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Trailblazers use big inning to walk-off win over D-III No. 7 Joliet Junior College

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VINCENNES, Ind. – The Vincennes University baseball team hit the diamond for another busy day of baseball Saturday at Jerry Blemker Field.

The Trailblazers kicked off their split doubleheader day by falling to Olney Central College 8-1 before bouncing back to close out the day with a big 12-2 win over NJCAA Division III No. 7-ranked Joliet Junior College.

VU’s offense came alive with a big six run inning against Joliet, which helped propel the Blazers to a run-rule, walk-off victory.

Vincennes began their day with their eighth straight game versus an NJCAA Division I opponent, this time coming in the form of Olney Central College.

Early on Saturday afternoon the two pitchers were dueling, with each starting pitcher carrying a no-hitter into the fourth inning.

The Blue Knights were the first to break the scoreless tie, plating three runs in the fifth and adding on with four runs in the sixth to take a 7-0 lead.

Vincennes would respond in the sixth after a single by sophomore Jack Robinson (Mooresville, Ind.), followed by a walk by sophomore Kade Hinton (Fort Wayne, Ind.).

Robinson would come in to score on an RBI single by sophomore Brandon Juarez (Evansville, Ind.) cutting the deficit to 7-1.

Olney Central answered back in the top of the seventh with a run of their own before closing out the game by retiring the Blazers in order in the bottom half of the inning, giving Olney Central the 8-1 victory over VU.

Vincennes freshman Kaleb Marrs (Terre Haute, Ind.) got the start on the mound in game one for the Blazers and threw four and one-third very solid innings, allowing three runs on four hits and striking out four.

VU Head Baseball Coach Chris Barney then turned the game over to sophomore Christian Pinson (Elizabethtown, Ky.) who allowed four runs on two hits and striking out three in one and one-third innings of work.

Freshman Bryce Gross (Bridgeport, Ill.) entered to close out the final inning and one-third, allowing one run on three hits and striking out one.

The Trailblazers then looked to bounce back and regroup ahead of another tough test in the night cap of the day, facing off against Joliet Junior College who comes into the weekend ranked No. 7 in NJCAA Division III baseball.

Vincennes set the tone early in game two of the day, leading off the bottom of the first with a double by freshman Bradyn Douglas (Frankton, Ind.), who later came around to score on a single by Kade Hinton and a fielding error to give the Blazers the early 1-0 lead.

The Trailblazers added to this lead in the second with the first four batters in the inning reaching base and back-to-back singles by sophomores Dylan Ecken (Louisville, Ky.) and Bryton Griffy (Louisville, Ill.), followed by a walk to Bryce Gross and a bases loaded walk by Douglas.

 

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Indiana Wins Big Ten with Walk-Off Relay Performance

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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Every single point mattered.

Indiana women’s swimming and diving won its seventh Big Ten Championship – first since 2019 – on Saturday (Feb. 24), outscoring runner-up and four-time defending champion Ohio State by one-half of a point at the Morgan J. Burke Aquatic Center.

The Hoosiers walked it off, placing second in the 400-yard freestyle ahead of third-place Ohio State to earn the necessary two-point advantage over the Buckeyes. OSU led through three legs, but sophomore Kristina Paegle’s 46.65 anchor got IU home in 3:11.37, over a second quicker than Ohio State’s relay.

The previous closest difference between first and second at a Big Ten women’s championships was 2004, when Michigan edged Penn State 604.5-590.5.

Because the team results were decided by such a small margin, every performance was crucial. Juniors Ching Hwee Gan, Brearna Crawford and Skyler Liu all won individual Big Ten Championships during the final night, but the Hoosiers could not have done it without freshman MacKenna Lieske, who had to win a swim-off in the morning to get into the 200-yard breaststroke C final, earning maximum points from her heat. It could not have happened without springboard specialist Anne Fowler’s perhaps last performance on platform, getting her own 17th-place finish and the nine points with it. Anna Freed swam an exhausting 200 fly, 200 back double and finished fifth in both races. There’s a hero in every Hoosier that swam, dove or encouraged her teammates.

