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THE RIGHT TO MATTER

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THE RIGHT TO MATTER

Gavel Gamut By Jim Redwine

It was not the British Parliament’s tax on tea that caused the Boston Tea Party on December 16, 1773; it was the denial of the Colonists’ right to be represented in Parliament.

It is not the sexual part of unwanted sex that matters to the Me Too Movement, we Homo sapiens have spent the last 200 to 300 thousand years engaging in sex; it is the “unwanted” factor that is objectionable.

And when our Founders were barely able to cobble together our Republic it was not the fact that some of the Thirteen Colonies had much greater populations than others or much greater wealth than others that almost caused the United States to be simply thirteen entirely separate entities; it was the fear by both the more populous and less populous colonies that their voices would not sufficiently matter.

There were many reasons why and how our constitutional democracy survived colliding circumstances, desires, and egos but two of the most significant compromises were the Proportional Representative construct and the Electoral College.

Large states accepted the compromise that in the Senate each state would have two and only two Senators because their proportional influence was recognized by having the number of Congressional Representatives determined by population. Smaller states accepted this arrangement in like manner because they would have an equal voice in at least one of the two Congressional bodies, the Senate, even though they would have fewer Congresspersons than larger states.

Then there is the imaginative system of the Electoral College. The Electoral College determines who will be the Executive Branch leaders, the President, and Vice President, via a method similar to the proportional representation system. And because the President has the authority to nominate all federal judges, whoever has influence over the election of the President has an indirect voice in the makeup of the third branch of our federal government, the Judicial Branch. Therefore, the Electoral College, whose only job is to meet every four years and vote for the Chief Executive and the Vice President, has some influence over two of the three Branches of our government. Of course, the Executive Branch contains the armed forces, the F.B.I., the D.E.A., etc., etc., etc. And these countless agencies assert immense power over all of us. We certainly want our opinions to matter when it comes to all those aspects of our government.

The number of Electors of the Electoral College is determined by totaling the number of Congressional Representatives each state has and each state’s two senators. The number of Congressional Representatives is derived from each state’s population. So, very similar to the general system of representative/proportional government, where all states have two and only two senators but have differing numbers of Congresspersons based on population, the Electoral College is based on every state having some Electors but more populous states having more Electors than less populous states.

Currently, there are 538 members of the Electoral College based on 100 Senators and 438 Congressional Representatives. For example, Indiana has 2 Senators and 9 Congresspersons for a total of 11 Electors and Oklahoma has 2 Senators and 5 Congresspersons for a total of 7 Electors. On the other hand, California has 2 Senators and 53 Congresspersons for a total of 55 Electors. Indiana’s sister state of Illinois has 20 Electors, almost twice as many as Indiana, and Oklahoma’s sister state of Texas has 38, over five times as many as Oklahoma. The District of Columbia has no Senators but does have 3 Electors based on the 23rd Amendment to the Constitution. Three is the least number of Electors of any state. The U.S. Territories do not receive any Electors.

Whichever candidate receives 270 Electoral votes, the current majority of Electors is elected President. Sometimes the candidate who receives the most popular votes does not receive a majority of the Electoral votes. This always reignites a debate to eliminate the Electoral College and go to a pure one person/one-vote system. Such was the case in 2016 when the Democrat nominee Hillary Clinton received 3,000,000 more popular votes than the Republican nominee Donald Trump, but Trump received 304 Electoral votes, which was 77 more than Clinton received. Had this outcome been inverted I suggest the pro/anti-Electoral College debate would have also been inverted. 

There certainly are legitimate arguments for modifying or even eliminating the Electoral College system even though the College has helped to assuage the constant yin and yang of large states versus small ones. As for me, having spent most of my life, so far, in either Oklahoma or Indiana, I do not wish to rely upon the tender mercies of the few lumbering giant states with huge populations of voters that might deign to turn a deaf ear to my concerns and those of the other residents of the numerous less populous states.

