
Podcast
Data proves Chicago Sky's Angel Reese is way behind Paige Bueckers, Caitlin Clark in WNBA value
On Monday, Chicago Sky star Angel Reese quickly shut down a reporters question about her statement last year about Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark not being the only athlete driving the sudden popularity in the WNBA before the 2024 season. “I’ll take the bad guy role, and I’ll continue to take that on and be […]

On Monday, Chicago Sky star Angel Reese quickly shut down a reporters question about her statement last year about Indiana Fever guard Caitlin Clark not being the only athlete driving the sudden popularity in the WNBA before the 2024 season.
“I’ll take the bad guy role, and I’ll continue to take that on and be that for my teammates,” Reese said. “I’ll look back in 20 years and be like, ‘Yeah, the reason why we’re watching women’s basketball is not just because of one person. It’s because of me, too,’ and I want y’all to realize that.”
There might be three people.
The Chicago Sky aren’t the draw that Caitlin Clark is

© Grace Smith / USA TODAY NETWORK via Imagn Images
Data from sportscasting.com shows Reese is having a tremendous impact on the popularity of the WNBA, but her value is vastly behind Clark and Dallas Wing rookie Paige Bueckers.
Clark is the main drive of ticket prices jumping by 125.7% when the Fever on the road to $106.32 compared to all other WNBA teams. Bueckers has made ticket prices jump 68.9% to $79.55 when Dallas in the road.
Angel Reese does have a positive impact

The Sky are third on the list at $56.32 to see Reese play on the road. That number represents a 19.56% increase over the average WNBA team, which isn’t close to the value Clark or Bueckers bring to the WNBA.
Reese has a larger reach for the league than tickets. She is the host a popular podcast “Unapologetically Angel” and has more social media followers than Clark. Reese uses her platform to promote the sport and advocate for better pay for female athletes.
And Reese will be a big draw at 2 p.m. Saturday on ABC when the Sky open their regular season on the road against the Fever.

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Podcast
Raising Arch
Cooper Manning began to suspect his oldest son might be a gifted athlete when in elementary school. He noticed Arch could really throw and was always able to run around and make plays in flag football. But even when Arch was only 4 or 5, there was something different about him. Whenever he’d go to […]

Cooper Manning began to suspect his oldest son might be a gifted athlete when in elementary school. He noticed Arch could really throw and was always able to run around and make plays in flag football. But even when Arch was only 4 or 5, there was something different about him.
Whenever he’d go to a Colts game to watch his Uncle Peyton or a Giants game to see his Uncle Eli, the little kid would sit there riveted from start to finish.
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“He never wanted to go run around in the halls or go eat popcorn and nachos,” Cooper said. “He’d just watch football like he was in a trance.”
At home, Arch didn’t play video games. He wanted to go outside and play catch, shoot hoops or have his dad hit him fly balls.
“We threw more footballs in the den over his mother’s head while a football game was going on, and she’d be like, ‘Please don’t do this — oh, here comes a lamp!’ And she was right,” Cooper said. “There was always something getting broken.”
Now, Arch is 21, a former top-ranked recruit from New Orleans entering his third season at Texas but first as starter after patiently waiting behind Quinn Ewers. He’s made two spot starts in his first two seasons, but the Longhorns could top preseason polls in large part because of excitement around the 6-foot-4, 225-pound redshirt sophomore. Behind the scenes, Arch has drawn rave reviews from coaches for his football intelligence, athleticism and make-up.
But Cooper, the oldest of former Saints star quarterback Archie Manning’s three sons, wasn’t about to go telling anyone that his kid was some athletic prodigy growing up. Being the Next Manning meant he didn’t need to say anything like that on his own.
“You never wanna be that dad who says his son is really something special,” he said. “When you share that with someone, you sound like a lunatic.”
When you’re from football’s first family of quarterbacks, that kind of thing is already baked in, whether you want all that comes with it or not.
Cooper wasn’t a quarterback like his dad or younger brothers. The 51-year-old entrepreneur/television personality was a gifted wide receiver who signed to play at Ole Miss, his father’s alma mater. But as a freshman, he felt numbness in his fingers and toes during training camp. He was diagnosed with spinal stenosis, a narrowing of the spine and pinching of the nerves that meant the end of his playing career.
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As Cooper’s children were growing up, he watched as his kid brothers blossomed into football icons. Peyton was the wizard who had the answers to every defensive scheme and adjustment whenever he dropped back to pass. Eli was the unflappable one who always seemed to be at his best when the spotlight was brightest. Eli led the Giants to two Super Bowls and was named MVP in both games. Peyton, a first-ballot Pro Football Hall of Famer, won five NFL MVPs and two Super Bowls.
People assume that the two former NFL stars have mentored their nephew, but that wasn’t so much the case. Archie’s been around a lot and always has been, said Arch’s mother, Ellen, “but really, Coop taught Arch how to play football.”

