Loons captain Michael Boxall will stick with club this month, won’t join New Zealand team

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Minnesota United’s roster was ravaged by international call-ups for the 1-1 draw with FC Dallas on Saturday, but the Loons will avoid losing their ironman this month.

MNUFC captain Michael Boxall — who has played all 1,440 minutes across 16 games this season — will not be joining New Zealand for the Oceania Football Confederation (OFC) Nations Cup next week, he told the Pioneer Press on Saturday.

“Had a few conversations — happy to stick around,” Boxall said inside the Loons dressing room post-match.

The Kiwis are scheduled to play group-stage matches June 18 and June 21. If they advanced all the way to the final and Boxall was with them, he could have missed approximately four MLS matches while playing for his country through June 30.

“It will give some younger players from New Zealand the opportunity to get some minutes and some experience,” Boxall, 35, said. “I’ll be around. And my wife (Libby) will be happy I’m not gone for three weeks.”

On top of his day job, Boxall will remain on daddy duty for his two young children.

The Loons will get back the majority of their internationals before Saturday’s game at the Seattle Sounders. Goalkeeper Dayne St. Clair (Canada) and midfielder Alejandro Bran (Costa Rica) are expected to remain with their national teams for Copa America. It’s uncertain if striker Tani Oluwaseyi will remain with Canada for that regional tournament; he was a late call-up to Canada’s two friendlies this week.

Not kept in a Kage

Loons academy prospect and current MNUFC2 player Kage Romanshyn has been training regularly with the first team since preseason started in January. So, the 18-year-old Apple Valley native’s MLS debut Saturday wasn’t exactly a push into the deep end of the pool.

“Training with these guys every day, it makes me so much better, working on my game against them,” Romanshyn said of work done during the week in Blaine. “I just feel like I’m getting better every day.”

Romanshyn said there were “a little bit” of nerves before subbing into the match for a 12-minute shift in the second half. “But kind of when I just stepped on the pitch, I just kind of felt at home,” Romanshyn said. “I felt ready. It was good.

“Honestly, it was a surreal experience,” Romanshyn continued. “I had so much fun. It kind of felt like a bit of hard work paid off, which was really fun. (I’m) just thankful for the coaches for believing in me.”

Romanshyn is subjected to some friendly ribbing from veterans on the team. Six-year midfielder Hassani Dotson says he tries to strike a balance with newcomers.

“I like to joke around with guys,” Dotson said. “Nothing too heavy, but talk to them a lot and make sure they know they can come to me with anything. I welcome the competition. I want him to be loud and aggressive, and let him know it’s his career too. He doesn’t have to take a back seat because he’s with older guys. That is one thing I really like about him is that he’s got that fire. He’ll let you know if you mess up. That’s what I want.”

Jokes include referring to Romanshyn by his actual first name, Keith. “Yeah, I don’t know if that is his legal name, but that came up,” Dotson said. “So we play around with little Keith.”

MLS debutants wear a small patch commemorating their achievement on the chest of their jerseys this season. “Probably frame it,” Romanshyn said, still wearing the black shirt in front of his locker. “Put it up in my house.”

Irwin keeps Loons level

With St. Clair expected to be away for weeks, the Loons need backup goalkeeper Clint Irwin to step up. He did so Saturday with three big saves in the second half in St. Paul.

“Exactly what we needed from him,” head coach Eric Ramsay said. “He has been a really big part of what we are doing. He is very good behind the scenes, perfect character for that No. 2 goalkeeper, really good influence in the dressing room, really steady guy, very positive, and we needed him to perform.

“I’m really glad that he has done so because it sets off really well this period that he is going to be standing in for Dayne,” Ramsay continued. “I did not have any doubts about him, I don’t think any of the staff had any doubts about him, and he has proved that.”

The Loons don’t have a third goalkeeper on their MLS roster. They have called up MNUFC2’s Alec Smir three times on short-term loans, including Saturday’s game, and since he hasn’t played, he has only one more loan available this season. That means the club might sign Smir to an MLS contract for the rest of the season to provide cover at the position.

Three Minnesotans killed in crash while attending family reunion in Kansas

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Three Minnesotans were killed over the Memorial Day weekend in Kansas when a driver crossed over the center line and struck their vehicle head on.

Troy A. Sabean, 33, of Roseville, who was driving a 2024 Toyota RAV4, was killed, along with his wife, Emma Porter, 33, of Roseville. Also killed was Ann C. Porter, 69, of Fergus Falls. Two other passengers, Paul M. Porter, 68, of Edina, and Kathleen L. Lebarron, 64, of Edina were taken to the hospital with serious injuries, according to the Kansas Highway Patrol.

The Minnesotans were in the state to attend a family reunion, according to Emma Porter’s obituary.

The other driver, 53-year-old Andrew M. Steele of White City, Kansas was driving a 2014 Ram 1500 pickup “in the center of the road” when it struck the Minnesota family in the May 25 crash just northwest of Council Grove, Kansas.

Steele and passenger Lisa M. Steele, 51, also of White City, Kansas, were taken to the hospital with serious injuries.

According to her obituary, Porter lived in Lamberton, Minnesota, until her family moved to Roseville in 2000. She graduated from Roseville Area High School in 2008 and was involved in band, the track team, cross country skiing, soccer and basketball. She graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2012 with a biology degree and worked as a junior scientist at Zepto Life Technology.

She married Sabean in 2018. He also attended Roseville High School and the couple met there.  According to Porter’s obituary, the couple loved gardening, traveling, spending time with their pet bird, volunteering and watching live music together. “In 2021, Emma achieved her lifelong goal of hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. She will be remembered as an amazing daughter, wife, sister, friend and coworker who was extremely kind and selfless, brave, silly and adventurous.”