FOOTNOTE: For more Gavel Gamut articles go to www.jamesmredwine.com Or “Like” us on Facebook at JPegRanchBooks&Knitting

EPA Meets President Trump’s Deadline, Makes Agency Guidance Available to the Public

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In support of President Trump’s Executive Order to promote transparency, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) launched a new guidance portal that provides public access to agency guidance documents. This new searchable database will make it easier for the regulated community to find and follow agency guidance.
“EPA has followed through on President Trump’s direction to streamline and improve the transparency of regulatory guidance issued by the agency,” said EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler. “This new online database is a major milestone in government transparency.  Never before has the American public had access to all of the Agency’s guidance documents? This initiative spearheaded by President Trump will finally provide sunlight to agency decisions.”
On October 9, 2019, President Trump issued Executive Order 13891, Promoting the Rule of Law Through Improved Agency Guidance Documents, to promote transparency by ensuring that all active guidance documents are made available to the public. Today, EPA is meeting the President’s deadline under the EO. The new guidance portal provides an indexed database that allows the public to search for documents based on a range of criteria that include the date of issuance, general subject matter, and a summary of contents.
Prior to the launch of the portal, EPA conducted an exhaustive review of its current guidance documents and withdrew those documents that were determined to be no longer relevant.
The guidance portal also provides a mechanism for the public to request modification or withdrawal of any documents. The EPA uses guidance documents to clarify existing obligations for interested parties, but not as a vehicle for implementing new, binding requirements on the public.
In addition to the guidance portal, by August 28, 2020, EPA is developing a regulation that establishes the processes and procedures for issuance of new guidance documents.

Indiana Finishes Third At The Big Ten Championships

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Indiana Finishes Third At The Big Ten Championships

 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – The No. 4-ranked Indiana University men’s swimming and diving team wrapped up the final day of competition at the 2020 Big Ten Championships with six medals added on Saturday night at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center.

IU finished third in the team standings with 1,321.5 points. No. 3 Michigan won the team title with 1,548 points to snap Indiana’s three-year run of championships. No. 17 Ohio State finished as the runner-up with 1,329 points.

For the week, IU racked up a total of 17 medals – nine gold, three silver, and five bronze. Indiana won four of the five relays at the Big Ten Championships for a third-straight year – the longest stretch in program history.

The Hoosier 400 Freestyle Relay team of sophomore Jack Franzman, junior Bruno Blaskovic, sophomore Van Mathias, and senior Mohamed Samy claimed a fifth-consecutive gold medal with an NCAA A Cut time of 2:48.43. Franzman led off the relay with an NCAA B Cut split of 42.48.

Blaskovic earned his second freestyle-sprint individual gold medal of the week with a 41.88 in the 100 Freestyle Championship Final. He is the first Hoosier since Sam Gasowski in 1996 to win both the 50 Freestyle and 100 Freestyle events in a single Big Ten Championships. The only other IU swimmer to accomplish this feat is Jim Montgomery, who doubled in both 1976 and 77. For his accomplishments, Blaskovic was named 2020 Big Ten Swimmer of the Championships, the fourth-straight season in which a Hoosier has won the award. No other Big Ten team has carried a streak longer than three seasons since the inception of the award in 1991.

Continuing the A Final, Samy earned his second individual bronze of the week with a time of 42.38. Franzman occupied the fourth spot with a career-best time of 42.45. Sophomore Brandon Hamblin (43.76) and junior Griffin Eiber (43.87) took 13th and 17th, respectively, in the event.

For the second time in as many seasons, junior Gabriel Fantoni swept the backstroke events at the Big Ten Championship. He pulled out the victory in dramatic fashion, closing the final 50 yards in 25.00 seconds. He becomes the first Hoosier to win back-to-back Big Ten Championships in the 200 Backstroke since Mark Kerry in 1978-79. IU has held the top spot on the podium in four-straight seasons. Earlier in the week, Fantoni won the 100 Backstroke for the second-straight season.