Arch Manning chose Texas over finalists Alabama and Georgia. (Scott Wachter / Imagn Images)
Ellen and Cooper realize that doesn’t make for a good story. Or draw as many eyeballs.
“As much as they are great influences, they weren’t around a ton,” Cooper said. “I don’t think Eli ever saw Arch play a high school or college football game. He is coming in this year. Peyton would come in for a game or two occasionally. Arch would see them at the Manning Passing Academy and may see ’em at Mardi Gras, but that’s like five nights in a year, so it’s hard to say whether he’s ‘like them or like someone else.’
“I do think you can pick up little pieces of people that you like. Arch is probably just as likely to pick up a habit of Patrick Mahomes as he is of Eli with things that you just like about people and the way they handle themselves. And fortunately, anybody who watches anything can get more exposure to players they like and want to mimic.”
Arch is actually much faster than either of his famous uncles. Cooper said Arch gets his speed from his mom. Ellen was the track star in the family, an all-district selection as a high-jumper in New Orleans who led her high school to its first state title in volleyball and was inducted into its sports hall of fame.
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Ask Cooper about how he and Ellen raised their children knowing the challenges that would come with the hype associated with being Mannings, and he can’t help but laugh, knowing that he and his brothers didn’t grow up in an era of social media and cellphones with cameras.
They decided they’d deflect all the early attention on Arch as best as they could. It helped that New Orleans offered a more laidback, easygoing vibe than most places. It also helped that Arch, from a young age, never wanted any of it.
But that didn’t stop college coaches from calling as early as sixth grade trying to talk about scholarships.
“I was like, ‘We’re not having any of this scholarship stuff,’” Cooper said. “‘This is ridiculous. He doesn’t even have braces yet.’”
Cooper and Ellen, who is an attorney, set up ground rules raising their three children, May, Arch and Heid. When it came to cellphones and curfews, the Manning kids had a lot less flexibility than most of their friends did. They didn’t get cellphones until middle school. Even then, cellphones couldn’t be used at dinner. And until they were in the 11th grade, they had to charge their phones at night in their parents’ bedroom.
“Did they bitch and complain about it? Sure, they did,” Ellen said. “But I mention that to other people and they say, ‘Oh, I can’t get my kid’s face out of the screen,’ and my response is, ‘Well, take it away from ’em! It’s like they’re scared to do that.
“We never were scared to enforce the rules that we put in place for them because we believed in them.”
They had seen how social media had come into vogue and didn’t love where some of that could be headed. Though their kids complained about restrictions, Ellen said, they’ve come to look back and appreciate it.
“It was all a distraction,” Cooper said. “I just saw too many people taking their kids to dinner and everybody else was talking and the kids are on their phones. I thought, we’re not having this junk. I was a little old-school, kind of copying my dad. We’re not playing video games. Get outside and go play. I don’t care, you’re not hanging around here just swiping and thumbing through some useless, endless stuff.
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“Arch was kind of wired that way anyhow so it made it easier.”
Cooper remembers Arch protesting that he couldn’t stay out until 11 o’clock in high school, saying friends’ parents let their sons come home later.
But then he’d say: “I didn’t really wanna go out anyway. I was just testing y’all.”
The irony is that now that all three kids have gone off to college — Heid is at Texas with Arch and May graduated this spring from Virginia — when they come home to New Orleans, they’ll spot their old man thumbing away on his phone.
Dad! Enough with the phone!
“I’ll lie and say I’m doing something work-related,” Cooper said, “but now it’s reversed, and they make me put it away for hours, so that’s good.”
When Arch’s recruitment began in earnest while at Isidore Newman School, Ellen and Cooper were thorough in how he chose where he went to college. They took visits to Clemson, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, Ole Miss and LSU.
They ended up going to Alabama, Texas and Georgia four times each before Arch chose to play for Steve Sarkisian and the Longhorns ahead of his senior season.
“When you’re 16, you don’t know what college is like, much less what the locker room is like, what the coaches are like, what the meetings are like, what practices are like, what it’s like to be going to classes in the summer — all that stuff,” Cooper said. “The more you get exposed to, the more you can make a relatively educated decision on where you can see yourself going, and if things may go wrong, you’re not gonna get homesick and think, ‘Golly, I screwed up.’
“We’re just the concierge, you get to figure out what feels right to you.”

