INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL TOURNAMENT

SECTIONAL SCHEDULE

CLASS 4A 

1. MUNSTER (8) | BRACKET
EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, HOBART, LAKE CENTRAL, MERRILLVILLE, MUNSTER

2. CROWN POINT (6) | BRACKET 
CHESTERTON, CROWN POINT, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO

3. PLYMOUTH (5) | BRACKET 
LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, MISHAWAKA, PLYMOUTH, SOUTH BEND ADAMS

4. PENN (6) | BRACKET 
CONCORD, ELKHART, GOSHEN, NORTHRIDGE, PENN, WARSAW COMMUNITY

5. DEKALB (5) | BRACKET 
CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), DEKALB, FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER

6. COLUMBIA CITY (6) | BRACKET 
COLUMBIA CITY, FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH, NEW HAVEN

7. LAFAYETTE JEFF (6) | BRACKET 
HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), KOKOMO, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, LOGANSPORT, MARION, MCCUTCHEON

8. NOBLESVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
CARMEL, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE

9. NEW PALESTINE (7) | BRACKET 
ANDERSON, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), MUNCIE CENTRAL, NEW PALESTINE, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, RICHMOND

10. LAWRENCE NORTH (7) | BRACKET 
BEN DAVIS,  INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), PIKE

11. RONCALLI (6) | BRACKET 
FRANKLIN CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, PERRY MERIDIAN, RONCALLI, SOUTHPORT, WARREN CENTRAL

12. DECATUR CENTRAL (6) | BRACKET 
AVON, BROWNSBURG, DECATUR CENTRAL, PLAINFIELD, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO

13. BLOOMINGTON NORTH (6) | BRACKET 
BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, CENTER GROVE, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, MARTINSVILLE, MOORESVILLE,

14. SHELBYVILLE (6) | BRACKET  
COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, SHELBYVILLE, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

15. SEYMOUR (6) | BRACKET 
BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, JENNINGS COUNTY, NEW ALBANY, SEYMOUR

16. EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ (5) | BRACKET
CASTLE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE NORTH

CLASS 3A

17. HIGHLAND (8) | BRACKET 
ANDREAN, BOONE GROVE, CALUMET, GRIFFITH, HANOVER CENTRAL, HIGHLAND, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, RIVER FOREST

18. GLENN @ NEWTON PARK (5) | BRACKET
CULVER ACADEMIES, GLENN, KNOX, NEW PRAIRIE, TIPPECANOE VALLEY

19. MISHAWAKA MARIAN (6) | BRACKET
JIMTOWN, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, SOUTH BEND CLAY, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON

20. NORTHWESTERN (6) | BRACKET  
FRANKFORT, NORTH MONTGOMERY, NORTHWESTERN, TWIN LAKES, WEST LAFAYETTE, WESTERN

21. ANGOLA (7) | BRACKET 
ANGOLA, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, GARRETT, HERITAGE, LEO, WOODLAN

22. FAIRFIELD (6) | BRACKET 
EAST NOBLE, FAIRFIELD, LAKELAND, NORTHWOOD, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE

23. NORWELL (6) | BRACKET  
BELLMONT, MACONAQUAH, MISSISSINEWA, NORWELL, OAK HILL, PERU

24. YORKTOWN (5) | BRACKET 
CENTERVILLE, DELTA, JAY COUNTY, NEW CASTLE, YORKTOWN

25. DANVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
CRAWFORDSVILLE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, LEBANON, MONROVIA, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS, WESTERN BOONE

26. EDGEWOOD (6) | BRACKET 
EDGEWOOD, INDIAN CREEK, NORTHVIEW, OWEN VALLEY, SOUTH VERMILLION, WEST VIGO

27. BREBEUF JESUIT (5) | BRACKET
BREBEUF JESUIT PREPARATORY, GUERIN CATHOLIC, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE

28. BEECH GROVE (6) | BRACKET 
BEECH GROVE, CHRISTEL HOUSE, HERRON, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – DOWNTOWN, SPEEDWAY

29. LAWRENCEBURG (7) | BRACKET 
BATESVILLE, CONNERSVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, LAWRENCEBURG, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SOUTH DEARBORN

30. NORTH HARRISON (7) | BRACKET 
CHARLESTOWN, CORYDON CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NORTH HARRISON, SALEM, SCOTTSBURG, SILVER CREEK

31. JASPER (6) | BRACKET 
HERITAGE HILLS, JASPER, PIKE CENTRAL, SOUTHRIDGE, VINCENNES LINCOLN, WASHINGTON

32. PRINCETON COMMUNITY (6) | BRACKET 
BOONVILLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, GIBSON SOUTHERN, MT. VERNON, PRINCETON COMMUNITY,

CLASS 2A

33. WHITING (6) | BRACKET 
21ST CENTURY CHARTER-GARY, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LAKE STATION EDISON, NORTH NEWTON, WHITING

34. NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE (6) | BRACKET 
HEBRON, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), SOUTH BEND CAREER ACADEMY, WHEELER, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

35. DELPHI (6) | BRACKET 
BENTON CENTRAL, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON PRAIRIE, DELPHI COMMUNITY, LEWIS CASS, SEEGER

36. WABASH (6) | BRACKET 
BREMEN, LAVILLE, MANCHESTER, PIONEER, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, WABASH

37. SOUTH ADAMS (6) | BRACKET  
ADAMS CENTRAL, BLACKFORD, BLUFFTON, EASTBROOK, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, SOUTH ADAMS

38. EASTSIDE (6) | BRACKET 
CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, EASTSIDE, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW, WHITKO,

39. EASTERN (GREENTOWN) (6) | BRACKET 
ALEXANDRIA MONROE, EASTERN (GREENTOWN), ELWOOD COMMUNITY, MADISON-GRANT, TAYLOR, TIPTON

40. FRANKTON (6) | BRACKET  
FRANKTON, LAPEL, MONROE CENTRAL, MUNCIE BURRIS, WAPAHANI, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY

41. SHENANDOAH (6) | BRACKET 
EASTERN HANCOCK, HAGERSTOWN, KNIGHTSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY

42. PARK TUDOR (5) | BRACKET 
HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, IRVINGTON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, PARK TUDOR, TRITON CENTRAL

43. SHERIDAN (6) | BRACKET 
CASCADE, COVENANT CHRISTIAN (INDPLS), INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, RIVERSIDE, SHERIDAN, UNIVERSITY

44. GREENCASTLE (6) | BRACKET 
CLOVERDALE, GREENCASTLE, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTHMONT

45. SOUTH RIPLEY (8) | BRACKET 
AUSTIN, BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, HAUSER, MILAN, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY

46. CLARKSVILLE (5) | BRACKET 
CLARKSVILLE, CRAWFORD COUNTY, EASTERN (PEKIN), PAOLI, PROVIDENCE

47. SULLIVAN (6) | BRACKET
EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, MITCHELL, NORTH KNOX, SOUTH KNOX, SULLIVAN

48. SOUTH SPENCER (6) | BRACKET 
EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, FOREST PARK, NORTH POSEY, PERRY CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, TELL CITY

CLASS 1A

49. MORGAN TOWNSHIP (6) | BRACKET  
BOWMAN LEADERSHIP ACADEMY, DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN, HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, KOUTS, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP

50. TRI-TOWNSHIP (7) | BRACKET  
ARGOS, CULVER COMMUNITY, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, OREGON-DAVIS, TRITON, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE

51. FREMONT (7) | BRACKET 
BETHANY CHRISTIAN, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FREMONT, HAMILTON, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN

52. NORTH WHITE (6) | BRACKET  
CASTON, NORTH MIAMI, NORTH WHITE, NORTHFIELD, SOUTHWOOD, WEST CENTRAL

53. FRONTIER (6) | BRACKET 
CLINTON CENTRAL, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FRONTIER, ROSSVILLE, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY

54. LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC (6) | BRACKET  
ATTICA, COVINGTON, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, NORTH VERMILLION, RIVERTON PARKE

55. WES-DEL (7) | BRACKET 
ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, COWAN, DALEVILLE, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, SOUTHERN WELLS, TRI-CENTRAL, WES-DEL

56. SETON CATHOLIC (6) | BRACKET 
BLUE RIVER VALLEY, CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, SETON CATHOLIC, TRI, UNION CITY

57. SHAKAMAK (6) | BRACKET 
BLOOMFIELD, CLAY CITY, DUGGER UNION, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

58. BETHESDA CHRISTIAN (5) | BRACKET 
BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – BROAD RIPPLE, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY, TINDLEY

59. MORRISTOWN (5) | BRACKET 
EDINBURGH, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, INDIANAPOLIS METROPOLITAN, MORRISTOWN

60. JAC-CEN-DEL (6) | BRACKET 
JAC-CEN-DEL, NORTH DECATUR, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, SOUTH DECATUR, SOUTHWESTERN (SHELBYVILLE), WALDRON

61. SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH) (6) | BRACKET  
BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, LANESVILLE, ROCK CREEK ACADEMY, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), WEST WASHINGTON

62. SHAWE MEMORIAL (6) | BRACKET 
CROTHERSVILLE, HENRYVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, RISING SUN, SHAWE MEMORIAL, TRINITY LUTHERAN

63. LOOGOOTEE (6) | BRACKET 
BARR-REEVE, LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS, VINCENNES RIVET

64. NORTHEAST DUBOIS (6) | BRACKET 
CANNELTON, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SPRINGS VALLEY, TECUMSEH, WOOD MEMORIAL

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BASEBALL RANKINGS

4A

1 CENTER GROVE

2 NOBLESVILLE

3 MOORESVILLE

4 FLOYD CENTRAL

5 MCCUTCHEON

6 VALPARAISO

7 FISHERS

8 EVANSVILLE NORTH

9 COLUMBUS NORTH

10 LAWRENCE NORTH

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: ZIONSVILLE, PENN, NEW PALESTINE, WARSAW

3A

1 ANDREAN

2 HANOVER CENTRAL

3 GUERIN CATHOLIC

4 JASPER

5 NEW PRAIRIE

6 SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH

7 WESTERN

8 INDIAN CREEK

8 PRINCETON

10 TWIN LAKES

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, BISHOP CHATARD, BREBEUF, HERITAGE, PERU, VINCENNES LINCOLN, EDGEWOOD, SILVER CREEK

2A

1 NORTH POSEY

2 HAGERSTOWN

3 FOREST PARK

4 TRITON CENTRAL

5 PARK TUDOR

6 SEEGER

7 CASCADE

8 MANCHESTER

9 EVANSVILLE MATER DEI

10 PROVIDENCE

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: MITCHELL, EASTERN GREENTOWN, LAPEL, IRVINGTON PREP, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, WINCHESTER, ILLIANA CHRSITIAN, NORTH NEWTON

1A

1 LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC

2 BARR REEVE

3 KOUTS

4 SHAKAMAK

5 UNION CITY

6 NORTHEAST DUBOIS

7 ROSSVILLE

8 SOUTH DECATUR

9 BLOOMFIELD

10 TRI-COUNTY

OTHERS RECEIVING VOTES: WEST WASHINGTON, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, FRONTIER, NORTH DAVIESS, WES DEL, NORTHFIELD, BORDEN, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN, WALDRON, TECUMSEH

CENTRAL INDIANA BASEBALL SCORES

ALEXANDRIA MONROE 9 SHENANDOAH 7

HAUSER 14 MORRISTOWN 4

DELTA 8 JAY COUNTY 4

PARK TUDOR 9 BISHOP CHATARD 7

TRI-CENTRAL 11 TAYLOR 4

CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN 11 RANDOLPH SOUTHERN 6

SOUTH DECATUR 10 N. DECATUR 1

BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 11 EVANSVILLE NORTH 3

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN 25 PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY 4

EASTERN HANCOCK 8 NORTHEASTERN 6

BATESVILLE 8 S. DEARBORN 5

WESTERN BOONE 8 SOUTHMONT 1

GREENWOOD 8 FRANKLIN CENTRAL 1

TRINITY LUTHERAN 6 SOUTHWESTERN 3

CENTRAL NOBLE 12 LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN 8

BREBEUF 9 HERITAGE CHRISTIAN 2

UNION CITY 11 SETON CATHOLIC 0

FRANKLIN COUNTY 3 RUSHVILLE 0

INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE 15 RIVERSIDE 5

LAWRENCE NORTH 10 PIKE 0

WINCHESTER 17 TRI 2

BETHESDA CHRISTIAN 10 FOUNTAIN CENTRAL 4

SOUTH ADAMS 8 MONROE CENTRAL 6

MONROVIA 5 MARTINSVILLE 3

PLAINFIELD 10 INDIAN CREEK 0

ANDERSON PREP 17 INDIANA DEAF 7

INDY GENESIS 16 PURDUE BROAD RIPPLE 4

LAPEL 12 MUNCIE CENTRAL 0

KNIGHTSTOWN 13 IRVINGTON PREP 3

SHELBYVILLE 8 WARREN CENTRAL 7

INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN 13 COVENANT CHRISTIAN 4

GREENSBURG 13 CONNERSVILLE 3

SOUTHPORT 5 BLOOMINGTON NORTH 1

WESTFIELD 17 KOKOMO 1

NEW ALBANY 14 COLUMBUS EAST 2

TERRE HAUTE SOUTH 13 S. VERMILLION 2

NORTH MONTGOMERY 7 TRI-WEST 5

HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN 7 YORKTOWN 3

ZIONSVILLE 8 CENTER GROVE 6

NEW PALESTINE 8 SCECINA 6

LEBANON 5 DANVILLE 2

RICHMOND 5 PENDLETON HEIGHTS 2

CARMEL 5 NOBLESVILLE 3

COLUMBUS NORTH 2 FISHERS 1

STATE SCOREBOARD: HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/IN/BASEBALL/SCORES/?DATE=5/13/2024

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL TOURNAMENT

SECTIONAL SCHEDULE

CLASS 4A

1. LAKE CENTRAL (7) | BRACKET 
EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, LAKE CENTRAL, MERRILLVILLE, MUNSTER.

2. CHESTERSON (6) | BRACKET 
CHESTERTON, CROWN POINT, HOBART, LOWELL, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO.

3. SOUTH BEND ADAMS (6) | BRACKET
LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, MISHAWAKA, PLYMOUTH, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH.

4. NORTHRIDGE (6) | BRACKET 
CONCORD, ELKHART, GOSHEN, NORTHRIDGE, PENN, WARSAW COMMUNITY.

5. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (5) | BRACKET 
CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), DEKALB, FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER.

6. COLUMBIA CITY (6) | BRACKET 
COLUMBIA CITY, FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH, NEW HAVEN.

7. KOKOMO (5) | BRACKET 
HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), KOKOMO, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, LOGANSPORT, MCCUTCHEON.

8. CARMEL (6) | BRACKET 
CARMEL, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD, ZIONSVILLE.

9. PENDLETON HEIGHTS (7) | BRACKET 
ANDERSON, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), MUNCIE CENTRAL, NEW PALESTINE, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, RICHMOND.

10. LAWRENCE CENTRAL (7) | BRACKET 
BEN DAVIS, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), PIKE.

11. FRANKLIN CENTRAL (6) | BRACKET 
FRANKLIN CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, PERRY MERIDIAN, RONCALLI, SOUTHPORT, WARREN CENTRAL.

12. TERRE HAUTE NORTH (6) | BRACKET 
AVON, BROWNSBURG, DECATUR CENTRAL, PLAINFIELD, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO.

13. CENTER GROVE (6) | BRACKET 
BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, CENTER GROVE, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, MARTINSVILLE, MOORESVILLE.

14. COLUMBUS EAST (6) | BRACKET 
COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, SHELBYVILLE, WHITELAND COMMUNITY.

15. NEW ALBANY (6) | BRACKET 
BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, FLOYD CENTRAL, JEFFERSONVILLE, JENNINGS COUNTY, NEW ALBANY, SEYMOUR.

16. EVANSVILLE NORTH (5) | BRACKET 
CASTLE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE NORTH.

CLASS 3A

17. GRIFFITH (6) | BRACKET 
BOONE GROVE, CALUMET, GRIFFITH, HANOVER CENTRAL, HIGHLAND, RIVER FOREST.

18. TWIN LAKES (6) | BRACKET 
FRANKFORT, NORTH MONTGOMERY, NORTHWESTERN, TWIN LAKES, WEST LAFAYETTE, WESTERN.

19. MISHAWAKA MARIAN (6) | BRACKET 
JIMTOWN, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, NEW PRAIRIE, SOUTH BEND CLAY, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON.

20. KANKAKEE VALLEY (6) | BRACKET 
CULVER ACADEMIES, GLENN, KANKAKEE VALLEY, KNOX, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, TIPPECANOE VALLEY.

21. FAIRFIELD (6) | BRACKET 
EAST NOBLE, FAIRFIELD, LAKELAND, NORTHWOOD, WAWASEE, WEST NOBLE.

22. LEO (7) | BRACKET 
ANGOLA, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, GARRETT, HERITAGE, LEO, WOODLAN.

23. OAK HILL (6) | BRACKET 
BELLMONT, MACONAQUAH, MARION, NORWELL, OAK HILL, PERU.

24. DELTA (6) | BRACKET 
CENTERVILLE, DELTA, JAY COUNTY, MISSISSINEWA, NEW CASTLE, YORKTOWN.

25. LEBANON (6) | BRACKET 
CRAWFORDSVILLE, DANVILLE, LEBANON, MONROVIA, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS, WESTERN BOONE.

26. OWEN VALLEY (5) | BRACKET 
EDGEWOOD, INDIAN CREEK, NORTHVIEW, OWEN VALLEY, WEST VIGO.

27. INDPLS. BISHOP CHATARD (5) | BRACKET 
BREBEUF JESUIT, GUERIN CATHOLIC, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE.

28. BEECH GROVE (5) | BRACKET 
BEECH GROVE, HERRON, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC, SPEEDWAY.

29. RUSHVILLE (7) | BRACKET 
BATESVILLE, CONNERSVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, LAWRENCEBURG, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SOUTH DEARBORN.

30. SILVER CREEK (7) | BRACKET 
CHARLESTOWN, CORYDON CENTRAL, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NORTH HARRISON, SALEM, SCOTTSBURG, SILVER CREEK.

31. SOUTHRIDGE (6) | BRACKET 
HERITAGE HILLS, JASPER, PIKE CENTRAL, SOUTHRIDGE, VINCENNES LINCOLN, WASHINGTON.

32. BOONVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
BOONVILLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, GIBSON SOUTHERN, MT. VERNON, PRINCETON.

CLASS 2A

33. ANDREAN (6) | BRACKET 
ANDREAN, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LAKE STATION EDISON, NORTH NEWTON, WHITING.

34. SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS) (5) | BRACKET 
BREMEN, HEBRON, LAVILLE, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), WHEELER.

35. CENTRAL NOBLE (5) | BRACKET 
CENTRAL NOBLE, CHURUBUSCO, EASTSIDE, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW.

36. SOUTH ADAMS (6) | BRACKET 
ADAMS CENTRAL, BLUFFTON, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, MANCHESTER, SOUTH ADAMS, WHITKO.

37. ROCHESTER (6) | BRACKET 
LEWIS CASS, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, PIONEER, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, WABASH, WINAMAC COMMUNITY.

38. DELPHI (6) | BRACKET 
BENTON CENTRAL, CARROLL (FLORA), CLINTON PRAIRIE, DELPHI COMMUNITY, SEEGER, TIPTON.

39. MADISON-GRANT (6) | BRACKET 
BLACKFORD, EASTBROOK, EASTERN (GREENTOWN), ELWOOD COMMUNITY, MADISON-GRANT, TAYLOR.

40. LAPEL (6) | BRACKET 
ALEXANDRIA MONROE, FRANKTON, LAPEL, MONROE CENTRAL, WAPAHANI, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY.

41. KNIGHTSTOWN (6) | BRACKET 
EASTERN HANCOCK, HAGERSTOWN, KNIGHTSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, SHENANDOAH, UNION COUNTY.

42. HERITAGE CHRISTIAN (6) | BRACKET 
CHRISTEL HOUSE, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA, IRVINGTON PREPARATORY, PARK TUDOR, TRITON CENTRAL.

43. CASCADE (5) | BRACKET 
CASCADE, COVENANT CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, RIVERSIDE, SHERIDAN.

44. SOUTHMONT (6) | BRACKET 
GREENCASTLE, NORTH PUTNAM, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SOUTHMONT.

45. MILAN (7) | BRACKET 
BROWN COUNTY, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, HAUSER, MILAN, SOUTH RIPLEY, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY.

46. PROVIDENCE (6) | BRACKET 
AUSTIN, CLARKSVILLE, CRAWFORD COUNTY, EASTERN (PEKIN), PAOLI, PROVIDENCE.

47. SOUTH KNOX (6) | BRACKET 
EASTERN GREENE, LINTON-STOCKTON, MITCHELL, NORTH KNOX, SOUTH KNOX, SULLIVAN.

48. FOREST PARK (6) | BRACKET 
EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, FOREST PARK, NORTH POSEY, PERRY CENTRAL, SOUTH SPENCER, TELL CITY.

CLASS 1A

49. TRI-TOWNSHIP (6) | BRACKET 
DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN, HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, KOUTS, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP.

50. WESTVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
ARGOS, CULVER COMMUNITY, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, OREGON-DAVIS, TRITON, WESTVILLE.

51. FREMONT (4) | BRACKET 
ELKHART CHRISTIAN, FREMONT, HAMILTON, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN.

52. NORTH MIAMI (6) | BRACKET 
CASTON, NORTH MIAMI, NORTH WHITE, NORTHFIELD, SOUTHWOOD, WEST CENTRAL.

53. ROSSVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
CLINTON CENTRAL, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FRONTIER, ROSSVILLE, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-COUNTY.

54. RIVERTON PARKE (6) | BRACKET 
ATTICA, COVINGTON, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, NORTH VERMILLION, RIVERTON PARKE.

55. SOUTHERN WELLS (6) | BRACKET 
ANDERSON PREPARATORY, COWAN, DALEVILLE, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, SOUTHERN WELLS, TRI-CENTRAL, WES-DEL.

56. TRI (4) | BRACKET 
CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, TRI, UNION CITY.

57. WHITE RIVER VALLEY (7) | BRACKET 
BLOOMFIELD, CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, DUGGER UNION, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY.

58. INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF (4) | BRACKET 
BETHESDA CHRISTIAN, EMINENCE, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY.

59. INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN (4) | BRACKET 
EDINBURGH, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, MORRISTOWN.

60. NORTH DECATUR (5) | BRACKET 
JAC-CEN-DEL, NORTH DECATUR, OLDENBURG, SOUTH DECATUR, WALDRON.

61. LANESVILLE (6) | BRACKET 
BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, LANESVILLE, ROCK CREEK, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH), WEST WASHINGTON.

62. NEW WASHINGTON (5) | BRACKET 
CROTHERSVILLE, HENRYVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, RISING SUN, TRINITY LUTHERAN.

63. NORTH DAVIESS (5) | BRACKET 
BARR-REEVE, LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, ORLEANS, SHOALS.

64. NORTHEAST DUBOIS (5) | BRACKET 
CANNELTON, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SPRINGS VALLEY, TECUMSEH, WOOD MEMORIAL.

