EPD DAILY ACTIVITY REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Indiana swimming and diving had a strong first day at Ohio State Fall Invitational, earning a competition-best 1580.5 points between both its men’s and women’s team Thursday (Nov. 18) at the McCorkle Aquatic Pavilion.
Through Thursday, the IU men lead the pack with 812.5 points, 301 points more than the second-place squad, host Ohio State. Indiana’s women’s squad (548) trails the hosts (579.5) in second place by a closer margin, 31.5 points.
The competition resumes at 9:30 a.m. ET Friday (Nov. 19) beginning with 400 IM prelims. Finals are scheduled to begin at 5 p.m.
TEAM SCORES
Men
1. Indiana – 812.5
2. Ohio State – 511.5
3. Notre Dame – 455.5
4. Virginia Tech – 449
5. Kentucky – 318
6. Pittsburgh – 246.5
7. Cincinnati – 205
Women
1. Ohio State – 579.5
2. Indiana – 548
3. Kentucky – 499.5
4. UCLA – 436.5
5. Notre Dame – 323.5
6. Virginia Tech – 314
7. Navy – 216
8. Pittsburgh – 186
9. Cincinnati – 64
NOTABLES
• Indiana’s men’s 400 Medley Relay squad (Burns, Mathias, Fantoni, Miroslaw) won the final in 3:04.05, setting a meet record and recording an NCAA A Cut time.Â
• The Hoosier men also captured an A cut in the 200 Freestyle Relay (Blaskovic, Miroslaw, Fantoni, Franzman) with a 1:16.63 mark.
• IU men won five of six competitions, while filling the runner-up spot in the 200 IM.
• Bruno Blaskovic raced a 19.21 in the 50 Free preliminary, then recorded a 19.28 to tie for first in the final with Virginia Tech’s Yousse Ramadan. The pair together set a pool record, previously 20.07 set by Matthew J. Kamin on February 24, 2017.
• Redshirt senior Andrew Capobianco returned to action and filed two NCAA Zone Qualifying scores in the 1-Meter dive preliminaries and finals, capturing first place with a 366.30 score.
• Indiana swept the men’s 500 Freestyle with the trio of Michael Brinegar, Mikey Calvillo and Warren Briggs. Each tallied an NCAA B Cut time in both the preliminary and the final.
RESULTS
200 Freestyle RelayÂ
Women
2. Ashley Turak, Anna Peplowski, Elizabeth Broshears, Noelle Peplowski – 1:28.88 (NCAA B Cut)
6. Kacey McKenna, Mackenzie Looze, Brearna Crawford, Aislinn Holder – 1:31.56
Men
1. Bruno Blaskovic, Rafael Miroslaw, Gabriel Fantoni, Jack Franzman – 1:16.63 (NCAA A Cut)
4. Luke Barr, Van Mathias, Gavin Wight, Brendan Burns – 1:18.58
6. Jacob Destrampe, Brandon Hamblin, Finn Brooks, Corey Gambardella – 1:19.53
500 Freestyle
Women
2. Mariah Denigan – 4:41.21 (NCAA B Cut)*
3. Ella Ristic – 4:42.73 (NCAA B Cut)*
12. Maggie Wallace – 4:45.74 (NCAA B Cut)
15. Elyse Heiser – 4:46.78 (NCAA B Cut)
30. Katie Carson – 4:58.33
Men
1. Michael Brinegar – 4:16.82 (NCAA B Cut)*
2. Mikey Calvillo – 4:18.62 (NCAA B Cut)*
3. Warren Briggs – 4:18.62 (NCAA B Cut)*
8. Tomer Frankel – 4:24.21*
14. Jackson Carlile – 4:24.19
16. Aidan Reagan – 4:24.79
21. Mason Carlton – 4:25.13
200 IM
Women
1. Mackenzie Looze – 1:56.14 (NCAA B Cut)*
2. Noelle Peplowski – 1:56.80 (NCAA B Cut)*
10. Brearna Crawford – 2:01.13*
13. Anna Freed – 1:58.51 (NCAA B Cut)
28. Emily Weiss – 2:01.67
Men
2. Jacob Steele – 1:44.87 (NCAA B Cut)*
3. Tristan DeWitt – 1:45.26 (NCAA B Cut)*
4. Luke Barr – 1:45.45 (NCAA B Cut)*
6. Van Mathias – 1:46.06 (NCAA B Cut)*
13. Maxwell Reich – 1:47.68
20. Josh Matheny – 1:52.365
23. Jassen Yep – 1:49.15
50 FreeÂ
Women
1. Ashley Turak – 22.21 (NCAA B Cut)*
6. Anna Peplowski – 22.44 (NCAA B Cut)*
DQ. Elizabeth Broshears*
27. Kacey McKenna – 23.28Â
38. Aislinn Holder – 23.56
Men
T1. Bruno Blaskovic – 19.28 (Pool Record, NCAA B Cut)*
5. Jack Franzman – 19.57 (NCAA B Cut)*
6. Rafael Miroslaw – 19.61 (NCAA B Cut)*
8. Gabriel Fantoni – 19.65 (NCAA B Cut)*
10. Gavin Wight – 19.87 (NCAA B Cut)*
13. Brandon Hamblin – 20.31
14. Finn Brooks – 20.34
23. Corey Gambardella – 20.24
26. Jacob Destrampe – 20.44
400 Medley RelayÂ
Women
2. Anna Peplowski, Noelle Peplowski, Elizabeth Broshears, Ashley Turak – 3:33.41 (NCAA B Cut)
3. Kacey McKenna, Brearna Crawford, Mackenzie Looze, Ella Ristic – 3:33.45 (NCAA B Cut)
Men
1. Brendan Burns, Van Mathias, Gabriel Fantoni, Rafael Miroslaw – 3:04.05 (Meet Record, NCAA A Cut)
