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Three Hoosiers Strike Gold on Thursday

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. – Indiana swimming and diving won the last three events of Thursday (Feb. 23) night’s session and sits just nine points off the lead for the team title halfway through the 2023 Big Ten Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships inside Canham Natatorium.

IU won a gold in each of the three disciplines. Senior Van Mathias sprinted to an individual swimming title in the 50-yard freestyle and sophomore Carson Tyler had a dramatic win on the 1-meter springboard before the Hoosiers captured gold in the 400-yard medley relay. Ohio State leads the pack with 487 points, but Indiana is close on its heels with 478 points after two days.

“We have a battle on our hands,” IU head swimming coach Ray Looze said. “I think this is going to come down to the last day, and I give a lot of credit to Ohio State and Michigan, they’re doing a great job. Our guys really dug down deep tonight. I thought our prelim session could have been better, and we’ll need to have a good one tomorrow. That’s what we have to keep our eye on, what we do in the next session.”

Mathias had never broken 20 seconds prior to the start of the season. Last year, he was swimming the 200 IM on night two of conference championships. A year later, the senior won his first individual Big Ten title in the 50-yard freestyle with a career-best 19.00. Mathias started the day with his best time sitting at 19.38. In prelims, he dropped to 19.16 before trimming it again in the final. His fellow Hoosier in the 50 free A final also earned a personal best, as junior Gavin Wight placed fourth with a 19.26. Sophomore Rafael Miroslaw (19.50) maxed out his points in the B final with a ninth-place finish, while senior Jack Franzman (19.78) and Finn Brooks (19.80) took 14th and 15th, respectively.

Tyler’s worst dive of the day earned him 62.40 points, and his consistency earned him his first-career Big Ten title. The sophomore walked into the championship final as the No. 2 seed after scoring a career-best 414.05 points in the prelim. In the evening, he tallied a 67.20, 72.85. 72.00, 72.00, 72.00 going into his final dive. With Ohio State senior Lyle Yost totaling 430.95 points in front of him, Tyler needed a 74.90 to tie. Tyler didn’t bend to the pressure and executed a reverse 1 ½ somersault with a 2 ½ twist free into 75 points flat.

IU has won the last four Big Ten diving titles as Tyler nabbed the 1-meter crown from teammate and defending champion, redshirt senior Andrew Capobianco, who scored 406.95 points for a third-place finish. Capobianco now has nine medals over five conference meets in his career. Sophomore Quinn Henninger placed sixth (374.75), while freshmen Maxwell Weinrich (363.40) and Dash Glasberg (271.40) bookended the B final.

“What a team effort today,” IU head diving coach Drew Johansen said. “All six of our men scored for the team. Carson had a personal best score while winning his first Big Ten title. Maxwell also had a personal best while winning the B final. Andrew has led this team in so many ways over the years, and his bronze medal performance was another great contribution to the team. We’re looking forward to the next two days.”

The same quartet that set a Big Ten meet record at last year’s championships won the 400-yard medley relay again Thursday night to stretch IU’s winning streak in the event to eight seasons. Junior Brendan Burns, sophomore Josh Matheny, junior Tomer Frankel and sophomore Rafael Miroslaw went 3:01.53, short of their superlative 3:00.76 from the 2022 national meet, but over four seconds better than the Canham Natatorium facility record (3:06.08).

“We did an awesome job with the end of this session,” Looze said “From Rafael Miroslaw winning the B final, to Van Mathias winning the 50, then Carson Tyler winning the 1-meter and winning the relay – that was a nice way to close things out. We have had a couple good days for us on the boards and in the water, we just have to do our job.”

In the 500 free that started the evening, senior Mikey Calvillo (4:18.45) and junior Warren Briggs (4:18.62) finished fifth and sixth, respectively. Sophomore Luke Barr also earned a top-five finish in the 200 IM, placing fifth in 1:44.06.