“I am still in a state of disbelief,” IU head swimming coach Ray Looze said. “What our women did tonight was simply unbelievable. We basically witnessed a near-perfect performance by everyone. This is a championship that I will never forget!”

Moments before the relay, Liu hinted that perhaps destiny was having its day. As the top seed stepped to the end of the 10-meter platform for her final dive, she needed 78.80 points to summit the top of the leaderboard. She said her arms were “trembling” as she went into her handstand 30 feet above the water. Somehow, she got into position, executed three-and-a-half somersaults into a pike position and glided into the water. Liu scored 79.20 points, winning her second Big Ten title in two days. She was named the Big Ten Diver of the Championships.

“That was the ultimate team victory,” IU head diving coach Drew Johansen said. “I have never seen four days of competition come down to half of a point. Every girl on this team made a difference. To see Skyler hit that last dive to win by less than a point was spectacular, and then to see our relay out-touch OSU was like a storybook ending.”

Crawford captured her second-career 200-yard breaststroke title in a season-best 2:07.25. She previously won it as a freshman in 2022 but was foiled last season by teammate Noelle Peplowski, now an assistant coach for the program. Indiana has won eight of the last nine Big Ten 200-yard breaststroke championships. The junior also earned a bronze medal for her performance in the 100-yard event on Friday.

Gan and fellow junior Mariah Denigan kicked off the evening session in style with their medal performances in the 1,650-yard freestyle. Swimming out of the first of five heats, Denigan dropped a 15:59.66 in her first mile swim of the season. Only Gan and Wisconsin’s Madeline Waggoner would beat that in the remaining four heats. Gan was ruthless in her victory, going wire-to-wire in the top-seeded heat and touching in 15:54.83. It’s Gan’s first individual Big Ten championship after finishing third in the event as a freshman and second last season and IU’s first mile title since 2014.

All four Hoosiers on the clinching relay previously competed in 100-yard freestyle finals. Junior Anna Peplowski (47.53) and Paegle (47.65) both medaled. Senior Ashley Turak (49.09) was eighth, and Ella Ristic (49.89) finished 24th. Peplowski led off the relay in 47.72, followed by Turak’s nearly identical 47.71. Ristic was 49.29, giving way to Paegle’s incredible 46.65 anchor.

IU had three top-10 finishers in the 200 fly via Freed’s fifth (1:57.76), sophomore Katie Forrester’s sixth (1:57.97) and Ava Whitaker winning the B final in 1:57.67. In the 200 back, Freed (1:54.80), sophomore Mya DeWitt (1:54.620 and junior Kacey McKenna (1:57.19) followed suit. A pair of freshmen also earned points on platform as Ella Roselli and Lily Witte each performed in the consolation final, their third final in three days.


TEAM SCORES
1. Indiana – 1,359

  1. Ohio State – 1,358.5
  2. Michigan – 1,207
  3. Wisconsin – 978
  4. Minnesota – 816
  5. Purdue – 572.5
  6. Northwestern – 463.5
  7. Nebraska – 409
  8. Penn State – 382
  9. Rutgers – 363.5
  10. Iowa – 303
  11. Illinois – 204

    RESULTS

1,650 FREESTYLE

  1. Ching Hwee Gan – 15:54.83 (Big Ten Champion, NCAA B Cut)
  2. Mariah Denigan – 15:15.66 (Bronze, NCAA B Cut)
  3. Elyse Heiser – 16:16.88 (NCAA B Cut)
  4. Katie Carson – 16:00.89 (Exhibition, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)


200 BACKSTROKE
4. Mya DeWitt – 1:54.62 (NCAA B Cut)

  1. Anna Freed – 1:54.80 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Kacey McKenna – 1:57.19

    100 FREESTYLE
    2. Anna Peplowski – 47.54 (Silver, NCAA B Cut)

  3. Kristina Paegle – 47.65 (Bronze, NCAA B Cut, Career Best)
  4. Ashley Turak – 49.09 (NCAA B Cut)
  5. Ella Ristic – 49.89

200 BREASTSTROKE

  1. Brearna Crawford – 2:07.25 (Big Ten Champion, NCAA B Cut)
  2. Reese Tiltmann – 2:14.38
  3. MacKenna Lieske – 2:13.34 (NCAA B Cut, Career Best)