Junior Jacob Steele finished 11th overall out of the Consolation Final in the 200 Backstroke with a time of 1:42.98, while freshman Jake Marcum won the C Final with a time of 1:43.61.

Freshman Brendan Burns captured his first-career Big Ten individual goal medal with a winning time of 1:40.98, a CBAC Pool Record. His career-best mark further cements himself as the second-best performer in program history in the event. His victory gives IU four-straight wins in the event. On the strength of his three individual medals, Burns was unanimously named the 2020 Big Ten Freshman of the Year, becoming the first Hoosier since Ian Finnerty in 2016 to win the award.

Mathias placed sixth out of the A Final in the event with a time of 1:44.56, while freshman Kai Bathurst finished eighth in his first-career Championship Final with a time of 1:45.55. Junior Corey Gambardella claimed 15th out of the Consolation Final with a mark of 1:46.16. Finally, senior Iago Moussalem (1:46.66) and freshman Harry Flanders (1:46.70) rounded out the Hoosier scoring with 21st and 22nd-place efforts, respectively. Sophomore Mikey Calvillo took bronze in the 1,650 Freestyle with a time of 14:54.02, one of just four swimmers to crack the 15-minute mark. Freshman Will Gallant finished fifth in the mile with a time of 15:00.07, junior Spencer Lehman placed 17th­ with a time of 15:20.55, and sophomore Ben McDade took 18th at 15:22.92. All four swimmers completed the race in an NCAA B Cut standard.

Sophomore Zane Backes won the Consolation Final of the 200 Breaststroke with a time of 1:54.22 to finish ninth overall. Junior Gary Kostbade (1:55.47) placed 12th out of the B Final after junior Thomas Vanderbrook (1:56.66) finished 20th and junior Matt Jerden (1:57.48) claimed the final scoring spot at 24th.

Sophomore Cole VanDevender earned a Consolation Final finish in his third-straight day of competition with a 10th-place effort of 326.70 points on the Platform Dive. Junior Mory Gould took 15th in the event with a six-dive score of 288.45.

Over the course of the Big Ten Championships, the Hoosiers broke six pool records, amassed 10 NCAA A cuts, 91 NCAA B cuts, eight NCAA Zones qualifying score and had 36 career-best performances.

UP NEXT

The Indiana University men’s swimming and diving program will compete in the 2020 NCAA Zone C Diving Championships and the 2020 NCAA Championships.

@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.

INDIANA POSTSEASON ACCOLADES

SWIMMER OF THE CHAMPIONSHIPS

Bruno Blaskovic

BIG TEN FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR

Brendan Burns

FIRST-TEAM ALL-BIG TEN

Zane Backes

Bruno Blaskovic

Brendan Burns

Gabriel Fantoni

Jack Franzman

Brandon Hamblin

Van Mathias

Mohamed Samy

BIG TEN SPORTSMANSHIP AWARD HONOREE

Brock Brown

RESULTS

1,650 Freestyle

  1. Mikey Calvillo – 14:54.02 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Will Gallant – 15:00.07 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Spencer Lehman – 15:20.55 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Ben McDade – 15:22.92 (NCAA B Cut)

200 Backstroke

  1. Gabriel Fantoni – 1:40.31 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Jacob Steele – 1:42.98 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Jake Marcum – 1:43.61 (NCAA B Cut)

100 Freestyle

  1. Bruno Blaskovic – 41.88 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Mohamed Samy – 43.38 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Jack Franzman – 42.45 (NCAA B Cut, Career Best)
  4. Brandon Hamblin – 43.76 (NCAA B Cut)
  5. Griffin Eiber – 43.76

200 Breaststroke

  1. Zane Backes – 1:54.22 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Gary Kostbade – 1:55.47 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Thomas Vanderbrook – 1:56.66 (NCAA B Cut, Career Best)
  4. Matt Jerden – 1:57.48 (NCAA B Cut)