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL SOFTBALL RANKINGS

4A

1 LAKE CENTRAL

2 CASTLE

3 NEW PALESTINE

4 CATHEDRAL

5 HARRISON

6 FLOYD CENTRAL

6 MOORESVILLE

8 PENN

9 RONCALLI

10 CROWN POINT

ALSO RECEIVING VOTES:  CROWN POINT, CENTER GROVE, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH’S, BROWNSBURG, PENDLETON HEIGHTS

3A

1 GIBSON SOUTHERN

2 WESTERN

3 SILVER CREEK

4 TRI-WEST

4 LEO

6 NEW PRAIRIE

7 YORKTOWN

8 BOONE GROVE

9 CHARLESTOWN

10 HERITAGE HILLS

ALSO RECEIVING VOTES: HANOVER CENTRAL, BEECH GROVE, SOUTH BEND RILEY, FAIRFIELD, BOONVILLE

2A

1 CASCADE

2 ANDREAN

3 EASTERN HANCOCK

4 SOUTH ADAMS

5 SULLIVAN

6 LAPEL

7 ILLIANA CHRISTIAN

8 SOUTH-CENTRAL, UNION MILLS

9 EASTSIDE

10 FRANKTON

ALSO RECEIVING VOTES: NORTH POSEY, PIONEER, BREMEN, NORTH NEWTON, ALEXANDRIA MONROE

1A

1 TECUMSEH

2 CLAY CITY

3 ROSSVILLE

4 WEST WASHINGTON

5 CASTON

6 TRI-COUNTY

7 RISING SUN

8 RIVERTON PARKE

9 SOUTHWOOD

10 BARR REEVE

ALSO RECEIVING VOTES: INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, WEST CENTRAL, LANESVILLE, DALEVILLE, WES DEL

CENTRAL INDIANA SOFTBALL SCORES

HERRON 17 INDIANAPOLIS TECH 5

TRI 11 KNIGHTSTOWN 9

WAPAHANI 25 RANDOLPH SOUTHERN 1

COLUMBUS EAST 14 JEFFERSONVILLE 1

HAUSER 8 MORRISTOWN 0

LAWRENCEBURG 7 CONNERSVILLE 6

CENTERVILLE 11 UNION COUNTY 8

ALEXANDRIA MONROE 14 MONROE CENTRAL 4

NORTH CENTRAL 13 GUERIN CATHOLIC 12

BEECH GROVE 14 BEN DAVIS 0

LAWRENCE NORTH 3 INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN 2

MARION 13 MUNCIE CENTRAL 2

BETHESDA CHRISTIAN 19 WARREN CENTRAL 9

PARK TUDOR 15 LIBERTY CHRISTIAN 7

NORTH DECATUR 20 S. DECATUR 2

SHENANDOAH 8 RUSHVILLE 5

MOUNT VERNON 20 ANDERSON 0

HAGERSTOWN 11 COWAN 7

EAST CENTRAL 1 GREENSBURG 0

CLINTON PRAIRIE 12 EASTERN 11

MONROVIA 6 COVENANT CHRISTIAN 4

LAPEL 16 ELWOOD 5

EASTERN HANCOCK 4 PENDLETON HEIGHTS 3

PROVIDENCE 13 SOUTHWESTERN 3

TRITON CENTRAL 10 BATESVILLE 6

BLUFFTON 13 WES DEL 2

CENTER GROVE 13 MARTINSVILLE 2

BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE 15 LOOGOOTEE 4

TRI-WEST 10 N. MONTGOMERY 0

WESTFIELD 5 WESTERN 4

GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN 19 IRVINGTON PREP 14

PLAINFIELD 4 PALESTINE 0

SHELBYVILLE 4 GREENFIELD CENTRAL 0

YORKTOWN 6 NORTHEASTERN 4

LIVING WATER HOMESCHOOL 17 LAWRENCE CENTRAL 3

TRI-WEST 18 N. MONTGOMERY 1

CASCADE 9 MOORESVILLE 1

NOBLESVILLE 13 MCCUTCHEON 7

HARRISON 13 CARMEL 3

WAPAHANI 13 DELTA 4

DANVILLE 8 LEBANON 6

STATE SCOREBOARD: HTTPS://WWW.MAXPREPS.COM/IN/SOFTBALL/SCORES/?DATE=5/13/2024

INDIANA BOYS TRACK SECTIONALS-MAY 16

1. HIGHLAND (13) | 5 PM CT | RESULTS 
21ST CENTURY – GARY, BOWMAN LEADERSHIP ACADEMY, CALUMET, EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, GRIFFITH, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, HIGHLAND, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LIGHTHOUSE CPC, MUNSTER

2. CROWN POINT (9) | 4:30 PM CT | RESULTS 
ANDREAN, CROWN POINT, HANOVER CENTRAL, HOBART, LAKE CENTRAL, LAKE STATION EDISON, LOWELL, MERRILLVILLE, RIVER FOREST

3. PORTAGE (10) | 5 PM CT | RESULTS 
CHESTERTON, LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, NEW PRAIRIE, PORTAGE, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), VALPARAISO, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE, WHEELER

4. RENSSELAER CENTRAL (15) | 4:45 PM CT | RESULTS 
BOONE GROVE, DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN, HEBRON, KANKAKEE VALLEY, KNOX, KOUTS, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, NORTH NEWTON, OREGON-DAVIS, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WEST CENTRAL, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

5. PENN (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
GLENN, LAVILLE, MISHAWAKA, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND CAREER ACADEMY, SOUTH BEND CLAY, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON, TRINITY SCHOOL AT GREENLAWN

6. PLYMOUTH (11) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
BREMEN, CASTON, CULVER ACADEMIES, CULVER COMMUNITY, MANCHESTER, NORTH MIAMI, PLYMOUTH, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, TRITON, WHITKO

7. GOSHEN (13) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
BETHANY CHRISTIAN, COLUMBIA CITY, CONCORD, ELKHART, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, FAIRFIELD, GOSHEN, JIMTOWN, LAKELAND CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, NORTHRIDGE, NORTHWOOD, WARSAW COMMUNITY, WAWASEE

8. KOKOMO (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
EASTERN (GREENTOWN), KOKOMO, LEWIS CASS, LOGANSPORT, MACONAQUAH, MADISON-GRANT, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, PIONEER, TAYLOR, TIPTON, TRI-CENTRAL, WESTERN

9. BENTON CENTRAL (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
ATTICA, BENTON CENTRAL, CARROLL (FLORA), COVINGTON, DELPHI COMMUNITY, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, FRONTIER, NORTH VERMILLION, NORTH WHITE, SEEGER, TRI-COUNTY, TWIN LAKES

10. WEST LAFAYETTE (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS  
CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, CRAWFORDSVILLE, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FRANKFORT, HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON, NORTH MONTGOMERY, ROSSVILLE, WEST LAFAYETTE

11. WESTFIELD (11) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
CARMEL, FISHERS, GUERIN CATHOLIC, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, LEBANON, NOBLESVILLE, SHERIDAN, UNIVERSITY, WESTERN BOONE, WESTFIELD

12. PLAINFIELD (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
AVON, BROWNSBURG, CASCADE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, EMINENCE, MONROVIA, MOORESVILLE, PLAINFIELD, SOUTHMONT, TRADERS POINT CHRISTIAN, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS, ZIONSVILLE

13. EAST NOBLE (12) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
ANGOLA, CENTRAL NOBLE, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, EASTSIDE, FREMONT, GARRETT, HAMILTON, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WEST NOBLE, WESTVIEW

14. FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE (@ NORTHROP) (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), CHURUBUSCO, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE SNIDER, FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN, LEO, WOODLAN

15. NEW HAVEN (10) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS  
ADAMS CENTRAL, BELLMONT, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HERITAGE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH, NEW HAVEN, SOUTH ADAMS

16. MARION (14) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, BLUFFTON, EASTBROOK, ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FRANKTON, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NORTHFIELD, NORWELL, OAK HILL, SOUTHERN WELLS, SOUTHWOOD, WABASH

17. DELTA (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
COWAN, DELTA, JAY COUNTY, MONROE CENTRAL, MUNCIE BURRIS, MUNCIE CENTRAL, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, UNION (MODOC), UNION CITY, WAPAHANI, WES-DEL, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY, YORKTOWN

18. MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) (13) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
ANDERSON, ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, BLUE RIVER VALLEY, DALEVILLE, EASTERN HANCOCK, KNIGHTSTOWN, LAPEL, LAWRENCE NORTH, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), NEW CASTLE, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, SHENANDOAH

19. LAWRENCE CENTRAL (14) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
BREBEUF JESUIT, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, HERRON, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), PARK TUDOR, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – BROAD RIPPLE, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – DOWNTOWN, RIVERSIDE, TINDLEY

20. PIKE (14) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
BEN DAVIS, COVENANT CHRISTIAN (INDIANAPOLIS), DECATUR CENTRAL, INDIANA MATH & SCIENCE, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE, INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL, PERRY MERIDIAN, PIKE, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY, SOUTHPORT, SPEEDWAY

21. GREENFIELD-CENTRAL (14) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
BEECH GROVE, CENTRAL CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, CHRISTEL HOUSE, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, MORRISTOWN, NEW PALESTINE, RONCALLI, SHELBYVILLE, TRITON CENTRAL, VICTORY COLLEGE PREP, WARREN CENTRAL.

22. COLUMBUS NORTH (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
CENTER GROVE, COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EDINBURGH, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, HAUSER, INDIAN CREEK, SOUTHWESTERN (SHELBYVILLE), WALDRON, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

23. CONNERSVILLE (10) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, CENTERVILLE, CONNERSVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, RICHMOND, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SETON CATHOLIC, TRI, UNION COUNTY

24. EAST CENTRAL (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
BATESVILLE, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JAC-CEN-DEL, LAWRENCEBURG, MILAN, NORTH DECATUR, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, RISING SUN, SOUTH DEARBORN, SOUTH DECATUR, SOUTH RIPLEY

25. TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO (14) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, GREENCASTLE, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), NORTH PUTNAM, NORTHVIEW, PARKE HERITAGE, RIVERTON PARKE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SULLIVAN, TERRE HAUTE NORTH, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH, WEST VIGO

26. BLOOMINGTON NORTH (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
BLOOMFIELD, BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, BROWN COUNTY, EASTERN GREENE, EDGEWOOD, LIGHTHOUSE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, LINTON-STOCKTON, MARTINSVILLE, OWEN VALLEY, SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

27. BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL (13) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, CROTHERSVILLE, EASTERN (PEKIN), JENNINGS COUNTY, MEDORA, MITCHELL, ORLEANS, PAOLI, SALEM, SEYMOUR, SPRINGS VALLEY, TRINITY LUTHERAN, WEST WASHINGTON

28. MADISON CONSOLIDATED (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
AUSTIN, CHARLESTOWN, HENRYVILLE, JEFFERSONVILLE, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NEW WASHINGTON, ROCK CREEK ACADEMY, SCOTTSBURG, SHAWE MEMORIAL, SILVER CREEK, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY

29. FLOYD CENTRAL (11) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS 
BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, CLARKSVILLE, CORYDON CENTRAL, CRAWFORD COUNTY, FLOYD CENTRAL, LANESVILLE, NEW ALBANY, NORTH HARRISON, PROVIDENCE, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH)

30. JASPER (10)  | 6:30 PM ET | RESULTS 
FOREST PARK, HERITAGE HILLS, JASPER, LOOGOOTEE, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, PERRY CENTRAL, SHOALS, SOUTH SPENCER, SOUTHRIDGE, TELL CITY

31. PRINCETON COMMUNITY (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
BARR-REEVE, GIBSON SOUTHERN, NORTH DAVIESS, NORTH KNOX, PIKE CENTRAL, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTH KNOX, TECUMSEH, VINCENNES LINCOLN, VINCENNES RIVET, WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON CATHOLIC, WOOD MEMORIAL

32. EVANSVILLE CENTRAL (14) | 5:30 PM CT | RESULTS 
BOONVILLE, CASTLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, EVANSVILLE DAY, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, EVANSVILLE NORTH, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, MT. VERNON, NORTH POSEY, SIGNATURE

INDIANA GIRLS TRACK AND FIELD SECTIONALS-MAY 14

1. HIGHLAND (13) | 5 PM CT | RESULTS 
21ST CENTURY – GARY, BOWMAN ACADEMY, CALUMET, EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, GARY WEST SIDE, GRIFFITH, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, HIGHLAND, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LIGHTHOUSE CPC, MUNSTER

2. HOBART (9) | 5 PM CT | RESULTS 
ANDREAN, CROWN POINT, HANOVER CENTRAL, HOBART, LAKE CENTRAL, LAKE STATION EDISON, LOWELL, MERRILLVILLE, RIVER FOREST

3. CHESTERTON (10) | 4:45 PM CT | RESULTS 
CHESTERTON, LAPORTE, MICHIGAN CITY, NEW PRAIRIE, PORTAGE, SOUTH CENTRAL (UNION MILLS), VALPARAISO, WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP, WESTVILLE, WHEELER

4. KANKAKEE VALLEY (15) | 4:45 PM CT | RESULTS 
BOONE GROVE, DEMOTTE CHRISTIAN, HEBRON, KANKAKEE VALLEY, KNOX, KOUTS, MORGAN TOWNSHIP, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERRE, NORTH NEWTON, OREGON-DAVIS, RENSSELAER CENTRAL, SOUTH NEWTON, TRI-TOWNSHIP, WEST CENTRAL, WINAMAC COMMUNITY

5. SOUTH BEND SAINT JOSEPH (12) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS 
GLENN, LAVILLE, MISHAWAKA, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND CAREER ACADEMY, SOUTH BEND CLAY, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON, TRINITY SCHOOL AT GREENLAWN

6. BREMEN (11) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
BREMEN, CASTON, CULVER ACADEMIES, CULVER COMMUNITY, MANCHESTER, NORTH MIAMI, PLYMOUTH, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, TRITON, WHITKO

7. WARSAW COMMUNITY (13) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
BETHANY CHRISTIAN, COLUMBIA CITY, CONCORD, ELKHART, ELKHART CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, FAIRFIELD, GOSHEN, JIMTOWN, LAKELAND CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, NORTHRIDGE, NORTHWOOD, WARSAW COMMUNITY, WAWASEE

8. KOKOMO (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
EASTERN (GREENTOWN), KOKOMO, LEWIS CASS, LOGANSPORT, MACONAQUAH, MADISON-GRANT, NORTHWESTERN, PERU, PIONEER, TAYLOR, TIPTON, TRI-CENTRAL, WESTERN

9. BENTON CENTRAL (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
ATTICA, BENTON CENTRAL, CARROLL (FLORA), COVINGTON, DELPHI COMMUNITY, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, FRONTIER, NORTH VERMILLION, NORTH WHITE, SEEGER, TRI-COUNTY, TWIN LAKES

10. HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
CLINTON CENTRAL, CLINTON PRAIRIE, CRAWFORDSVILLE, FAITH CHRISTIAN, FRANKFORT, HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, MCCUTCHEON, NORTH MONTGOMERY, ROSSVILLE, WEST LAFAYETTE

11. HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN (HOSTING @ FISHERS HS) (11) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
CARMEL, FISHERS, GUERIN CATHOLIC, HAMILTON HEIGHTS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, LEBANON, NOBLESVILLE, SHERIDAN, UNIVERSITY, WESTERN BOONE, WESTFIELD

12. ZIONSVILLE (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
AVON, BROWNSBURG, CASCADE, DANVILLE COMMUNITY, EMINENCE, MONROVIA, MOORESVILLE, PLAINFIELD, SOUTHMONT, TRADERS POINT CHRISTIAN, TRI-WEST HENDRICKS, ZIONSVILLE

13. EAST NOBLE (12) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
ANGOLA, CENTRAL NOBLE, DEKALB, EAST NOBLE, EASTSIDE, FREMONT, GARRETT, HAMILTON, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WEST NOBLE, WESTVIEW

14. FORT WAYNE NORTHROP (12) | 5:45 PM ET | RESULTS
CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), CHURUBUSCO, FORT WAYNE BISHOP DWENGER, FORT WAYNE BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, FORT WAYNE NORTHROP, FORT WAYNE NORTH SIDE, FORT WAYNE SNIDER, FORT WAYNE SOUTH SIDE, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN, LEO, WOODLAN

15. NEW HAVEN (10) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
ADAMS CENTRAL, BELLMONT, FORT WAYNE BISHOP LUERS, FORT WAYNE CANTERBURY, FORT WAYNE WAYNE, HERITAGE, HOMESTEAD, HUNTINGTON NORTH, NEW HAVEN, SOUTH ADAMS

16. MARION (14) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
ALEXANDRIA MONROE, BLACKFORD, BLUFFTON, EASTBROOK, ELWOOD COMMUNITY, FRANKTON, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, NORTHFIELD, NORWELL, OAK HILL, SOUTHERN WELLS, SOUTHWOOD, WABASH

17. DELTA (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
COWAN, DELTA, JAY COUNTY, MONROE CENTRAL, MUNCIE BURRIS, MUNCIE CENTRAL, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, UNION (MODOC), UNION CITY, WAPAHANI, WES-DEL, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY, YORKTOWN

18. PENDLETON HEIGHTS (13) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
ANDERSON, ANDERSON PREPARATORY ACADEMY, BLUE RIVER VALLEY, DALEVILLE, EASTERN HANCOCK, KNIGHTSTOWN, LAPEL, LAWRENCE NORTH, LIBERTY CHRISTIAN, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), NEW CASTLE, PENDLETON HEIGHTS, SHENANDOAH

19. LAWRENCE CENTRAL (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
BREBEUF JESUIT, HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, HERRON, INDIANA SCHOOL FOR THE DEAF, INDIANAPOLIS ARSENAL TECHNICAL, INDIANAPOLIS BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CATHEDRAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, NORTH CENTRAL (INDIANAPOLIS), PARK TUDOR, PURDUE POLYTECHNIC – BROAD RIPPLE, RIVERSIDE, TINDLEY

20. DECATUR CENTRAL (13) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
BEN DAVIS, COVENANT CHRISTIAN (INDIANAPOLIS), DECATUR CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDIANAPOLIS GEORGE WASHINGTON, INDIANAPOLIS SHORTRIDGE, INDIANA MATH & SCIENCE, PERRY MERIDIAN, PIKE, PROVIDENCE CRISTO REY, SPEEDWAY, SOUTHPORT

21. WARREN CENTRAL (14) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
BEECH GROVE, CENTRAL CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, CHRISTEL HOUSE, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, INDIANAPOLIS LUTHERAN, INDIANAPOLIS SCECINA MEMORIAL, MORRISTOWN, NEW PALESTINE, RONCALLI, SHELBYVILLE, TRITON CENTRAL, VICTORY COLLEGE PREP, WARREN CENTRAL

22. FRANKLIN COMMUNITY (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
CENTER GROVE, COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EDINBURGH, FRANKLIN COMMUNITY, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, HAUSER, INDIAN CREEK, SOUTHWESTERN (SHELBYVILLE), WALDRON, WHITELAND COMMUNITY

23. CONNERSVILLE (10) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, CENTERVILLE, CONNERSVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, RICHMOND, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, SETON CATHOLIC, TRI, UNION COUNTY

24. EAST CENTRAL (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
BATESVILLE, EAST CENTRAL, FRANKLIN COUNTY, GREENSBURG, JAC-CEN-DEL, LAWRENCEBURG, MILAN, NORTH DECATUR, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, RISING SUN, SOUTH DEARBORN, SOUTH DECATUR, SOUTH RIPLEY

25. TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO (14) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
CLAY CITY, CLOVERDALE, GREENCASTLE, NORTH CENTRAL (FARMERSBURG), NORTH PUTNAM, NORTHVIEW, PARKE HERITAGE, RIVERTON PARKE, SOUTH PUTNAM, SOUTH VERMILLION, SULLIVAN, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO, WEST VIGO

26. BLOOMINGTON NORTH (12) | 5:30 PM ET | RESULTS
BLOOMFIELD, BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, BROWN COUNTY, EASTERN GREENE, EDGEWOOD, LIGHTHOUSE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, LINTON-STOCKTON, MARTINSVILLE, OWEN VALLEY, SHAKAMAK, WHITE RIVER VALLEY

27. SEYMOUR (13) | 5:45 PM ET | RESULTS
BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, CROTHERSVILLE, EASTERN (PEKIN), JENNINGS COUNTY, MEDORA, MITCHELL, ORLEANS, PAOLI, SALEM, SEYMOUR, SPRINGS VALLEY, TRINITY LUTHERAN, WEST WASHINGTON

28. JEFFERSONVILLE (12) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
AUSTIN, CHARLESTOWN, HENRYVILLE, JEFFERSONVILLE, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, NEW WASHINGTON, ROCK CREEK ACADEMY, SCOTTSBURG, SHAWE MEMORIAL, SILVER CREEK, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER), SWITZERLAND COUNTY

29. FLOYD CENTRAL (11) | 6 PM ET | RESULTS
BORDEN, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, CLARKSVILLE, CORYDON CENTRAL, CRAWFORD COUNTY, FLOYD CENTRAL, LANESVILLE, NEW ALBANY, NORTH HARRISON, PROVIDENCE, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH)

30. PERRY CENTRAL (11) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
CANNELTON, FOREST PARK, HERITAGE HILLS, JASPER, LOOGOOTEE, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, PERRY CENTRAL, SHOALS, SOUTH SPENCER, SOUTHRIDGE, TELL CITY

31. PRINCETON COMMUNITY (13) | 5 PM ET | RESULTS
BARR-REEVE, GIBSON SOUTHERN, NORTH DAVIESS, NORTH KNOX, PIKE CENTRAL, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, SOUTH KNOX, TECUMSEH, VINCENNES LINCOLN, VINCENNES RIVET, WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON CATHOLIC, WOOD MEMORIAL

32. MT. VERNON (14) | 5:30 PM CT | RESULTS
BOONVILLE, CASTLE, EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, EVANSVILLE DAY, EVANSVILLE F.J. REITZ, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, EVANSVILLE NORTH, EVANSVILLE REITZ MEMORIAL, MT. VERNON, NORTH POSEY, SIGNATURE

INDIANA GIRLS TENNIS POLL

1.SB ST. JOSEPH

2.FISHERS

3.BREBEUF

4.JASPER

5.PARK TUDOR

6.FRANKLIN COMMUNITY

7.CARMEL

8.LAFAYETTE HARRISON

9.NOBLESVILLE

10.LAWRENCE NORTH

11.ZIONSVILLE

12.NORTH CENTRAL

13.CATHEDRAL

14TCOLUMBUS NORTH

14TCATHEDRAL

16.WESTFIELD

17.GUERIN CATHOLIC

18.MOUNT VERNON (FORTVILLE)

