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North Platte St. Pats Volleyball Coach headed to Ogallala

North Platte – Shelly Byrn has had a great run as head coach of the North Platte Saint Pats Irish and that has opened up new opportunities for her as the new head coach for the Ogallala Indians. Byrn will be replacing Steve Morgan, who was a coach for 45 years at Ogallala leading the Indians to 3 state titles in his time as head coach.

Byrn was very excited about the job saying: “This great opportunity presented itself. 17 years ago, the Irish gave us an opportunity and it was a great decision. Now, we have a great opportunity in Ogallala,”

Byrn said of replacing Morgan “We (Husband and I) are both very excited for this opportunity. I am humbled and honored to follow a great volleyball coach. Coach Morgan was a great coach and left big shoes to fill, but, hopefully I can add to the great history at Ogallala.”

 

2019 Legion rosters announced

North Platte – The American Legion 2019 JR and SR squads were announced on the 10th of April by the new coaches. They are:

Juniors:

Coaches: Coach Barker, Coach Janas & Coach Kruse

Players:
Blake Barner
Trey Barker
Cole Wright
Cody Wright
Tate Janas
Jeremiah Seamann
Carson Johnson
Tyler Tobey
Carter Kelley
Cy Wagner
Will Coe
Derrick Kuhlmann
Bryce Butterfield
Nathan Moats
Jaylan Ruffin

Seniors:

Coaches: Coach Ty Brockmoller, Coach Benny Brockmoller & Coach Justin Janas

Players:
Eli Cox
Jacob Swift
Tyler Ferguson
Brayden Stiffler
Miles Morrell
Avery Munson
Jacob Tobey
Dylan Younghans
Sam Malsbury
Caden Messersmith
Carter Johnson
Dolan Branch
Gus Kreber
Andrew Lindemeier

NSAA April Meeting: Girls wrestling and bowling fall short, new cutoff for Class A

Lincoln, NE – The April NSAA meeting had a lot of potential big changes on the agenda, only one of which really came to pass.

The most controversial item on the agenda was the vote to sanction a separate division for girls wrestling in the state of Nebraska. Proponents of the proposal argued that it would increase people interested in the sport and would not take any time away from the state championships.

The proposal fell just 1 vote shy of the 30 total votes needed to pass, 29-21.

The other item on the agenda was a proposal to sanction bowling as an official high school sport instead of a club sport. That was rejected 23-27.

The final news to come out of the meeting is a major shift in how schools are classified going forward.

From now on, schools with 850 or more students enrolled in three grades (boys and girls combined) will be considered Class A in everything but Football. Football will remain with its 450 boys enrollment cutoff for the time being.

That means North Platte High School, who has spent the last few years bouncing between Class A and Class B will now be considered Class A once again in every sport.

Ex-Bulls coach Fred Hoiberg hired at struggling Nebraska

Fred Hoiberg, the former NBA player who coached Iowa State and the Chicago Bulls, was hired Saturday to coach a Nebraska team that had big hopes this season but finished with a 19-17 record and out of the NCAA Tournament yet again.

Hoiberg has strong ties to the school, which announced his hiring four days after seventh-year coach Tim Miles was fired.

Hoiberg, dismissed by the Bulls in in December, agreed to a seven-year contract paying a total of $25 million.

The 46-year-old Hoiberg was born in Lincoln and maternal grandfather Jerry Bush was the Cornhuskers coach from 1954 to 1963. His paternal grandfather was a professor at Nebraska and his parents are graduates of the school.

“I can’t express how excited I am to be back on the sidelines and to be coaching at a university that means a lot to my family and me,” Hoiberg said. “Nebraska has always felt like a second home.”

Hoiberg went 115-155 from 2010-15 with the Bulls. Before that, he had a successful five-year run as Iowa State’s coach with an up-tempo, spread-the-floor offense. He went 115-56 and led the Cyclones to four straight NCAA Tournaments and two Big 12 tournament titles.

“When you look at him, you see an individual who has had success as a player and a coach,” athletic director Bill Moos said. “Fred’s background will sell itself on the recruiting trail, and help us bring in the type of student-athletes needed to compete at the highest level. His style of play not only will be appealing to prospective recruits but will also provide our great fans an entertaining brand of basketball.”

Hoiberg takes over a program that has never been able to win consistently. Nebraska’s most recent regular-season conference championship came in 1950. The Huskers remain the only Power Five conference program to have never won an NCAA Tournament game.