Arch Manning made his first start in a 51-3 win over ULM last September. (Tim Warner / Getty Images)
After making brief appearances as a freshman in 2023, Arch played in 10 games last season, starting two when Ewers was injured. The younger Manning was impressive in limited time, as he completed 68 percent of his passes, going 61-for-90 for 939 yards with nine touchdowns and two interceptions. More impressively, he completed over 78 percent on third downs and 85 percent in the red zone. He also ran for 108 yards and four touchdowns for a Texas team that made it to the College Football Playoff semifinals for the second consecutive season.
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The Mannings are well aware that Arch is a hot-button subject — and has been since he got to Texas (and even before that). They appreciate how UT has handled him. He’s been there for two and a half years and been available for interviews just five times: once during Sugar Bowl media day in his freshman year, another time for Cotton Bowl media last year, once this spring and twice after his two starts last fall.
Cooper set his phone up to get Google Alerts daily for articles mentioning Arch, but for as many as there are, he’s realized there’s rarely anything to them.
“There’s not really anything new because he’s not saying anything, and no one is really saying anything with new information,” he said. “It’s just recycled stuff. He’s kept his head down and kept a low-profile, so when he does something, it kinda matters.
“I think they’ve done a great job of protecting him, developing him, and letting him be a regular kid as best you can. Now, when the time is right, you’re ready to go, you’re ready to go. Playing is good, but playing when you’re really ready and prepared usually works out better, in every league.”
Cooper is also proud to say that Arch was never on social media growing up. His first tweet didn’t come until June 23, 2022, when he announced his commitment to Texas. It has been retweeted over 35,000 times and liked over 200,000 times. He’s tweeted only four times in the three years since. He’s slightly more active on Instagram, where he has posted 16 times. He doesn’t read a lot of the stuff on social media, either, Cooper said, adding that they “don’t ever discuss” the things being talked about or written about him.
Committed to the University of Texas. #HookEm pic.twitter.com/jHYbjBaF5K
— Arch Manning (@ArchManning) June 23, 2022
It’s all part of the careful curation of a quarterback, and of a young man, at a time when not everything can be controlled.
Arch, who is majoring in communication and leadership, can’t help but encounter some unique challenges no one else in his family faced. Like, how do you handle when you’re walking to class and realize you’re being filmed? Or every time when you go out to eat?
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“He struggles with that right now,” Ellen said. “Especially when he’s in Austin, he feels like he can’t go out because everybody wants to take a picture. He said it’s not even the ones that are coming up and saying, ‘Hey, can I get a picture?’ He’s always been very gracious about that. He learned that from his grandfather. You always take the time to take a picture, talk to a fan.
“But it’s the people who are filming him from across the quad when he walks to class. That’s the most awkward thing for him. He calls me: ‘Mom, will you just talk to me while I’m walking to class because this is so awkward. I don’t know whether to wave and smile.’”
Still, Cooper said the biggest area he thinks Arch has grown since going to Austin is his independence.
As a kid, he struggled getting up early, whether for school or for an 8 a.m. baseball tournament an hour away. He quickly learned he needed to take initiative in Austin.
“When you don’t have someone nagging you, who you know is gonna bail you out,” Cooper said, “all of a sudden, you grow up.”
Arch gushed to his father about Kelvin Banks, the All-American Texas left tackle, who he said might be the best teammate he’ll ever have — and provided stiff competition to be the first one at 6 a.m. workouts.
“He said Kelvin’s always the first one in,” Cooper recalled, “so he said, ‘I started trying to beat him in. I’d get there 10 minutes earlier than him, but Kelvin had gotten there 20 minutes earlier. It was like this unspoken rule —No, no, no, no one is gonna be in before me.’ He just takes it seriously, which is good.”
Banks is gone, taken with the No. 9 pick in the NFL Draft by the Saints in April. With Ewers gone, too, there’s no doubt it’s Arch’s team now.
He’s come a long way from scrambling to get to those 8 a.m. youth baseball tournaments. Though he’s set up to succeed, what happens next?
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It’s up to Arch Manning.
“That’s what you do as a parent — you do your best, and then hope when you send them off to college, they’ve absorbed some of the things you instilled in them,” Cooper said, “but you can’t micromanage anything.”
(Illustration: Kelsea Petersen / The Athletic; Kevin C. Cox / Getty, Icon Sportswire / Getty, Wesley Hitt / Getty)
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Yankees' Giancarlo Stanton 'looks pretty good' since returning from injury
CINCINNATI — Seven games are not nearly enough to know what the Yankees are going to get out of Giancarlo Stanton this season. But in the limited sample size, Aaron Boone has liked what he has seen so far, even without Stanton flashing any of his power just yet. “I feel like he looks pretty […]