TEAM SCORES
Ohio State – 487

Indiana – 478

Michigan – 403

Wisconsin – 341

Minnesota – 280

Purdue – 240

Northwestern – 210

Penn State – 204 

RESULTS
500 FREESTYLE

  1. Mikey Calvillo – 4:18.45 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Warren Briggs – 4:18.62 (NCAA B Cut)

    200 IM
  3. Luke Barr – 1:44.06 (NCAA B Cut)

50 FREESTYLE

  1. Van Mathias – 19.00 (Big Ten Champion, Pool Record, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)
  2. Gavin Wight – 19.26 (NCAA B Cut, Career Best)
  3. Rafael Miroslaw – 19.50 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Jack Franzman – 19.78 (NCAA B Cut)
  5. Finn Brooks – 19.80 (NCAA B Cut)

1-METER DIVE

  1. Carson Tyler – 431.05 (Big Ten Champion, NCAA Zone Qualifier, Career Best)
  2. Andrew Capobianco – 406.95 (Bronze, NCAA Zone Qualifier)
  3. Quinn Henninger – 374.75 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)
  4. Maxwell Weinrich – 363.40 (NCAA Zone Qualifier, Career Best)
  5. Dash Glasberg – 271.40

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Indiana Homeowner Assistance Fund Offers Monetary Assistance for Delinquent and Future Property Tax Bills

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INDIANAPOLIS (Feb. 23, 2023) – The Indiana Homeowner Assistance Fund (IHAF) is a support program for eligible Hoosiers who have experienced hardship from income loss.

Administered by the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority (IHCDA), the IHAF has helped more than 3,500 eligible applicants and disbursed more than $40 million through the program to date.

“As the time for annual property assessments approaches, it is important for Hoosiers to know that IHAF can possibly pay for delinquent and future property charge fees, including property taxes,” said Indiana Lt. Governor Suzanne Crouch, Indiana’s Secretary of Agriculture and Rural Development. “Homeowners in Indiana who anticipate having difficulties paying their property taxes, or who already have delinquent property taxes, should visit www.877gethope.org for more information and to start an application.”

Applicants can also connect with a housing counselor who can provide advice and information on their options.

Homeowners may be eligible for assistance if they meet the following requirements:

  • Impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic and experienced a financial hardship on or after January 21, 2020;
  • Own only one mortgaged home;
  • Property to be assisted is the primary residence;
  • Have an income equal to or less than 150% of the Area Median Income adjusted for household size, or 100% of the National Median Income, whichever is greater; and,
  • Live in Indiana.

“In addition to property tax assistance, applicants may also be eligible to receive mortgage reinstatement, up to six months of monthly mortgage payment assistance, and assistance with other property charge fees including homeowner insurance and homeowner association fees,” said Jake Sipe, executive director of IHCDA.

EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT

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EPD

EPD ACTIVITY REPORT

FOOTNOTE:  EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT  information was provided by the EPD and posted by the City-County-County Observer without opinion, bias, or editing.

Toumi records career-high in home finale

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Aces fall to Flames by 82-76 final

 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – Yacine Toumi recorded a career-high 20 points in Wednesday’s home finale inside the Ford Center that saw the University of Evansville men’s basketball team fall to UIC by a final of 82-76.

Toumi was 9-for-18 from the field and tied for the game-high with eight rebounds.  Kenny Strawbridge Jr. added 18 points with Gage Bobe and Marvin Coleman II finished with 12 and 11, respectively.  Jace Carter led the Flames with 22 points and 8 rebounds.  Tre Anderson completed the contest with 18 tallies.

Both teams shot well to open the game with UIC hitting their first four attempts to take a 9-4 lead while Evansville was 4-for-6 with a Gage Bobe triple tying the game at 9-9 less than four minutes in.  After UIC went back in front at 14-12, the Purple Aces made their move, recording eight in a row.

