Every core element in entrepreneurship is about making the best use of all factors available. In a fast-paced world populated with technology, that is the reason why companies strive to be effective. Today, for a company like Meta the challenge is to utilize infrastructure properly while avoiding exceeding capacity limits. Entering this challenge was Siddhant Benadikar, who worked in distributed systems with Meta during a time when the company was acquiring new capacity and traffic demands were mounting but no new capacity was allocated for the year. It was in such an environment where transformation of the existing strategies became a necessity owing to Siddhant’s concern for the operational targets of the Meta Company. Transforming Platform Productivity: Optimisation Dynamics Siddhant impressively showcased his leadership when he took the lead in a very strategic project intended to re-engineer the performance of Meta’s platforms and at the same time reduce utilization. The problem solution was that Meta had to cope with the same performance of workloads under similar conditions of infrastructure availability, which allowed for the growing trends of system usage, efficiently serving its purpose. This was not an easy task when considering the size of Meta and the overwhelming amount of traffic that its infrastructure supports every day. One of the most impactful aspects in this case was the improvement of the K-nearest neighbor (KNN) search algorithm and its application to Meta’s FAISS library. This algorithm is part of several systems for data retrieval and recommendation employed within the wide ecosystem of Meta. The team of Siddhant made substantial upgrades in memory optimizing techniques and FASS integration and as a result, they managed to increase the KNN searches runtime efficiency by 15 times over its previous performance. This waste amount was not only a fast and efficient way of accessing data but also cut resource use by 40%. Such an accomplishment however meant that the same amount of data processing by meta’s platforms took place with over 60% less computational resources, which meant more capacity available to repurpose for other important system-enhancing programs. Beyond the optimization activities of KNN and FAISS, Siddhant also took active responsibility for the political aspect and integrated the platform into Meta’s quota management system. Such integration was necessary for curtailing resource allocation abuse, ensuring that every user of the system got their due portion of it according to the quota they had purchased. Focusing on efficiency and rational distribution of resources turned out relevant also for the optimization of particular user pipelines, in the processes of which Siddhant was able to implement some changes that made the data processing cycles more effective by eliminating unnecessary steps. The $20 Million Impact: Efficiency and Cost Savings All these development efforts had a compounding effect. In these facts, under Siddhant, the Meta company had approximately $20 million in savings added to the capital expenditure (CapEx). Reducing the required resource footprint to accommodate increasing traffic demands is where Siddhant’s project empowered Meta to stay within its capacity limits, even where the user traffic continued to increase. This project didn’t just solve immediate capacity issues – it laid the foundation for future improvements in efficiency as well as controllable growth in capacity. However, the full integration with the quota management system, specifically, was important in making sure that the system does not cause an overload and that Meta is always able to honor the service level agreements (SLA) with its internal business units. Thanks to introducing such capabilities as automated supervision and rational resource allocation within a specified time, the team led by Siddhant managed to avoid congestion and guaranteed that critical applications were always provided with sufficient computing resources. This project, probably, highlights strong technical knowledge and the out-of-the-box thinking from Siddhant. His capacity to spearhead efficiency strategies in a high-performance distributed system was not only a quick fix to the pressing issues that had been experienced at Meta but was also a step toward the enhancement of resource management concepts at Meta. Siddhant showed that optimization in terms of meeting commercial objectives is possible without delay in performance through the use of a blend of algorithms, memory management skills, and integration styles. Beyond Optimization: Establishing the Cornerstones for Future Runway Expansion As successful as the resource optimization project turned out to be, its effects were not only limited to the quick wins in terms of efficiency and cost reduction. Siddhant’s efforts succeeded in raising the