19.EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL

20.DELTA

21.CASTLE

22.HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN

23.FW CARROLL

24.PENN

25.CULVER ACADEMY

26.HOMESTEAD

27.TERRE HAUTE SOUTH

28.BISHOP CHATARD

29.SOUTH KNOX

30.PROVIDENCE

INDIANA GIRLS TENNIS SCORES

BREBEUF 3 ZIONSVILLE 2

FISHERS 3 GUERIN CATHOLIC 2

GREENCASTLE 4 INDIAN CREEK 1

INDIANA GIRLS TENNIS SECTIONAL PAIRINGS

BRACKETS 

  1. PLAINFIELD (4): AVON, BROWNSBURG, DANVILLE, PLAINFIELD.
  2. GREENCASTLE (4):  GREENCASTLE, MARTINSVILLE, MOORESVILLE, SOUTH PUTNAM.
  3. TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO (4):  NORTHVIEW, TERRE HAUTE NORTH VIGO, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH VIGO, WEST VIGO.
  4. BLOOMINGTON SOUTH (4):  EDGEWOOD, BLOOMINGTON NORTH, BLOOMINGTON SOUTH, BROWN COUNTY.
  5. JASPER (4):  FOREST PARK, JASPER, NORTHEAST DUBOIS, SOUTHRIDGE.
  6. LINTON-STOCKTON (5):  BLOOMFIELD, LINTON-STOCKTON, OWEN VALLEY, SULLIVAN, WHITE RIVER VALLEY.
  7. VINCENNES LINCOLN (5):  SOUTH KNOX, VINCENNES LINCOLN, VINCENNES RIVET, WASHINGTON, WASHINGTON CATHOLIC.
  8. LOOGOOTEE (4):  BARR-REEVE, LOOGOOTEE, NORTH DAVIESS, PAOLI.
  9. PRINCETON COMMUNITY (5):  GIBSON SOUTHERN, PIKE CENTRAL, PRINCETON COMMUNITY, TECUMSEH, WOOD MEMORIAL.
  10. MT. VERNON (POSEY) (5):  EVANSVILLE CENTRAL, EVANSVILLE MATER DEI, EVANSVILLE REITZ, MT. VERNON (POSEY), NORTH POSEY.
  11. EVANSVILLE BOSSE (HOSTED @ EVANSVILLE NORTH) (6):  EVANSVILLE BOSSE, EVANSVILLE CHRISTIAN, EVANSVILLE DAY, EVANSVILLE HARRISON, EVANSVILLE MEMORIAL, EVANSVILLE NORTH.
  12. HERITAGE HILLS (5):  BOONVILLE, CASTLE, HERITAGE HILLS, SOUTH SPENCER, TELL CITY.
  13. LANESVILLE (5):  CORYDON CENTRAL, CRAWFORD COUNTY, LANESVILLE, NORTH HARRISON, SOUTH CENTRAL (ELIZABETH).
  14. NEW ALBANY (5):  CLARKSVILLE, CHRISTIAN ACADEMY OF INDIANA, JEFFERSONVILLE, NEW ALBANY, PROVIDENCE.
  15. FLOYD CENTRAL (4):  BORDEN, EASTERN (PEKIN), FLOYD CENTRAL, SALEM.
  16. SILVER CREEK (4):  CHARLESTOWN, HENRYVILLE, NEW WASHINGTON, SILVER CREEK.
  17. SCOTTSBURG (5):  AUSTIN, MADISON CONSOLIDATED, SCOTTSBURG, SHAWE MEMORIAL, SOUTHWESTERN (HANOVER).
  18. BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE (5):  BEDFORD NORTH LAWRENCE, BROWNSTOWN CENTRAL, JENNINGS COUNTY, SEYMOUR, TRINITY LUTHERAN.
  19. EAST CENTRAL (6):  BATESVILLE, EAST CENTRAL, LAWRENCEBURG, MILAN, OLDENBURG ACADEMY, SOUTH DEARBORN.
  20. COLUMBUS NORTH (5):  COLUMBUS EAST, COLUMBUS NORTH, EDINBURGH, GREENSBURG, HAUSER.
  21. PERRY MERIDIAN (4):  DECATUR CENTRAL, PERRY MERIDIAN, RONCALLI, SOUTHPORT.
  22. CONNERSVILLE (4):  CONNERSVILLE, FRANKLIN COUNTY, RUSHVILLE CONSOLIDATED, UNION COUNTY.
  23. CENTER GROVE (6):  CENTER GROVE, FRANKIN COMMUNITY, GREENWOOD CHRISTIAN ACADEMY, GREENWOOD COMMUNITY, INDIAN CREEK, WHITELAND COMMUNITY.
  24. SHELBYVILLE (5):  MORRISTOWN, SHELBYVILLE, SOUTHWESTERN (SHELBY), TRITON CENTRAL, WALDRON.
  25. BEN DAVIS (5):  BEN DAVIS, COVENANT CHRISTIAN (INDIANAPOLIS), INDIANAPOLIS CARDINAL RITTER, SPEEDWAY, TR-WEST HENDRICKS
  26. NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.) (5):  HERRON, INDPLS. BISHOP CHATARD, INDIANAPOLIS CRISPUS ATTUCKS, INDPLS. SHORTRIDGE, NORTH CENTRAL (INDPLS.).
  27. LAWRENCE NORTH (5):  HERITAGE CHRISTIAN, INDPLS. ARSENAL TECH, INDPLS. CATHEDRAL, LAWRENCE CENTRAL, LAWRENCE NORTH
  28. FRANKLIN CENTRAL (5):  BEECH GROVE, FRANKLIN CENTRAL, INDPLS. LUTHERAN, INDPLS. SCECINA MEMORIAL, WARRREN CENTRAL.
  29. NEW CASTLE (5):  BLUE RIVER VALLEY, KNIGHTSTOWN, NEW CASTLE, SHENANDOAH, TRI.
  30. MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE) (4):  EASTERN HANCOCK, GREENFIELD-CENTRAL, MT. VERNON (FORTVILLE), NEW PALESTINE.
  31. ANDERSON (4):  ANDERSON, FISHERS, HAMILTON SOUTHEASTERN, PENDLETON HEIGHTS.
  32. RICHMOND (6):  CAMBRIDGE CITY LINCOLN, CENTERVILLE, HAGERSTOWN, NORTHEASTERN, RICHMOND, SETON CATHOLIC.
  33. FOUNTAIN CENTRAL (4):  COVINGTON, FOUNTAIN CENTRAL, PARKE HERITAGE, SOUTH VERMILLION.
  34. CRAWFORDSVILLE (5):  CRAWFORDSVILLE, LEBANON, NORTH MONTGOMERY, SOUTHMONT, WESTERN BOONE.
  35. CARMEL (4):  CARMEL, GUERIN CATHOLIC, UNIVERSITY, ZIONSVILLE.
  36. PARK TUDOR (4):  BREBEUF JESUIT, INTERNATIONAL SCHOOL OF INDIANA, PARK TUDOR, PIKE.
  37. SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH (5):  GLENN, LAVILLE, SOUTH BEND RILEY, SOUTH BEND ST. JOSEPH, SOUTH BEND WASHINGTON.
  38. LAPORTE (4):  LAPORTE, MARQUETTE CATHOLIC, MICHIGAN CITY, NEW PRAIRIE.
  39. VALPARAISO (6):  BOONE GROVE, CHESTERTON, KOUTS, PORTAGE, VALPARAISO, WHEELER.
  40. HOBART (6):  ANDREAN, GARY WEST SIDE, HOBART, LAKE STATION EDISON, MERRILLVILLE, RIVER FOREST.
  41. HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE) (5):  BENTON CENTRAL, HARRISON (WEST LAFAYETTE), LAFAYETTE JEFFERSON, ROSSVILLE, WEST LAFAYETTE.
  42. FRANKFORT (6):  ATTICA, CLINTON PRAIRIE, FRANKFORT, LAFAYETTE CENTRAL CATHOLIC, MCCUTCHEON, SEEGER.
  43. LOGANSPORT (5):  CARROLL (FLORA), DELPHI COMMUNITY, LEWIS CASS, LOGANSPORT, TWIN LAKES.
  44. KOKOMO (5):  EASTERN (GREENTOWN), KOKOMO, NORTHWESTERN, TAYLOR, WESTERN.
  45. CROWN POINT (6):  CROWN POINT, HANOVER CENTRAL, KANKAKEE VALLEY, LOWELL, NORTH NEWTON, RENSSELAER CENTRAL.
  46. MUNSTER (6): CALUMET, GRIFFITH, HIGHLAND, ILLIANA CHRISTIAN, LAKE CENTRAL, MUNSTER.
  47. EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL (6):  EAST CHICAGO CENTRAL, HAMMOND ACADEMY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, HAMMOND BISHOP NOLL, HAMMOND CENTRAL, HAMMOND MORTON, WHITING.
  48. CULVER ACADEMIES (6):  CULVER ACADEMIES, KNOX, NORTH JUDSON-SAN PIERE, PLYMOUTH, ROCHESTER COMMUNITY, TRITON.
  49. MARION (5):  BLACKFORD, MADISON-GRANT, MARION, MISSISSINEWA, HUNTINGTON NORTH.
  50. BLUFFTON (5):  ADAMS CENTRAL, BELLMONT, BLUFFTON, NORWELL, SOUTH ADAMS.
  51. HOMESTEAD (5):  FW BISHOP LUERS, FW CANTERBURY, FW SOUTH SIDE, FW WAYNE, HOMESTEAD.
  52. PERU (6):  MACONAQUAH, MANCHESTER, NORTHFIELD, PERU, SOUTHWOOD, WABASH.
  53. JAY COUNTY (4):  JAY COUNTY, RANDOLPH SOUTHERN, UNION CITY, WINCHESTER COMMUNITY.
  54. DELTA (4):  DELTA, MUNCIE BURRIS, MUNCIE CENTRAL, YORKTOWN.
  55. ELWOOD (4):  ALEXANDRIA MONROE, ELWOOD, FRANKTON, TIPTON.
  56. NOBLESVILLE (4):  HAMILTON HEIGHTS, LAPEL, NOBLESVILLE, WESTFIELD.
  57. FORT WAYNE CONCORDIA LUTHERAN (5):  FW BISHOP DWENGER, FW BLACKHAWK CHRISTIAN, FW CONCORDIA LUTHERAN, FW NORTH SIDE, NEW HAVEN.
  58. CARROLL (FORT WAYNE) (5):  CARROLL (FORT WAYNE), CHURUBUSCO, FW NORTHROP, FW SNIDER, LEO.
  59. EAST NOBLE (5):  CENTRAL NOBLE, EAST NOBLE, DEKALB, LAKEWOOD PARK CHRISTIAN, WEST NOBLE.
  60. ANGOLA (5):  ANGOLA, FREMONT, LAKELAND, PRAIRIE HEIGHTS, WESTVIEW.
  61. WARSAW COMMUNITY (5):  COLUMBIA CITY, TIPPECANOE VALLEY, WHITKO, WARSAW COMMUNITY, WAWASEE.
  62. CONCORD (4):  CONCORD, ELKHART, JIMTOWN, NORTHRIDGE.
  63. NORTHWOOD (5):  BETHANY CHRISTIAN, BREMEN, FAIRFIELD, GOSHEN, NORTHWOOD
  64. PENN (5):  MISHAWAKA, MISHAWAKA MARIAN, PENN, SOUTH BEND ADAMS, SOUTH BEND CLAY.

INDIANA BOYS GOLF SCORES

TRI-WEST 163, DANVILLE 188, NORTH MONTGOMERY 189

BLOOMINGTON SOUTH 294, COLUMBUS NORTH 322, TERRE HAUTE SOUTH 330, TERRE HAUTE NORTH 340, SOUTHPORT 377

TRACK AND FIELD RESULTS: HTTPS://IN.MILESPLIT.COM/RESULTS

COLLEGE BASEBALL SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

COLLEGE BASEBALL TOP 25

  1. TENNESSEE
  2. KENTUCKY
  3. ARKANSAS
  4. CLEMSON
  5. TEXAS A&M
  6. OREGON STATE
  7. NORTH CAROLINA
  8. WAKE FOREST
  9. GEORGIA
  10. FLORIDA STATE
  11. DUKE
  12. OKLAHOMA
  13. EAST CAROLINA
  14. ARIZONA
  15. UC IRVINE
  16. MISSISSIPPI STATE
  17. NC STATE
  18. VIRGINIA
  19. OKLAHOMA STATE
  20. INDIANA STATE
  21. LOUISIANA
  22. SANTA BARBARA
  23. OREGON
  24. CAROLINA
  25. TEXAS

COLLEGE BASEBALL RANKINGS:

BASEBALL AMERICA: https://www.baseballamerica.com/stories/college-baseball-top-25-rankings/

PERFECT GAME: https://www.perfectgame.org/Articles/View.aspx?article=22895

USA TODAY: https://sportsdata.usatoday.com/baseball/cbb/coaches-poll

NCBWA: https://www.sportswriters.net/ncbwa/news/2024/05/13/tennessee-42-10-tops-ncbwa-division-i-poll

NCAA RPI: https://www.ncaa.com/rankings/baseball/d1/rpi

COLLEGE SOFTBALL SCORES

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

NBA PLAYOFFS

EASTERN CONFERENCE

ALL TIMES EASTERN STANDARD TIME

(1) BOSTON VS. (4) CLEVELAND

• GAME 1: CELTICS 120, CAVALIERS 95
• GAME 2: CAVALIERS 118, CELTICS 94
• GAME 3: CELTICS 106, CAVALIERS 93
• GAME 4: CELTICS 109, CAVALIERS 102
• GAME 5: CAVALIERS VS. CELTICS, WEDNESDAY, MAY 15 (7 ET, TNT)
• GAME 6: CELTICS VS. CAVALIERS, FRIDAY, MAY 17 (8:30 ET, ESPN) *
• GAME 7: CAVALIERS VS. CELTICS, SUNDAY, MAY 19 (TBD, TBD) *
BOSTON LEADS SERIES 3-1

* = IF NECESSARY

(2) NEW YORK VS. (6) INDIANA

• GAME 1: KNICKS 121, PACERS 117
• GAME 2: KNICKS 130, PACERS 121
• GAME 3: PACERS 111, KNICKS 106
• GAME 4: PACERS 121, KNICKS 89
• GAME 5: PACERS VS. KNICKS, TUESDAY, MAY 14 (8 ET, TNT)
• GAME 6: KNICKS VS. PACERS, FRIDAY, MAY 17 (TBD, ESPN)
• GAME 7: PACERS VS. KNICKS, SUNDAY, MAY 19 (3:30 ET, ABC) *
SERIES TIED 2-2

* = IF NECESSARY


WESTERN CONFERENCE

ALL TIMES EASTERN STANDARD TIME

(1) OKLAHOMA CITY VS. (5) DALLAS

• GAME 1: THUNDER 117, MAVERICKS 95
• GAME 2: MAVERICKS 119, THUNDER 110
• GAME 3: MAVERICKS 105, THUNDER 101
• GAME 4: THUNDER 100, MAVERICKS 96
• GAME 5: MAVERICKS VS. THUNDER, WEDNESDAY, MAY 15 (9:30 ET, TNT)
• GAME 6: THUNDER VS. MAVERICKS, SATURDAY, MAY 18 (8:30 ET, ESPN)
• GAME 7: MAVERICKS VS. THUNDER, MONDAY, MAY 20 (8:30 ET, TNT) *
SERIES TIED 2-2

* = IF NECESSARY

(2) DENVER VS. (3) MINNESOTA

• GAME 1: TIMBERWOLVES 106, NUGGETS 99
• GAME 2: TIMBERWOLVES 106, NUGGETS 80
• GAME 3: NUGGETS 117, TIMBERWOLVES 90
• GAME 4: NUGGETS 115, TIMBERWOLVES 107
• GAME 5: TIMBERWOLVES VS. NUGGETS, TUESDAY, MAY 14 (10:30 ET, TNT)
• GAME 6: NUGGETS VS. TIMBERWOLVES, THURSDAY, MAY 16 (8:30 ET, ESPN)
• GAME 7: TIMBERWOLVES VS. NUGGETS, SUNDAY, MAY 19 (TBD, TBD) *
SERIES TIED 2-2

* = IF NECESSARY

NHL PLAYOFFS

EASTERN CONFERENCE

FLORIDA PANTHERS (1A) VS. BOSTON BRUINS (2A)

FLORIDA LEADS SERIES 3-1

GAME 1: BRUINS 5, PANTHERS 1
GAME 2: PANTHERS 6, BRUINS 1
GAME 3: PANTHERS 6, BRUINS 2
GAME 4: PANTHERS 3, BRUINS 2
GAME 5: BRUINS AT PANTHERS — MAY 14, 7 P.M. ET (ESPN, SNE, SNO, CBC, TVAS)
+ GAME 6: PANTHERS AT BRUINS — MAY 17, TBD
+ GAME 7: BRUINS AT PANTHERS — MAY 19, TBD

COMPLETE PANTHERS-BRUINS SERIES COVERAGE

NEW YORK RANGERS (1M) VS. CAROLINA HURRICANES (2M)

NEW YORK LEADS SERIES 3-2

GAME 1: RANGERS 4, HURRICANES 3
GAME 2: RANGERS 4, HURRICANES 3 (2OT)
GAME 3: RANGERS 3, HURRICANES 2 (OT)
GAME 4: HURRICANES 4, RANGERS 3
GAME 5: HURRICANES 4, RANGERS 1
GAME 6: RANGERS AT HURRICANES — MAY 16, 7 P.M. ET (TNT, TRUTV, MAX, SNE, SNO, SN360, CBC, TVAS)
+ GAME 7: HURRICANES AT RANGERS — MAY 18, TBD

COMPLETE RANGERS-HURRICANES SERIES COVERAGE

WESTERN CONFERENCE

DALLAS STARS (1C) VS. COLORADO AVALANCHE (3C)

DALLAS LEADS SERIES 3-1

GAME 1: AVALANCHE 4, STARS 3 (OT)
GAME 2: STARS 5, AVALANCHE 3
GAME 3: STARS 4, AVALANCHE 1
GAME 4: STARS 5, AVALANCHE 1
GAME 5: AVALANCHE AT STARS — MAY 15, 8 P.M. ET (ESPN, SN, TVAS)
+ GAME 6: STARS AT AVALANCHE — MAY 17, TBD (TBD)
+ GAME 7: AVALANCHE AT STARS — MAY 19, TBD (TBD)

COMPLETE STARS-AVALANCHE SERIES COVERAGE

VANCOUVER CANUCKS (1P) VS. EDMONTON OILERS (2P)

VANCOUVER LEADS SERIES 2-1

GAME 1: CANUCKS 5, OILERS 4
GAME 2: OILERS 4, CANUCKS 3 (OT)
GAME 3: CANUCKS 4, OILERS 3
GAME 4: CANUCKS AT OILERS — MAY 14, 9:30 P.M. ET (ESPN, SN, CBC, TVAS)
GAME 5: OILERS AT CANUCKS — MAY 16, 10 P.M. ET (TNT, TRUTV, MAX, SN, CBC, TVAS)
+ GAME 6: CANUCKS AT OILERS — MAY 18, TBD (TBD)
+ GAME 7: OILERS AT CANUCKS — MAY 20, TBD (TBD)

COMPLETE CANUCKS-OILERS SERIES COVERAGE

+ = IF NECESSARY

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

TORONTO 3 BALTIMORE 2 (10)

DETROIT 6 MIAMI 5

TAMPA BAY 5 BOSTON 3

PHILADELPHIA 5 NY METS 4 (10)

ATLANTA 2 CHICAGO CUBS 0

PITTSBURGH 8 MILWAUKEE 6

ATLANTA 2 CHICAGO CUBS 0

HOUSTON 9 OAKLAND 2

ST. LOUIS 10 LA ANGELS 5

CLEVELAND 7 TEXAS 0

ARIZONA 6 CINCINNATI 5

SEATTLE 6 KANSAS CITY 2

COLORADO 5 SAN DIEGO 4

LA DODGERS 6 SAN FRANCISCO 4 (10)

WASHINGTON AT CHICAGO WHITE SOX POSTPONED

STANDINGS: HTTPS://WWW.MLB.COM/STANDINGS/

MINOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

MAJOR LEAGUE SOCCER

NO GAME SCHEDULED

UFL

NO GAMES SCHEDULED

TOP NATIONAL HEADLINES/RELEASES

NBA PLAYOFFS

JAYSON TATUM’S 33 POINTS HELP CELTICS DOWN SHORT-HANDED CAVALIERS 109-102 TO TAKE 3-1 LEAD IN SEMIS

CLEVELAND (AP) — Jayson Tatum scored 33 points with LeBron James watching from a courtside seat and the Boston Celtics beat the severely short-handed Cleveland Cavaliers 109-102 in Game 4 on Monday night to take a commanding 3-1 lead in their East semifinal series.

Jaylen Brown added 27 for the Celtics, who can close out Cleveland with a win in Game 5 on Wednesday night at home.

Game 6, if necessary, would be back at Rocket Mortgage FieldHouse on Friday.

The Cavs got pushed to the brink of elimination with two top players in street clothes on the bench, as Donovan Mitchell (calf) and Jarrett Allen (ribs) sat out with injuries.

It was nothing new for a Cleveland team that dealt with injuries all season, but it was a big ask for the Cavs to try and survive without Mitchell, their All-Star guard who has carried the offensive load throughout the postseason, or Allen, their leading rebounder.

The top-seeded Celtics, who have shown a tendency to relax at the wrong time, didn’t show the Cavs much mercy.

Tatum had his second straight strong performance, adding 11 rebounds and five assists. Jrue Holiday had 16 points for Boston.

Darius Garland scored 30 and Evan Mobley and Caris LeVert 19 apiece for the Cavs, who stayed connected with the Celtics and only trailed by 10 going into the fourth.

Boston went up 15 on a jumper by Brown, but Cleveland responded with a 10-2 run as Garland and Dean Wade made 3-pointers.

The Cavs were still within 102-97 when Brown buried a 3-pointer with 1:08 left and Boston closed it out at the free-throw line.

James, who played 11 seasons in two separate stints for Cleveland, was back in his former home arena — a visit certain to drive speculation about where he might play next.

The NBA’s career scoring leader can opt out of his contract with the Los Angeles Lakers this summer, and James has said he’s not made any firm decisions.

The 39-year-old sat across from Boston’s bench in between his wife, Savannah, and agent Rich Paul. James got a monstrous ovation from Cleveland’s crowd when he was shown on the scoreboard during a timeout in the first quarter.

Despite dealing with a left knee injury for months, Mitchell averaged 29.6 points in the first 10 playoff games — scoring 50 in a Game 6 loss to Orlando.

He injured his calf in the waning moments of Cleveland’s loss in Game 3 on Saturday and was added to the injury report as questionable on Sunday. Mitchell underwent round-the-clock treatment but didn’t have enough time to heal.

Allen sat out the seventh straight game with a painful injury the center sustained in the opening round.

With Holiday scoring seven straight points, the Celtics went ahead by 13 in the second quarter and appeared ready to run away from the Cavs.

But Cleveland stormed back as Max Strus, who has struggled with his outside shot throughout the playoffs, made consecutive 3-pointers in a 13-3 run that helped the Cavs close within 62-57 at halftime.

Boston’s center Kristaps Porzingis missed his fifth straight game, but the Celtics were encouraged he was able to do some on-court work.

SHAI GILGEOUS-ALEXANDER SCORES 34, THUNDER OVERCOME MAVS DEFENSE TO EVEN SERIES 2-2

DALLAS (AP) — Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 34 points and the Oklahoma City Thunder overcame a Dallas franchise playoff-record 13 blocks, rallying for a 100-96 victory Monday night to even their Western Conference semifinal series at 2-2.

Chet Holmgren and Lu Dort hit clutch 3-pointers late, and Jalen Williams drove for a dunk and a 94-91 lead with 1:29 remaining as Dallas players and coaches screamed for a double-dribble call.

The teams split a pair on each other’s home court. Game 5 is Wednesday night in Oklahoma City.

