EVANSVILLE, Ind. – On Tuesday afternoon, the Evansville Otters drafted LHP Brett Winkelmann and C Damon Maynard from the annual Frontier League Tryout Camp in Sauget, Ill.
Winkelmann, a left handed pitcher, hails from Omaha, NE. After playing collegiately at Emporia State University and Barton Community College, Winkelmann transferred to Nebraska to focus on his college degree. While at Nebraska, he played club baseball for the Cornhuskers. During the 2022 season, the Nebraska Baseball Club advanced to the NCBA World Series. Winkelmann was a key player with the ‘Huskers, earning Rawlings NCBA All-American honors in 2022.
Maynard, a native of Indianapolis, IN, has played primarily as a catcher, with some outfield experience as well. He began his collegiate career with Olney Central College, where he bat .311, helping the team to its first regional championship in school history. After two seasons, he transferred to Illinois State where he had a limited role for his junior season. A change of scenery helped the catcher as he found his home at USC Upstate, alongside current Otters Kevin Davis and Noah Myers. Maynard began his professional career in 2022 with the Grand Junction Rockies, where he appeared in seven games in the closing weeks of the season.
The 2023 season is right around the corner. For information or to purchase single game, group or season tickets, call 812-435-8686 or visit evansvilleotters.com.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
AVON, Ohio –Â The Evansville Otters saw the Lake Erie Crushers put up two crooked-number innings Saturday, leading to a 12-3 final in favor of Lake Erie.
The Crushers got after Evansville starter Steve Pastora early, picking up back-to-back hits in the first, but Pastora held Lake Erie to a single run in the first.
Evansville answered well in the second, taking the lead on a two-run home run from Justin Felix, his sixth home run of the season and second of the road trip.
However, the momentum settled into Lake Erie’s favor in the third, making it a rough inning for Evansville.
The first five Crushers reached in the third, scoring on RBIs from Kenen Irizarry, Jake Gitter, Connor Owings and Casey Combs.
Lake Erie chased Pastora from the game, striking for five runs total in the inning. From there, Ryan O’Reilly was brought in for the Otters.
Lake Erie extended their lead to 7-2 in the fifth on a solo home run from Connor Owings, his second RBI of the day.
In the seventh, the Crushers added another run, this time on a bases-loaded walk by Combs.
Evansville grabbed another home run in the eighth, a solo shot from Jeffrey Baez, bringing Evansville within five. Baez is up to five home runs on the season.
In the bottom half of the eighth, Lake Erie put the game away for good. The first four men reached two scoring on a two-run single from Jackson Valera. Two more runs scored in the inning on a double from Owings, giving the Crushers a 12-3 advantage.
Evansville managed a couple of base runners in the ninth but left them stranded.
Steve Pastora received the loss, allowing six runs on five hits, and failing to complete the third inning. Jason Alvarez grabbed the win, striking out seven in five innings while allowing just two runs.
With the loss, the Otters take another series loss on the road trip and are now 22-15 in 2022.
The two sides conclude the three-game set Sunday afternoon at 1:05 p.m.CT. Coverage starts at 12:50 p.m.CT on the Evansville Otters YouTube page.
The Evansville Otters are the 2006 and 2016 Frontier League champions.
The Otters play all home games at historic Bosse Field, located at 23 Don Mattingly Way in Evansville, Ind. Stay up to date with the Evansville Otters by visiting evansvilleotters.com, or follow the Otters on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.
FOOTNOTE: Â EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.
CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Golf pushed its way to a third-place team finish out of nine teams and 48 competitors at the Ohio Valley Conference Championship at the Dalhousie Country Club. The Screaming Eagles qualified for match play before being taken down, 4-1, by Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Wednesday morning. Sophomore Jason Bannister (Laguna Niguel, California) was one of five athletes named to the All-Tournament team after placing second individually.  The opening round had the Eagles in fourth place after shooting 297 (+19). Bannister quickly took the reins for USI, shooting one under par, and was in a tie for fifth going into the second day. Senior All-OVC selection Zach Williams (Mt. Vernon, Illinois) shot close behind with a 73 (+1) to rest in a tie for 12th.  The Eagles were red hot in the second round, shooting 289 with only two players going over par. Bannister, Williams, and freshman Carter Goebel (Breese, Illinois) each marked a 72 to provide USI with some insurance and propel up to third place. Junior Trevor Laub (Edwardsville, Illinois) subbed in after not competing in the opening round and scored a smooth 73 on day two.  Round three was similar for the Eagles as the group shot 288 and took the sole position of third place to qualify for match play. Bannister went on a tear on day three, matching the 18-round low in USI history (67) and worked his way to second overall in individual play by going six under par. Williams also went under par, shooting 71 and placing eighth individually by shooting at par. Goebel was the only other Eagle to place, standing in a tie for 18th.  With the third-place finish, USI was invited to match play to face SIUE head-to-head for a chance to make the OVC Championship round. The Eagles were downed by the Cougars in head-to-head play, 4-1-0, with Bannister going one-up on his opponent.  University of Arkansas at Little Rock was crowned OVC Champion after winning the three-round stroke play with an 840 (-24) and defeating Lindenwood University (4-0-1) and SIUE (4-0-1) in match play. Little Rock’s Anton Albers was the individual champion after a three-round score of 205 (-11). Â
VINCENNES, Ind. – Vincennes University volleyball sophomore Lara Gomes de Castro (Sao Paulo, Brazil) officially signed to continue her volleyball career at the next level Wednesday afternoon, signing with NAIA Union College in Barbourville, Ky.
“One of the main reasons for choosing Union College was the high quality of the Psychology department,†Gomes said. “But my meeting with Coach Wise also played a big role in my decision. As well as a large amount of International Students in their community. Coach Sien and I also talked a lot about the program since two other VU athletes have gone there and had successful volleyball careers and did well academically.â€
Gomes really came into her own this past season for the Trailblazers, finishing with 215 digs, 34 aces and six set assists.
Multiple times throughout the season, Gomes came up big in high-pressure situations from behind the service line. Not only picking up key aces but also serving the ball extremely tough and allowing the Blazers to go on big scoring runs.
Lara also earned NJCAA Academic All-American honors last July.
“When you think about two year, it doesn’t seem like that long but in a person’s life during that period, it is,†VUVB Head Coach Gary Sien said. “For Lara, seeing her continue to be a good student here has been really nice to see. As well as her being such a hard worker and being able to pick up the language here, which can be difficult for some international students.â€
“As a player, Lara is a very popular player,†Sien added. “I believe her teammates have really enjoyed having her here. It was great to have her these past two years because she could be a big-time spark plug for us. She could go out there and give us some tough serves and it got to the point where when she went back there, I almost expected her to get an ace. But she would always come into the game with that tough mentality and it showed in her serves.â€
“She also seemed to have the toughest chances on the defensive end because she would get some of the hardest hit right at her,†Sien said. “But more often than not, she would get that ball up and keep the play going. I think she worked very well with Morgan Netcott (Montague Mich.) this past season and I think they had a really nice chemistry on the back row.â€
Gomes is following in the footsteps of former VUVB athletes Allison Ruddick (Muncie, Ind.) and 2018 Region 24 Player of the Year Alison Smith (Oakland, Ill.) who went on to play at Union College.
Ruddick played for the Bulldogs from 2019 to 2021 and was named to the All-Appalachian Athletic Conference (AAC) first team all three years.
Ruddick was also named AAC Libero of the Year and in 2021 was named AVCA All-Northeast Region Libero of the Year.
Ruddick was joined her last two years by fellow VU standout Alison Smith, who in her first two years with the Bulldogs finished with 10 or more kills in a match 13 times, including ending one match with 20 or more kills.
Smith returned to Union this past season and went on to lead the Bulldogs with 352 kills, while also finishing the season with 98 digs and 41 blocks.
