $1.8 million.

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Daily fines of $998, designed to encourage immigrants in the U.S. illegally to leave the country, have been imposed on more than 21,500 people who the lawyers said were trying to comply with immigration laws.

The fines are “grossly disproportionate to the gravity,” of any immigration violations, said the suit, calling them unconstitutional.

The lawsuit was filed in a Massachusetts court on behalf of two immigrant women. It seeks class-action status to represent people facing fines that lawyers say have totaled more than $6 billion since President Donald Trump returned to office early this year and launched an immigration crackdown.

“The people we serve are doing exactly what the law requires — pursuing legal relief through immigration courts and immigration agencies,” Hasan Shafiqullah, a supervising attorney with The Legal Aid Society, one of the groups handling the suit, said in a news release. “In return, the government is threatening to seize their wages, cars, even their homes.”

One of the two plaintiffs, a Florida woman identified in the complaint only as Nancy M. to shield her from retribution, had been ordered to leave the U.S., but also had what’s known as an “order of supervision” and was meeting annually with immigration authorities as she tried to become a legal permanent resident.

Instead, earlier this year she received a bill for roughly $1.8 million, a number apparently reached by totalling daily $998 fines for the past five years.

Starting soon after Trump was sworn in, the administration announced a series of efforts to encourage immigrants to leave the U.S.

In February, the Department of Homeland Security announced that people in the country illegally could face “significant financial penalty” if they chose to stay.

Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem “have a clear message for those in our country illegally: leave now,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said in a February statement. “The Trump administration will enforce all our immigration laws — we will not pick and choose which laws we will enforce.”

The department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.