bar of how such projects were undertaken at Meta within resource constraints. By decreasing reliance on additional infrastructure, the project also allowed Meta to reallocate resources towards other most critical projects within the company and hence advance its overall strategic goals. Enhancing the Technology Results: Scalable Integration of a Compute TPL with Heterogeneous Accelerator Clients. Lending entity computing industries recently supported this initiative granting the company’s growth inconsistency within a critical market image. Certainly, incarceration or In such prospect, we prognosticate augmentations of scale currently delineated in the data and to similar bifurcated systems. The optimizations that Sith carried out have been adopted in the other architectures of META enabling different teams to achieve the KNN and FAISS progress in other data-heavy devices at the same time. This interchange of ideas between different units and the application of the best concepts regarding the technology layers has enhanced the connectivity and the effectiveness of the technology stack allowing META to grow in the future. From Aspirations to Achievements: siddhant's Journey in Distributed Systems Siddhant’s rise to assuming the position of a resource optimization expert at Meta shows his furrow of innovation and problem-solving capability. At first, he wanted to join a medical course, but since he loved how technology works and how complex problems are solved, he decided to change to computer science. He obtained several degrees in computer science, emphasizing the areas of distributed systems, machine learning, and large data architecture. His combination of machine learning, graph algorithms, and system optimization gave him an upper hand in solving some of the toughest challenges at Meta. Siddhant has recruited and retained talent while executing complex, high-impact projects perfectly blending deep technical skills alongside high-level strategic thinking. The resource optimization work was not relayed to merely addressing current issues but rather transformed the norm in which Meta views a potentiality in greater efficiency and scalability. The Human Side of Technology: Leadership and Mentorship In addition to contributing research ideas, Siddhant has always spearheaded mentoring and team-building activities. The management of such an intricate project takes more than technical expertise; it consists of motivating and leading a group through complicated and frequently unclear situations. Leading him, as a leader towards a target is collaborative, explicit, and through unceasing advancement. Siddhant created a culture of innovation and resilience by nurturing an atmosphere where all the team members are encouraged to submit their ideas and knowledge. He has been a mentor to junior engineers in this area, helping them grow and become proactive so that they may take on greater challenges and responsibilities and add value to Meta. Looking Forward: The Future of Resource Optimization Siddhant has thoughts beyond the immediate present and believes there is still scope for improvement in resource optimization as well as distributed systems. Data-intensive applications; large-scale infrastructure; and economies of scale have always required efficiency in resource allocation and optimization more than any other. He foresees this phase as the afternoon of day_two where optimization will be an inbuilt design philosophy rather than a reactive strategy. He has expressed a great inclination towards the combination of resource optimization and new persuasive technologies such as artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML). Elaborating on this point, Siddhant considers it feasible to design systems of resource management that incorporate the use of AI and ML, making them more efficient yet inherently more flexible and smarter. These subsystems would forecast capacity requirements, reconfigure existing resources on demand and in real-time, and refine operation strategies and policies considering the actual level of workloads and changing business objectives. About Siddhant Benadikar An experienced professional with a particular focus on distributed systems, resource management, and large data architecture design is Siddhant Benadikar. His contributions while working for Meta helped in implementing various efficiency measures that resulted in substantial reductions in capital expenditures for the corporation while improving the performance and scalability of the platform. Over the past few years, there have been numerous achievements and progress in the work coupled with the thirst for tackling new high-level problems, which has propelled Siddhant to explore many new heights in large-scale distributed computing. There are new standards that have been set by his leadership and vision about how resources