Preston Phillips got things started with a score off a UIC turnover while Kenny Strawbridge Jr. converted a 3-point play and a triple to give UE a 20-14 lead at the 10:34 mark.  The Flames countered with a 9-0 stretch over the next three minutes to retake the lead.  They hit three field goals in a row along with two free throws.  Evansville missed four shots and turned it over twice in that span.

Bobe connected on his second triple as the Aces knotted the score at 25-25 but the Flames continued to have the answer. Up 28-27, the Flames went on a 12-2 run to take a 40-29 advantage, their largest of the half.  Marvin Coleman II hit a three to finish the half with UIC leading, 40-32.

After completing the first half on an offensive run, the Flames kept up the intensity as they opened the second stanza by scoring ten in a row.  Facing the 50-32 deficit, the Aces responded with a 10-0 rally.  Strawbridge had two 3-point plays and eight total points in the run to make it a single digit game at the 14-minute mark.

Two minutes later, Chris Moncrief knocked down his second shot to get his team within six before finding Phillips for a dunk to cut the deficit to five at the midway point of the half.  With 8:15 remaining, the Aces made it a one-possession game when Toumi drove to the basket for his sixth make of the night.  A 10-2 UIC run cemented a double-digit lead entering the final five minutes.

Evansville continued to battle in the final minute, getting as close as four points before the Flames wrapped up the 82-76 victory.  UIC shot 50.9% on the night while tallying 35 rebounds.  UE checked in at 45.5% and a total of 34 boards.

Regular season play comes to a conclusion on Sunday when the Aces visit Illinois State.

No. 10 Trailblazers grind it out late in physical defensive battle with SWIC

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The No. 10-ranked Vincennes University Trailblazers faced a tough, 40-minute physical battle Wednesday night against Southwestern Illinois College at the P.E. Complex and came away with the 65-62 win.

SWIC received votes for the NJCAA Top-25 this week but were unable to crack the list and wasted little time showing why many believe they should be in the Top-25 this week.

This game was a back-and-forth battle from the start, with neither team really able to break lose in the early going.

The lead changed hands four times and the game was tied six different times throughout the opening 20 minutes of play, with SWIC able to grab a 31-29 lead at the break.

Vincennes looked to grab the early momentum out of the locker room and did so with a 10-0 scoring run to take a 39-33 lead.

VU would later use an 8-0 scoring run to take a nine-point lead, but once again the Blue Storm found a way to answer back and evened the game at 54-54.

VU sophomore Tasos Cook (Columbus, Ohio) completely swung the momentum back to the home Blue and Gold by hitting a three-pointer with just under two minutes to play to give VU a 57-54 lead.

The Trailblazers would grow their lead to five before SWIC would rally to cut the deficit to one, before VU answered with an open layup under the basket by freshman Michael Osei-Bonsu (Bolingbrook, Ill.).

After a pair of late free throws by the Blue Storm, sophomore Caleb Johnson (N. Preston, Nova Scotia) broke loose behind the SWIC defense to help seal the game with a layup.

Southwestern Illinois was unable to convert on a buzzer-beater three and the Trailblazers came away with the tough 65-62 win.

“We just gutted it out tonight,” VU Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin said. “I thought we had chances to take control in the second half at times. We got up nine, but it’s going to be a gritty, gutsy game when we are not hitting shots from the perimeter. At some point guys have to step up in big games and be able to make those shots because it makes things so much harder when we’ve really got to break people down in order to get the ball inside.”

“We hit a big shot late,” Franklin added. “Tasos got one on an inside-out action, which we could have gotten those things most all night. But this game was tough, gutty. Southwestern is a top-30 team in the country. They were receiving votes this week and they deserve to be. It’s hard to get into the poll when you know they are only going to put a couple of teams in at the most and us and John A. Logan have been up there the whole time. But SWIC has been a quality team all year and they are playing really well now. They came into tonight winning five games in a row and they are going to be a tough out in the Region tournament. We may very well see them again.”

VU was led offensively by Tasos Cook who finished with 15 points, 13 of which came in the second half. Cook would also grab a pair of rebounds.