CINCINNATI — Seven games are not nearly enough to know what the Yankees are going to get out of Giancarlo Stanton this season.
But in the limited sample size, Aaron Boone has liked what he has seen so far, even without Stanton flashing any of his power just yet.
“I feel like he looks pretty good,” Boone said after Stanton went 1-for-4 with three strikeouts in a 6-1 loss to the Reds at Great American Ballpark.
“I feel like he’s on time for things, tracking the ball. … There’s going to be swing-and-miss in G’s game, that’s part of it. I actually feel like he’s in a pretty good place right now.”

Stanton finished Monday batting 7-for-23 with one double, two walks and nine strikeouts in the week since making his season debut after missing the first two and a half months with tendinitis in both elbows. Eight of those strikeouts have come in his last three games alone.
The 35-year-old DH, who started Monday for the sixth time in eight games, has continued to hit the ball hard when he makes contact, including a 109.8 mph single against the Reds. Where he can improve, Boone indicated, is getting those balls in the air.
“Some of his best shots have been a low liner or ball in the ground,” Boone said. “I think the next step is getting some balls a little bit more airborne. But feel like he’s recognizing pitches pretty well.”
Before the game, Boone said he will be deliberate in getting Stanton days off to try to make sure he stays healthy the rest of the season.
“With our club and the roster, we have that freedom a little bit to say, be a little bit more disciplined to probably play him two out of three days here and there,” Boone said. “We’ll continue to evolve as we go and continue to pay attention to how he’s doing and how he’s recovering.But right now, especially in these early days, I’m putting a value on making sure I give him that day, even when maybe you want to do otherwise.”
Marcus Stroman will make another rehab start with Double-A Somerset on Tuesday, when he is expected to throw around 70 pitches. It could be the veteran’s last rehab outing, depending on what the Yankees want to do with him — possibly slotting him back into the rotation while Ryan Yarbrough is on the injured list, though Allan Winans was called up on Monday to fill his spot in the meantime.
In the latest update on fan voting for the All-Star Game, Aaron Judge was the only Yankee leading his position — not to mention all of baseball. Paul Goldschmidt (who was overtaken by the Blue Jays’ Vladimir Guerrero Jr. for the lead at first base) and Ben Rice (at DH) ranked second at their respective positions.
The first phase of fan voting ends on Thursday at noon, with the top two vote-getters at each position advancing to the second phase of voting to determine who makes the team.
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Urban Meyer details the secret 14
Some grudges never go away. That is the case with former Ohio State coach Urban Meyer. Meyer revealed on “The Triple Option Podcast” last week that he’s holding onto some lingering anger against Sports Illustrated over a story from 14 years ago that detailed the Buckeye program’s memorabilia-for-ink scandal and put then-coach Jim Tressel on […]