The Mavericks’ last chance to tie came with 10.1 seconds left when trailing by two, Luka Doncic had two free throws. But the Dallas superstar missed the first.

Backed by one of their best defensive efforts of the season, the Mavs led by 14 early in the second half. But their offense disappeared from there, and the Thunder slowly came back.

Oklahoma City went in front for the first time since early in the game — and for good — on Holmgren’s 3 for an 89-86 lead with 3:24 remaining.

P.J. Washington led Dallas in scoring again with 21 points, while Doncic had 18 points, 12 rebounds and 10 assists. Kyrie Irving had his second single-digit scoring game of the series with nine points.

Dort’s clutch 3 came on a 3-of-10 shooting night from deep as he finished with 17 points. Holmgren had 18 points and nine rebounds.

NFL NEWS

SUPER BOWL CHAMPION CHIEFS WILL OPEN REGULAR SEASON AT HOME AGAINST RAVENS IN AFC TITLE GAME REMATCH

NEW YORK (AP) — The Super Bowl champion Kansas City Chiefs will open the regular season at home against the Baltimore Ravens on Sept. 5 in a rematch of the AFC title game, the NFL announced Monday.

The NFL will release the entire 2024 season schedule on Wednesday night on the NFL Network.

The Chiefs beat the Ravens 17-10 in the AFC championship game in January and went on to defeat the San Francisco 49ers 25-22 in overtime in the Super Bowl.

The Chiefs-Ravens opener at Arrowhead Stadium will be a Thursday night game on NBC. The Chiefs are favored by three points, according to BetMGM Sportsbook.

Patrick Mahomes and the Chiefs will be going for an unprecedented third straight Super Bowl title and fourth in six years this season. Mahomes is 4-1 in his career against Lamar Jackson and the Ravens.

Kansas City will begin the season at home for the second straight year and is 9-2 in openers under Andy Reid. The Chiefs lost 21-20 to Detroit in their 2023 opener.

In addition to Mahomes, the Chiefs bring back star tight end Travis Kelce, who agreed to a $34.5 million, two-year contract extension last month, and All-Pro defensive tackle Chris Jones, who signed a five-year, $158.75 million deal in March.

Led by Jackson, the two-time MVP, Baltimore had the best record in the NFL last season and was the top seed for the AFC playoffs. The Ravens beat the Houston Texans 34-10 in the divisional round before undisciplined play and a couple interceptions by Jackson doomed them against the Chiefs.

The Ravens will have a different look when the teams meet in the opener. Derrick Henry, the second-leading rusher in the league for Tennessee last season, signed with the Ravens in March and gives the team a pounding running back to complement the elusive Jackson. Ravens running backs had just six carries in the AFC title game.

The Ravens have won seven of their last eight Week 1 games.

2024 NFL SCHEDULE TO BE RELEASED MAY 15

You can watch the schedule release on NFL Network, NFL.com, the NFL app and NFL+.

The National Football League announced that the 2024 NFL Schedule powered by AWS will be released on NFL Network, NFL.com, the NFL app and NFL+ at 8 p.m. ET on Wednesday, May 15.

NFL Network’s coverage is highlighted by “Schedule Release ’24 Presented by Verizon” at 8 p.m. ET which breaks down the 2024 NFL regular season schedule, division by division, analyzing the top matchups and primetime games. Rich Eisen and Colleen Wolfe host the three-hour show, joined by Maurice Jones-Drew, Michael Robinson and Cynthia Frelund.

Featured guests on “Schedule Release ’24” include:

NBC “Sunday Night Football” play-by-play broadcaster Mike Tirico

CBS play-by-play broadcaster Jim Nantz

ESPN “Monday Night Football” play-by-play broadcaster Joe Buck

Prime Video “Thursday Night Football” play-by-play broadcaster Al Michaels

Minnesota Vikings tight end T.J. Hockenson

NFL vice president of broadcasting Mike North

NFL.com and the NFL app will provide complete team-by-team and weekly schedules of all regular season games, listing opponents, sites and times.

A special two-hour Schedule Release edition of “Good Morning Football” airs on Wednesday beginning at 7 a.m. ET on NFL Network, with hosts Jason McCourty, Peter Schrager, Kyle Brandt and Sherree Burruss. The 2024 International Games will be revealed during the show ahead of the full schedule announcement Wednesday evening. The Emmy Award-winning “Good Morning Football” returns to its weekly Monday-Friday schedule this summer, with further details to follow.

Additional coverage is provided by “NFL GameDay View: Schedule Release” at 10 p.m. ET on the NFL Channel and YouTube, a one-hour show hosted by Patrick Claybon, Cynthia Frelund and Gregg Rosenthal analyzing the 2024 NFL schedule. The NFL Channel is available on the NFL App on Mobile and CTV, FAST streaming platforms such as Peacock, Roku, PlutoTV, Vizio WatchFree, Tubi, LG, Xumo Play, TCL and Plex, and at NFL.com/nflchannel. “NFL GameDay View: Schedule Release” will also air at 11 p.m. ET on NFL Network.

NFL+ will offer fans exclusive content with “Secrets of the Schedule,” which features key decisionmakers from around the league sharing insights into creating this year’s schedule. Fans will also get exclusive insights into their respective teams’ win/loss record with “Projected Team Win Totals presented by Courtyard by Marriott” featuring Cynthia Frelund, who shares her projected win total for each NFL team.

ESPN will also have a two-hour primetime special highlighting the release of the 2024 regular season schedule on Wednesday at 8 p.m. ET on ESPN2 and simulcast on ESPN+. Host Kevin Negandhi along with Dan Orlovsky, Marcus Spears, Mina Kimes and Adam Schefter anchor the coverage, with multiple guests expected.

Individual game tickets will go on sale immediately through Ticketmaster, the Official Ticketing Partner of the NFL, once each game is announced. Tickets will also go on sale through SeatGeek and Sports Illustrated Tickets, members of the NFL Ticket Network. For more information, visit NFL.com/tickets.

The NFL uses the power of Amazon Web Services (AWS) for its schedule-making process. There are approximately a quadrillion possible schedule combinations each NFL season and over 26,000 factors to take into consideration such as stadium availability, travel requirements, primetime games, competitive fairness and division rivalries. The NFL uses AWS to run high performance computing workloads to find the best possible schedule each year. For more information, click here.

Courtyard by Marriott is also helping fans traveling to games find accommodations in close proximity to each respective NFL stadium with a new hotel booking button on the NFL.com schedule page. The button will direct fans to recommendations for nearby Courtyard by Marriott hotels, or other hotels within the Marriott Bonvoy portfolio, during the specific game weekend they are attending.

BUCCANEERS SAFETY ANTOINE WINFIELD JR. AGREES TO FOUR-YEAR, $84.1 MILLION CONTRACT

Antoine Winfield Jr.’s steady rise to stardom with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers has prompted a massive pay day.

The safety agreed to a four-year, $84.1 million deal with the Bucs on Monday, NFL Network Insider Ian Rapoport reported. The deal includes $45 million in guaranteed money and makes him the highest-paid defensive back in the NFL, marking the first time in league history that such a title belongs to a safety.

Winfield certainly deserves the deal. He’s earned one Pro Bowl nod (2021), and after being robbed of All-Pro honors in previous years, he finally secured one in 2023, drawing Defensive Player of the Year votes along the way.

Winfield recorded a career-high six forced fumbles — including two that saved the Bucs from allowing touchdowns — in a 2023 campaign that saw him start in all 17 games, logging 122 tackles, six sacks, three interceptions and 12 passes defensed, all of which also standing as career-best totals.

As faces have changed in Tampa Bay’s secondary, Winfield has remained the constant, delivering consistent production that has often swung games in the Buccaneers’ favor. He received the franchise tag in early March from the Buccaneers, and on Monday he became the latest tagged player to agree to a long-term deal, leaving Cincinnati’s Tee Higgins as the only player tagged in 2024 without a multi-year extension in place.

COLLEGE FOOTBALL

COLLEGE FOOTBALL PORTAL CLASSES: OLE MISS ALL IN, OHIO STATE SHOPS HIGH END. PRIME RESTOCKS AGAIN

With the spring transfer portal window closed, a look at six college football teams that cleaned up in various ways.

Mississippi

In terms of quantity and quality, Ole Miss killed it. In a Nick Saban-less Southeastern Conference, the Rebels might be the best non-Georgia team in 2024.

The Rebels had good returning pieces at quarterback (Jaxson Dart) and receiver, and then Lane Kiffin went all in behind the Grove Collective to build a contender in the first year of the 12-team College Football Playoff.

The jewels of the class are mostly on the defensive side with DT Walter Nolen (Texas A&M), DE Princely Umanmielen (Florida) and LB Chris Paul (Arkansas), plus WR Juice Wells (South Carolina). The Rebels sprinkled in offensive line help via Washington and topped it off with running back (Henry Parrish, Miami) and secondary (Isaiah Hamilton, Houston) depth in the spring.

Oregon

The Ducks replaced the most experienced quarterback college football has ever had (Bo Nix) with another sixth-year player. Dillon Gabriel (UCF, Oklahoma) might not develop into a first-round draft pick, but he is more than capable of being a quality triggerman for a prolific college offense.

WR Evan Stewart (Texas A&M) is very likely to develop into a first-round draft pick. The Ducks added two good cornerbacks (Jabbar Muhammad, Washington; Kam Alexander, UTSA) and bulked up an already promising defensive line (Jamaree Caldwell, Houston; Derrick Harmon, Michigan State).

Beating Southern California for Harmon and grabbing S Peyton Woodyard (Alabama) in the spring punctuated the transfer class and has the Ducks ready roll into the Big Ten.

Miami

In Year 3 under Mario Cristobal, Miami is looking for a breakthrough.

The Hurricanes made a good case as the winners of the spring transfer window by landing all-Pac-12 RB Damien Martinez (Oregon State), WR Sam Brown (Houston), DT Simeon Barrow (Michigan State), LB Jaylin Alderman (Louisville) and CB Dyoni Hill (Marshall).

That came after adding QB Cam Ward (Washington State), who also considered entering the NFL draft, in the winter.

Ohio State

The Buckeyes’ transfer class had just six players, but they shopped at the top of the market.

S Caleb Downs was one of the best defensive players in the country last season as a freshman at Alabama. RB Quinshon Judkins ran for 2,725 yards in two seasons at Mississippi. Will Howard had 48 touchdown passes and 19 TD runs in four seasons at Kansas State. Plus, they added former Alabama starting center Seth McLaughlin and Crimson Tide five-star quarterback signee Julian Sayin.

All that on top of Ohio State’s mountain of returning talent and coach Ryan Day is well positioned to snap a three-game losing streak against Michigan or face the consequences.

Alabama

New coach Kalen DeBoer’s most notable portal acquisition was a bounce-back from Iowa.

Offensive tackle Kadyn Proctor, a freshman starter last year, left in January for his home-state Hawkeyes. He then changed his mind and returned to Alabama in the spring window.

DeBoer lured four of his former Washington players to the SEC, including talented C Parker Brailsford and WR Germie Bernard.

DT LT Overton (Texas A&M), CB Domani Jackson (USC) and S Keon Sabb (Michigan) are high-ceiling additions to the defense. And to replace star K Will Reichard, the Tide signed Groza Award winner Graham Nicholson from Miami, Ohio.

Colorado

Deion Sanders is at it again. After bringing in more than 50 transfers last year, Coach Prime has a transfer class of 39 (and possibly counting).

The Buffaloes badly needed to reinforce their lines after tanking a 3-0 start to Sanders’ tenure in Boulder. With that in mind, CU added nine offensive linemen — including Tyler Johnson from Houston and Payton Kirkland from Texas — and 11 defensive linemen — led by B.J. Green from Arizona State and Dayon Hayes from Pittsburgh.

Colorado notably lost RB Dylan Edwards (Kansas State), but brought in a pair of promising ball carriers in Dallan Hayden (Ohio State) and Rashad Amos (Miami, Ohio).

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

MLB ROUNDUP: GUARDIANS BLANK SLUMPING RANGERS

Jose Ramirez went 2-for-3 with four RBIs and five Cleveland pitchers combined for a four-hitter as the Guardians handed the slumping Texas Rangers a fourth straight loss, prevailing 7-0 on Monday night in Arlington, Texas.

Ramirez had a pair of two-run singles, walked twice and stole two bases, and Andres Gimenez and Brayan Rocchio each had two hits and two runs for Cleveland.

Hunter Gaddis (2-1) picked up the victory with an inning of hitless relief as the Guardians earned their second win in a row.

Jose Leclerc (3-3) took the loss, allowing three runs on two hits and a walk in just one-third of an inning. Texas starter Michael Lorenzen no-hit the Guardians for 5 1/3 innings. He wound up throwing seven shutout innings and yielding just one hit.

Blue Jays 3, Orioles 2 (10 innings)

Daulton Varsho homered to tie the game in the eighth inning and knocked in the go-ahead run with a groundout in the 10th to lift visiting Toronto to a win over Baltimore.

Bo Bichette had three hits for the Blue Jays, who were facing the Orioles for the first time this season. Adley Rutschman homered twice for Baltimore, which mustered just one other hit.

Jordan Romano (1-0) was the winning pitcher with two innings of hitless relief. He struck out Colton Cowser with a runner on third for the second out of the 10th before Jordan Westburg walked. Cedric Mullins then grounded out to end the game.

Braves 2, Cubs 0

Zack Short drove in the go-ahead run in the sixth for his first RBI of the season and four pitchers combined on a shutout as Atlanta beat visiting Chicago.

The Braves scored both of their runs with two outs in the sixth off reliever Hayden Wesneski (2-2). Travis d’Arnaud and Short delivered back-to-back doubles before Ronald Acuna Jr. brought Short home with a single.

The Cubs threatened in the ninth against reliever A.J. Minter. Cody Bellinger singled and advanced to second when Christopher Morel worked a 12-pitch walk. But Ian Happ hit into a double play, and Nico Hoerner flied out to seal Minter’s first save. Ray Kerr (1-0) tossed two scoreless innings for the win.

Rays 5, Red Sox 3

Amed Rosario doubled, tripled and factored into four of Tampa Bay’s runs in a win over host Boston.

Rosario drove in three runs, Yandy Diaz went 3-for-5 and Jose Caballero also had a pair of hits, with each scoring a run for the Rays. Tampa Bay began well against Red Sox starter Kutter Crawford (2-2), scoring three two-out runs on four hits during a 35-pitch first inning. Tampa Bay starter Zach Eflin (3-4) allowed three runs over five innings.

Wilyer Abreu went 2-for-3 while Tyler O’Neill hit a three-run home run for the Red Sox, who had won their previous two games following a three-game skid. Crawford yielded four runs on seven hits.

Tigers 6, Marlins 5

Spencer Torkelson clubbed a go-ahead, two-run homer in the eighth and host Detroit topped Miami.

Torkelson’s long ball, his second of the season, made a winner of Alex Faedo (3-1). Jason Foley recorded his 10th save.

After the Marlins scored two in the top of the eighth to grab a 5-3 lead, the Tigers scored three against Anthony Maldonado (0-1). Wenceel Perez hit a one-out double and scored on Andy Ibanez’s single. With two outs, Torkelson launched a slider over the left-center-field wall.

Pirates 8, Brewers 6

Bryan Reynolds went 5-for-5 with a homer and two doubles and Mitch Keller tossed six scoreless innings as visiting Pittsburgh held on for a victory over Milwaukee.

Keller (4-3), who threw a complete game in his previous start, scattered eight hits, struck out seven and walked none.

Milwaukee pulled within 7-6 in the eighth on Jake Bauers’ first career grand slam. However, the Brewers never found a way to pull ahead. Milwaukee starter Colin Rea (3-1) allowed three runs on six hits in six innings.

Astros 9, A’s 2

Alex Bregman homered twice, rookie Spencer Arrighetti notched his first career win and Houston claimed the opener of a four-game series with visiting Oakland.

Bregman recorded his sixth career multi-homer game as part of a four-RBI night. He helped Houston win for the fourth time in five games while sending Oakland to a seventh loss in nine games.

Arrighetti (1-4) allowed two runs on five hits and two walks with five strikeouts over five innings. A’s starter Ross Stripling (1-7) yielded three runs, two earned in five innings.

Phillies 5, Mets 4 (10 innings)

Bryson Stott lofted a 10th-inning sacrifice fly for visiting Philadelphia, which overcame a two-run, ninth-inning deficit to beat New York. The Phillies have won 10 of 12.

Stott led off the ninth with a homer against Mets closer Edwin Diaz, who later forced home the tying run with two outs when he hit Alec Bohm. In the 10th, New York reliever Sean Reid-Foley (1-1) yielded Stott’s fly to right field.

J.D. Martinez finished 3-for-4 with two RBIs and Pete Alonso had two hits and scored twice for the Mets, who have lost six of nine.

Nationals-White Sox, ppd.

Washington’s scheduled game at Chicago was rained out and will be made up as part of a doubleheader on Tuesday.

REDS OF TJ FRIEDL (FRACTURED THUMB) OUT 4 TO 5 WEEKS

Cincinnati Reds outfielder TJ Friedl was placed on the 10-day injured list Monday with a fractured left thumb.

Reds manager David Bell said Friedl is expected to miss four to five weeks. Friedl just returned from a broken right wrist sustained during spring training.

“He’s such a great teammate. He worked hard to get back, just getting into playing,” Bell told reporters prior to Monday’s road game against the Arizona Diamondbacks. “Nothing we can do about it. He’s gonna be fine.”

The severity of the injury was detected Monday during tests in Phoenix.

Friedl, 28, was playing in just his sixth game of the season on Sunday when the first pitch of the game from San Francisco Giants left-hander Kyle Harrison hit Friedl on the thumb.

Friedl stayed in the game to run the bases and score before departing.

Friedl is batting .182 in 22 at-bats with two steals and two RBIs. In 2023, he batted .279 with 18 homers, 66 RBIs and 27 steals in 138 games.

Cincinnati recalled outfielder Jacob Hurtubise from Triple-A Louisville. The 26-year-old Army graduate put his military commitment on hold in 2020 to pursue a baseball career.

This season, Hurtubise is batting .241 in nine games over three minor league stops this season. He was 2-for-8 at Louisville.

NHL PLAYOFFS

TT JOHNSTON PROPELS STARS TO 3-1 SERIES LEAD OVER AVS

DENVER (AP) — Wyatt Johnston scored twice on the eve of his 21st birthday as the Dallas Stars pushed Colorado to the brink of elimination Monday night with a 5-1 win in Game 4 that came hours after Avalanche standout Valeri Nichushkin was suspended for at least six months.

Johnston had shorthanded and power-play goals for the Stars, who grabbed a 3-1 lead in the second-round, best-of-seven series. Dallas can close it out at home in Game 5 on Wednesday.

Miro Heiskanen and Evgenii Dadonov also scored, while Sam Steel added a late empty-net goal. Jake Oettinger made 24 saves.

About an hour before the game, the National Hockey League and National Hockey League Players’ Association announced that Nichushkin was suspended for at least six months without pay. He was placed in stage 3 of the league’s player assistance program. It’s the second time this season Nichushkin has been in the program.

A Colorado lineup missing Nichushkin, the team’s leading goal scorer (nine) in this playoff run, struggled early to get on track and was outshot by a 16-2 margin in the first period. Casey Mittelstadt scored Colorado’s lone goal.

The Avalanche also were without standout defenseman Devon Toews, who was a late scratch due to an illness. Colorado’s defense couldn’t prevent Johnston and the Stars from building a 3-0 lead in the second period. Dallas has yet to trail in regulation during the series.

Johnston, who turns 21 on Tuesday, scored his 10th and 11th career playoff goals. He became the eighth player in NHL history to reach double-digit postseason goals at age 20 or younger, according to league research.

The Stars saw forward Roope Hintz leave the game after suffering an upper-body injury in the opening period.

Alexandar Georgiev was kept busy all night, stopping 29 shots.

Avalanche forward Jonathan Drouin played in his first postseason game this season, stepping in to fill the void of Nichushkin. Drouin has been sidelined since he suffered a lower-body injury in the regular-season finale.

Caleb Jones was inserted into the lineup with Toews out and was whistled for two penalties.

The Avalanche dropped both home games to Dallas in this series. Colorado posted the NHL’s best home record (31-9-1) in the regular season.

Johnston took advantage of a Cale Makar turnover late in the first period and scored a shorthanded goal to give the Stars a 1-0 lead. It’s the second shorthanded goal of the series for Dallas.

The Stars have outscored the Avalanche 6-0 in the opening period.

Colorado’s frustration was on display after the first-period buzzer, with Colorado defenseman Josh Manson taking exception to Jamie Benn running into Georgiev. Manson pounced on Benn and both were hit with penalties — Manson for roughing and Benn for goaltender interference.

Benn delivered a big hit on Toews in Game 2.

CANES POT 4 UNANSWERED TO FORCE GAME 6 VS. RANGERS

NEW YORK (AP) — Trailing by a goal with 20 minutes to go and their season on the line, the Carolina Hurricanes weren’t discouraged. They knew they could turn the game around.

Jordan Staal and Evgeny Kuznetsov scored 3:06 apart early in the third period, and the Hurricanes got four goals in the period for a 4-1 win over the New York Rangers in Game 5 of the second-round playoff series on Monday night, staving off elimination for the second straight game.

“There was no panic, we understood what the situation was,” Hurricanes coach Rod Brind’Amoiur said. “It wasn’t like we were dead. … You were one shot away, and that’s the way they approached it.”

Jordan Martinook and Martin Necas also scored in the Hurricanes’ big third period, and Frederik Andersen — starting for the fourth time in five games in this series and ninth time in 10 games in the postseason — had 20 saves.

“No one was definitely hanging any heads,” Staal said, “We knew we had to have our best period, and we did. We’re going to have another huge challenge going back home in a couple of days. … We’re fighting for our lives and the boys showed up and it showed.”

Jacob Trouba scored a short-handed goal and Igor Shesterkin stopped 24 shots for New York, which has lost two straight after taking a 3-0 series lead.

“One game at a time,” Rangers forward Chris Kreider said. “If you had told me it would be 3-2 against the second-best team in the league with an opportunity to close it out, that’s a pretty good spot to be in. We’ll just go down there and play better, be more detailed. Find a way to win.”

New York coach Peter Laviolette was also displeased with the result.

“Got some time here before the next game, but clearly we got do a lot of things better,” he said. “There were a lot of issues tonight. We’ll go back and look at it and we’ll try to correct those issues.”

Game 6 is Thursday night in Raleigh, North Carolina.

The Hurricanes won despite going 0 for 3 on the power play to fall to 1 for 20 in this series while giving up a short-handed goal for the second time.

“We’re fighting for our lives every game,” Martinook said. “We gave ourselves a chance to play another game and hopefully give ourselves a chance to come back here (for a deciding Game 7).”

Staal tied it 1-1 at 3:33 as he got a pass from Dmitry Orlov, skated around one Rangers defender in the left circle, came in on Shesterkin and beat him with a backhanded shot that went around the leg of the sprawled goalie. It was Staal’s first goal of the playoffs.

“Just an incredible play by him,” Martinook said. “He was incredible tonight. Everybody jumped on his back. He led us for sure.”

Kuznetsov then gave the Hurricanes the lead as he knocked in the rebound of Brady Skjei’s shot from the right side for his fourth of the postseason.