200 Butterfly

  1. Brendan Burns – 1:40.98 (NCAA B Cut, Pool Record, Career Best)
  2. Van Mathias – 1:44.56 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Kai Bathurst – 1:45.55 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Corey Gambardella – 1:46.16 (NCAA B Cut)
  5. Iago Moussalem – 1:46.66 (NCAA B Cut, Career Best*)
  6. Harry Flanders – 1:46.70 (Career Best)

Platform Dive

  1. Cole VanDevender – 326.70 (NCAA Zone Qualifying Score)
  2. Mory Gould – 288.45

400 Freestyle Relay

  1. Jack Franzman, Bruno Blaskovic, Van Mathias, Mohamed Samy – 2:48.43 (NCAA A Cut, Pool Record)

 

Riley leads Aces in Senior Day Game

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Bronx Native Scores 18 Points In Final Home Game

University of Evansville senior K.J. Riley shined in his final home game as a member of the Purple Aces men’s basketball team, scoring 18 points in a 71-60 loss to Illinois State on Saturday inside the Ford Center.

Riley hit 10 of his 12 free throw attempts and also led the Aces (9-22, 0-18 MVC) with eight rebounds and four assists.  Evan Kuhlman and Sam Cunliffe registered 10 points apiece with each hitting a pair of 3-pointers.

“In these games, there are three or four possessions that make the difference, you never know which ones they will be.  That is why you have to play every possession and that is demanding,” Aces head coach Todd Lickliter said.  “Our team has the confidence that we can play with any team in this league and we are excited to head to St. Louis to make a run.”

During his postgame press conference, Lickliter took the time to recognize K.J. Riley and his contributions to the program on and off the court.

“K.J. has made coaching really enjoyable for me.  He is going to do everything you need as a coach and is going to be successful doing whatever he wants in his life,” Lickliter exclaimed.  “K.J. has an open invitation to come back whenever he wants; he will always be part of this program and is an Ace forever.”

UE finished the game shooting 32.8% overall and 30.3% from long range.  Illinois State (10-20, 5-13 MVC) shot 46.4%.  The Aces defense forced 15 turnovers and turned those into 18 points.

It was a defensive showdown in the opening moments.  After Evansville scored the opening bucket, Illinois State knocked down a pair of threes to take a 6-2 lead.  Sam Cunliffe registered two assists on baskets by Evan Kuhlman and Noah Frederking to put UE back on top, 7-6.  The Redbirds reassumed the lead, scoring eight of the next 11 to go up 14-10.  Sam Cunliffe ended the stretch with a triple, but Illinois State kept rolling.

ISU hit four out of five field goals in a 7-0 run to take a 21-13 lead near the halfway point of the opening 20 minutes.  After UE reeled off the next four, ISU had another big run, adding 10 in a row to go up by a 31-17 score with five minutes left in the half.  During the run, the Redbirds hit eight of their nine field-goal tries.

Facing their largest deficit, the Aces rallied in the final moments of the half.  Four points both from Cunliffe and Noah Frederking was the start of a 10-0 stretch.  K.J. Riley added the last two points, knocking down two free throws following a technical foul issued on Illinois State.  ISU added a late triple, but UE’s rally saw them head to the break trailing by seven – 34-27.

The first bucket of the second half saw ISU hit the first shot to push the lead back to nine before UE fought back.  Over the first 10 minutes of the half, Evansville stayed within two possessions before the senior from the Bronx converted a 4-point play.  With 9:07 on the clock, K.J. Riley made it a 46-45 game in favor of ISU before Jawaun Newton continued the run a minute later.

Newton drained a triple on the feed from Frederking to put the Aces on top at 48-46.  Illinois State countered with four in a row to retake the lead before a John Hall layup knotted the score at 50-50 with the game nearing the six-minute mark.

Over the final moments, the Redbirds put the game away as they finished the game on a 21-11 run to finish with the 71-60 victory.

Leading ISU was D.J. Horne, who posted 24 points.  He was 8-for-16 from the field and hit all eight free throws.  Horne and Matt Chastain finished with seven rebounds apiece.