200 BUTTERFLY

  1. Anna Freed – 1:57.76 (NCAA B Cut)
  2. Katie Forrester – 1:57.97 (NCAA B Cut)
  3. Ava Whitaker – 1:57.67 (NCAA B Cut)

PLATFORM

  1. Skyler Liu – 342.40 (Big Ten Champion, NCAA Zone Qualifier)
  2. Ella Roselli – 246.65 (NCAA Zone Qualifier)
  3. Lily Witte – 209.55
  4. Anne Fowler – 210.75

400 FREESTYLE RELAY

  1. Anna Peplowski, Ashley Turak, Ella Ristic, Kristina Paegle – 3:11.37 (Silver, Program Record, NCAA A Cut)

Women’s Swim and Dive makes vast improvements at conference championships

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MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. – University of Southern Indiana Women’s Swimming and Diving squad tackled the four-day Summit League Championships this week in Minneapolis, Minnesota with conference implications on the line. USI broke nine school records this weekend and placed seventh among the highly competitive field.
 
The women improved vastly from the 2022-23 season showing they clearly belonged among a tough Summit League field. The women reached as high as sixth place in the standings. The progress will continue to motivate the Eagles as they take steps forward in year two of the program’s existence.
 
Day 1
USI got off to a hot start on opening night breaking records in both relay events. Sophomore Makana Goss (Noblesville, Indiana), Freshman Hayden Shurtz (Ft. Wayne, Indiana), sophomore Sarah-Catherine Dawson (Prospect, Kentucky), and Hallie Meier (Plainfield, Indiana) broke the 200 yard medley relay (1:46.82) to start the night.  
 
Freshman Reagan Holmes (Henderson, Nevada), sophomore Mattilynn Smith (Morgantown, Kentucky), freshman Caiya Cooper (LaPorte, Indiana), and Meier dazzled in the 800 yard freestyle relay (7:43.01). Both events set the tone for the rest of the week.
 
Day 2
The second day brought a lit bit of everything with 15 Eagles earning season bests. Cooper is going to be a force for years to come, shattering records all week. She broke the 500 yard freestyle record on day two (5:05.04).
 
Next, USI compiled a 200 yard freestyle relay team of four freshman Ella Johnson (Owensboro, Kentucky), Meier, Holmes, and Cooper to earn the school record (1:39.23).
 
Day 3
The third day brought three new school records and 16 swimmers earning season bests as USI crept into sixth place, passing Eastern Illinois University.
 
Cooper continued her tear with a blazing start in the 200 yard freestyle (1:53.99). Another key contributor for the Eagles all season long was Shurtz who just missed the A-finals in the 100 yard breaststroke (1:03.99). Holmes is another freshman phenom who broke the 50 yard freestyle record (24.52).
 
Freshman Naomi Weaver (Greenwood, Indiana), Shurtz, Dawson, and Cooper finished the night with the 400 yard medley relay record (3:54.34).
 
Day 4
USI finished the final day with 15 season bests and two additional records. The Eagles just barely slid into seventh place on the day behind St. Thomas University.
 
Holmes continued her tear with a shifty 100 yard freestyle performance (52.94). Shurtz followed up with her signature 200 yard breaststroke event earning a school record (2:22.72).
 
Final Results

  1. Denver
  2. South Dakota
  3. Lindenwood
  4. Nebraska Omaha
  5. South Dakota State
  6. St. Thomas
  7. Southern Indiana
  8. Eastern Illinois
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Do organizations really believe in diversity equality and inclusion?
Diversity, equity, and inclusion are three closely linked values held by many organizations that are working to be supportive of different groups of individuals, including people of different races, ethnicities, religions, abilities, genders, and sexual orientations.Aug 17, 2022

“Whitelash” and Other Current Challenges to DEI in the Workplace

August 2023

Despite heightened public awareness around systemic racial inequalities, much of which was galvanized by the murder of George Floyd in 2020, there are now equally escalating challenges to efforts aimed at improving diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace. Here are some of the biggest barriers to DEI efforts in corporate America today.