can be optimized making him a central figure in the tech world that continually yearns for efficiency and optimization.Week 17 Wrap: Saquon Barkley surpasses 2,000 rushing yards in the fantasy football championships3 No Brainer Oil Stocks to Buy With $1,000 Right NowPublished 4:25 pm Friday, December 27, 2024 By Staff Reports Here’s a look back at some of the big moment’s from area sports in the last year: Albert Lea dance team qualifies for state. The Albert Lea dance team qualified for state in January after placing third in the high kick category in the section tournament in Kasson. This was the first time for the team to qualify for state in the history of the program. Winning the Class AA tournament in February was Totino-Grace, followed by Austin in second and Benilde-St. Margarets in third. Glenville-Emmons player reaches 1,000 points. Glenville-Emmons basketball player Marshall Baseman reached 1,000 career points in February in a game against Lyle-Pacelli at home. The Wolverines won 96-85 in overtime, and Baseman walked away from the game with 34 points, bringing his total to 1,015 points. He had multiple 30-plus point games during the season and also led the team in rebounds. 4 Lake Mills wrestlers place at state. Six Lake Mills wrestlers earned the right to represent their team at the 2024 Iowa State Wrestling Tournament in Des Moines, and four ended the tournament on the podium. Wyatt Hanna at 215 pounds placed fourth, Lucas Oldenkamp at 106 pounds placed seventh, Steve Brandenburg at 138 pounds placed seventh and Landon Price at 132 pounds placed eighth. It was only the third time in program history (2017 and 2021) Lake Mills has brought home four or more medals. Lake Mills player reaches 1,000 points; team wins conference title and competes at state. Lake Mills basketball player Lance Helming celebrated reaching 1,000 career points in February in the team’s game against Bishop Garrigan. The team won the Top of Iowa Conference West title and went on to compete at the state basketball tournament. Albert Lea Area’s Mike Olson competes in the semifinals before advancing to the championship match at 133 pounds. He ultimately placed second. Photo courtesy Laura Mae Murtaugh Albert Lea wrestling team places 4th in state; Olson siblings each take 2nd, others 3rd, 4th The Albert Lea wrestling team competed at the beginning of March representing Section 1AAA in the state dual tournament at the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul. After winning their quarterfinal dual, the Tigers dropped the semifinal and consolation duals to finish the tournament in fourth place. Maggie and Michael Olson were the top finishers for the Tigers as individuals, both finishing as the runner-up in their respective weight classes. Logan Davis placed third at 127 pounds, and Nick Korman placed fourth at 145 pounds. Qualifying for the state tournament from other area schools were Ryan Schlaak, Annabelle Petsinger and George Roessler of NRHEG and Byron Getchell from USC/Maple River. Northwood-Kensett girls win state shuttle hurdle, set state record. The Northwood-Kensett shuttle hurdle team of Macy Thorson, Morgan Wallin, Emma Hengesteg and Lindsey Moore won the state championship in May at Drake Stadium in Des Moines. They set a state record of 1:04.89. The previous record was 1:05.44. A-C student wins state clay target tournament. Alden-Conger’s Ross Huper won the Minnesota State High School Clay Target League Tournament in June with a perfect score. The top 100 boys participated in the tournament, along with the top 25 girls from the state. Albert Lea’s Tanner Green tied for 37th place, Henry Kuiters tied for 19th place and Anna Laskowske finished in 19th place. The Albert Lea team, made up of Green, Laskowske, Kaylyn Eide, Henry Kuiters and Kate Kuiters, took home 25th place. United South Central’s Braxton O’Rourke tied for 37th place. Albert Lea golfers finish in top 25 at state. Two Albert Lea boys’ golfers competed in the Class AA state golf tournament in June and came out in the top one-third of finishers. Noah Teeter scored a total of 116 to tie for 20th place, while Archie Nelson scored 117 to tie for 24th place. The winner was Jack Justesen of Hawley, who scored 105. Albert Lea football wins big at homecoming. Ends season with two wins. The Albert Lea football team won 27-19 against Tri-City United in their homecoming game in September and was met with much excitement by fans in the crowd. The team went on to finish the season with an overall record of 2-7, its best finish in recent years. Albert Lea swimmer qualifies for state. Albert Lea senior Hailey Deming punched her ticket to the Class A state swimming and diving meet in November in the 50-yard freestyle. Lake Mills boys cross country team wins back-to-back state championship. Despite the odds, the Bulldogs boys cross country team won