It’s all college athlete updates in this edition of Lots O’ Stuff.

Jackson County Central graduate Kie Anderson won his second straight tournament Saturday when he won two matches to claim the 133-pound title at the St. John’s University North Country Invite.
Anderson, a junior at Concordia University, opened with a 5-3 decision over Travis Moelter of Wisconsin-Eau Claire and then pinned Ryan Bruckner of the UMD Club Team in 1:40.
He also won the Dragon Open in Moorhead last month. Anderson is 13-8 on the season. The Cobbers host a dual vs. Minnesota State Moorhead Sunday.
JCC grad Nolan Ambrose placed second at 149 pounds in the Worthington Open at Minnesota West Saturday.
He won four matches to reach the finals. He won a 16-1 tech fall over Andrew Schwab of Iowa Central, pinned Anthony Nunes of University of Mary in 2:48, won a 15-3 major decision over Martin County West grad Kain Sanders of Minnesota State and a 16-1 tech fall over Augustana teammate Davin Rose.
Ambrose lost 3-0 to Mary’s Kaden DeCoteau in the finals.
Also, out of Augustana, two MCW grads are in the Division II ratings by the National Wrestling Coaches Association.
At 125, senior Jaxson Rohman is ranked third. At 157, redshirt Connor Simmonds jumped from No. 15 to No. 6.
The Vikings are home for Alumni Weekend with two home duals at Elmen Center, hosting Mary at 7 p.m. Friday and Minot State at 2 p.m. Saturday.
Martin County West graduates Lucas Jagodzinske and Blake Jagodzinske both wrestled for Augsburg at the Cornell College Mike Duroe Invitational in Mount Vernon, Iowa.
Lucas, a junior, placed third at 149. He won his first two matches, winning a 12-0 major decision over Cooper Ludwig of Cornell and by fall in 4:05 over Jaiden Moore of Coe.
After a semifinal loss to Wartburg’s Kyler Romero, Lucas won by a 15-0 tech fall in 3:00 over Lauden Edwards of Coe and was a 10-4 winner over Reese Osborne of Wartburg in the third-place match.
Blake, a senior, was fifth at 157.
He alternated wins and losses during the tournament, dropping a 10-6 decision to Zane Licht of Wartburg, losing 9-0 to Scotty Scheidecker of Cornell, losing by tech fall to Demetri Teddlie of University of the Ozarks and winning by medical forfeit over Licht.
MCW graduate Katie Lange, a freshman at Grand Valley State, won both of her matches for the Lakers at the Iowa Duals at Carver Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City.
Lange, rated second at 138 pounds, was a 4-3 winner over Nanea Estrella of Iowa. The Hawkeyes won the dual 35-7.
Lange also won by fall in Bri Bynum of Augustana (Ill.) in Grand View’s 29-8 win. The Lakers are the McKendree Duals in Lebanon, Ill. Sunday.
Heron Lake native Hobie Hedquist, a sophomore for the North Dakota men’s hockey team, got the start in goal for the No. 14 Fighting Hawks in a 3-2 overtime loss to No. 4 Western Michigan in Grand Forks on Friday.
Hedquist made a career-high 31 saves but suffered the first home loss of his career. UND, 12-10-1 overall and 7-5 in the NCHC, is idle this weekend before playing at St. Cloud State Jan. 31-Feb.2.
Sherburn native Carsen Musser, a freshman goalie at Colorado College, played 12:40 in relief for the Tigers in their 7-2 win over Minnesota-Duluth Friday. CC, 11-10-1 overall and 5-6-1 in the NCHC, is at Arizona State this weekend.

Fun fact
According to Nielsen, of the 20 most viewed television broadcasts of all time, 19 are Super Bowls. The M*A*S*H series finale is the lone exception at No. 11.
Listed are rank, broadcast, date and network(s):
1. Super Bowl LVIII (Kansas City 25, San Francisco 22, OT), Feb. 11, 2024 CBS/Univision/Nickelodeon
2. Super Bowl LVII (Kansas City 38, Philadelphia 35), Feb. 12, 2023, Fox/Fox Deportes
3. Super Bowl XLIX (New England 28, Seattle 24), Feb. 1, 2015, NBC/Universo
4. Super Bowl XLVIII (Seattle 43, Denver 8), Feb. 2, 2014, Fox/Fox Deportes
5. Super Bowl 50 (Denver 24, Carolina 10), Feb. 7, 2016, CBS/ESPN Deportes
6. Super Bowl LI (New England 34, Atlanta 28, OT), Feb. 5, 2017, Fox/Fox Deportes
7. Super Bowl XLVI (New York Giants 21, New England 17), Feb. 5, 2012, NBC
8. Super Bowl XLV (Green Bay 31, Pittsburgh 25), Feb. 6, 2011, Fox
9. Super Bowl XLVII (Baltimore 34, San Francisco 31), Feb. 3, 2013, CBS
10. Super Bowl XLIV (New Orleans 31, Indianapolis 17), Feb. 7, 2010, CBS
11. M*A*S*H ("Goodbye, Farewell and Amen"), Feb. 28, 1983, CBS
12. Super Bowl LII (Philadelphia 41, New England 33), Feb. 4, 2018, NBC/Universo
13. Super Bowl LIV (Kansas City 31, San Francisco 20), Feb. 2, 2020 Fox/Fox Deportes
14. Super Bowl LVI (Los Angeles Rams 23, Cincinnati 20), Feb. 13, 2022 NBC/Telemundo
15. Super Bowl LIII (New England 13, Los Angeles Rams 3), Feb. 3, 2019 CBS/ESPN Deportes
16. Super Bowl XLIII (Pittsburgh 27, Arizona 23), Feb. 1, 2009 NBC
17. Super Bowl XLII (New York Giants 17, New England 14), Feb. 3, 2008 Fox
18. Super Bowl LV (Tampa Bay 31, Kansas City 9), Feb. 7, 2021 CBS/ESPN Deportes
19. Super Bowl XXX (Dallas 27, Pittsburgh 17), Jan. 28, 1996 NBC
20. Super Bowl XLI (Indianapolis 29, Chicago 17), Feb. 4, 2007 CBS
When you think of music from the Rolling Stones, maybe you think of “Satisfaction”, “Gimme Shelter”, “You Can’t Always Get What You Want”, “Paint It, Black” or maybe “Start Me Up.”
Chances are you are not aware that in 1964, the group recorded a television commercial jingle for Rice Krispies:
The ad only aired in the UK. It was written by early Stones member Brian Jones, who passed away in 1969.
That was the end of their exploration into writing jingles, but several of their songs wound up being used for commercials. Among them were “Satisfaction” for Snickers and “You Can’t Always Get What You Want” for Levi’s in Canada.