Arch Madness is next for the Aces.  UE heads to St. Louis as the #10 seed for the sixth time in program history.  Evansville opens the tournament on Thursday evening at 8:35 p.m. against the #7 seed.  The final standings and seeds will be determined following Saturday’s league games.

 

Camping Season Is Quickly Approaching

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Guides

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The DNR’s 2020 Indiana Recreation Guide is the source for information on state parks, state forests, lakes, fish & wildlife areas, nature preserves, state park inns, and other DNR properties.

Gray’s Career Day Earns Series Win For Aces

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Sophomore pitchers strikes out seven, allows just two hits in seven innings

After an impressive pitching performance on Friday, the University of Evansville baseball team again got a gem from its starter in a 4-1 victory over Butler at Bosse Field on Saturday afternoon.

“What electric stuff tonight from Shane Gray. Just his fastball all night, both sides of the plate, up, down,” said Aces head baseball coach Wes Carroll. “I thought him and Max were in sync the entire game and he was able to get a swing and miss whenever he needed to late in the count and it was a special overall performance for our sophomore and a much-needed series win. Just an overall great performance from out club.”

Sophomore Shane Gray took a no-hitter through 6.2 innings, finishing with seven Ks in seven innings and allowing just two hits and one run in his outing.

Gray got the Aces going in the top of the first, inducing a fly-out to left field and back-to-back groundouts to end the Butler half of the first. Evansville took the lead in the bottom of the first as senior Craig Shepherd smashed a single up the middle and junior Robbie Wilkes followed suit with a base hit to left field. Two batters later, sophomore Indiana Stanley cracked a single through the left side, scoring Shepherd and Wilkes to give Evansville a 2-0 lead.

It was Gray again who sat the Bulldogs down in order, this time including a strikeout to end the inning. In the bottom of the second, the Aces repeated their effort from the first, scoring twice more as senior Troy Beilsmith led off the inning by taking first base after being hit by a pitch. Freshman Max Malley joined Beilsmith on base and the two stole second and third, respectively. With runners in scoring position, Shepherd delivered a two-RBI single up the middle to push the Aces lead to 4-0.

The Aces looked to strike for more runs in the third inning as junior Mark Shallenberger ripped a double down the line and junior Mason Brinkley singled to third with one out. After a wild pitch moved Brinkley to second, Butler ended the Aces threat with two strikeouts to end the inning.

The middle innings were quiet for both teams as neither side registered a hit from the fourth through the sixth inning. Butler got its first and only tally in the top of the seventh inning as a pair of hits got the Bulldogs within three runs at 4-1.

Coming on in relief, freshman Jace Kressin got the job done for the Aces, shutting down the Bulldogs, with two spotless innings, including three strikeouts.

Evansville closes out the series with the Bulldogs on Sunday at noon at Bosse Field.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

ADOPT A PET

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Lorna is a female torbie (tabby + tortoiseshell) cat at River Kitty Cat Café. She is the VHS’ longest resident, having been surrendered May 7, 2019. She’s a little more aloof than many cats, and doesn’t always seek human affection. That is holding her back. But in a quieter home environment, she will probably come out of her shell a lot! Her adoption fee is $40 and she can be visited at River Kitty Tuesday-Sunday. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 Tuesday-Saturday for adoption details!

Hoosiers Return 20 to Saturday Finals

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The No. 4-ranked Indiana University men’s swimming and diving team is poised for another big night on the final day of competition at the 2020 Big Ten Championships at the Counsilman-Billingsley Aquatic Center on Saturday.

Indiana will return 20 athletes into the finals, the most of any team in the field, with seven Championship Finalists, seven Consolation Finalists and six C Finalists. IU will also have four swimmers competing in the 1,650 Freestyle during the evening session.

The Hoosiers head into the final session in third place on the team leaderboard with 857.5 points. No. 3 Michigan leads the field with 1,063 points and No. 17 Ohio State occupies the second spot with 865 points.