Martinook made it 3-1 just before the midpoint of the period. Necas sent a centering pass from the end boards, and the puck went off Jack Drury’s stick to Martinook, and he quickly sent a shot that beat Shesterkin.

“He got a little piece of it and calmed it down, so I guess I got to thank him,” Martinook said with a smile.

The Rangers pulled Shesterkin for an extra skater with 3:44 to go, but Necas sent a long shot that went into the empty net 15 seconds later.

The Rangers got a power play when Orlov was called for roughing at 3:47 of the second period. Shortly after the penalty expired, New York’s Jack Roslovic was whistled for tripping, putting Carolina’s struggling power play on the advantage. However, it was the Rangers who broke through.

Trouba blocked a shot by Sebastian Aho, skated up the ice on 2-on-1 rush and fired a shot from the right circle that beat Andersen at 6:23. It was his first goal of the playoffs and the Rangers’ fourth short-handed tally.

The Hurricanes got another power play at the midpoint of the period, but didn’t get a shot on goal during the advantage. Shesterkin then denied Drury’s point-blank try with 6 minutes to go in the second.

Carolina had a 10-9 advantage on shots on goal in a scoreless and fast-paced first period. Both teams had chances and the goalies had to make several nice saves.

Rangers rookie sensation Matt Rempe was back in the starting lineup after sitting out Games 3 and 4.

MEN’S GOLF NEWS

JIMMY DUNNE RESIGNS FROM PGA TOUR POLICY BOARD

Jimmy Dunne, one of the authors of the framework agreement between the PGA Tour and Saudi Arabia’s Public Investment Fund (PIF), stepped down from the tour’s policy board on Monday, effective immediately.

The move comes almost one year after Dunne worked to get the PGA Tour and PIF, which bankrolls the rival LIV Golf circuit, in discussions intended to produce an official partnership. The parties have continued to negotiate even after an original Dec. 31 deadline passed.

In his resignation letter, as reported by multiple media outlets, Dunne wrote that “no meaningful progress has been made towards a transaction with PIF.” With player board members now controlling the board’s direction, Dunne added that “my vote and my role is utterly superfluous.”

Dunne, an investment banker, added, per numerous reports, “It is crucial for the Board to avoid letting yesterday’s differences interfere with today’s decisions, especially when they influence future opportunities for the Tour. Unifying professional golf is paramount to restoring fan interest and repairing wounds left from a fractured game. I have tried my best to move all minds in that direction.”

Dunne reportedly wrote of his role in the talks, “When I arrived on the board in January 2023, everybody involved with the game was concerned about the fundamental threat of LIV Golf. As directed by Commissioner (Jay) Monahan, I engaged LIV’s majority owner, the Public Investment Fund, to see if we could end the lawsuits and reunify the game.

“Importantly, we were able to come to an agreement in which the lawsuits were dismissed with prejudice and a path was created for the Tour to remain in control of professional golf. I believe that history will look favorably on this outcome and the very real opportunities now afforded the Tour.”

Monahan said in a statement regarding Dunne’s exit: “On behalf of the Tour, I’d like to thank Jimmy for his steadfast service to this organization since he joined the Board in January 2023, not to mention his countless contributions to the game of golf that span decades.

“Since his arrival on the Policy Board, we have made remarkable progress in setting the PGA Tour up for decades of future success, including ending costly and destructive litigation with the PIF, establishing PGA Tour Enterprises as a growth vehicle to enable and support our ambitions, the arrival of SSG as an outside investor and partner, and the creation of the Player Equity Program.

“With these foundational elements in place and — more specifically — with an active, focused and engaged Transaction Subcommittee, we continue to make meaningful progress behind the scenes in our negotiations toward a potential agreement with the PIF. Our goal remains to deliver the best possible outcome for the PGA TOUR, our players, partners, tournaments and fans.”

Last summer, Dunne spoke before the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations on behalf of the PGA Tour regarding the negotiations with PIF.

TOP INDIANA HEADLINES/RELEASES

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL BOYS BASKETBALL

SOUTHPORT HIRES NEW COACH

Former Mt. Vernon basketball coach Ben Rhoades has been hired as the new coach at Southport. Rhoades replaces Bill Zych who resigned after just one season. Rhoades led Mt. Vernon to two sectional titles and an overall record of 74-42 before being placed on leave in 2023 following an arrest for operating a vehicle while intoxicated.

INDIANA HIGH SCHOOL GIRLS BASKETBALL

BROWNSBURG HIRES NEW COACH

Josh Sabol is returning to coaching after spending eight years on the court at Decatur Central and Franklin. This time Coach Sabol will take over at Brownsburg. Sabol led Franklin to a 4A runner-up in 2021-22.

INDIANA PACERS

GAME PREVIEW: PACERS AT KNICKS (GAME 5)

The Eastern Conference Semifinals between the Indiana Pacers and New York Knicks has morphed into a best-of-three games series.

Sixth-seeded Indiana will get another crack at taking a game at Madison Square Garden on Tuesday after the Blue & Gold evened their playoff series with the No. 2 New York Knicks, 2-2, over the weekend in Indianapolis.

Indiana enters Game 5 with their most convincing victory over the Knicks yet: a 121-89 thrashing at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Sunday.

PLAYOFF CENTRAL: Follow Indiana’s Postseason Run at Pacers.com/Playoffs >>

After leading by 20 points at the end of the first quarter of Game 4, the Pacers never let off the gas. At halftime, Indiana held a 69-51 advantage before the lead ballooned to 43 points in the second half. 

Both sides emptied their benches in the fourth quarter, treating the final frame as a mere formality.

The 32-point win was just two points away from tying the largest margin of victory in a Pacers playoff win ever, and the biggest win by the Blue & Gold in the 2024 postseason.

The Pacers shot 56.8 percent as a team overall (45.2 percent from 3-point range) in Game 4 and held the Knicks to 33.7 percent from the field, including 7-for-37 from deep.

Six Pacers finished in double-digit scoring, led by 20 points from Tyrese Haliburton in 28 minutes and 15 points by T.J. McConnell off the bench. McConnell also dished out 10 assists to record his second postseason double-double ever.

Haliburton’s dominant play has proven vital to the Pacers’ recent success. After a rough Game 1, where he only scored six points on as many shot attempts, Haliburton has averaged 29.7 points, 7.0 assists, and 5.3 rebounds over his last three games.

Indiana’s team defense made headlines in Game 4, especially for limiting Knicks volume scorer Jalen Brunson to 18 points on 6-for-17 shooting. No other Knicks player in the starting lineup recorded more than eight points in the game, and Alec Burks posted 20 points off the bench, while Miles McBride had 16 points in 32 minutes.

Brunson, who has carried the Knicks’ offensive load all season, has seen his scoring numbers decrease each time out since logging 43 points in Game 1. His 18 points on Sunday were a playoff low for him.

Like every other game in the series thus far, both teams will keep an eye on the injury report leading up to the tip of Game 5.

The Knicks could be without ex-Indiana University Hoosier OG Anunoby for a third straight game on Tuesday, as he continues recovering from a calf injury sustained during Game 2. When Anunoby plays, the Knicks are 26-5 this season, including 2-0 against the Pacers in the playoffs.

RELATED: Pacers Not Getting Too High Despite Complete Performance in Game 4 >>

If the Pacers can win Game 5 at MSG, they will feel like they’re in prime position to advance to the Eastern Conference Finals for the first time since the 1999 season. 

Game 6 will occur in Indianapolis on Friday, and the Pacers are 5-0 at home in the playoffs. Indiana also hasn’t lost at Gainbridge Fieldhouse since March 18.

New York has lost just one game at home in the playoffs thus far: Game 5 in overtime against the Philadelphia 76ers on April 30.

Projected Starters

Pacers: G – Tyrese Haliburton, G – Andrew Nembhard, F – Aaron Nesmith, F – Pascal Siakam, C – Myles Turner

Knicks: G – Jalen Brunson, G – Donte DiVincenzo, F – Josh Hart, F – Precious Achiuwa, C – Isaiah Hartenstein

Injury Report

Pacers: Tyrese Haliburton – questionable (lower back spasms/sacral contusion/right ankle sprain), Bennedict Mathurin – out (right shoulder labral tear)

Knicks: OG Anunoby – out (left hamstring strain), Bojan Bogdanovic – out  (left foot surgery), Julius Randle – out (right shoulder surgery), Mitchell Robinson – out (left ankle stress injury)

Last Meeting

May 12, 2024: Unlike the first three games in the series, the Pacers led from nearly start to finish in a 121-89 blowout win over the Knicks in Game 4 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse. With the win, the Pacers stayed undefeated (5-0) at home in the playoffs.

The Pacers scored at least 32 points in each of the first three quarters to start the game, including leading 34-14 after the first frame. 

Indiana’s lead swelled to 28 points at halftime before exploding to 43 in the second half. Both teams played their bench units for almost the entire fourth quarter.

The Pacers shot an outstanding 56.8 percent from the field while limiting the Knicks to 33.7 percent. The Pacers finished 14-for-31 from 3-point range, while the Knicks made just 7 of 37 attempts.

Tyrese Haliburton led the Pacers with 20 points, T.J. McConnell had 15 points and 10 assists, and Pascal Siakam and Obi Toppin each chipped in 14 point for the Blue & Gold.

Jalen Brunson scored 18 points in 31 minutes and Alec Burks scored 20 points off the bench for the visitors. Brunson was the only Knicks starter to hit double digits for points on the night. 

The Pacers won the rebounding margin 52-43, had 31 assists as a team and outscored the Knicks 60-40 in the paint. 

Noteworthy

  • The Pacers and Knicks will play at least six games in a playoff series for the sixth time in their last seven playoff matchups. 
  • Indiana has never come back from being down 0-2 in a playoff series.
  • Indiana is 24-21 against New York all-time in the playoffs.

Broadcast Information (TV and Radio Listings >>)

TV: TNT – Broadcasters TBA

Radio: 93.5/107.5 The Fan – Mark Boyle (play-by-play), Eddie Gill (analyst), Pat Boylan (sideline reporter/host)

Tickets

The Pacers will host the Knicks for Game 6 at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Friday, May 17. The time for Game 6 is TBD. Find Tickets >>

INDIANA FEVER BASKETBALL

GAME PREVIEW: FEVER TIP OFF 25TH REGULAR SEASON AT CONNECTICUT SUN ON TUESDAY NIGHT

UNCASVILLE, CONN. – The Indiana Fever open the franchise’s 25th season on Tuesday night at the Connecticut Sun for the first of four matchups this season.

Tuesday marks the second year in a row the Fever and Sun meet for the regular season opener. The Sun traveled to Gainbridge Fieldhouse for the inaugural matchup of the 2023 season and beat Indiana, 70-61. Entering Tuesday, Connecticut has won each of the last eight meetings against the Fever. Indiana has a 9-15 record in road openers and is 11-13 overall in regular-season opening games.

Tuesday will mark the debut for the 2024 Indiana Fever and the 2024 No.1 draft pick from the University of Iowa, Caitlin Clark. In Indiana’s two preseason matchups this year, Clark scored a team-high 21 points against the Dallas Wings, and then followed up with 12 points and a team-high eight rebounds against the Atlanta Dream.

Clark’s debut alongside 2023 No. 1 draft pick and last year’s unanimous WNBA Rookie of the Year, Aliyah Boston, mark the fourth time in WNBA history a team selected No. 1 overall picks in consecutive seasons.

Fever guard Kelsey Mitchell enters her seventh season with Indiana as the second leading scorer in franchise history, while forward NaLyssa Smith and guard Erica Wheeler round out a talented rotation. Mitchell averaged 18.2 points and was the team’s leading scorer last season and Smith led the team in rebounds with 9.2 per game last year. Smith scored a team-high 21 points in last Thursday’s preseason contest against the Dream. Wheeler became the first player in franchise history in 2023 to record at least 200 assists in a regular season.

Fever forward Katie Lou Samuelson returns to familiar stomping grounds Tuesday as she spent her college career at the University of Connecticut, becoming the Huskies’ No. 5 all-time leading scorer with 2,342 career-points. Indiana signed Samuelson, who enters her fifth season in the WNBA, early in 2024 as a free agent

Along with Clark, the Fever used the No. 15 draft pick this year to select Ohio State guard Celeste Taylor in the 2024 WNBA Draft. Taylor was named the Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year this season by the conference’s coaches, a year after earning ACC Defensive Player of the Year honors at Duke.

The Connecticut Sun finished third in the 2023 WNBA regular season standings and advanced to the second round of the 2023 WNBA playoffs in head coach Stephanie White’s first year at the helm.

Going into Tuesday, Connecticut boasts another experienced roster led by DeWanna Bonner, who led the team in scoring last year at 17.4 points per game, and forward Alyssa Thomas, a 10-year veteran and four-time WNBA All-Star, who led Connecticut in rebounds (9.9), assists (7.9) and steals (1.8) in 2023.

After signing via free agency on February 1, Rachel Banham emerged as the top scorer in Connecticut’s sole preseason match against the Liberty, notching 20 points to go along with Bonner’s 16 points.

Tuesday’s game will be broadcast on ESPN 2, Disney+, the WNBA App and on WNBA League Pass.

The Fever host the New York Liberty, for its home opener at Gainbridge Fieldhouse on Thursday at 7 p.m. ET. The game will be broadcast on WTHR Channel 13 and Prime Video.

INDY ELEVEN WOMEN’S SOCCER

INDY ELEVEN OPENS THE SEASON TUESDAY AT RACING LOUISVILLE FC

To Ella Rogers and Grace Bahr, Indy Eleven’s USL W League offseason looked a bit different. Sure, they were both vital pieces of the 2023 team, and they both raised the trophy following the season. To say the very least, of course.

The road to repeating, however, has been anything but the same.

“I think it was just with everything that happened with me personally in that game, winning was just the icing on the cake of a great season,” Bahr said. “It was just pure joy.

“I think everyone was exhausted… 2 p.m. on a Saturday, on a turf field is a soccer fanatic’s dream and also a soccer player’s nightmare. But at the same time, the more work you put in the more rewarding it feels so it was just incredible, and all the postgame celebrations were extremely exciting as well.”

Rogers echoed those sentiments and relishes the fact that the championship feels as good today as it did a season ago.

“The fact that it’s a summer league and that it’s a summer team the amount of pride that I think everyone has for Indy Eleven and playing for the club, I was just so thankful to be a part of that group… We competed and just left everything out on the field.”

Let’s start with the pair’s contributions to Indy Eleven’s 2023 season that not only produced a USL W League crown, but also yielded its second straight division championship, brought to you by a 16-0 win in the final regular season match, the most all-league selections by any club of the 65-team field and a USL W League Organization of the Year nod.

Rogers served as a captain for the Girls in Blue, starting all 14 matches, leading the team in minutes, and registering three assists. Bahr, a mainstay on the backline for Indy, started all 13 matches played in 2023 and tallied three goals and a pair of assists.

On July 22, 2023, when the final game was done and the championship was in its rightful home in the Circle City, Rogers was standing on her own two feet, while Bahr used the aid of teammates as she was carried to the stage to claim her medal.

Don’t let that picture fool you about Bahr, but we will get to that later.

How did they get here? To a team that gets together for three, hopefully four, months out of the year. A roster of 30+ youth, collegiate and post-grad players who share a common goal.  

Rogers, a former standout at Xavier University, spent three seasons with the Musketeers and started all 65 games played, registering eight goals and eight assists on her way to leading the squad to three straight NCAA Tournament appearances and a No. 11 spot in the United Soccer Coaches rankings in 2021. She’s now headed to Arkansas, a team that won 15 games in 2023 and advanced to the second round of the NCAA Tournament.

Why did she return for a third season?

“The competitive environment in our training sessions is just really unmatched,” she said. “I think [Head Coach] Pauly [Dolinsky] and [assistant coach] BK [Brandon Kim] do such a great job of making it rigorous when it needs to be. We’re all there for a reason. We want to get better on an individual level, but we know that can’t happen if we don’t have team cohesion and come together.”

Bahr spent two seasons at the University of Wisconsin before transferring to Xavier where she went on to develop into an All-BIG EAST First-Team selection, USC All-East Region selection and the 2019 BIG EAST Championship Most Outstanding Defensive Player.

She’s also five years removed from that chapter of her life, but to her year three is no different from year one in Indy.

“It’s not proposed, and it’s not put on paper that this is just a summer team. We want to win national championships. We want to be a team that can compete against the best and we would back ourselves to compete against the best. That idea behind the team and the platform behind the team is why any competitive athlete and somebody who just has a drive to win and a hatred to lose would love being here and that’s why I’ve been staying.”

But between years two and three it took a village, as they say, to get her back.

“Off season for me was very different,” Bahr said “I coach soccer because I can’t stay away. It’s a game that’s given me so much and I feel obligated and honored to be in a position to give back to others. I also work a full-time job to pay the bills and then on top of that to get back on the field after surgery, recovery, physical therapy, getting back to running, getting back the strength and then getting my confidence back to go into tackles, to play like I’m back to how I was… Offseason has been a bit of everything, certainly chaotic.”

Rogers will return to the squad as a captain again in 2024, saying that the trust the team has put in her as helped a lot in the way that she has developed as a leader.

Bahr will tell you she’s great because, “She leads by action. I think if you logged everyone’s miles, she might double mine and she’d triple other people. She’s going to do the work that maybe people don’t want to put in or she’s going to do extra work just because that’s the kind of person she is.

“I also think part of being a leader is learning and she’s open to those conversations. She and I are talking about our relationship as a center back and as a midfielder. Her intention behind learning as a teammate and learning as a person [is how] she leads by example on and off the field.”

The respect is mutual between the pair after spending two seasons together wearing the Indy Eleven crest after just missing each other at Xavier. Remember when we said we’d get to that story about Bahr later? Rogers probably sums up her spirit and mindset best.

“Grace is one of the most competitive and resilient people I’ve ever met,” she said of her teammate “She’s a goof, but don’t get me wrong, when that girl wants to win get out of her way. She’s going to find a way to win. She just wants to be around the game and loves it so much that she’s not going to let something stop her from doing it.”

The USL W League season begins for Indy Eleven on Tuesday at rival Racing Louisville FC, with the Girls in Blue returning to play in front of their home crowd on Monday, May 20 against Kings Hammer FC.

“It’s so fun playing in front of them,” Rogers says of the atmosphere at the Grand Park Events Center. “I’m just so drawn to going back because of the people and the environment and the BYB, too. They’re unreal, it’s so fun playing in front of them. Their support is unmatched from any other environment I’ve personally ever played in.”

The 2022 season left Indy with some unfinished business after falling in the first round of playoffs.

On the other hand, the 2023 season finished in front of a record-setting crowd that came to support a team that, in addition to the league crown, has made back-to-back playoff appearances, while racking up numerous individual accolades.

However, despite entering this season as the defending champions, Rogers and Bahr both say there are still a lot of things to be proven.

In the simplest of terms from Bahr, “Two trophies are better than one so that should be reason enough. That’s for sure.”

And she has one final message for those reading.

“For fans who know about us, and people who don’t know about us, we’re coming back for title number two. There are no guarantees, but I think the motivation, the excitement… to do it again would be great. We’re here to win, we’re here to have fun. And those two things go hand in hand at Indy Eleven.”

But if you are subscribing for the gameday fits this season, she promises you’ll get those too.

INDIANA BASEBALL

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. –  The Indiana Baseball team (28-21-1, 13-8 B1G) will play its final midweek of the season during the last week of the regular season on Tuesday (May 14) evening in Louisville. The Hoosiers and Cardinals will meet in a potential RPI-boosting opportunity on the road ahead of the Big Ten weekend finale.

The Hoosiers took their first series loss since March last weekend in Lincoln. IU won the first game of the series but couldn’t muster any offense on Saturday and Sunday, dropping each contest by three-or-fewer runs. The last Big Ten weekend of the year will see Michigan travel to Bloomington.

IU’s pitching staff has been strong in recent weeks, not allowing more than seven runs in each of the past 10 contests. The Hoosier offense will need to get going over the final week heading into the Big Ten Tournament to make a run at an at-large bid. Sophomores Tyler Cerny and Devin Taylor have combined for 140 hits this year.

First pitch from Louisville will be at 6:00 PM on Tuesday (May 14) evening. This weekend’s series with Michigan will start on Thursday at 5:00 PM on the Big Ten Network. IU just needs one win in conference play to clinch a Big Ten Tournament bid.

Gameday Info

at Louisville (Tuesday, May 14th – 6:00 PM)

Live Video: es.pn/44FueOF

Live Audio: bit.ly/IUAudio

Live Stats: bit.ly/4bn4klC

Probable Starters

Indiana at Louisville

• Tuesday – TBD (IU) vs. TBD (UL)

Player and Stat Trends

Tibbitts Chases 200

• Brock Tibbitts made his return to the lineup after missing a month with a lower-leg injury. He had four hits in the weekend series win over Purdue including the hit that kickstarted an amazing ninth-inning rally. He had two more in the series at Nebraska. Tibbitts now has 188 for his career and is 12 away from becoming the 25th member of the 200-hit club at Indiana.

Notable

Final Week of Regular Season

• A three-month long regular season comes to a close this weekend. IU has just four games remaining with a trip to Louisville in the midweek and a three-game visit from Michigan this weekend. The Hoosiers will finish with 54 regular season games after weather forced cancelations of home games against Ball State and Cincinnati.

Pitching Continues to Improve

• Pitching coach Dustin Glant has done an outstanding job getting his staff ready for the stretch run. Despite not having the likes of Luke Sinnard, Ben Grable and Matthew Bohnert, the Hoosiers have found a group of reliable arms for the postseason.

• IU hasn’t allowed more than seven runs in a game in its last 10 contests. The Hoosiers are 6-3-1 in that stretch. Over the weekend in a tough environment at Nebraska, IU conceded just 14 runs. The Huskers never scored more than five in a game but managed to win the series.

One Win From Omaha

• Barring getting swept at home against Michigan, Indiana will make its 11th-consecutive Big Ten Tournament appearance. The Hoosiers will continue to have the longest active streak in the conference. IU has played in every contested tournament (2020, 2021 not contested) since 2012. IU needs just one win against Michigan to clinch a spot but will want a good showing this weekend to secure a higher seed.

Sophomores Shining

• Sophomores Devin Taylor and Tyler Cerny have formed a formidable duo offensively for the Hoosiers this season. The pair has started in all but one game (Devin Taylor – personal issue) this year and have combined for 140 hits (70 each) in 2024.

• Both players became starters early in 2024 and have never left the lineup since. They’ve combined for 23 home runs and 94 RBIs this year while also scoring over 50+ runs each for the team. Cerny is draft-eligible in 2024 but could potentially come back to form a lethal duo with Taylor in 2024.

Get to 30 Wins

• The Indiana program has reached 30-or-more regular seasons in 10 of the past 11 completed campaigns. Only in 2022, while playing lots of freshmen, did the Hoosiers fail to reach to the 30-win mark in the regular season.

• The Hoosiers have 28 wins heading into this week and need just two to reach the 30-win threshold for the third time under head coach Jeff Mercer. If IU sweeps Michigan, it will be the third time under Mercer has led this program to 16+ Big Ten wins in a regular season (excludes the 44-game Big Ten only 2021 slate).

Familiar Faces Return

• Michigan comes to town this weekend led by former IU head coach Tracy Smith. Smith racked up 287 wins in nine years as IU’s head coach. He led the Hoosiers to Omaha for the 2013 College World Series and won back-to-back Big Ten regular season titles. On staff for the Wolverines is former big leaguer Josh Phegley, who played for IU from 2007-09.