She is survived by her mother, Hedera Porter, father, Paul Porter, and his wife, Katy LeBarron, and brother, Erik Porter.

In lieu of flowers for Porter, her obituary requests donations to the Pacific Crest Trail Association, the North Star Chapter of the Sierra Club or the Ramsey County Master Gardener program are encouraged. According to his obituary, Sabean is survived by his mother Judy Brueghel and his father Allen Sabean. Instead of flowers the family welcomes donations to SavetheBoundaryWaters.org or First Nations Development Institute.

Memorial information for the couple will be provided at a later date.

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Gophers football: High-rated Florida receiver and big Arizona lineman join 2025 recruiting class

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Cannonballs continued to land during the Gophers football program’s “Summer Splash” recruiting weekend on Sunday.

Peoria, Ariz., offensive lineman Nick Spence started things off with a pledge at 9 a.m. The 6-foot-6, 290-pound, three-star recruit from Liberty High School had offers from Duke, Iowa State, San Diego State and others.

“Proud to announce my commitment to Minnesota!” Spence posted on social media.

Naples, Fla., receiver Bradley Martino gave his verbal just before 10 a.m. The 6-foot-3, 175-pound four-star prospect from Golden Gate High School had offers from Michigan State, Louisville, North Carolina State, Oregon State, Pittsburgh and more.

“I’d really like to give a social thanks to coach (P.J.) Fleck and the entire Minnesota coaching staff for making me feel welcome,” Martino wrote on social media. “All the support and guidance you have provided me throughout my recruitment process has been phenomenal.

“With that being said, after an awesome weekend I am committing to the University of Minnesota! ROW THE BOAT!”

Martino is now the Gophers’ second-highest rated recruit in next year’s class, behind Laguna Beach, Calif., quarterback Jackson Kollock.

The Gophers have 14 commits in its 2025 class. The weekend started off with three-star defensive lineman Abe Tarawallie, of Heritage Christian Academy in Maple Grove, pledging to the U on Monday.

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Letters: Minnesota can’t subsidize its way to enough affordable housing

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It’s time to shift from subsidies if we want more affordable housing

The recently announced delay to housing construction at the former Hillcrest Golf Course in St. Paul underscores a critical issue: We cannot subsidize our way to more affordable housing.

The Heights, a new mixed-use low-carbon community, was recently touted as an answer to Minnesota’s housing needs by its backers. This claim is far from accurate. Despite my enthusiasm and support for this project as a member of the City’s Planning Commission, it is clear that relying heavily on public subsidies is not a sustainable solution to affordable housing.

While projects like The Heights can occasionally proceed, they are far from addressing our broader housing needs. Instead, we need to implement zoning and building code changes, such as those at the state Legislature that failed to pass this year, and remove restrictive requirements such as parking mandates, large lot size minimums, and restrictive setbacks. Additionally, reducing the impact of increasing municipal fee burdens on new developments is essential.

The Heights project requires over $120 million in public subsidies (including $73 million from the state, $43 million from the city, and $2.5 million from the Port Authority) and its viability is contingent on funds that even a supportive DFL trifecta could not secure.

Funding projects like these is a complex, time-consuming and uncertain endeavor reliant on a number of other small public grants. For example: In addition to the above, The Heights has also received a variety of other public grants, including $7 million from the Port Jobs Bill, $670,000 in a remediation Grant, $2 million from DEED, $500,000 from the Met Council, and $800,000 from the EPA.

At full build-out, The Heights would deliver 900 new homes at a public subsidy of over $130,000 per unit. By contrast, changing zoning and building codes at the local and state levels could easily deliver more housing and economic development with zero public subsidy (and a windfall to public coffers).

While projects like The Heights are valuable on a small scale, they aren’t a way to address broad housing affordability in the city or in this state. It’s not possible to replicate it at any scale without municipalities going into bankruptcy. It’s time to shift our focus from subsidies to structural changes that facilitate development and address our housing crisis more effectively.

Nate Hood, St. Paul
The writer is a member of the St. Paul Zoning Committee and Planning Commission

 

Part of a larger problem

After WNBA player Chennedy Carter shoulder-checked Caitlin Clark, Carter’s teammate Angel Reese hugged and congratulated her. Clark didn’t have the ball — so it was a flagrant foul. But Chennedy wasn’t ejected from the game or suspended for following games.

The message to our youth: “Violence in sports is OK when you are older, even though we tell you as children and teenagers it is never OK to hurt someone just because you are angry.”

The WNBA, like male sports teams, takes a soft approach on violence. Carter’s coach said, “Chennedy was caught up in the heat of the moment.” Sports commentators said, “It’s life as a rookie in the WNBA.” And one even said, “Caitlin is getting pushed around. Good.”

The underlying message is, unwarranted violence in sports is to be expected, admired, and is OK. Being out of control is OK. You just have to be a pro.

Geoffrey Saign, St. Paul

 

Pride in St. Paul

Thank you to St. Paul, for hanging pride flags on the Wabasha Street bridge during June. Let’s celebrate that love is love and all are welcome here.

Beth Hvass, St. Paul

 

Sainted, Tainted

Sainted to ALL the graduates from our local and suburb areas. What a fine group of young women and men. You are our future.

Tainted to those at some of the graduation ceremonies who thought it was just their one and only with the incessant air horns that blasted well into others’ names being announced. No decorum or sense of shame for what you deemed to be your God-given right. I hope your graduate was totally embarrassed  Their future may bring some resolution to this practice.

Kathy Moore, West St. Paul

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