200 Backstroke

Junior Gabriel Fantoni will be seeded sixth in the Championship Final of the 200 Backstroke after securing a time of 1:41.95. Junior Jacob Steele will compete in the Consolation Final after turning in a mark of 1:42.92 in the prelims, while freshman Jake Marcum will have the top seed time in the C Final after hitting a career-best mark of 1:44.22.

 100 Freestyle

All five of the Hoosiers from the preliminary heats of the 100 Freestyle will be back in the Saturday evening finals, led by junior Bruno Blaskovic. He posted the top seed time with a mark of 41.49, the second-fastest time swam in the nation this season and the third-fastest performer in program history. Senior Mohamed Samy (42.71) and sophomore Jack Franzman (42.72) will both be seeded in the top four of the event.

Sophomore Brandon Hamblin earned his first individual final of the week by making the Consolation Final of the 100 Freestyle with a career-best time of 43.65. Junior Griffin Eiber will swim out of the C Final after registering a mark of 43.92.

200 Breaststroke

Sophomore Zane Backes (1:55.42) and junior Gary Kostbade (1:55.62) will each represent the Hoosiers in the Consolation Final of the 200 Breaststroke, while junior Matt Jerden (1:56.43) and junior Thomas Vanderbrook (1:57.68) each qualified for the C Final.

200 Butterfly

In one of the more dominant events for the Hoosiers, IU placed three in the Championship Final, one in the Consolation Final and two in the C Final of the 200 Butterfly.

Freshman Brendan Burns leads the pack in the A Final with the second-quickest qualifying time at 1:42.47. He will be joined by sophomore Van Mathias (1:43.56) and freshman Kai Bathurst (1:44.45).

Junior Corey Gambardella (1:46.16) will compete in the B Final, while senior Iago Moussalem (1:46.66) and freshman Harry Flanders (1:46.73) will each be in the C Final.

Platform Dive

Sophomore Cole VanDevender earned his third trip to the Consolation Final in a diving event this week with an NCAA Zone Qualifying Score of 307.65. He finished ninth overall in the preliminary flight, while junior Mory Gould completed his set with a score of 268.85 to sneak into the B Final with a 15th-place finish in prelims.

UP NEXT

The first five timed finals of the 1,650 freestyle begin at 4:00 p.m. ET, with the action getting started in earnest at 6:30 p.m. ET.

@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.

RESULTS

200 Backstroke

Gabriel Fantoni – 1:41.95 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut)

Jacob Steele – 1:42.92 (Consolation Final, NCAA B Cut)

Jake Marcum – 1:44.22 (C Final, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)

100 Freestyle

Bruno Blaskovic – 41.49 (Championship Final, NCAA A Cut, Pool Record, Career best)

Mohamed Samy – 42.71 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut)

Jack Franzman – 42.77 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut)

Brandon Hamblin – 43.65 (Consolation Final, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)

Griffin Eiber – 43.92 (C Final)

200 Breaststroke

Zane Backes – 1:55.42 (Consolation Final, NCAA B Cut)

Gary Kostbade – 1:55.62 (Consolation Final, NCAA B Cut)

Matt Jerden – 1:56.43 (C Final, NCAA B Cut)

Thomas Vanderbrook – 1:57.58 (C Final, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)

200 Butterfly

Brendan Burns – 1:42.47 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut)

Van Mathias – 1:43.56 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut)

Kai Bathurst – 1:44.45 (Championship Final, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)

Corey Gambardella – 1:46.16 (Consolation Final, NCAA B Cut)

Iago Moussalem – 1:46.66 (C Final, NCAA B Cut, Career Best*)

Harry Flanders – 1:46.73 (C Final, Career Best)

  1. Jakub Karl – 1:48.37

Platform Dive

Cole VanDevender – 307.65 (Consolation Final, NCAA Zone Qualifying Score)

Mory Gould – 268.85 (Consolation Final)