3. Jacob Steele, Josh Matheny, Tomer Frankel, Jack Franzman – 3:07.97
7. Luke Barr, Maxwell Reich, Corey Gambardella, Gavin Wight – 3:10.85
Men’s 1-Meter Dive
1. Andrew Capobianco – 366.30 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)*
3. Carson Tyler – 353.10 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)*
Women’s 3-Meter DiveÂ
2. Anne Fowler – 368.55 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)*
3. Kristen Hayden – 368.30 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)*
UP NEXT
Seven more events are set for the second day of the three-day meet on Friday (Nov. 19). Preliminaries begin at 9:30 a.m. ET to set up for the final events scheduled to start at 5 p.m.
Â
@IndianaSwimDive
Be sure to keep up with all the latest news on the Indiana men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams on social media – Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
Â
EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Men’s Basketball (1-0) open the regular season in fashion by defeating Oakland City University (1-4), 76-56, Thursday at Screaming Eagles Arena. The Screaming Eagles have defeated the Mighty Oaks in nine straight meetings dating back to 2000.
The Oaks quickly jumped ahead in the first three minutes outscoring the Eagles, 10-3, after back-to-back three-point baskets. USI made quick work and took the lead for the first time, 13-12, with 12:05 remaining in the opening half. The Eagles burst out in the second portion of the first half going on a 16-0 run to make it a 13-point lead.
Senior guard Jelani Simmons (Columbus, Ohio) and freshman guard Elijah Jones (Chicago Heights, Illinois) posted seven points each in the opening frame to lead the team in scoring. Senior guard Trevell Cunningham (Milwaukee, Wisconsin) and freshman guard Isaiah Stafford (Bolingbrook, Illinois) contributed five points each while junior forward Jacob Polakovich (Grand Rapids, Michigan) grabbed a team-high eight first half rebounds. The Eagles ended the opening frame on a 9-0 run to make it a 36-20 lead going into the half.
USI’s offense was able to shoot 40% from the field, just under 43% from beyond the arc, and 62.5% at the line to open the game. The Eagles’ defense held their ground and kept the Oaks’ field goal percentage to 21% while forcing nine turnovers. Both sides battled the boards in the first frame, but USI won the rebounding battle, 26-23.
Simmons came out in the second half nailing back-to-back buckets to give USI a 20-point advantage before the Oaks turned around and added a quick three-points to change the pace. The Eagles returned the favor posting a 9-0 run with 13:48 to play that included a banked-in three-pointer by Stafford to extend USI’s lead to 51-28.
Oakland City went on a 6-0 run with 2:13 remaining but it was not enough as the Eagles closed out the 20-point victory. Jones led USI in scoring with 12 points while adding eight rebounds to the stat sheet. Simmons and Stafford posted 11 points each while junior guard Myles Belyeu (Mason, Ohio) attributed 10 points, respectfully. Polakovich grabbed a game-high 13 rebounds helping USI collect a team total of 53 boards.
The Eagles’ offense finished the night shooting just above 39% from the field, a little over 29%Â from downtown, and an even 60% from the free throw line. USI also had 10 blocks and only turned the ball over nine times. The Eagles’ defense forced 15 turnovers and held the Oaks to a 28% shooting clip.
COMING UP FOR USI:
USI hits the road for the first time in 2021-22 next week with visits to Cedarville University Monday in Cedarville, Ohio, and Kentucky Wesleyan College November 24 in Owensboro, Kentucky.
Cedarville started the season 0-2 after falling to No. Truman State University, 80-87, and Quincy University, 77-88, in the Quincy University Midwest Crossover last weekend. The Yellow Jackets recorded their first win of the young season after defeating the University of Indianapolis, 73-64, Thursday night. Cedarville will finish the road trip at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan, Saturday before hosting USI for their home opener.