Caleb Johnson continued his streak of scoring in double figures with 13 points, eight rebounds, a team-high six assists and a pair of blocks.

Michael Osei-Bonsu was the third VU scorer to reach double digits, battling foul trouble to come away with 13 points, five rebounds and a pair of assists.

Freshman Kris King (Washington, D.C.) came off the bench to add some quality minutes late on his way to eight points, three rebounds, two assists and two steals.

“The biggest thing tonight was collectively, we outrebounded them 40 to 20,” Franklin said. “SWIC is one of the better rebounding teams in the league and really one of the better rebounding teams in the country. For us to do that was a great effort on our team’s part. Then we should win a ball game like that by double figures, when you outrebound a team 40 to 20.”

“We just didn’t hit shots,” Franklin added. “At the end of the day, we didn’t hit shots from the perimeter and we don’t have that ‘break down’ guy so it’s just going to be a grind. I thought Michael did a good job on the block when we were uncovered and could get him. Tasos, in the second half, was tougher. Caleb didn’t make shots from the perimeter tonight. We’ve got to have that. But he hung in there and made a few plays down the stretch mentally that we are going to have to get sharper that put us in a hole to where we probably would have won by five or nine.”

“Across the board, it’s just what it was,” Franklin said. “There’s ups and downs throughout the game. There were good plays and bad plays by all of the guys who played. But it’s going to be an ugly game when you’ve got two teams that play defense, fight and battle like that this time of year with that much on the line. Especially when you are not busting shots from the perimeter.”

“I thought we had good character tonight,” Franklin added. “We’re learning, this has been a new team all year and we are still learning. We’re learning how to handle things. We’re learning how to get through that wall and play with a little toughness and maybe a little nastiness instead of a little tightness. That’s what we are preaching right now. I thought we had good performances. We played everybody. But if we are going to win a Championship, we need really 40 minutes of really positive play from our point guard spot and we’ve got to bust some shots, especially from that two-spot.”

“Caleb has hit shots pretty good for us all year, but tonight he didn’t really hit the perimeter shot,” Franklin said. “He still did some good things, so then we are left looking around asking, ‘who is going to’. We’ve got a lot of guys and I’m just telling you that you need to find whatever is inside yourself and be able to bring it with all of these bright lights and bust it. Because it makes it very difficult to win these ball games, or a lot more difficult than it should be.”

“I didn’t think we did a very good job of stopping Boyd from putting his head down and going right at the rim,” Franklin added. “That just can’t happen. We got better at that as the game went along. But in the first half we let him do whatever he wanted. But that, again, is a toughness thing. Those are things that we can learn from this ball game if we want to be champions. Obviously we are in a tremendous position when you are sitting here at 25-3 and it goes on to the next game.”

The Trailblazers will now hit the road for their final true road game of the 2022-23 season Saturday, Feb. 25 when VU takes on Wabash Valley College in Mt. Carmel, Ill. Tip-off time Saturday is set for 4 p.m. eastern.

VU defeated the Warriors 84-61 earlier this season at the P.E. Complex, behind 22 points by Caleb Johnson, 18 points by Tasos Cook and 16 points by freshman Ryan Oliver (Antioch, Tenn.).

“The next game for us is big,” Franklin said. “If we can find a way to get us a couple of wins here, it was three, now it’s two, I just don’t know how people can keep us out of the tournament if we can win these next couple.”

“But they are tough ball games,” Franklin added. “Going to Wabash, who is red hot coming into tonight and we know that Olney is going to be a load. Olney has had Dickerson out, who is their leading scorer and he will be back, I’m sure Tuesday night to face us. It’s going to be more of the same as to what you saw tonight I imagine and if we can hit a couple of shots, then we can stretch this out instead of being nip and tuck all game. We were on the verge of that tonight when we were up nine and we relaxed again on the defensive end. Right when you know the best players on the other team are going to step their games up.”