Scouting the Opponent

Louisville (29-22, 12-13 ACC)

• Much like Indiana, Louisville has struggled on the mound this season but has been prolific in spurts at the plate. Louisville is batting a collective .313 but has an earned run average of well over 6.60. Nearly every single starter in the Cardinals’ lineup is hitting over .300.

• Zion Rose has only played in 40 of 51 games this year but is leading the team with a .387 batting average. There are seven Cardinals with an average between .300 and .330. It’s a balanced lineup. Louisville has hit 74 home runs but seven players have between seven and nine long balls.

• On the mound it has been a struggle for Louisville. It has 453 strikeouts but has conceded 82 home runs on the season and is allowing opponents to hit .284. Six different pitchers have made 15+ appearances including Kayden Campbell who has pitched 22 times in relief.

Inside the Series

Indiana at Louisville

• Louisville and Indiana have met regularly at the end of the season in the past 10 years and have featured multiple times in the same NCAA regional. Indiana won the team’s meeting last year. Ethan Phillips had a productive outing on the mound as the Hoosiers won 7-3 in Bloomington.

• Jeff Mercer’s first season saw his team go to the Louisville Regional. The Hoosiers lost a tightly contested 9-7 contest to be eliminated from the tournament. The two programs have played 55 times in their history.

INDIANA SOFTBALL

BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ––– Indiana Softball earned an NCAA Tournament bid for the second consecutive season on Sunday night as announced on the NCAA Softball Tournament Selection Show.

The Hoosiers will be the No. 3 Seed in the Columbia Regional. The regional will take place from May 17-19 at the University of Missouri. Missouri is the No. 7 overall seed in the tournament.

Indiana will play against No. 2 seed Washington in their first game of the regional on Friday May 17 at 3 p.m. (ET)/2 p.m. (CT). No. 1 seed Missouri will play against No. 4 seed Omaha at 5:30 p.m. (ET)/4:30 p.m. (CT) that afternoon.

The regional round is a four-team, double-elimination tournament played over three days.

Indiana enters the postseason with a 40-18 record and was the runner-up in the Big Ten Tournament, marking back-to-back seasons of 40-plus wins and Big Ten Tournament final appearances.

PURDUE MEN’S GOLF

NOTE: Tuesday’s tee times have moved up 30 minutes in advance of expected rain moving in. Hole 1 tee times start at 7:30 a.m. ET, while hole No. 10 starts at 8 a.m. ET.

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – The Purdue men’s golf team posted five solid rounds on a near-perfect scoring day at Kampen-Cosler Course to sit in third place after 18 holes at the NCAA West Lafayette Regional.

The Boilermakers totaled a 4-under par 284 to finish 18 holes in third place, seven shots behind No. 2-ranked Vanderbilt (-11; 277) and one shot behind No. 11-ranked Arizona (-5; 283).

No. 15-ranked Florida is in fourth at 1-over par 289, while No. 23-ranked New Mexico is in fifth at 2-over par 290.

The top-five finishing teams will advance to the NCAA National Championships held at the Omni La Costa Resort and Spa in Carlsbad, California, on May 24-29.

“I think we played pretty solid today and having everyone under or even par was a really good start for us. Across the board, the guys played well and if you can get five players at even-par or better on this course, you are going to be right there,” said head coach Rob Bradley. “This course is all about making good decisions and having control and the guys stayed in front of that. It’s important to stay with the same game plan and just keep doing what we are doing.”

For the first time in Purdue’s NCAA Regionals or Championships history, the Boilermakers had all five rounds of even-par or better. Purdue is the only team in the field with five rounds of even-par or better.

Four players shot scores of 1-under par 71, while freshman Sam Easterbrook carded an even-par 72.

All-American Herman Sekne started slow, but rallied on his back nine to shoot a 1-under par 71, his 17th round of even-par or better this season. After a bogey on his sixth hole on the par-4 15th, he played the remaining 12 holes in 2-under par for his 71, with birdies coming on holes 1 and 6. He now has 56 rounds of even-par or better, coming in just 107 career rounds.

Junior Nels Surtani also had a strong back nine to record his 1-under par 71. Surtani was 1-over par through six holes, before birdies and 16 and 17 (one of just five on the day) moved him to 1-under par. He bogeyed the difficult 18th hole, but played his final nine holes in 1-under par with one birdie and eight pars for his 14th round of par or better this season.

Senior Peyton Snoeberger started red-hot for the Boilermakers en route to his 1-under par 71, recording birdies on 12, 13, 16 and 17 to move to 3-under par through eight holes. A double-bogey on 18 dropped him to 1-under par, before playing his final nine holes in even-par for his 71.

Lastly, junior Kent Hsiao also was 3-under through seven holes, before a bogey on 17 dropped him to 2-under par. He would play the front nine in 1-over par with four pars, two birdies and three bogeys for his round of 71.

All four players at 71 sit inside the top 10 in a tie for eighth place after 18 holes.

Freshman Sam Easterbrook was 2-under par through six holes before three straight birdies on 16, 17 and 18 moved him to 1-over par for his round. He would birdie holes 4 and 7, sandwiched around at bogey on No. 6, to finish at even-par 72.

Easterbrook sits inside the top 20 in a 17th-place tie after 18 holes.

Purdue will tee off round two at 7:30 a.m. ET, off hole No. 1 and be paired with Vanderbilt and Arizona. 

PURDUE BASEBALL

CHICAGO – Purdue Baseball and Alexander Field will be in the spotlight for the final weekend of the regular season as the Big Ten Network has selected all three games vs. Illinois for live television coverage.

New start times for the series are 8 p.m. Thursday, 8 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Saturday (all ET). The annual Senior Day ceremony will remain before Saturday’s game, starting at approximately 2:30 p.m.

Fans are advised to secure their tickets before arriving at the ballpark, but some general admission seats and standing room only tickets may be available at the gate the day of the game. Gates open on hour before first pitch. There were 9,600 fans through the gates the week of May 1-5 as Alexander Field hosted four straight crowds of over 2,200.

This year marks the fourth time since 2017 that the Boilermakers will be spotlighted by the BTN during the final weekend of the regular season. The BTN also televised multiple Purdue games during the final weekends of 2017, 2018, 2021 and 2022. All but 2017 featured games at Alexander Field as the Boilermakers have closed the regular season at home every year since 2018.

Illinois enters the week in first place in the Big Ten with a 15-6 record. Purdue is in a three-way tie for third place at 13-8. Nebraska is in second place at 14-7. In 2017, the Boilermakers won two of three at first-place Minnesota during the final weekend of the regular season to open the door for Nebraska to win its first-ever Big Ten title.

The Big Ten Network will also televise every game of next week’s eight-team Big Ten Tournament at Charles Schwab Field in Omaha. Tournament action begins Tuesday, May 21

BTN TV SCHEDULE FOR MAY 16-18

Thursday

Michigan at Indiana at 5 p.m. ET

Illinois at Purdue at 8 p.m. ET

Friday

Nebraska at Michigan State at 5 p.m. ET

Illinois at Purdue at 8 p.m. ET

Saturday

Nebraska at Michigan State at Noon ET

Illinois at Purdue at 3 p.m. ET

BUTLER BASEBALL

INDIANAPOLIS – Butler and Notre Dame will play a 4 PM game at Bulldog Park on Tuesday afternoon. This will be the second meeting between these two programs this year. The contest will stream on FloSports.com and is the final midweek game on the Bulldog schedule.

Scouting Notre Dame

Toledo traveled to South Bend over the weekend to face the Fighting Irish at Frank Eck Stadium. ND won games one and two, but would fall in the finale 5-2. The weekend series would move their overall record to 27-22. One thing is certain about the Irish, they will not beat themselves with mistakes in the field. They rank second in the nation with a .984 fielding percentage and are 24th in the NCAA in turning double plays. At the dish, TJ Williams and David Glancy are the top hitters in the lineup. Williams is batting .329 this year and is the team leader in stolen bases with 10. Glancy leads the team in hits (55), home runs (13), and total bases (104). The Bulldogs will also prep for Simon Baumgardt and Jack Penney, the only two players to start in all 49 games this season.

Previous Meeting at Notre Dame

The Fighting Irish recorded an 11-2 win over Butler on April 10. Sammy Cooper earned the win on the mound while the loss went to Ben Whiteside. Tobey McDonough got the start for Notre Dame and tossed the first two innings of the contest. Notre Dame led Butler 4-0 after five innings, but a Jack Moroknek homer in the sixth would cut that deficit in half. The game took a turn in the bottom of the sixth with ND scoring five runs. Jack Penney and Connor Hicks each had two hits to lead the Irish lineup. Moroknek and Joey Urban had multi-hit games for the ‘Dawgs.

All-Time Series

Notre Dame leads the all-time series against Butler 70-15. The Irish have won 14-straight with 10 of those meetings coming in South Bend. Butler’s last win over Notre Dame was a 3-1 victory in Indianapolis on April 16, 1994. The last time BU hosted ND was the following day on April 17, 1994. The first-ever meeting between the two programs was played on June 7, 1910!

Single-Season Records

Butler set the single-season team home run record at Ball State on May 7 and Carter Dorighi etched his name into the BU record book over the weekend as the program’s single-season hits leader! This year’s team has hit 60 home runs, breaking the old record of 56 set by the 1998 team. Dorighi came up with 11 hits last week to move his season total to 87! He broke the single-season hit record of 82 which was set by Harrison Freed during the 2019 campaign. Dorighi is in line to set another school record on Tuesday. The BU shortstop heads into the matchup with 229 at-bats. The single-season record stands at 231, a total set by Tyler Houston in 2018.

BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll

Joey Urban made the BIG EAST Weekly Honor Roll after an announcement from the league office on Monday afternoon. Urban hit .545 over four games and slugged .864. He had 12 total hits including four doubles and a homer. He had 10 RBIs and 19 total bases to help BU win the weekend series at Villanova.

BIG EAST Standings

UConn 14-4, 29-21

St. John’s 13-5, 33-13-1

Georgetown 11-6, 31-18

Xavier 11-7, 28-23

Seton Hall 6-12, 23-28

Villanova 6-12, 15-32

Creighton 5-12, 32-16

Butler 5-13, 20-32

Bulldog Bits

– Carter Dorighi leads the team, the BIG EAST and ranks fourth in the nation in hits (87)

– Dorighi leads the conference in batting average (.380), runs (54), and total bases (130)

– Dorighi scored 10 runs last week

– Dorighi ranks fourth in the league in doubles with 16

– Dorighi had six hits in a game vs. Morehead State on March 3

– Dorighi had 11 hits last week, batting .478 over his last five starts

– Dorighi has a team-best 27 multi-hit games this year

– Dorighi has reached base safely in 15-straight games

– Kade Lewis ranks second in the BIG EAST in batting average (.371), and hits (72)

– Lewis is on a five-game hitting streak

– Lewis has the fourth-best slugging percentage in the BIG EAST (.613) and ranks fourth in RBIs (49)

– Lewis is tied for the top spot in the BIG EAST with four triples

– Joey Urban is the league leader in sac flies with five

– Urban is batting .370 against BIG EAST opponents this year

– Urban had five RBIs in a single game vs. EIU last week and had five hits at Nova on Sunday

– Jack Moroknek comes in at second in the BIG EAST in total bases (120) and Lewis is third (119)

– Moroknek ranks fifth in the league in hits (65) and is fourth in home runs with 13

– Moroknek was one of five Bulldogs to homer last week

– Moroknek hit three home runs in the same game vs. Eastern Michigan on April 16

– Moroknek had a BIG EAST-best 13 total bases against the Eagles

– Xavier Carter had a hit in every game last week, totaling seven over his last four starts

– Ian Choi had a hit, an RBI and scored a run in his last game

– Evan Parks has four multi-hit games over his last five starts

– Tommy Townsend recorded five RBIs from May 7 to May 12

– Cole Graverson is third in the league in saves with five

– Tyler Banks tossed seven innings at Nova in his last start, limiting the Wildcats to one run off three hits

– Banks threw a season-high 109 pitches over the seven frames

– Gage Vota struck out a season-high five batters at Nova (May 12)

– Butler leads the league in hits (515), total plate appearances (2,169) and at-bats (1,834)

– BU set season-high totals in hits (21) and at-bats (49) on Saturday at Villanova

– Butler is 7-1 this year when holding their opponent to five runs or less

– Butler reached 20 wins over the weekend, marking an eight-game improvement over last year’s total

Up Next

Butler will host UConn to wrap up the 2024 regular season. This series will begin on Thursday at 3 PM and feature another 3 PM start on Friday before ending on Saturday at 1 PM. All three contests will stream on FloSports.com.

BUTLER MEN’S SOCCER

Men’s soccer head coach Paul Snape and his staff have released a challenging slate of fixtures for the fall 2024 season. The 20-game schedule begins with three exhibition matches and includes eleven home contests at the Sellick Bowl.

The Bulldogs will travel to Northern Kentucky (Aug. 9) for their season opener and the first of three pre-season matches. Also prior to the regular season, Michigan State (Aug. 12) and Indiana Wesleyan (Aug. 17) will visit the Butler campus.

The nine-game non-conference portion of the regular-season schedule is highlighted by a match with 2023 NCAA Tournament qualifier Indiana on Wednesday, September 4. Additional home dates are Southern Indiana (Aug. 22), Western Illinois (Aug. 25), Oakland (Aug. 30), Evansville (Sep. 10) and Wright State (Sep. 24). The Dawgs will travel to Bowling Green, Ohio State, and IUPUI.

The 2024 season will be the second in which the BIG EAST is divided into two six-team divisions. The East Division consists of Connecticut, Georgetown, Providence, St. John’s, Seton Hall and Villanova, while the Midwest Division includes Akron, Butler, Creighton, DePaul, Marquette and Xavier. Each team plays all five divisional members once, in addition to three cross-over matches with the other division in each season.

The eight-match BIG EAST schedule for Butler begins on Friday, Sept. 20, when the Bulldogs travel to Akron. The first home conference foe will be St. John’s on Friday, October 4. This weekend will be Alumni Reunion Weekend for the Bulldogs and aligns with campus homecoming activities. Additional home opponents are UConn (Oct. 19), Xavier (Oct. 23), and DePaul (Nov. 2). With the additional road opponents consisting of Marquette, Seton Hall, and Creighton, Butler will not face Providence, Georgetown, or Villanova during the 2024 regular season.

A few days after the conclusion of the regular season schedule, the 2024 BIG EAST Tournament will begin. The top eight teams in the league standings will battle in search of the conference’s automatic entry into the NCAA Tournament.

Entering his 14th season, Coach Snape and his program are looking to build on the success of previous teams. The Bulldogs have qualified for the BIG EAST Tournament six times since 2016 and competed in the NCAA Tournament in three of those seasons. The 2017 side finished atop the BIG EAST standings and won two matches in the NCAA Tournament.

Coach Snape has named three captains for the 2024 side, including junior, Palmer Ault, who is returning after being selected last December in the 2024 MLS SuperDraft by the Colorado Rapids. The forward, from Noblesville, Ind., was selected as the fifth pick (36th overall) in the second round but has chosen to delay his signing with the club until a future date. Ault led the Bulldogs in goals last fall and was rewarded with All-East Region honors. Additional captains for the Bulldogs are senior-midfielder, Joost De Schutter, who missed much of the 2023 season with an injury, and graduate-goalkeeper, Caleb Norris. Other notables for the upcoming season are sophomore-forward Ryan Hannosh, who was second on the team in 2023 in offensive points, and newcomers Josemir Gomez, a Horizon League first teamer last season, and Sam Pitts-Eckersall, a transfer from UNC Asheville.

The coaching staff has been putting the finishing touches on the full 2024 roster. Additional student-athletes who are joining the program will be announced in the coming weeks.

IUPUI MEN’S BASKETBALL

INDIANAPOLIS – IU Indianapolis head basketball coach Paul Corsaro announced two signees to National Letters of Intent to join the Jaguar program, beginning this fall. DeSean Goode (Fairmont, W.Va./Fairmont Senior/Fork Union Academy) and Caleb Hannah (Chicago, Ill./Orr Academy/Miami Dade College) bring the incoming recruiting class to 11 newcomers. Goode will be a true freshman this fall while Hannah will be a sophomore, having played at Miami Dade College this past season.

“Definitely excited about adding these two young men to our program,” Corsaro said. “These two guys bring a ton of athleticism and upside to the program. Caleb had a really strong freshman year at Miami Dade and I really like bringing in junior college kids with three years to play. He’s got great length and athleticism from the guard position and creates mismatches offensively. DeSean originally committed to New Orleans and came highly recommended to us. He’s won at virtually every level and impacts games in a lot of different ways. We’re definitely excited to get both of them to campus.”

Goode, a 6-foot-8 forward, starred at Fairmont (W.Va.) Senior High School before playing a year of postgraduate prep at Fort Union Military Academy. He earned First Team All-Conference in the Elite Prep League last season, averaging 13 points and 8.2 rebounds per game. He helped Fork Union to a 31-7 record and an Elite Prep League title. He previously led Fairmont Senior to back-to-back Class AAA titles. He was a First Team Class AAA All-State as a senior after averaging 18.4 points per game and a second team honoree following his junior year when he averaged 16.3 points per game.

Hannah, a 6-foot-7 guard, averaged 8.7 points and 4.7 rebounds per game while shooting 48.8 percent overall and 42.0 percent as a freshman at Miami Dade College this past season. He scored in double-digits 14 times, including a season-high 18 points against Time to Ball Prep. He registered a double-double against Elgin Community College on Dec. 8 last season. He starred at Orr Academy High School in Chicago, being ranked among the top 30 players in the state of Illinois. He earned First Team All-State honors after averaging 15.7 points and 6.3 rebounds per game and was later tabbed to play in the Chicago City All-Star Game. He lated played a season of postgraduate prep at Victory Rock Prep in Bradenton, Fla., averaging 14.4 points and 5.2 rebounds per game as the team’s MVP.

IUPUI MEN’S SOCCER

INDIANAPOLIS – The IU Indianapolis Athletics Department and head men’s soccer coach Sid van Druenen announced the additions of eight individuals for the upcoming fall campaign. All eight will be true freshmen beginning this fall and join a group of previously announced incoming transfers as part of this year’s recruiting class.

van Druenen will finalize the group of newcomers in the coming weeks ahead of the fall reporting date.  

“We are very excited about this incoming class as not only are they good soccer players with the potential to help us right away, but they also are all very hard working, committed and great people,” van Druenen said. 

The Jaguars return five starters from last year’s 7-7-5 squad in Jose Antonio HerreraBrady HornNoah KummrowJago Thompson-Roberts and Gijs Velings. Horn topped the team in minutes (1,593) last fall while Thompson-Roberts and Veilings ranked Nos. 6 and 7 on the squad in that category, respectively. 

Below is a rundown of the eight newcomers, listed alphabetically.  

Tyson Aschliman (Aurora, Ill. / Batavia)
6-foot // Forward

-Played for Sockers FC Chicago MLS Next from 2021-2024
-Made three appearances in the MLS Next Playoffs, including a 2023 NPL National Championship
-Was a 2024 ISAC State Scholar

van Druenen on Aschliman
“Tyson was impressive when we watched him at one of the recruiting events down in Florida this winter. He adds all around quality to our forward group and I would not be surprised if he steps on the field regularly this Fall.”


Kyle Clayton (Fishers, Ind. / Fishers)
5-foot-11 // Midfielder/Forward

-Two-time First Team All-State, All-Conference and All-District performer at Fishers High School
-Nominated for Player of the Year honors
-Totaled 43 goals and 30 assists in his high school career (18 goals, 17 assists as a senior and 22 goals and 10 assists as a junior)

van Druenen on Clayton
“Kyle is a versatile player that can play in a lot of different positions with the competitive attitude needed to be successful here.”


Kyle Denn (Medford, Ore. / South Medford)
5-foot-8 // Midfielder

-Earned Oregon 6A All-State honors
-Had a conference best 17 goals and six assists his senior year
-Played for the Portland Timbers Academy and attended TOVO Academy in Barcelona, Spain
-Class valedictorian

van Druenen on Denn
“Kyle is a technically gifted attacking midfielder who likes to dribble at defenders and take them on 1-v-1. I think he can be a real threat in our attack once he gets adjusted to the physicality of D1 soccer.”


Bali Esquivel (Arlington Heights, Ill. / Rolling Meadows)
5-foot-10 // Midfielder

-Played for Sockers FC
-Helped Sockers to back-to-back National Academy Championships
-Participated in Puerto Rico U20 National Team camp 

van Druenen on Esquivel
“Bali comes to us from one of the most respected MLS academies in the country and his is simply put, the total package for us. He has a high work rate, good personality and phenomenal technical ability.”


Mano Karjian (Plymouth, Mich. / Canton)
5-foot-8 // Midfielder

-Played for the Michigan Wolves MLS Next Academy for eight seasons
-Played in the GA Cup for the Columbus Crew 
-Served as Michigan Wolves team captain 

van Druenen on Karjian
“Manuel is a midfielder with great ability, creativity and a nose for the goal. He was the first player committed in this class and we have high expectations from him from day one.”


Christian Nielsen (Carmel, Ind. / Carmel)
6-foot-2 // Forward

-Was a First Team All-State and All-District honoree
-Named a USC Regional All-American
-Honor roll student and honors diploma recipient

van Druenen on Nielsen
“Chris is a strong and physical center forward who has been developing very well in the past 12 months and will be a true threat for us once he gets adjusted to the D1 environment.”


Owen Parrish (Erlanger, Ky. / Dixie Heights)
6-foot-0 // Midfielder

-Played for FC Cincinnati beginning in 2019
-Previous played for Cincinnati United Premier, Lexington FC and Bluegrass FC

van Druenen on Parrish
“Owen comes to us from a soccer family and one of the best MLS academies in the country. His soccer IQ, movement and passing ability will be great additions to our midfielder group.”


Alex Pursch (Noblesville, Ind. / Noblesville)
6-foot-1 // Defender

-Earned first team All-State, All-District and All-Great Lakes Region honors in 2023
-Helped Noblesville to two IHSAA State titles
-Played club soccer for Indy Premier 

van Druenen on Pursch
“Alex is a defender with pace and good ability on the ball who possesses the physical attributes to make an immediate impact on our back line.”

BALL STATE MEN’S GOLF

CHAPEL HILL, N.C. – Ball State entered this week’s NCAA men’s golf regional at UNC Finley Golf Club in North Carolina as the No. 12 seed out of 13 teams. But it took just one round to launch the Cardinals into a brief lead and put junior Braxton Kuntz in contention for an individual title.

Ball State assumed its spot atop the leaderboard after Kuntz (62-72—134) completed his fifth birdie of the first round, on the par-3 eighth hole as Ball State finished its opening round on the front nine holes. Ball State stood atop North Carolina and Georgia Tech at that moment, but slipped into a second-place tie with the Yellow Jackets as the round came to a close. The Cardinals’ 7-under-par 273 that was its lowest ever in NCAA Championship competition, and the fourth-best in program history overall.

Kuntz led Ball State’s first-round onslaught with an 8-under 62 that was a new course record and the lowest open-round individual score in an NCAA Regional since at least 1998. Kuntz’ 62 was six strokes better than Ball State’s previous record in NCAA Championship competition (68 by McCormick Clouser in the 2013 first round at Pullman, Washington). It tied teammate Kash Bellar with the program’s lowest round ever recorded, during the 2021 Earl Yestingsmeier Invitational at Delaware Country Club. It was the third round in Ball State history that was eight strokes under par, matching Bellar’s 2021 round and an 8-under 64 by Eric Steger, at Renaissance Golf Club in Fort Myers, Fla., in 2009.