its second state championship in a row in November. Hayden Thompson led the team, running a time of 16:12.0 and finishing in fifth place overall. Knute Rogne also finished in the top 10, finishing in exactly 10th place with a time of 16:31.2. Also scoring for Lake Mills were Kade Van Roekel, Stephen Brandenburg and Lane Rygh. Coach Beth Van Roekel said this was only the fourth state title in school history, with one being won previously each in wrestling and golf and now two in cross country. This is also the first time they have had three individuals medal at state with Thompson, Rogne and Kade Van Roekel. Beth Van Roekel in October was named the Top of Iowa Conference West Boys Cross Country Coach of the Year. In 2023, Van Roekel was named the Class 1A Boys State Coach of the Year by the Iowa Association of Track Coaches. Albert Lea athlete reaches milestones in volleyball and wrestling. Albert Lea’s Nevaeh Wacholz recorded her 1,000th set assist in October in the Tigers 3-0 loss to Northfield at the high school gym. Wacholz went on in November to celebrate her 1,000th career varsity point in the Albert Lea High School girls’ basketball game against Dover-Eyota.
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The popularity of The Finals is on the up, with Season 4 breathing a wave of fresh air over the arena. The community's lukewarm response to the previous season seems to have been taken into account, and many of the issues have been rectified . This means that this is the perfect time to jump into The Finals if you haven't already. This will be made all the easier on 12th December, as Embark's online shooter is coming to PS4, opening it up to many additional aspiring finalists. This surprise drop on the PS4 also coincides with the release of Season 5, making for an exciting few weeks ahead for players. You can watch a teaser of Season 5 below: In addition to this good news, we can also confirm that a PS5 Pro update for the game is now available. From its release in December o2023, The Finals has undergone many changes and updates, and over the course of four seasons, has adapted and listened to its community, something which is important in the live-service landscape. Back in May, publisher Nexon admitted that The Finals had "lower than expected" performance. Have you stuck with The Finals? Will you be playing it on PS4? Grab the cash box in the comments below.
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American golfer Brian Harman is opening up about a near-drowning incident that nearly took the life of his six-year-old son and left a family friend in a coma. Harman, 37, revealed that family friend Cathy Dowdy was "injured really badly" after she attempted to rescue his son from "an abnormally bad" riptide as Dowdy and his family vacationed in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida, on Oct. 13. Harman was competing at a golf tournament in China at the time of the incident. “My son was involved, he was out boogie boarding with one of his really good friends, got ripped out to sea by just a rip current,” Harman said Tuesday ahead of The RSM Classic in St. Simons Island, Georgia, where he's currently tied for 80th place after shooting par in the first round on Thursday. He continued: "(Cathy Dowdy) went in the water after my son. He's 6. Couldn't get to him... She's been in a coma for going on six weeks now and so obviously our world down here was kind of turned on its head.” Harman said his son was ultimately rescued by a man named Crane Cantrell, who was walking down to the beach at the time. A lifeguard was able to reach Dowdy, pull her to shore and perform CPR on her until emergency crews rushed her to a hospital, according to St. Johns Citizen . Dowdy remains on a ventilator, as of Monday, according to the latest update shared on a GoFundMe fundraiser set up for Dowdy's medical expenses. The 2023 Open Championship winner applauded the bravery of Dowdy and Cantrell for selflessly jumping in the water to save his son, one of three children he shares with wife Kelly Van Slyke. “I wanted to use whatever platform I have to bring awareness to what Cathy did, what Crane did,” Harman said. “They disregarded their selves, went into the water, saved my son and how do you thank people like that? I don't know other than to just say what you think. I think that bravery and doing something like that for people who aren't your blood is just the most beautiful thing you can do in this life. Harman continued: "We call 'em family friends but they're family... We're with 'em till the end, and I appreciate everybody that's helped us out through all this. You know, prayers for Cathy.” The GoFundMe for Dowdy has raised more than $84K as of Thursday afternoon. The USA TODAY app gets you to the heart of the news — fast . Download for award-winning coverage, crosswords, audio storytelling, the eNewspaper and more .