Gomes is joining a Bulldogs squad that finished this past season with a 15-18 record and reached the Quarterfinals of the AAC Conference tournament under head coach Jeremy Wise.
“Union’s conference has been more competitive in recent years so she will be going up against some pretty good competition at the next level,†Sien said. “The neat thing about Union is that we have had a couple of recent VU volleyball players play there.â€
“Union does do a little bit of traveling,†Sien added. “Their conference is split up over several states. But her playing here should have helped her be ready for that with the traveling that we do.â€
Gomes was one of five VUVB sophomores who closed out their Trailblazer career’s this past November with a combined record of 51-13 overall, including an outstanding 24-0 record against Region 24 opponents.
Gomes along with sophomores Josephine Mulligan (Saint John, Ind.), Kaley Roush (Shoals, Ind.), Hannah Graber (Montgomery, ind.) and Malgorzata Banasiak (Gdynia, Poland) were part of the first Trailblazer volleyball squad to win a Region Championship since making the jump to NJCAA Division I in 2016 and winning VU’s first Region Championship since 2006 in 2021.
“Being part of VU’s first Division I volleyball Region 24 Championship and then coming back and doing it again is something that I will never forget,†Gomes said. “I am beyond grateful for being part of that and extremely blessed for having amazing teammates that wanted to win just as much as I wanted to and we all worked very hard for it.â€
“All of these girls have a special place in my heart,†Gomes added. “Since my first day at VU, they have helped me in many different ways, as well as Coach Sien, who I am extremely thankful for giving me the opportunity to live out my dream.â€
“This sophomore class has a lot of firsts attached to them and those don’t go away,†Sien said. “First Region title since 2006 and the first back-to-back Region titles this past season. These past two years have been one of the best two-year runs in program history. There have been a couple of years that could be comparable, but they don’t have the titles. So this group has not only had the good record on the court, but they also have the hardware to back it up.â€
“It took a really special group to do that,†Sien added. “Thinking back to when I was recruiting two or three years ago, I knew it would take a special group to be able to do what we wanted to do and these five came in and showed that they are that special group. It’s tough to do that on its own. It’s even harder to have that undefeated Region record to go along with it.â€
“Vincennes University has given me a chance to have a smooth transition coming from another country,†Gomes said. “Being at a two-year college, the professors and coaches are a lot more involved personally rather than just seeing you as a number. I have had help with international professors, coaches, teammates and more. It was the perfect step before coming to a four-year and has definitely given me the experience and maturity that are necessary to be successful in my next step.â€
The Vincennes University Athletic Department would like to congratulate Lara Gomes de Castro on her signing with Union College and wishes her good luck as she continues her volleyball career in the fall.
Gibson County – Tuesday afternoon, April 25, at approximately 2:00 p.m., Indiana State Police and Gibson County Sheriff’s Office responded to Fifth Third Bank in Haubstadt after bank employees suspected a person inside the bank was attempting to withdraw money fraudulently. When troopers and detectives arrived, they identified the suspect as Joshua Cantrell, 40, of Indianapolis. Further investigation revealed Cantrell was allegedly using fraudulent identification and attempting to withdraw funds from an unauthorized account. Cantrell was also in possession of a THC vape cartridge. He was arrested and taken to the Gibson County Jail where he is currently being held on bond.
Arrested and Charges:
Joshua Cantrell, 40, Indianapolis, IN
Fraud, Level 6 Felony
Identity Deception, Level 6 Felony
Forgery, Class A Misdemeanor
Possession of Marijuana, Class B Misdemeanor
Investigating Officer: Detective W. Campbell, Indiana State Police
Assisting Officers: Sergeant Detective B. Chandler, Master Trooper M. Finney, and Lieutenant B. Bailey, Indiana State Police
Assisting Agency: Gibson County Sheriff’s Office
The U.S. Supreme Court dropped its decision to allow Americans to continue to have access to the abortion pill known as mifepristone on a Friday night.