When first-round play concluded, Kuntz was in territory never before reached by a Ball State player: leading the NCAA Regional by three strokes, ahead of six golfers tied for second.

“We can’t start the conversation about our play today without mentioning the incredible opening round 62 by Braxton!,” exclaimed Ball State coach Mike Fleck who is leading his second team into NCAA competition. “And to do it in this setting, it was fun to watch and be a part of. Our first round was special and I’m so proud of our guys bringing it and being ready to compete. Alec [Cesare] also had a great day and again, it is a testament to our depth.”

Due to concerns of inclement weather later in the competition, the NCAA began the second round approximately 90 minutes after the conclusion of the first round, and when play was halted at 8:15 p.m., Ball State stood in eighth place with Kuntz still among tournament leaders. Kuntz sits in a ninth-place tie entering the final round of play, four strokes behind Clemson’s Calahan Keever (130) who leads the tournament and played beside the Cardinals’ Alec Cesare (68-70—138) through both rounds. Cesare, meanwhile, sits in a tie for 20th place.

Cesare, Kuntz and teammate Ali Khan (72-70—142) were the only Cardinals players to finish their second rounds. Kash Bellar and Carter Smith will complete their second rounds when play resumes Tuesday morning.

“What a long grueling day of golf,” Fleck added. “We were out there for over 13 hours and two of the guys have to be back in position at 7:15 for a 7:30 restart to complete round two. Our goal is to push for one of those top 5 spots and we are certainly in a position to do just that. I’m excited to compete and keep proving ourselves.”

The final round will begin shortly after conclusion of Round 2, but abbreviated play due to weather could extend the final round over two days.

Ball State Individual Results, through 8:15 p.m., middle of second round

No. 4 Braxton Kuntz (134): 31-31—62 | 34-39—73 (-6, 9th)

No. 5 Alec Cesare (138): 32-36—68 | 36-35—71 (-2, 20th)

No. 3 Ali Khan (142): 37-35—72 | 35-35—70 (+2, 36th)

No. 2 Kash Bellar (—): 37-34—71 | in progress (+4, 51st)

No. 1 Carter Smith (—): 37-39—76 | in progress (+12, 67th)

BALL STATE BASEBALL

The Ball State baseball teams is scheduled to host No. 17 Indiana State at 3 p.m. on Tuesday in the 2024 home finale.

The Cardinals (30-20-1, 16-11 Mid-American Conference) are coming off a series win over the weekend against Central Michigan to improve their MAC set winning streak to six straight. Ball State is in a tie for third place in the conference standings before concluding the regular season at Kent State from Thursday to Saturday.

The Sycamores (36-11, 19-5 Missouri Valley Conference) most recently took 2 of 3 against in-state rival Evansville. Indiana State fell 7-6 on Sunday to snap a five-game winning streak.

Ball State will be looking for its first win against a ranked opponent since 2022 when the Cardinals won at Oregon.

SCOUTING INDIANA STATE: The Sycamores are in their 11th year under the direction of head coach Mitch Hannahs. They went 45-17 (24-3 MVC) last year in a season that culminated in a run to the Super Regional of the NCAA Tournament.

The Indiana State pitching staff leads the league and ranks in the Top 30 nationally in ERA (4.52, No. 29) and strikeouts per nine innings (10.5, No. 15), while the Sycamore bats pace the MVC

in OBP (.407) and rank second in scoring (7.6 runs per game).

Junior Luis Hernandez leads the Sycamore bats with a .369 average and 61 RBI while knocking 17 home runs, and redshirt senior infielder Mike Sears paces Indiana State in doubles (14), homers (19) and OPS (1.133).

INDIANA STATE BASEBALL

TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – Indiana State baseball remained ranked in all five national Division I polls for the fourth consecutive week as the various organizations announced their Top 25 rankings on Monday.

Indiana State (36-11, 19-5) was ranked in all five major NCAA Division I polls for the fourth time in the 2024 season. The Sycamores remained No. 14 in Perfect Game, No. 20 in D1Baseball, and No. 17 in the NCBWA polls. ISU climbed to No. 23 in the Baseball America poll, while dropped two spots to No. 20 in the USA Today Coaches Poll.

The Sycamores also remained inside the top-10 in the NCAA Rating Percentage Index (RPI) standings sitting at No. 10 overall boasting the No. 18 non-conference strength of schedule and No. 58 overall strength of schedule through 46 games. The Sycamores boast a 20-9 record in road or neutral site game sitting as the lone team ranked in the top 30 in the RPI to post at least 20 wins away from their home venue in 2024.

Indiana State heads back to the road on Tuesday afternoon as the Sycamores travel to Muncie, Ind. to take on Ball State to start a four-game road trip to wrap up the 2024 regular season. First pitch at Ball Diamond at First Merchants Ballpark Complex is set for 3 p.m. ET with the game to be carried live on ESPN+ and 105.5 The Legend.

SOUTHERN INDIANA BASEBALL

EVANSVILLE, Ind. — University of Southern Indiana Baseball returns to the friendly surroundings of the USI Baseball Field this weekend for a four-game homestand to end the 2024 regular season. The Screaming Eagles are slated to host Middle Tennessee State University Tuesday at 6 p.m. before hosting Western Illinois University for a three-game Ohio Valley Conference series Thursday through Saturday.

The game times for the weekend series between USI and WIU is 6 p.m. Thursday and Friday, while the regular season finale is Saturday at 1 p.m.

The USI-WIU series is Alumni Weekend for the Eagles and will feature a Senior Day and the 2014 NCAA Division II National Championship Reunion Saturday. The 2024 seniors and the national championship team will be recognized prior to Saturday’s 1 p.m. contest.

USI (22-30, 11-13 OVC) is seventh in the OVC standing after being swept by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. The Eagles are a game ahead eighth place Eastern Illinois University (10-14) and two games ahead of ninth place Lindenwood University (9-15).

There is a chance for USI to finish as high as fourth in the OVC due to being two games behind fourth-place Tennessee Tech University (13-11) and one game behind Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (12-12) and the University of Tennessee at Martin (12-12), which are tied for fifth. WIU (13-34, 8-16) is 10th but still in contention for a berth in the tournament.

The SERVPRO OVC Championship, which includes the top eight teams in the standings, is scheduled for May 22-25 at Marion Stadium in Marion, Illinois. Links to follow the Eagles during the 2024 season can be found on USIScreamingEagles.com and on the USI Baseball Schedule.

USI Baseball Notes

Eagles have rough week on the road: The USI Screaming Eagles had a rough time on the road last week, falling to the University of Evansville and being swept by the University of Arkansas at Little Rock in OVC play. USI junior catcher Logan Mock led USI at the plate by hitting .556 (5-9) with eight RBIs.

Mock ties season high for RBIs twice. USI junior catcher Logan Mock tied a career-high in back-to-back games versus Little Rock. Mock, who had two RBIs in the first game versus the Trojans, had three RBIs in each of the last two games.

USI has won 6th series this year. USI has won six series this season, including three in OVC play. The Eagles won only four series all of last season. 

Comes down to pitching. USI’s 22 wins in 2024 (year two of the Division I transition) are five victories better than last season with eight regular season games to play and a lot of this year’s improvement has come down to pitching. The Eagles have a 6.02 ERA, 1.68 better than last season’s 7.70 ERA and the lowest since 2021.

Tough one run games. The Eagles have had their problems with one-run games in 2024. USI is just 2-9 in one run games, including a pair last weekend with Little Rock.

USI in the OVC. USI is seventh in the OVC standing (11-13) after being swept Little Rock. The Eagles are a game ahead eighth place Eastern Illinois University (10-14) and two games ahead of ninth place Lindenwood University (9-15). USI has a chance to finish as high as fourth in the OVC due to being two games behind fourth-place Tennessee Tech University (13-11) and one game behind Southern Illinois University Edwardsville (12-12) and the University of Tennessee at Martin (12-12), which are tied for fifth. Senior outfielder Ren Tachioka leads USI at the plate in conference play, batting .420 (34-81). Senior first baseman Tucker Ebest has a team-high 23 RBIs and five home runs in league action.

USI in non-conference. In the 28 non-conference games, senior outfielder Ren Tachioka leads the Eagles with a .357 average (30-84), while senior first baseman Tucker Ebest has a team-high 26 RBIs. Ebest also is tied with senior designated hitter Jack Ellis with a team-best four home runs outside of the OVC. Four pitchers have a team-best two victories each in the non-conference schedule.

Season leaders at the plate in 2024. Senior outfielder Ren Tachioka is hitting a team best .388 (64-165) in 42 of the 52 games, while senior infielder/designated hitter Tucker Ebest has hit a team-high nine home runs and driven in a team-best 49 RBIs.

Leaders on the mound in 2024. USI junior right-handers Gavin Seebold has recorded a team-best six wins this season (6-2). Junior right-hander Gavin Morris and freshman right-hander Grant Parson follow with four wins each, while Parson has a team-high 60 strikeouts. Freshman right-hander Clayton Weisheit leads USI hurlers with a team-low 2.92 ERA in 37.0 innings this season.

At home versus the road. USI, as a team, is hitting .296 at the home (23 games), compared to .265 on the road (28 games). Senior rightfielder Ren Tachioka is hitting a team-high .444 at the USI Baseball Field, but team-high .344 on the road.

Multi-hit/Multi-RBI Games. USI junior centerfielder Terrick Thompson-Allen leads the Eagles with 24 multi-hit games (22 with 2; 2 with 3), followed by senior outfielder Ren Tachioka has 21 (14 with 2; 6 with 3; 1 with 4). Senior first baseman/designated hitter Tucker Ebest has a team-high 14 multi-RBI games. Sophomore infielder Caleb Niehaus has the top RBI game of the season with five versus Southeast Missouri State University.

In the OVC statistically. USI, as a team, is fifth in the OVC in pitching with a team 6.02 ERA and sixth in the league in hitting with a .278 team batting average. Senior outfielder Ren Tachioka is third in the OVC with a .388 batting average, while freshman right-hander Grant Parson is fifth with a 3.90 ERA and sixth with 60 strikeouts.

In OVC Games Only. USI is fifth in the league with a .303 team batting average and sixth with a 5.97 team ERA in OVC games only.

MTSU in 2024. The Blue Raiders of MTSU are 19-32 overall in 2024 and are 5-5 in the last 10 games. MTSU, who took two of three from Jacksonville State University last weekend, is 11-20 since playing the Eagles in March.            

USI vs. MTSU. USI owns the first and only meeting between the two programs, defeating MTSU, 12-9, in March. Junior catcher Logan Mock led the USI hitters in the win, going four-for-four with three RBIs and two doubles.   

Western Illinois in 2024. The Leathernecks of Western Illinois University are 13-34 overall and 8-16 in the OVC after losing two of three to Southeast Missouri State University. WIU has won three of the last 10 games, entering this week.  

USI vs. WIU. The all-time series between USI and WIU is tied, 3-3, after the Eagles took three of four from the Leathernecks to open the 2023 season.

VALPO BASEBALL

Valparaiso University men’s golf fifth-year senior Caleb VanArragon (Blaine, Minn. / Blaine) golfed the first round of the NCAA West Lafayette Regional on Tuesday, hosted by Purdue at the par-72, 7461-yard Kampen Course in West Lafayette, Ind. He posted a first-round score of 74 (+2), tied for 28th in a 75-golfer field.

“Caleb showed a lot of poise and patience today,” head coach Dave Gring said. “The golf course is a tremendous test and it doesn’t allow missed shots – you’re going to pay for those. It got windy during the round, getting up to 15–20 mph. Even though he struggled with his ball striking, hitting only five fairways and seven greens in regulation, he absolutely grinded with his short game. He got up and down seven of 11 times and only had 26 putts. Caleb is used to hitting a lot of greens and giving himself birdie opportunities. Today, it was survival of the fittest and just saving par.”

VanArragon birdied Hole 4 and Hole 16, but did have two bogeys and one double bogey. He will tee off the second round on Tuesday at 8:53 a.m. CT / 9:53 a.m. ET starting on Hole 1. A link to live scoring via GolfStat is available on ValpoAthletics.com.

“I thought that Caleb made a lot of very good decisions today, both with his target lines off the tee boxes to iron selections hitting into the greens,” Gring said. “He just missed the fairway on the ninth hole and that created a bit of a domino effect, leading to the double bogey. All four of the Par 3s were very challenging today, playing away from the water hazard on each one of them. Caleb wasn’t able to get up and down on two of them and that led to the other two bogeys. He made birdies on two of the four Par 5s and just missed birdie on the other two. We still have a lot of golf to play and we’re looking forward to the second round tomorrow.”

VALPO WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

Valpo women’s basketball head coach Mary Evans announced today four additions — three transfers and one freshman — for the Beacons’ 2024-25 roster, bringing in a veteran group to complement the returnees and previously announced freshmen.

“This group will add maturity and experience to a really young team,” Evans said. “They all love to be in the gym and work on their games. They will mesh well with our returning core, and I am excited to get to work with this group of young women.”

Fiona Connolly is a 5-8 guard from South Burlington, Vt. Connolly will have two seasons of eligibility remaining at Valpo after playing her first two collegiate seasons at La Salle, where she appeared in 47 games, scoring 53 points and handing out 36 assists. Connolly completed her prep career at Brewster Academy, where she was named NEPSAC Player of the Year as a senior. Previously playing at Rice Memorial H.S., Connolly helped her squad to a berth in the state semifinals.

“Fiona is a tough and hard-nosed point guard,” Evans said. “She will bring some experience and maturity to our lead guard position. She loves to push pace. The quality that our staff loved the most about her is her ability to pass the basketball and find teammates in transition.”

Maci Rhoades is a 5-11 guard from Beavercreek, Ohio. Rhoades has two seasons of eligibility remaining at Valpo after playing her first two years at Radford, where she appeared in 46 games, scoring 151 points and grabbing 74 rebounds. Rhoades hit at a 40% clip from 3-point range in her two seasons for the Highlanders. Rhoades played her prep basketball at Beavercreek H.S., where she earned Honorable Mention notice for the Ohio Southwest District I All-Star Team.

“Maci can flat out shoot the basketball,” Evans said. “She has shown the ability to hit at a high rate at the collegiate level. She has good size at the wing position and is extremely versatile on the floor.”

Mor Shabtai is a 5-4 guard from Israel. She most recently played for Hapoel Petah Tikva in the Israeli Women’s Basketball Premier League. Shabtai also previously played for ASA Jerusalem and Elitzur Holon, both in the Premier League as well. While Shabtai will be a freshman, she adds to the veteran group as she is 20 years old and has served in the Israeli military.

“Mor is an exciting point guard who loves to push pace and pass the basketball,” Evans said. “Her experience playing at a number of levels overseas, as well as her international experience, should lead to a smooth transition to college basketball. She will add some depth and maturity to our guard position.”

Bella Swedlund is a 5-8 guard from Winner, S.D. A three-star prospect according to ESPN.com and the nation’s 25th-ranked point guard in the class of 2022, Swedlund is still looking to make her collegiate debut after redshirting at Kansas in 2022-23 and sitting out last season due to injury at Toledo. A three-time First Team All-State honoree and finalist for South Dakota Miss Basketball as a senior at Winner H.S., Swedlund helped lead her teams to three regional titles and the 2019 Class A state title. She ranked 14th in state history at the time of her graduation with 2,256 career points.

“Bella is a scorer and fantastic shooter,” Evans said. “She has had some tough luck to start her collegiate career, but is a true competitor and an amazing young person. I believe she will be able to come in and help stretch the floor as a shooter as she works her way back from injury.”

These four players join the pair of incoming freshmen — Lexi Castator and Kylie Waytashek — who inked NLIs with the program last fall.

VALPO BASEBALL

Valparaiso (14-34, 6-18 MVC)

at Northwestern (16-32, 3-18 Big Ten)

Rocky Berenice Miller Park (600) | Evanston, Ill.

Tuesday, May 14, 3:30 p.m. CT – RHP Kaleb Krier

Next Up in Valpo Baseball: The Valparaiso University baseball team will play its nonconference finale on Tuesday at Northwestern, the team’s final road contest of the 2024 campaign. The Beacons will face a power-5 opponent as a final tune-up for this weekend’s Missouri Valley Conference series against nationally-ranked Indiana State that begins on Thursday at Emory G. Bauer Field. 

Last Time Out: Valpo saw its hopes of qualifying for the Missouri Valley Conference Tournament dashed as the Beacons were swept this past weekend at Murray State. The most compelling contest was the series opener, when Valpo rallied from down six in the ninth thanks to a pair of a three-run homers – one by Kyle Schmack with one away and one by Connor Giusti with Valpo down to its final out – but the Racers won that game 11-10 in 10 innings and went on to win the remaining games in the series 7-3 and 12-3.

Following the Beacons: Tuesday’s game will be broadcast on B1G+. Links to live video and stats are available on ValpoAthletics.com. For in-game updates, follow @ValpoBaseball on X. 

Head Coach Brian Schmack: Brian Schmack (202-328) is in his 11th season in charge of the program. He ranks third in program history in seasons coached and games coached as he coached his 500th game on March 17, 2024 at Campbell. On April 19 vs. Missouri State, he became the third head coach in program history to secure his 200th win. Schmack, a member of the 2003 Detroit Tigers, served as pitching coach/associate head coach at Valpo for seven seasons prior to his promotion.

Series Notes: Valpo holds a 9-24 all-time record against Northwestern. This will represent the first clash between the two teams since a 12-5 Wildcat win on April 8, 2014 as part of Brian Schmack’s first season as Valpo head coach. In 2011, Valpo beat Northwestern 5-2.

Schmack’s Home Run Chase

Kyle Schmack hit two more home runs in the May 10-12 series at Murray State, moving into sole possession of second in program history for both single-season and career long balls.

With four games left in the regular season, Schmack needs two home runs to tie both records and three to become the program’s sole home run king both for a career and single season.

Brian Wolotka (2001, 18) owns the single-season record, while J.J. Swiatkowski (1997-2000, 36) possesses the career record.

In The Other Dugout: Northwestern

Coming off a 3-1 win at Ohio State on Sunday to salvage the finale of a three-game series.

Games against MVC teams this season include a 3-2 loss at UIC on April 30 and a 7-6, 10-inning win vs. Illinois State on April 23.

Led offensively by Bennett Markinson, who owns a .330 batting average with five home runs and 33 RBIs. Preston Knott has the team’s best on-base percentage at .418, while Owen McElfatrick leads the Wildcats in the power categories with 11 home runs, 36 RBIs and a .549 slugging percentage.

Under the direction of first-year head coach Ben Greenspan, who previously served as associate head coach and recruiting coordinator at Michigan.

Notes Wrapping Up Murray State (May 10-12)

Valpo improbably rallied for six runs in the top of the ninth of Friday’s series opener, creating a 10-10 tie only to fall 11-10 in 10 innings.

Kyle Schmack and Connor Giusti both hit three-run homers in the inning. That marked the first time Valpo had two home runs worth three or more runs each in the same inning since April 25, 2016 when Giovanni Garbella hit a grand slam and Josh Clark had a three-run shot against Purdue North Central. Before that, Valpo had not slugged a pair of home runs worth three runs or more in the same frame since at least 2006.

Giusti’s home run came with two outs and Valpo down 10-7. It marked the second time this season that Valpo has been down to its final out and hit a home run to tie or take the lead. Brady Renfro had a walk-off home run with Valpo down to its final out against Missouri State.

Murray State’s Drew Vogel hit for the reverse natural cycle, hitting a home run, triple, double and single in that order. His single to lead off the 10th clinched it before he eventually scored the winning run. Previously, a Valpo opposing player hit for the cycle on May 13, 2018 – Illinois State’s Owen Miller, now in the big leagues with the Milwaukee Brewers.

The Friday game marked Valpo’s fourth extra-inning contest of the season, with the Beacons dropping to 2-2 in such games. Valpo played its 11th one-run game of the season and fell to 3-8 in those games. The squad played its 18th game decided by two runs or fewer, falling to 4-14 under those circumstances.

Six Beacons had multiple hits on Friday, led by Kyle Schmack and Kade Reinertson with three hits apiece. Each team produced 16 hits in the game, Valpo’s second-highest total of MVC play behind 18 on April 28 at UIC.

Valpo experienced the wrong side of a walk-off for the fifth time this season in the Friday game at Murray State. The Beacons were previously walked off on April 30 at Western Michigan, April 23 at Northern Illinois, March 15 at No. 21 Campbell and March 5 at Jacksonville.

Murray State won the middle game of the series 7-3 on Saturday despite Valpo nearly doubling up the Racers in the hit column, 11-6. Eight Valpo players had at least one hit including multi-hit games from Kaleb Hannahs, Ryan Maka and Alex Thurston. Alex Ryan extended his on-base streak to 16, and then stretched that streak to 17 with Sunday’s series finale.

Valpo lost the final game of the set 12-3 despite home runs by Maka and Schmack.

UINDY BASEBALL

INDIANAPOLIS – The UIndy softball team continues its stellar 2024 season this week when the No. 2 Greyhounds host the 21st-ranked Trevecca Trojans at the NCAA DII Midwest Super Regional Tuesday and Wednesday. The region’s top two teams will square off in a best-of-three showdown with a trip to the DII Championship on the line.

With UIndy’s Baumgartner Field as the setting, game one is set for Tuesday at 11 a.m. ET—weather permitting. The teams will return to the diamond for game two on Wednesday to finish the best-of-three series. First pitch is scheduled for 11 a.m., followed by the if-necessary game immediately following.

The Midwest Super Regional will be streamed for free on the GLVC Sports Network. The GLVCSN is available online, as well as through iOS and Android mobile apps and GLVCSN OTT apps on Roku, Amazon Fire TV, Apple TV, and Android TV.

The Hounds have advanced to the Super Regional round on five previous occasions, including last spring. UIndy is gunning for its third-ever “World Series” appearance (2009, ’15). This year’s championship will be held in Longwood, Fla., May 19-25.

UINDY MEN’S TENNIS

GREENWOOD, Ind. – The No. 8-ranked University of Indianapolis men’s tennis kept their brooms busy early on Monday afternoon, sweeping the eight-seeded Findlay Oilers on route to the NCAA DII Midwest Regional Final.

The Hounds have now swept their last four matches, all within the postseason. They will face McKendree in the regional final as the Bearcats and Greyhounds battle it out for a spot in Orlando, Fla. for Nationals.

HOW IT HAPPENED

Louis Picaud and Erwan Momo Andre, the nations No. 31-ranked doubles pair, set the pace for the match, sprinting to a rapid 6-0 victory at court two for doubles. Pedro Franca and David Simeonov were the clinchers for the doubles point this time around, swiping the honors from the top-court of Matthieu Derache and Tom Zeuch who were on match point as well.

With domination in all three doubles courts, the Hounds continued to roll in singles. First on the board was Mauricio Grijalva putting his foot on the gas with a big 6-2, 6-2 win.

After a lull in the action, the 2-0 lead broke quickly for the Hounds, starting with Zeuch at the top court. The nation’s best player finished a straight-sets sweep of No. 64 Arthur Bord to make it 3-0. That left it to the freshman Manuel Lanteri and Derache at courts three and four both racing for the clinch. Derache would not be stripped of the honor this time, delivering a vicious forehand to ice the match and set the Hounds date with the Bearcats.