Why Can It Be Challenging for Some Companies to Hire a Diverse Workforce?

Multiple factors are setting up the current obstacles to achieving diverse and inclusive workplaces. Here are some everyone should be aware of.

Pre-Existing Low Engagement With DEI

Just as cultural and political leanings skew different ways in different US regions, so do values around diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workplace. This has been true long before the recent discourse about racial justice, and unfortunately, deepening ideological divisions are intensifying these differences.

As of 2017, company DEI programs flourished the most in New England, Middle Atlantic, and West Coast states. The regions where DEI fared worst included the South (Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi, Tennessee, Arkansas, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas) and Mountain states (Nevada, New Mexico, Utah and Wyoming). In these large swathes of the country, DEI programs are especially unlikely to thrive with any additional threats or challenges to their existence — and there are several.

Confusion Around Federal vs. State EEO Laws

Federal laws around DEI are set and enforced by the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC). These are known as Equal Employment Opportunity (EEO) laws, which are most commonly referenced by companies in rote boilerplate statements. Although most employers are familiar with federal EEO laws, some states have their own versions of these, which can make DEI program compliance tricky at best and legally risky at worst.

Conservative Backlash Against DEI Awareness and Engagement

If you’ve read, watched, or listened to any news in the past few years, you’ve heard about the conservative backlash — also known as “whitelash” — of right-wing politicians, industry leaders, and individuals who resent policy efforts aimed at protecting liberty and justice for all Americans. 

These groups present a false argument that America is under attack from “woke culture” and the so-called “woke agenda.” In doing so, conservatives choose to ignore hundreds of years of profound and continuing racial injustices — which, even today, are far from being adequately addressed — in favor of the idea that white populations are now the victims of “reverse racism.”

However unfounded, political and public whitelash has necessarily spilled over into corporate America, whose C-suite staff are still overwhelmingly white and male. As a result, DEI officers in many companies and industries feel they have to tread carefully in how they advocate for equity in hiring and promotion practices as well as other important company policies. 

To begin with, many of these business leaders, well-intentioned and otherwise, are simply unaware of the ways and degree to which they have enjoyed automatic advantages because of their race and gender. They may not realize that even “meritocracy” — a concept speciously championed by politicians like Texas governor Greg Abbott — often fails to account for how the barrier-ridden realities of life keep non-white and other marginalized workers from achieving the same successes as their white male peers, despite their best efforts and sacrifices. 

Others have additional conscious or unconscious racial biases and are unwilling to fully examine how these function in their own career or in company operations, much less invest the time and resources needed to eliminate them in the workplace.

Mass Layoffs of DEI Professionals

Far from what Americans might expect in the wake of the Black Lives Matter movement and increased awareness of racial inequalities, many companies are actually cutting DEI staff rather than stepping up related efforts. 

Although corporations actively sought out these professionals between September 2019 and September 2020, DEI roles began facing mass elimination just months after the death of George Floyd. This downward trend has been driven in large part by a slow economy, cooling interest in corporate accountability with regard to racial equity, and public whitelash against the principles that drive DEI as a whole. Related job cuts exist across all industries, but most notably in top tech firms.

The SCOTUS Ruling on Affirmative Action in College Admissions

In addition to all of these factors, the Supreme Court recently ruled that affirmative action in college admissions is unconstitutional. In short, it is requiring higher education institutions to eliminate race-conscious aspects of admissions (which take racial barriers into account) for race-neutral ones (which don’t). 

This decision may also have a legal impact on affirmative action hiring practices. Although employers cannot lawfully discriminate against employees based on a protected status like race, they may, conversely, run into other legal challenges if they use race-conscious policies like those used by many universities. Employers are also likely to be concerned with avoiding backlash and lawsuits from prospective and actual employees who believe they were discriminated against because of their white race or male gender.

How to Promote Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in Your Workplace

Your company can overcome current challenges to DEI efforts in the workforce. Educating yourself, your coworkers, and your direct reports about ethically and legally sound DEI policies is a great place to start. You can learn about this by reading books like The Anti-Racist Organization: Dismantling Systemic Racism in the Workplace by HR strategist Shereen Daniels, which offers a four-part approach for tackling structural racism in the workplace. 