As a star player for Iowa State, Hoiberg became known as “The Mayor” because of his popularity in Ames. He competed twice a year against the Huskers from 1991-95 — when Nebraska enjoyed its most sustained success, with four straight NCAA appearances. In the 25 years since, the Huskers have gone to the tournament just twice (1998, 2014).

Nebraska had reason to be encouraged this season. The Huskers started 13-4 and were in The Associated Press Top 25 for the first time since 2014. Then the Huskers lost 11 of the next 13 and finished 13th in the Big Ten, the fifth time in seven years they’ve been 10th or worse. A brief run in the Big Ten Tournament wasn’t enough to earn an NCAA bid.

The Huskers will lose seniors James Palmer Jr., Glynn Watson Jr. and Isaac Copeland, and junior Isaiah Roby has said he didn’t know if he would return if there were a coaching change.

Hoiberg had said shortly after his dismissal by the Bulls that he wanted to coach again, but the speculation was that it would be in the NBA.

Nebraska has had a history of hiring hot mid-major coaches — Danny Nee in 1986, Barry Collier in 2000, Doc Sadler in 2006 and Miles in 2012.

The school built a new practice facility in 2011 and a new arena in 2013. With the infrastructure in place, Moos and the university administration were looking to make a splash hire.

“I had the opportunity to coach (an exhibition) at Pinnacle Bank Arena with the Bulls, and I have seen first-hand that the facilities are as nice as any in the country,” Hoiberg said. “When you couple that with a loyal and passionate fan base, you can see there is great potential for the future of Nebraska basketball.”

NPHS names new Activities Director

North Platte – North Platte High School will have a new AD who is pretty familiar with the workings of NPHS.

Posted earlier on NPHS’s official Facebook page:
“North Platte Public Schools is pleased to announce Mr. Jordan Cudney as our new North Platte High School Activities Director for the 2019-2020 school year. He will officially begin his duties in July 2019. Jordan will be working on transition and program development through June with High School Administration. Mr. Cudney is currently the Cozad Activities Director. He has coaching and teaching experience at Ord, Omaha Benson and Crete Public Schools. Jordan has college coaching experience at Morningside College and Midland University. Jordan and his wife Kara (McKeone), NPHS alum, and have two daughters.”

The hire will replace Marc Mrozcek who will be leaving at the end of the school year to take a combination Assistant Principle and Activities Director position with Gothenburg Public Schools.

GAMESTORY: Knights Women fall to #1 Illinois Central

Harrison, AR – For just the third time in program history, the Women’s basketball program was going to take part in the national tournament. They drew the #16 seed after winning District F and would face off against #1 Illinois Central Cougars (31-1) to start the tournament.

The Knights knew they would have a tough battle but they were more then ready to meet the challenge.

From the tip however it was all Cougars. They would jump to a quick 5-0 lead after three minutes of play prompting a time out from head coach Jeff Thurman.

After the time out the teams would trade buckets and make it a 7-2 game. From there the next three minutes was both teams testing each other. Neither scoring the ball, both teams playing challenging defense. The Cougars would break out of the trend and behind a furious fast break attack would take the large lead 24-9 after the first quarter.

The Second quarter is where the Knights defense would really start to show its teeth. They would clamp down on the transition defense and would hound the cougars all quarter. All this would happen while the Knights started to show some energy on offense as well.

The Cougars would outscore the Knights in the second by only 2 points and would have the 42-25 lead at halftime.

After halftime, the Cougars from Illinois Central would show why they are the #1 team in the nation.

I would take them just over a minute to push their lead over the 20 point margin, something they were not able to do in the first half. With 8:38 left in the 3rd Illinois would have their first 20 point lead.

The Cougars would not stop the pressure and put a clamp on any offense North Platte tried to start. at the 5:5o mark they had their largest lead of the night 54-28 over the Knights.

At the end of three-quarters of play the Cougars held on to a 65-39 point lead.

At the start of the 4th the Knights showed signs of life and would jump out with a 7-2 run and then take a time out with 5:21 left in the game. At that point the score stood at 67-46.

The Knights would continue to pressure the Cougar defense and would force an Illinois time out with 3:37 left to play and a 70-53 score.

It was too little too late for the Knights however, the lead Illinois built was too large and the Knights fell 76-55.

Madisyn Francis lead the way with 19 points for the Knights. Also scoring in double figures was Nahatabaa Nacona with 13.

The best the Knights can finish is now 7th place. They will play #8 South Suburban (who lost to #9 Union County) on Thursday morning at 11am.

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