UP NEXT

The Hounds will face McKendree in the regional final as the Bearcats and Greyhounds battle it out for a spot in Orlando, Fla. for Nationals. The match will take place at 11 a.m. ET in the UIndy Tennis Center.

UINDY SOFTBALL

LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The postseason’s second set of softball all-region awards was released Monday, with five Greyhounds appearing on the D2CCA All-Midwest Region List. Senior Kenzee Smith was tabbed the Midwest Pitcher of the Year, while teammates Jocelyn Calvin, Megan Nichols and Emily O’Connor joined her on the first team. Lexy Rees was included on the second team.

Nominated and voted on by the region’s College Sports Communicators, the release comes on the heels of the NFCA’s all-region announcement. All five aforementioned Greyhounds appeared on both lists, with all five repeating their D2CCA recognition from a season ago. Meanwhile, Smith becomes the sixth Greyhound pitcher since 2012 to be named the region’s best pitcher, the last being her former-teammate Hallie Waters in 2021.

The quintet leads a 56-win UIndy club that is hosting the NCAA DII Midwest Super Regional this week. The Hounds will face 21st-ranked Trevecca in a best-of-three series this Tuesday and Wednesday, with the winner advancing to the NCAA DII Championships.

UINDY ATHLETICS

INDIANAPOLIS – The University of Indianapolis has earned its 12th consecutive Great Lakes Valley Conference (GLVC) All-Sports Trophy, the league office announced on Monday. The Greyhounds totaled 199.5 points during the 2023-24 academic year, winning by 18.5 points over second-place Lewis University.
 
The trophy is UIndy’s 15th in program history, with wins in the 1978-79, 1994-95, and 2002-03 seasons, as well as the past 12, dating back to 2011-12. The GLVC did not award the All-Sports Trophy in 2019-20 due to the COVID-19 pandemic that suspended spring sports competition that year.
 
The GLVC All-Sports Trophy is presented to the institution that demonstrates the best all-around performance in the league’s 24 sponsored sports. Points are allocated based on overall finish in the respective sport’s Conference tournament and league standings.
 
UIndy captured a league-high eight GLVC titles this season to earn top points in men’s soccer, football, men’s swimming and diving, men’s and women’s golf, as well as men’s and women’s tennis, and women’s lacrosse. In addition, the UIndy women finished runner-up in swimming and softball.
 
The All-Sports Trophy was first instituted in the GLVC during the 1978-79 season with seven different institutions having claimed the award.
 
The standings for the 2023-24 GLVC All-Sports Trophy are below.
 

1. UIndy199.510. Quincy89
2. Lewis18111. Truman State85
3. Drury15612. Southwest Baptist84.5
4. McKendree146.513. William Jewell79.5
5. Maryville14414. Upper Iowa57.25
6. Missouri-St. Louis127.515. Missouri Western ^6
7. Missouri S&T11316 Newman #5
8. Rockhurst11217. Davenport +*4
9. Illinois Springfield105.7518. Central Missouri #2.5

 
# Bowling member only | + Men’s Lacrosse member only | ^ Women’s Lacrosse member only | * Wrestling member only

MARIAN MEN’S GOLF

Jackson, Mich. – After helping Marian men’s golf to a second consecutive Crossroads League Championship, Marian freshman Lane Zedrick has been named the Crossroads League Men’s Golfer of the Week. The honor is the sixth of the season for the men’s golf program, and is Zedrick’s first career honor.

Zedrick led a dominant Crossroads League Championships performance from No. 23 Marian, as the freshman led the Knights to the team title. Zedrick fired scores of 67, 68 and 70 to take individual medalist honors. The individual championship is the third consecutive for Marian.

The Knights will tee off at the NAIA National Championship next Tuesday, May 21, at 2:00 p.m. in the first round.

INDIANA SMAILL COLLEGE WEB SITES

INDIANA WESLEYAN ATHLETICS: https://iwuwildcats.com/

EARLHAM ATHLETICS: https://goearlham.com/

WABASH ATHLETICS: https://sports.wabash.edu/

FRANKLIN ATHLETICS: https://franklingrizzlies.com/

ROSE-HULMAN ATHLETICS: https://athletics.rose-hulman.edu/

ANDERSON ATHLETICS: https://athletics.anderson.edu/landing/index

TRINE ATHLETICS: https://trinethunder.com/landing/index

BETHEL ATHLETICS: https://bupilots.com/

DEPAUW ATHLETICS: https://depauwtigers.com/

HANOVER ATHLETICS: https://athletics.hanover.edu/

MANCHESTER ATHLETICS: https://muspartans.com/

HUNTINGTON ATHLETICS: https://www.huathletics.com/

OAKLAND CITY ATHLETICS: https://gomightyoaks.com/index.aspx

ST. FRANCIS ATHLETICS: https://www.saintfranciscougars.com/landing/index

IU KOKOMO ATHLETICS: https://iukcougars.com/

IU EAST ATHLETICS: https://www.iueredwolves.com/

IU SOUTH BEND ATHLETICS: https://iusbtitans.com/

PURDUE NORTHWEST ATHLETICS: https://pnwathletics.com/

INDIANA TECH ATHLETICS: https://indianatechwarriors.com/index.aspx

GRACE COLLEGE ATHLETICS: https://gclancers.com/

ST. MARY OF THE WOODS ATHLETICS: https://smwcathletics.com/

GOSHEN COLLEGE ATHLETICS: https://goleafs.net/

HOY CROSS ATHLETICS: https://www.hcsaints.com/index.php

TAYLOR ATHLETICS: https://www.taylortrojans.com/

VINCENNES ATHLETICS: https://govutrailblazers.com/landing/index

NUMBERS IN SPORTS

3 – 37 – 7

May 14, 1913 – Washington Senator pitcher Walter Johnson, had his amazing MLB record of scoreless innings streak end at 56.

May 14, 1920 – Speaking of Washington’s Walter Johnson, on this day the legend won his 300th career game in the MLB as he and the Senators outlasted the Detroit Tigers 9-8.

May 14, 1940 – The fans at Chicago’s Comiskey Park, saw something truly spectacular. Boston Red Sox hitter Jimie Foxx, Number 3 hammered a pitch over the left field roof of the ball park. Foxx had two shots over the wall in the game to help the Red Sox to win over the White Sox 7-6.

May 14, 1967 – Number 37, Stu Miller, pitcher of the Baltimore Orioles is the trivia answer to this question: Who served up the pitch for Mickey Mantle’s 500th career Home Run? Old Number 7 of the New York Yankees belted this base clearer to help the Yanks over come Baltimore 6-5. Miller up till that time was one of the few AL pitchers that had faced Mantle multiple times that had the great Yankee hitter had not gone yard on.

FOOTBALL HISTORY

First Weekend of College Football

May 14, 1874-  Harvard versus McGill game #1

The Boston Globe, on May 14, 1874, had this excerpt in their column called the SUBURBS, CAMBRIDGE. Foot Ball – The McGill University students here to play the Harvards at football today and tomorrow were in Cambridge yesterday. They visited Jarvis Field in the afternoon, and after viewing the grounds on which the matches will be played, they indulged in a short “kick” preparatory to their labors this afternoon. They are a fine-looking and strongly built set of men, and their friends are confident that they will get away with the Harvard team without trouble. 

This is a report on the first time a football team and its entourage were in the game’s host city 24 hours before kick-off. This is a common occurrence and almost mandatory in our era of Division I football. 

Remember, this is the first international football game on US soil!

Prior to this, two schools playing each other was rare. Okay, there was the soccer match in 1869 between Princeton and Rutgers, which often gets credit as the first football game. It was, in fact, much closer to soccer than what we know as American football, as you were not allowed to carry the ball and could barely touch it with your hands. Most games on college campuses were intramural. 

The American Heritage website gives us more insight. 

In the spring of 1874, a group of athletic Harvardians grew tired of intramural competition and looked for another college to play against. Scorning the soccer-like game played to the south, they found a worthy opponent in McGill, of Montreal, which also played something close to rugby.

When the captains of the two teams met, however, their rules differed in several respects. The Canadian game allowed more carrying and used an oblong ball that was easier to throw and catch. 

They played two games—one on May 14 under Harvard’s rules and one on May 15 under McGill’s. Harvard won the first game 3-0, while the second … Just like the fans of that era, we will make you wait until the event’s date, and we will tell you more about it tomorrow in our May 15 edition.

I will share with you that that weekend in Massachusetts was extremely pivotal in the creation of the game we love. It was a spark that gave a glimpse to the players and spectators that spring in 1874 of how unique a game American football could be. Yes, it was a spark that would set off the tinderbox six years later when a group of men, including Walter Camp, sat down and made some significant reforms to how colleges would play this new game. Much of it was inspired by how these young men from McGill explained a game they played to the boys from Boston. 

Tune in tomorrow for the details…


Hall of Fame Birthday for May 14

May 14, 1907 – Salem, Ohio –  Carnegie Mellon’s quarterback from 1926 through the 1928 season, Howard Harpster was born. Harpster received the great honor of being selected for inclusion into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1956.  Read more about this legend by clicking his name or by visiting the On This Day page for May 14.

TODAY IN BASEBALL HISTORY

May 14

1913 — Washington’s Walter Johnson gave up a run in the fourth inning against the St. Louis Browns to end his streak of 56 scoreless innings. The Senators won 10-5.

1914 — Jim Scott of the Chicago White Sox pitched nine innings of no-hit ball against the Washington Senators, but lost 1-0 after giving up two hits in the 10th inning.

1920 — Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators recorded his 300th victory with a 9-8 win over the Detroit Tigers.

1927 — Chicago pitcher Guy Bush went the distance for the Cubs in a 7-2 18-inning win over Boston. Charlie Robertson of the Braves almost matched the feat, leaving with one out in the 18th.

1950 — Pittsburgh first baseman Johnny Hopp hit two home runs and four singles in six at-bats, leading the Pirates to a 16-9 victory over the Cubs in the second game of a doubleheader at Chicago.

1965 — Carl Yastrzemski of Boston hit for the cycle and added another home run for five RBIs in a 12-8 10-inning loss to the Detroit Tigers.

1966 — Roberto Clemente’s sixth and final career home run off Sandy Koufax is another no-doubter. It comes during Koufax’s final season, the net result being one less shutout for Sandy and one more moon shot for Clemente

1967 — Mickey Mantle’s 500th home run, off Stu Miller, lifted the New York Yankees to a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

1972 — In his first game with the New York Mets, Willie Mays hit a fifth inning home run off Don Carrithers for the difference in a 5-4 triumph over the San Francisco Giants.

1977 — Jim Colborn of the Kansas City Royals no-hit the Texas Rangers for a 6-0 victory.

1986 — California Angels slugger Reggie Jackson hits his 537th career home run to move past Mickey Mantle on the all-time list. Jackson delivers the milestone blast against Roger Clemens of the Boston Red Sox.

1988 — Jose Oquendo became the first non-pitcher in 20 seasons to get a decision, taking the loss in the 19th inning when Ken Griffey’s two-out, two-run double led the Atlanta Braves over the St. Louis Cardinals 7-5.

1989 — Benny Distefano became the first left-handed catcher in a major league game in nine years when he caught the ninth inning of the Pittsburgh Pirates’ 5-2 loss to the Atlanta Braves. Mike Squires caught two games with the Chicago White Sox in 1980 and Dale Long caught two games for the Chicago Cubs in 1958.

1993 — Jay Gainer of the Colorado Rockies hit a home run on the first major league pitch he saw. The first baseman became the fifth National Leaguer and 12th major leaguer to accomplish this feat. The Cincinnati Reds beat the Rockies 13-5.

1996 — Dwight Gooden pitched a no-hitter as the New York Yankees beat the Seattle Mariners 2-0. Gooden struck out five and walked six.

2000 — Although Sammy Sosa collects five hits, Henry Rodriguez has seven RBI and Eric Young steals five bases, the Chicago Cubs still manage to lose to Montreal, 16-15. Young’s five stolen bases are the most by a Cubs player since 1881 when George Gore stole seven.

2010 — After Twins manager Ron Gardenhire orders an intentional walk to Mark Teixeira and brings in righty Matt Guerrier to face Alex Rodriguez in the 7th, the Yankee third baseman blasts his 19th career grand slam to pass Frank Robinson for 7th on the all-time career home run list and give New York an 8-4 win.

2012 — Major League Baseball fires arbitrator Shyam Das after 13 years on the job. The Commissioner’s office was incensed at Das for overturning Ryan Braun’s suspension for PED use on a technicality on February 23rd, and the last straw comes when the same ruling is used today to justify ending Eliezer Alfonzo’s 100-game suspension early.

2016 — In his final season, David Ortiz is still a master of the clutch hit. Today, he hits a two-out 9th-inning triple off Luke Gregerson to drive in Xander Bogaerts and tie the game for the Red Sox against the Astros, then hits a two-out double in the 11th off Michael Feliz that again drives in Bogaerts and gives the Sox a 6-5 win. The double is the 600th of his career, making him only the third player after Hank Aaron and Barry Bonds to hit 500 homers and 600 doubles; he had hit homer #513 in the 3rd inning.

2017 — The Yankees officially retire uniform number 2 in honor of Derek Jeter and unveil a plaque in his name in Monument Park at New Yankee Stadium between games of a doubleheader against the Astros.

TODAY IN SPORTS HISTORY

May 14

1913 — Washington’s Walter Johnson gives up a run in the fourth inning against the St. Louis Browns to end his streak of 56 scoreless innings. The Senators win 10-5.

1919 — Four days after his Kentucky Derby victory, Sir Barton, ridden by Johnny Loftus, wins the Preakness Stakes by four lengths over Eternal.

1920 — Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators records his 300th victory with a 9-8 win over the Detroit Tigers.

1967 — Mickey Mantle hits his 500th home run, a shot off Stu Miller that lifts the New York Yankees to a 6-5 victory over the Baltimore Orioles.

1977 — The Montreal Canadiens edge the Boston Bruins 2-1 to win the Stanley Cup in four games.

1981 — The Boston Celtics win the NBA championship with a 102-91 victory over the Houston Rockets in Game 6.

1989 — James Worthy scores 12 of his 33 points in the fourth quarter, and the Lakers rally from a 29-point first-half deficit to beat Seattle 97-95 and sweep the Western Conference semifinals.

1994 — FA Cup Final: Manchester United defeat Chelsea 4-0 at Wembley Stadium, London.

1995 — Kelly Robbins overcomes a three-shot deficit in the final seven holes to win the LPGA Championship by a stroke over defending champion Laura Davies.

1997 — FC Barcelona of Spain win 37th European Cup Winner’s Cup against Paris Saint-Germain of France 1-0 in Rotterdam.

1997 — Baseball’s Executive Council suspends NY Yankees owner George Steinbrenner for his suing other team owners.

1999 — Annika Sorenstam shoots an 11-under 61, the best score in LPGA history on a par-72 course, to take a two-shot lead over Michelle McGann after the opening round of the Sara Lee Classic.

2003 — Jean-Sebastien Giguere stops 35 shots for his third straight shutout, and Anaheim beats Minnesota 4-0 for a 3-0 lead in the Western Conference finals. He’s the first goalie in modern NHL history to record three consecutive shutouts in the next-to-last round of the playoffs.

2004 — Richard Jefferson scores 18 of his 31 points after regulation to lead New Jersey to a 127-120 triple-overtime victory over Detroit and a 3-2 lead in the Eastern Conference semifinals. The last playoff game to be decided in three overtimes was Phoenix’s 129-121 victory over Chicago in Game 3 of the 1993 NBA Finals.

2010 — The Philadelphia Flyers overcome a couple of 3-0 deficits to finish off the Boston Bruins. Simon Gagne scores on a power play with 7:08 left to cap a comeback from a three-goal deficit, and the Flyers win 4-3 for a berth in the Eastern Conference finals. The Bruins become the third team in NHL history to lose a series after winning the first three games.

2011 — English FA Cup Final, Wembley Stadium, London (88,643): Manchester City beats Stoke City, 1-0; Yaya Touré scores 74′ winner; Citizens’ 5th title.

2017 — Stephen Curry scores 40 points and hits a tying 3-pointer with 1:48 remaining, and the Golden State Warriors rally after Kawhi Leonard is lost to an ankle injury to beat the San Antonio Spurs 113-111 in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals. Draymond Green gives Golden State the lead for good on a three-point play after the Warriors trail by as many as 25 points in the first half.

2017 — PGA Players Championship, TPC at Sawgrass: 21 year old South Korean Kim Si-woo shoots final round 69 to win by 3 strokes ahead of Louis Oosthuizen and Ian Poulter.

2018 — The Supreme Court clears the way for states to legalize betting on sports, breaking a longtime ban and creating a potential financial boon for states and the gambling industry. Despite opposition from the major sports leagues and the Trump administration, the high court strikes down a federal law that barred betting on football, basketball, baseball and other sports in most states.

2018 — Arsenal finish EPL season in 6th place on 63 points; fail to qualify for the UEFA Champions League for the first time since 1997.

TV SPORTS TUESDAY

MLB REGULAR SEASONTIME ETTV
Philadelphia at NY Mets1:10pmMLBN
WCAU
SNY
MLB.TV
Fubo
Toronto at Baltimore6:35pmSportsnet
MASN
MLB.TV
Fubo
Miami at Detroit6:40pmBally Sports-Florida
Bally Sports-Detroit
MLB.TV
Fubo
Tampa Bay at Boston7:10pmBally Sports-Sun
NESN
MLB.TV
Fubo
Chi. Cubs at Atlanta7:20pmMARQ
Bally Sports-South
MLB.TV
Fubo
Washington at Chi. White Sox7:40pmMASN2
NBC Sports-Chicago
MLB.TV
Fubo
Pittsburgh at Milwuakee7:40pmATTSN-Pittsburgh
Bally Sports-Wisconsin
MLB.TV
Fubo
NY Yankees at Minnesota7:40pmTBS
YES
Bally Sports-North
MLB.TV
Fubo
Cleveland at Texas8:05pmBally Sports-Great Lakes
Bally Sports-Southwest
MLB.TV
Fubo
Oakland at Houston8:10pmNBC Sports-California
SCHN
MLB.TV
Fubo
St. Louis at LA Angels9:38pmBally Sports-Midwest
Bally Sports-West
MLB.TV
Fubo
Cincinnati at Arizona9:40pmMLBN
Bally Sports-Ohio
YurView
MLB.TV
Fubo
Colorado at San Diego9:40pmMLBN
Rockies.TV
Padres.TV
MLB.TV
Fubo
Kansas City at Seattle9:40pmBally Sports-Kansas City
Root Sports
MLB.TV
Fubo
LA Dodgers at San Francisco9:45pmSNLA
NBC Sports-Bay Area
MLB.TV
Fubo
NBA PLAYOFFSTIME ETTV
East Semifinals Game 5: Minnesota at Denver10:30pmTNT
Fubo
West Semifinals Game 5: Indiana at New York8:00pmTNT
Fubo
NHL PLAYOFFSTIME ETTV
East Semifinals Game 5: Boston at Florida7:00pmESPN
West Semifinals Game 4: Vancouver at Edmonton9:30pmESPN
SOCCERTIME ETTV
La Liga: Osasuna vs Mallorca1:30pmESPN+
Fubo
Scottish Premiership: Rangers vs Dundee2:30pmParamount+
Fubo
EPL: Tottenham Hotspur vs Manchester City3:00pmPeacock
Fubo
La Liga: Real Madrid vs Deportivo Alavés3:30pmESPN+
Fubo
La Liga: Girona vs Villarreal4:00pmESPN+
Fubo
COLLEGE BASEBALLTIME ETTV
UConn vs Cincinnati11:00amESPN+
Texas Southern vs Rice12:35pmESPN+
Alabama State vs UAB2:00pmESPN+
Old Dominion vs Richmond2:00pmESPN+
Villanova vs Saint Joseph’s2:00pmESPN+
William & Mary vs George Mason2:00pmESPN+
Coppin State vs Mount St. Mary’s3:00pmESPN+
Dayton vs Toledo3:00pmESPN+
Indiana State vs Ball State3:00pmESPN+
Penn State vs Pittsburgh3:00pmACCNX
St. Bonaventure vs Niagara3:00pmESPN+
Central Michigan vs Oakland3:30pmESPN+
Akron vs Michigan4:00pmB1G+
Valparaiso vs Northwestern4:30pmB1G+
Alabama A&M vs Murray State5:00pmESPN+
Belmont vs Tennessee5:00pmSECN+
Florida State vs Stetson5:00pmESPN+
Georgia State vs South Carolina Upstate5:00pmESPN+
Presbyterian vs Western Carolina5:00pmESPN+
The Citadel vs Charleston Southern5:00pmESPN+
UC Davis vs San Francisco5:00pmESPN+
Cal Poly vs Pepperdine6:00pmESPN+
Campbell vs East Carolina6:00pmESPN+
Charleston vs Duke6:00pmACCNX
Clemson vs Coastal Carolina6:00pmESPN+
Eastern Illinois vs Illinois State6:00pmESPN+
Eastern Kentucky vs Morehead State6:00pmESPN+
Eastern Michigan vs Michigan State6:00pmB1G+
Indiana vs Louisville6:00pmACCNX
Jacksonville vs Georgia Southern6:00pmESPN+
Jacksonville State vs Kennesaw State6:00pmESPN+
Marshall vs Ohio6:00pmESPN+
Miami vs Florida International6:00pmESPN+
North Carolina A&T vs UNC Greensboro6:00pmESPN+
North Florida vs South Florida6:00pmESPN+
Queens (NC) vs Gardner-Webb6:00pmESPN+
VMI vs Radford6:00pmESPN+
Florida Atlantic vs Florida Gulf Coast6:30pmESPN+
Wright State vs Kentucky6:30pmSECN+
Alcorn State vs Lamar7:00pmESPN+
Baylor vs TCU7:00pmESPN+
Central Arkansas vs Little Rock7:00pmESPN+
Evansville vs Austin Peay7:00pmESPN+
Incarnate Word vs UTSA7:00pmESPN+
Liberty vs Wake Forest7:00pmACCN
Middle Tennessee vs Southern Indiana7:00pmESPN+
Mississippi vs Southern Miss7:00pmESPN+
North Alabama vs Mississippi State7:00pmSECN+
Ole Miss vs Southern Miss7:00pmESPN+
South Alabama vs SE Louisiana7:00pmESPN+
South Dakota State vs Kansas State7:00pmESPN+
Texas State vs McNeese7:00pmESPN+
UIC vs Iowa7:00pmB1G+
Washington vs Portland7:05pmESPN+
Grand Canyon vs BYU8:00pmESPN+
Loyola Marymount vs UC Irvine9:00pmESPN+
USC vs Gonzaga9:00pmESPN+
TENNISTIME ETTV
Internazionali BNL d’Italia Tennis: ATP Round of 16, WTA Quarterfinals5:00amTENNIS
Internazionali BNL d’Italia Tennis: ATP Round of 16, WTA Quarterfinals1:00pmTENNIS
WNBATIME ETTV
New York vs Washington7:00pmESPN3
Indiana vs Connecticut7:30pmESPN2
Phoenix vs Las Vegas10:00pmESPN2
Minnesota vs Seattle10:00pmESPN3