“We’ll see what we learn from tonight,” Franklin said. “We’ll see if we come out tougher, a little harder edged Saturday. If somebody is going to have that confidence and that hard edge to step into that shot and move the ball a little crisper, because whenever we moved the ball in our actions, our success rate was really high. We’ve just got to get sharper. It’s hard. These games like this, you don’t really learn what these games are until you are in them. Anybody watching it, you don’t know what they are either until you are on that floor. That’s a different kind of things out there on that floor. With what’s on the line and the physicality and the toughness and both teams having a pretty good idea of what they are trying to do and are going at it pretty hard at this point. So I’m proud of our guys, that they were able to find a way to get it done tonight.”

 

Indiana Wins 800 Freestyle Relay, Medals Twice on Opening Night

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ANN ARBOR, Mich. – For the second-straight year and fifth time in seven years, Indiana started its pursuit of the Big Ten title with a win in the 800-yard freestyle relay on the first night of events Wednesday (Feb. 22) night inside Canham Natatorium.

IU’s quartet of sophomore Rafael Miroslaw, junior Tomer Frankel and seniors Brendan Burns and Van Mathias posted the third-best time in program history in 6:10.80. The time beat their previous season best set at midseason by over 11 seconds.

Strong splits from Miroslaw (1:32.73) and Frankel (1:33.33) kept the Hoosiers amongst the top teams at the halfway point, then Burns blazed a 1:32.03, the best split in the field, to give IU a two-second lead going into the final leg. Mathias went 1:32.71 to shut the door as IU won by 2.7 seconds. Only five swimmers swam sub-1:33, and three of those were Hoosiers.

Through two events, Indiana shares the lead with Ohio State, each earning 118 points on opening night. Michigan sits third with 112 points.

IU also medaled in the 200-yard medley relay, grabbing bronze in 1:23.52 and earning an NCAA A cut. Indiana was eighth after the first 50 yards, but Mathias (22.74) and Frankel (19.89) shot the Hoosiers into contention with the fastest splits in their respective strokes. Junior Gavin Wight anchored the relay in 18.80.

“It was a pretty eventful night,” IU head swimming coach Ray Looze said. “On the medley relay, we had a little rough start on that, and what was remarkable, is I think we were eighth after the first leg and then slowly worked our way back into third, which was really impressive given the way this pool swims. You really don’t want to get behind. I was happy and impressed with the composure that those guys displayed.

“And then to come back and get the victory in the 800 freestyle, our first two guys are our fastest guys, and really it was the third and fourth guys that solidified the win. So, you never know where it’s going to come, but it takes a team. I like the way the team responded, and I think that first portion of the relay was a hit in the face, but I think it’s going to be a good thing in the end. Sometimes when you get punched, it gets you into the game, and then you can move forward. I think that will serve in that capacity for us.

 

“I’m super proud of the guys, and we have a lot of work to do. We expect this to be a real battle. This conference meet is never easy, so I think we understand that now clearly.”


TEAM SCORES
t1. Indiana – 118

t1. Ohio State – 118

  1. Michigan – 112

t4. Minnesota – 100

t4. Wisconsin – 100

t4. Purdue – 100

  1. Northwestern – 92
  2. Penn State – 88

    RESULTS
    200 MEDLEY RELAY
    3. Luke Barr, Van Mathias, Tomer Frankel, Gavin Wight – 1:23.52 (Bronze, NCAA A Cut)

    800 FREESTYLE RELAY
    1. Rafael Miroslaw, Tomer Frankel, Brendan Burns, Van Mathias – 6:10.80 (Big Ten Champion, NCAA A Cut)

    UP NEXT
    The 2023 Big Ten Men’s Swimming and Diving Championships resume Thursday for day two, the first full day of action. Athletes will compete in the 500 freestyle, 200 IM, 50 freestyle, 1-meter dive and 400 medley relay, with preliminaries beginning at 10 a.m. ET. Finals are scheduled to begin at 5 p.m. ET.