New Delhi: A young Delhi Police constable was killed by three criminals in south Delhi's Govindpuri early on Saturday. The patrol cop, Kiranpal Singh , 28, spotted the suspects and questioned them. He asked for their identity documents and wanted to check a phone they were trying to hide. The drunk men attacked him and stabbed him twice, once in the lungs and then near the abdomen, before fleeing. The cop bled to death. The Crime Branch and local police arrested two of the accused, Deepak and Krish, on Saturday. The third suspect, Rocky, who first slashed out with the knife, is absconding, and a manhunt has been launched. Deepak sustained a gunshot wound when he resisted arrest. They used to engage in petty thefts and snatchings. Cops are verifying theirpastrecord. Singh is the second on-duty cop to be killed in the last two months. Earlier, a drunk man, alleged to be an illegal liquor supplier, killed a cop in Nangloi. Saturday's incident took place around 4.45am when head constable Singh was on his patrol duty in the Govindpuri area. "He was heading towards the police station when he noticed three men who were intoxicated. When confronted, they started misbehaving with the cop, and a scuffle ensued," an office said on Saturday. The suspects fled the scene after stabbing the cop. Maharashtra Jharkhand Maharashtra Alliance View i Party View Seats: 288 Results Majority: 145 BJP+ 229 MVA 47 OTH 12 Results : 288 / 288 BJP+ WON Jharkhand Alliance View i Party View Seats: 81 Results Majority: 41 INDIA 56 NDA 24 OTH 1 Results : 81 / 81 INDIA WON Source: PValue Ravi Kumar Singh, DCP (Southeast), said that at 5am, when Singh did not return to the police station, another constable, Sunil, tried to contact him on phone two or three times. However, he received no response. Sunil went out to search for him and found Singh lying unconscious on the roadside, near the entrance of Street Number 13 at Sant Ravidas Marg. He was rushed to the hospital, where he was declared dead on arrival. The cops launched a manhunt and analysed the footage in which one of the suspects was seen running. They traced the location of one of the accused, Deepak, 21, to his residence in DDA flats in Govindpuri. A team led by DCP (Crime) Sanjay Sain went to apprehend him. "As soon as they reached the staircase of the building, Deepak, who was hiding in the bathroom, fired at the cops. We retaliated, and he was shot in the leg," an officer claimed. While the district police arrested another accused, identified as Krish, 18, the hunt is on for the third suspect, Raghav alias Rocky. Krish is a Class XII student, and his father is a driver, whereas Deepak has studied up to Class X. "During interrogation, the accused claimed that they went to a friend's birthday party and had an argument with someone there before leaving. They were roaming in the area for two hours and were later heading to a tea stall in Govindpuri when they ran into the cop." The cops are verifying the past record of the men, but said they were petty snatchers and robbers. While scanning the social media profile of one of the accused, the cops also recovered pictures in which he posed with a knife. The area where the murder took place is a busy market area on Street Number 13, with both residential units and commercial shops. Area residents claim that drugs are sold and public drinking is also a menace. At night, drunkards create a nuisance, and if someone objects, brawls break out. The area has multiple encroachments. Residents also claimed that thefts are common in the area, people consume liquor in the park and take drugs because there is no patrolling. They were shocked that the incident happened barely 200 metres from a police booth.WASHINGTON (AP) — President-elect Donald Trump has identified what he sees as an all-purpose fix for what ails America: Slap huge new tariffs on foreign goods entering the United States. On Monday, Trump sent shockwaves across the nation's northern and southern borders, vowing sweeping new tariffs on Mexico, Canada , as well as China, as soon as he takes office as part of his effort to crack down on illegal immigration and drugs. In a pair of posts on his Truth Social site Trump railed against an influx of immigrants lacking permanent legal status, even though southern border apprehensions have been hovering near four-year lows. He said he would impose a 25% tax on all products entering the country from Canada and Mexico, and an additional 10% tariff on goods from China, as one of his first executive orders. He said the new tariffs would remain in place “until such time as Drugs, in particular Fentanyl, and all Illegal Aliens stop this Invasion of our Country!” The president-elect asserts that tariffs — basically import taxes — will create more factory jobs, shrink the federal deficit, lower food prices and allow