Gophers women's basketball coach Lindsay Whalen gets one-year contract extension, pending Regents approval
The deal would keep Lindsay Whalen under contract through the 2024-25 season and pay her $600,000 in base salary that year.
The deal would keep Lindsay Whalen under contract through the 2024-25 season and pay her $600,000 in base salary that year.
The NCAA men's and women's Division III men's and women's basketball tournaments begin today. Tap here for livestreams of the four Minnesota teams in the tournament.
Taylor Heise is the leading scorer in college women's hockey, the WCHA Player of the Year and a finalist for the award given to the top woman in the sport.
Son Brendan is a senior forward for the Pioneers. Dad Brian ranks as legend for the Bears ("My team," he says). The clash is tonight in Section 4AA final.
The first girls' state meet makes possible something never before conceivable: A sister-brother state championship duo. Meet Audrey and Ryder Rogotzke of Stillwater, who are each seeded No. 1 in their divisions.
The latest developments on the Russia-Ukraine war:
Russian troops Friday seized the biggest nuclear power plant in Europe after a middle-of-the-night attack that set it on fire and briefly raised worldwide fears of a catastrophe in the most chilling turn in Moscow's invasion of Ukraine yet.
Stocks around the world racked up more losses Friday, as even a gangbusters report on the U.S. jobs market can't pull Wall Street's focus off its worries about the war in Ukraine.
The U.N.'s top human rights body overwhelmingly approved a resolution Friday that aims to set up a three-member panel of experts to monitor human rights in Ukraine.
In a buoyant sign for the U.S. economy, businesses stepped up their hiring last month as omicron faded and more Americans ventured out to spend at restaurants, shops and hotels despite surging inflation.
In probing his grief, my one-time colleague Ivan Maisel bluntly analyzes his own actions as a father in a way that will make careerists flinch.
For those who lost loved ones in the opioid crisis, making sure the family behind OxyContin maker Purdue Pharma paid a price was never just about money. What many wanted was a chance to confront the Sackler family face to face, to make them feel their pain.