Some grudges never go away. That is the case with former Ohio State coach Urban Meyer.
Meyer revealed on “The Triple Option Podcast” last week that he’s holding onto some lingering anger against Sports Illustrated over a story from 14 years ago that detailed the Buckeye program’s memorabilia-for-ink scandal and put then-coach Jim Tressel on the cover.
“I still hold a grudge about that whole thing,” Meyer said. “I know Jim Tressel. I followed him, so I know exactly what his program was all about. And that was wrong. The support Tressel received in Columbus, I don’t think was fair, and certainly the national [media], it’s actually a joke, to be honest with you.”
On June 6, 2011, SI published its story by writers George Dohrmann and David Epstein that detailed the scandal in which six players from the Ohio State football team had traded memorabilia for cash or tattoos, one being star quarterback Terrelle Pryor.
SI’s report showed that the Department of Justice’s December 2010 investigation didn’t go back far enough — going back to 2002, it involved over 28 players.
The story led to the resignation of Tressel as the Ohio State head coach.
Meyer took over as head coach after Luke Fickell’s season as interim in 2011, and he was left to deal with the fallout: the Buckeyes were banned from the postseason in 2012, placed on two-year probation, and lost five football scholarships for a three-year period.
“I know this one well because I lived it,” Meyer said. “Our 2012 team went undefeated and was not able to compete (in the postseason). We would have played Notre Dame for the national championship that year. It was very punitive. Jim Tressel, whom I know well — once again, I know this case because I lived it, and I was hired directly after Coach Tressel resigned. There was no competitive advantage (to the penalties).
“They were trading memorabilia for tattoos. Competitive advantage, zero. There’s nothing there. Was it wrong? Yes. Jim Tressel was accused of lying. … He was aware of (the trading). He ended it. … But the inconsistency of that penalty, to this day, still bothers me.”
Tressel went on to become the president of Youngstown State University from 2014-2023 and in February of 2025, was sworn in as the 67th Lieutenant Governor of Ohio.
Meyer, on the other hand, coached the Buckeyes until 2018, until he endured his own set of scandals that led to his retirement after the 2018 season. He won a national championship with Ohio State in 2014.
He went on to coach the NFL’s Jaguars in a disastrous stint that saw him fired with a 2-11 record and spate of on- and off-the-field controversies.
Podcast
Urban Meyer holds grudge against Sports Illustrated over famous Jim Tressel cover
How long is Urban Meyer willing to hold onto a grudge? Apparently, more than 14 years. That’s how long it’s been since Sports Illustrated published its famous longform report on Jim Tressel, which came out just hours after he resigned from his position as Ohio State’s head coach on Memorial Day 2011. The story, authored […]


How long is Urban Meyer willing to hold onto a grudge? Apparently, more than 14 years.
That’s how long it’s been since Sports Illustrated published its famous longform report on Jim Tressel, which came out just hours after he resigned from his position as Ohio State’s head coach on Memorial Day 2011. The story, authored by George Dohrmann with David Epstein, was accompanied by a dramatic cover featuring a close-up of Tressel, along with the headline “How Deep It Went,” and came amid the tattoos-for-memorabilia scandal that had engulfed the Buckeyes program since late 2010.
Unsurprisingly, SI‘s story didn’t sit well with Ohio State fans, who argued that the outlet’s findings were much ado about nothing. And that apparently included Urban Meyer, who would ultimately become the Buckeyes’ next full-time head coach after Luke Fickell served on an interim basis in 2011.
“To this day, I still hold a grudge about that whole thing,” Meyer said on a recent episode of his podcast, The Triple Option. “I know Jim Tressel. I followed him, so I know exactly what his program was all about. And that was wrong. I mean, that was a mistake on a lot of fronts. The support Tressel received in Columbus, I don’t think was fair, and certainly the national [media], it’s actually a joke, to be honest with you. And so remember now, competitive advantage [that Ohio State received from the scandal] negligible. None. There wasn’t.”
It’s also worth noting that the Tressel cover story seemingly started a trend of controversial Sports Illustrated investigations into college athletic programs, including Oklahoma State football and UCLA men’s basketball. As for Tressel, just about everything related to the “Tatgate” scandal that ended his coaching career in Columbus now seems relatively overdramatic, including the SI cover.
Ultimately, it’s hardly surprising that Meyer would side with Tressel here, considering their shared Ohio State connection (and that the penalties imposed on the Buckeyes bled into Meyer’s tenure). As for his grudge against SI, it’s hard to find any evidence of that playing out in a meaningful way, at least in the public eye.
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Fernando Cruz uses his 'gift pitch' to get Yankees out of big late
Fernando Cruz refers to his splitter as his “gift pitch.” When it’s diving effectively, that gift translates to swings and misses by opposing batters in bunches. The righty reliever and his heavy splitter delivered three key strikeouts with two runners aboard in the eighth inning Sunday, and his lights-out performance with a one-run deficit gave […]