the government to subsidize childcare. Economists are generally skeptical, considering tariffs to be a mostly inefficient way for governments to raise money. They are especially alarmed by Trump’s latest proposed tariffs. Carl B. Weinberg and Rubeela Farooqi, economists with High Frequency Economics said Tuesday that energy, automobiles and food supplies will be particularly hit hard. “Imposing tariffs on trade flows into the United States without first preparing alternative sources for the goods and services affected will raise the price of imported items at once," Weinberg and Farooqi wrote. "Since many of these goods are consumer goods, households will be made poorer.” High Frequency Economics believes the threats are not meant to support new trade policy and are instead a tool to elicit some changes along the borders and for imports from Canada, Mexico and China. Though Vice President Kamala Harris criticized Trump’s tariff threats as unserious during her failed bid for the presidency, the Biden-Harris administration retained the taxes the Trump administration imposed on $360 billion in Chinese goods. And it imposed a 100% tariff on Chinese electric vehicles. Indeed, the United States in recent years has gradually retreated from its post-World War II role of promoting global free trade and lower tariffs. That shift has been a response to the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs, widely attributed to unfettered trade and an increasingly aggressive China. They are typically charged as a percentage of the price a buyer pays a foreign seller. In the United States, tariffs are collected by Customs and Border Protection agents at 328 ports of entry across the country. The tariff rates range from passenger cars (2.5%) to golf shoes (6%). Tariffs can be lower for countries with which the United States has trade agreements. For example, most goods can move among the United States, Mexico and Canada tariff-free because of Trump’s US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement. Trump insists that tariffs are paid for by foreign countries. In fact, its is importers — American companies — that pay tariffs, and the money goes to U.S. Treasury. Those companies, in turn, typically pass their higher costs on to their customers in the form of higher prices. That's why economists say consumers usually end up footing the bill for tariffs. Still, tariffs can hurt foreign countries by making their products pricier and harder to sell abroad. Yang Zhou, an economist at Shanghai’s Fudan University, concluded in a study that Trump’s tariffs on Chinese goods inflicted more than three times as much damage to the Chinese economy as they did to the U.S. economy By raising the price of imports, tariffs can protect home-grown manufacturers. They may also serve to punish foreign countries for committing unfair trade practices, like subsidizing their exporters or dumping products at unfairly low prices. Before the federal income tax was established in 1913, tariffs were a major revenue driver for the government. From 1790 to 1860, tariffs accounted for 90% of federal revenue, according to Douglas Irwin, a Dartmouth College economist who has studied the history of trade policy. Tariffs fell out of favor as global trade grew after World War II. The government needed vastly bigger revenue streams to finance its operations. In the fiscal year that ended Sept. 30, the government is expected to collect $81.4 billion in tariffs and fees. That's a trifle next to the $2.5 trillion that's expected to come from individual income taxes and the $1.7 trillion from Social Security and Medicare taxes. Still, Trump wants to enact a budget policy that resembles what was in place in the 19th century. He has argued that tariffs on farm imports could lower food prices by aiding America’s farmers. In fact, tariffs on imported food products would almost certainly send grocery prices up by reducing choices for consumers and competition for American producers. Tariffs can also be used to pressure other countries on issues that may or may not be related to trade. In 2019, for example, Trump used the threat of tariffs as leverage to persuade Mexico to crack down on waves of Central American migrants crossing Mexican territory on their way to the United States. Trump even sees tariffs as a way to prevent wars. “I can do it with a phone call,’’ he said at an August rally in North Carolina. If another country tries to start a war, he said he’d issue a threat: “We’re going to charge you 100% tariffs. And all of a sudden, the president or prime minister or dictator or whoever the hell is running the country says to me, ‘Sir, we won’t go to war.’ ” Tariffs raise costs for companies and consumers that rely on imports. They're also likely to provoke retaliation. The European Union, for example, punched back against Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum by taxing U.S. products, from bourbon to Harley-Davidson motorcycles. Likewise, China responded to Trump’s trade war by slapping tariffs on American goods, including soybeans and pork in a calculated drive to hurt his supporters in farm country. A study by economists at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, the University of Zurich, Harvard and the World Bank concluded that Trump’s tariffs failed to restore jobs to the American heartland. The tariffs “neither raised nor lowered U.S. employment’’ where they were supposed to protect jobs, the study found. Despite Trump’s 2018 taxes on imported steel, for example, the number of jobs at U.S. steel plants barely budged: They remained right around 140,000. By comparison, Walmart alone employs 1.6 million people in the United States. Worse, the retaliatory taxes imposed by China and other nations on U.S. goods had “negative employment impacts,’’ especially for farmers, the study found. These retaliatory tariffs were only partly offset by billions in government aid that Trump doled out to farmers. The Trump tariffs also damaged companies that relied on targeted imports. If Trump’s trade war fizzled as policy, though, it succeeded as politics. The study found that support for Trump and Republican congressional candidates rose in areas most exposed to the import tariffs — the industrial Midwest and manufacturing-heavy Southern states like North Carolina and Tennessee.
A 9th telecoms firm has been hit by a massive Chinese espionage campaign, the White House saysVALLEY CITY, N.D. — With a late burst of offense, Dakota Wesleyan University men’s basketball came out on top in a bounceback game against a familiar foe. The Tigers pulled away late in the second half to beat Valley City State 72-56 in non-conference action on the road at Osmon Fieldhouse, avenging a 78-76 loss to the Vikings two weeks ago on Nov. 9. It also improves DWU’s mark away from the Corn Palace to 4-0 in early season action. ADVERTISEMENT Similar to the earlier contest, the Tigers and Vikings kept pace with one another throughout the first half of play. An early basket from Sam Aslesen put DWU ahead by three points in the opening stages before a quick 7-2 scoring run from Valley City made it a 12-10 game. In total, the first half featured eight lead changes, with neither team’s lead greater than three throughout. Genesis Kemp put the Vikings up by two with 28 seconds remaining, but Randy Rosenquist Jr. drained a three-pointer as time expired to send the Tigers into the locker room up 30-29. Following the lead swapping six times in the first four minutes of the second half, Ethan Determan keyed an 8-2 run as DWU opened up a seven-point lead. The Tigers’ efforts on the other end helped close out the game on a 21-6 run, holding Valley City to just nine shot attempts and forcing five turnovers. Aslesen led the Tigers in the scoring column with 17 points, collecting six rebounds and a pair of steals. Tampa Scott IV was 6-of-11 from the field en route to 15 points and three assists. Blaze Lubbers added 12 points and nine rebounds, and Jakob Dobney finished with 11 points, three steals and a block off the bench. For Valley City State (6-2), Tyrel Creger and Odier Olange led the Vikings with 11 points, with the Vikings running into foul trouble late, finishing with 21 fouls as a team. Jayden Patcha netted eight points off the bench on 4-of-8 shooting, while also picking up seven rebounds. Shaheed Muhammad had seven points, an assist and a steal. DWU (5-2) returns to the Corn Palace for the traditional pre-Thanksgiving GPAC doubleheader, hosting Briar Cliff at 7:45 p.m. on Nov. 26. Dakota Wesleyan men 72, Valley City State 56 ADVERTISEMENT Dakota Wesleyan (5-2): Tampa Scott IV 6-11 1-2 15 Randy Rosenquist Jr. 2-5 0-0 6 Sam Aslesen 7-12 2-3 17 Blaze Lubbers 3-7 6-6 12 Tyson Stevenson 2-4 0-0 5 Anthony Riggans 0-0 0-0 0 Ethan Determan 1-3 2-2 4 Jakob Dobney 3-8 4-8 11 Steele Morgan 1-3 0-1 2. Totals: 25-53 15-22 72. Valley City State (6-2): Tyrel Creger 4-5 2-2 11 Lamar Grayson 2-5 0-0 4 Odier Olange 5-10 0-0 11 Agwa Nywesh 2-7 1-2 6 Caden Grinde 2-4 0-0 4 Shaheed Muhammad 2-8 1-2 7 LaDarious Stanfield 1-2 0-0 3 Genesis Kemp 1-3 0-0 2 Jayden Patcha 4-8 0-0 8. Totals: 23-52 4-6 56. Halftime: DWU 30-29. 3-point field goals: DWU 7-16 (Scott 2-4, Rosenquist 2-3, Aslesen 1-1, Lubbers 0-2, Stevenson 1-2, Determan 0-1, Dobney 1-2, Morgan 0-1), VCSU 6-19 (Creger 1-2, Olange 1-1, Nywesh 1-5, Grinde 0-1, Muhammad 2-6, Stanfield 1-1, Kemp 0-2, Patcha 0-1). Rebounds-offensive: DWU 35-10 (Lubbers 9), VCSU 28-5 (Patcha 7). Total fouls: DWU 9, VCSU 21. Fouled out: Olange, Grinde. Assists: DWU 11 (Rosenquist 4), VCSU 10 (Grinde 3). Turnovers: DWU 14, VCSU 16. Blocks: DWU 2 (Aslesen, Dobney), VCSU 3 (Olange, Stanfield, Patcha). Steals: DWU 7 (Dobney 3), VCSU 10 (Grinde 3).