For decades, courts have used Friday evenings—especially Friday evenings at the start of long holiday weekends—to issue rulings that were likely to stir up some dust. Justices and judges like times when people are paying attention to other things to do such drops.
Few questions are more likely to create controversy in American life than abortion. It is our national quarrel that will not end—largely because we Americans continue to allow our fellow citizens with the most extreme views to set the terms of the discussion.
That much was made clear even before the high bench spoke.
Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America, an anti-abortion group, released a statement attacking former President Donald Trump for being soft on the issue. Trump, who appointed the three Supreme Court justices who made overturning Roe v. Wade and curtailing reproductive rights possible, has indicated that the increasing stridency of the Republican Party he leads may not help at the polls.
More recently, Trump said the court’s Dobbs decision, which overturned Roe, returned the issue to the states.
That was too much for the zealots at Susan B. Anthony, who blistered the former president.
“President Trump’s assertion that the Supreme Court returned the issue of abortion solely to the states is a completely inaccurate reading of the Dobbs decision and is a morally indefensible position for a self-proclaimed pro-life presidential candidate to hold. Life is a matter of human rights, not states’ rights,†said Susan B. Anthony president Marjorie Dannenfelser.
She also laid down a litmus test for Trump and all other GOP presidential hopefuls. She said her group wouldn’t support a minimum 15-week national standard banning abortions.
A couple of things make this dustup interesting.
The first is that, on the larger point, Trump was and is right.
The Dobbs decision hasn’t helped Republican candidates anywhere. It’s tended to keep red states red, make blue states a little bluer and prompt purple states—where national elections will be decided for decades to come—to tinge toward blue.
Competitive Republicans know this and are trying to figure a way out of the political trap in which they’ve ensnared themselves.
That won’t be easy, as both the Susan B. Anthony statement and the Supreme Court stay demonstrate.
That’s the second interesting point.
The GOP’s activist base isn’t in a mood to allow any conservative to be honest enough to acknowledge this political reality. The anti-abortion true believers are determined to continue their long march to restrict or even eliminate reproductive rights until the very end.
Even if that means speaking deliberate untruths or shattering established norms of judicial decorum.
Sensitive perhaps to the huge blowback to the Dobbs decision, the U.S. Supreme Court decided to stay a lower court’s ruling to ban the abortion pill. Justice Clarence Thomas—he of the “ethical-scandal-of-the-week†club—voted to deny the stay.
But that wasn’t the big news.
Justice Samuel Alito, who drafted the Dobbs ruling, added a dissent that all but called his fellow conservatives on the bench names and stacked one dubious, unsupported assertion after another. In doing so, Alito didn’t advance a legal argument so much as shout an ideological polemic—one that took aim at, among others, fellow Justice Amy Coney Barrett.
By implication, Alito accused Barrett of both hypocrisy and moral cowardice.
There are many words that can be used to describe Alito’s dissent. “Dignified†and “judicial†are not among them.
But that’s the nature of America’s abortion debates in the aftermath of the Alito-drafted Dobbs decision. Because many of the standards previously used for weighing questions of fundamental rights before the court—legal precedents, factual evidence, close readings of the Constitution—Alito and his colleagues have decided no longer apply when it comes to abortion, every discussion about the issue turns into an argument and every argument into a free-for-all.
Most of the rumbling and brawling, though, seems to involve conservatives attacking other conservatives, and Republicans taking shots at other Republicans.
That may be the reason the Supreme Court dumped the decision to stay the lower court’s decision on a Friday night.
Whichever way the justices went on the question, a lot of people were going to be angry.
And many of them were going to be Republicans.
FOOTNOTE: John Krull is director of Franklin College’s Pulliam School of Journalism and publisher of TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalism students. The views expressed are those of the author only and should not be attributed to Franklin College.
THE CITY-COUNTY OBSERVER POSTED THIS ARTICLE WITHOUT BIAS OR EDITING.