Fernando Cruz refers to his splitter as his “gift pitch.”
When it’s diving effectively, that gift translates to swings and misses by opposing batters in bunches.
The righty reliever and his heavy splitter delivered three key strikeouts with two runners aboard in the eighth inning Sunday, and his lights-out performance with a one-run deficit gave the Yankees a chance to post three runs in the bottom half for a 4-2 win over the Orioles at the Stadium.
With the Yanks trailing 2-1, lefty Tim Hill walked the first two batters he faced in the inning, but Cruz came on and fanned Ramón Laureano, Colton Cowser and Cedric Mullins — all swinging — in succession to squelch the threat.
“In that situation where two guys are on, you really want the swing-and-miss. The game’s on the line there, you’re gonna live or die with it,” Yankees manager Aaron Boone said after the game. “Just an outstanding job of execution. To strike out three [in a row] was massive to keep the game right there.”

The uplifting outing marked the first relief appearance for Cruz since he had walked three batters and allowed a run in one inning of work in Wednesday’s loss to the Angels.
“That’s gonna happen every now and then. The reality is, on balance, he’s been outstanding for us this year,” Boone added.
Indeed, the 35-year-old Cruz has posted a 3.26 ERA with a 1.09 WHIP and 50 strikeouts in 30 ¹/₃ innings over 29 appearances since he was acquired in a December deal that sent former All-Star catcher Jose Trevino to the Reds.
“I feel like my splitter is just a gift pitch. It’s been there the whole time, I just had to make an adjustment to get it more to the strike zone. Today was that kind of day,” Cruz said. “We’ve been working at it. We’ve been on top of it, and it was there today.
“It feels like everything for me because there were two runners that my guy left on base. I think picking [Hill] up, like he picks me up every time, is such a huge thing for me and being able to help the team stay with a one-run [deficit] was huge for us to be able to come back and win it.”
Cruz didn’t make it to the major leagues until his age-32 season, when Cincinnati finally promoted him in 2022 after 12 seasons in minor league ball.
The first-place Yankees will open a three-game road series Monday night against the Reds.
“It means a lot. Cincinnati is a special place for me. It’s gonna be like that my whole life,” Cruz said. “It’s where I made my debut, and it’s the organization that gave me an opportunity.
“I really appreciate everything that they’ve done, but now I’m in another chapter in my life with the Yankees, and we’re gonna take care of business.”
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Scotts Bluff County Sheriff's Office Investigating Friday Crash on Lake Minatare Road
Emergency personnel responded to a two-vehicle injury accident at the intersection of Sugar Factory Road and Lake Minatare Road on Friday at approximately 4 p.m. [embedded content] Scotts Bluff County Sheriff Mark Overman says multiple people were injured and transported to the hospital by Regional West ambulance crews. The investigation is ongoing and Overman says […]


Emergency personnel responded to a two-vehicle injury accident at the intersection of Sugar Factory Road and Lake Minatare Road on Friday at approximately 4 p.m.
Scotts Bluff County Sheriff Mark Overman says multiple people were injured and transported to the hospital by Regional West ambulance crews.
The investigation is ongoing and Overman says they are not able to release names of persons involved or other details regarding this accident.
The Scotts Bluff County Sheriff’s Office is the lead agency investigating the accident, while the Nebraska State Patrol and the Scottsbluff Rural Fire Department assisted at the scene.
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