The USI-Cedarville matchup on Monday is the first meeting between the two programs in men’s basketball.
Kentucky Wesleyan is 2-1 after defeating the University of Illinois Springfield, 84-76, and falling to Lindenwood University, 78-83, last weekend in St. Charles, Missouri. The Panthers collected another victory after defeating Midway University, 72-48, in its home opener Tuesday. The Panthers host East/West University Saturday before hosting the USI Wednesday.
USI trails in the all-time series with KWC, 49-43, but has won the last seven-straight against the Panthers. The Eagles, who have won the last three at the Owensboro Sports Center, defeated the Panthers, 82-63, to open Screaming Eagles Arena in 2019.
EAST PEORIA, Ill.—University of Southern Indiana Volleyball landed three players on the All-Great Lakes Valley Conference teams in an announcement by the league office Thursday afternoon.
Sophomore outside hitter Leah Anderson (Bloomington, Illinois) earned first-team honors, while senior setter Casey Cepicky (St. Louis, Missouri) and junior middle hitter Taylor Litteken (Foristell, Missouri) collected second-team honors.
Anderson, who earned first-team All-GLVC honors last spring, averaged a team-high 3.51 points and GLVC-best 0.61 service aces per set during the regular season. She is currently second on the team with 2.70 kills and 2.82 digs per frame.
Cepicky also is earning second-team All-GLVC honors for the second straight season after finishing sixth in the GLVC with a team-high 9.18 assists per set during the regular season. A GLVC Defensive Player of the Week earlier in the year, Cepicky also is averaging 1.10 points, 0.65 attacks, 2.53 digs and 0.57 blocks per frame, all while posting a .337 attacking percentage. She ranks No. 3 all-time at USI with 3,975 career assists and No. 7 with 1,181 career digs.
Litteken collects All-GLVC honors for the second straight year after earning second-team accolades a year ago. Litteken finished the regular-season ranked No. 3 in the GLVC with a team-best .358 attacking percentage, was second on the team with 0.88 blocks per set and fourth on the team with 2.29 kills per game.
In addition to USI’s All-GLVC honorees, senior middle blocker Sidney Hegg (Menasha, Wisconsin) was USI’s James R. Spalding Sportsmanship Award nominee. Hegg finished the regular-season ranked No. 6 in the league in blocks.
USI takes on Rockhurst University Friday at 8:30 p.m. in the opening round of the GLVC Volleyball Championship Tournament at the EastSide Centre in East Peoria, Illinois.
|
LABOR OF LOVE SUMMIT FOCUSES ON PROGRESS, CHALLENGES IN IMPROVING INFANT AND MATERNAL HEALTH
|
 EVANSVILLE, Ind. – University of Southern Indiana Cross Country travels to St. Leo, Florida for the 2021 NCAA Division II National Championships Saturday at The Abbey Course. The women’s six-kilometer race begins at 7:30 a.m. (CST) while the men’s 10k is scheduled to begin at 8:45 a.m. (CST).
Fans that are unable to make the trip can watch the Screaming Eagles live on NCAA.com. Links to live video and results are available at GoUSIEagles.com.
USI Cross Country Notes
Comastri double-trouble for Runner of the Year. Jennifer Comastri becomes just the second runner in program history to earn both GLVC Runner of the Year as well as Region Runner of the Year along with Heather Cooksey (2004-05). In her time at USI, Comastri is a four-time All-GLVC honoree and earned All-America honors in 2019.
Give Us Your Grease For Proper Disposal
(Evansville, IN) – Evansville Water and Sewer Utility (EWSU) will host the first annual Holiday Used Cooking Oil Drive on Saturday, November 27, from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. The event will be held at the parking lot behind the Civic Center next to C.K. Newsome Community Center, 100 E. Walnut Street.
EWSU is partnering with American Grease and Septic to offer a place for Evansville residents to properly dispose of used cooking oil generated while preparing this year’s Thanksgiving meal. The service is being provided at no cost to residents.
The cooking oil drive is for residential grease only, such as frying oil, meat drippings, canola oil, corn oil, lard, olive oil, peanut oil, sesame oil, sunflower oil, and vegetable oil. No petroleum oil waste will be accepted.
Residents should enter the parking lot from behind the Newsome center on Elsas Ave. Representatives from American Grease and Septic will set up barrels for residents to dispose of used cooking oil, and a dumpster will be available to discard empty containers. Residents will exit the parking lot onto Walnut Street. (see map below)
“It’s important for residents to dispose of fats, oils and grease properly and not pour it down the drain and into the city’s sewer system,†said EWSU Regulatory Compliance Coordinator Matt McBride. “This type of material, called FOG, can solidify and clog sewer pipes resulting in sewer backups and costly repairs for homeowners and the Utility.â€