Support DEI in the American Workplace With ARCC

The Anti-Racism Commitment Coalition (ARCC) is an inclusive coalition of dedicated people committed to eradicating racism and spreading anti-racism throughout our communities, countries, and the world. We work to help and educate people on their transformative journey to anti-racism by providing access to related support and resources. On [fill in date and time and link to social media or website landing page], ARCC welcomed Shereen Daniels, who visited us as part of her book tour.

You can help us to build a racism-free world. Subscribe to receive news and updates about our work. Be sure to check out our newsletters and ARCC of Change podcast series. Show your commitment to anti-racism by purchasing ARCC merchandise or by making a donation. 

THUNDERBOLTS GAIN WEEKEND SPLIT, DEFEAT PEORIA 5-4

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Evansville, In.:  Bouncing back once again following a loss on Friday in Peoria, the Thunderbolts turned the tables in a high-offense game, defeating the Rivermen 5-4 at Ford Center on Saturday night.   The Thunderbolts’ next home game will be on Friday, March 1st against the Quad City Storm, puck drop at 7:00pm CT.

 

Despite a much better first period for Evansville, the Rivermen took the first lead of the game as Chase Spencer scored with 23 seconds to go in the period.  In response, Evansville exploded for four goals in the second period to take a 4-1 lead;  Starting the goal rush was Brendan Harrogate, scoring from Matthew Hobbs and Vadim Vasjonkin on a 2-on-1 rush at 1:38 to tie the game at 1-1.  Mark Zhukov put Evansville ahead by firing a shot through a screen, assisted by Matt Dorsey at 3:12.  On a power play, Matthew Hobbs deflected in a shot to make it 3-1, assisted by Dorsey and Zhukov at 9:13.  Only 45 seconds later, Myles Abbate made it 4-1 by tucking in a puck around the Rivermen goaltender at 9:58 from Zhukov.

 

The fourth goal would result in a Peoria goaltending change, with Mario Cavaliere replaced by Nick Latinovich.  The Rivermen controlled play for a long stretch after the swap, and at 13:25 pulled back to within 4-2 as Alec Hagaman scored on a power play.  The third period was mostly scoreless until the final few minutes, when Braydon Barker added another power play goal at 16:48 to pull Peoria back to within one goal.  Immediately afterward, the Thunderbolts gained a power play thanks to Dorsey powering to the Rivermen net to draw a penalty, and Bronson Adams, in his professional debut, scored on the ensuing power play from Abbate and Hobbs to give Evansville a 5-3 lead with only 57 seconds remaining.  Peoria got one back however, as Hagaman scored again with 38 seconds remaining to make it 5-4.  The Thunderbolts survived the final rush with Latinovich pulled, and Evansville held on to win the game and split the weekend with the Rivermen, maintaining a 5-point lead above the playoff line.

Zhukov and Hobbs each finished with a goal and two assists, Abbate with a goal and assist, and Harrogate along with Adams with one goal each.  Dorsey tallied a pair of assists, while Ty Taylor made 35 saves on 39 shots faced for his 2nd win of the season.  The Thunderbolts and Rivermen meet again on Friday, March 22nd at Ford Center.

 

Thomas scores 31 as No. 8 Trailblazers win first-place battle with Olney Central

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VINCENNES, Ind. – Vincennes University freshman Lebron Thomas (Bishopville, S.C.) came through for the Blazers when they needed him the most Saturday night, hitting 11 of 12 second half free throws to help the No. 8-ranked VU Trailblazers pick up an 87-79 victory over Olney Central College.

With this win, the Trailblazers now move in front of the Blue Knights, gaining a half-game lead over Olney Central for the top spot in the Region 24 standings.

The Trailblazers were also without Hall of Fame Head Coach Todd Franklin Saturday night, who was serving a one game suspension after being ejected from Wednesday night’s win over Southwestern Illinois.

Longtime VU Assistant Coach Brian Davis served as acting Head Coach Saturday night and helped guide the Trailblazers to victory.

Vincennes got off to a slow start Saturday night and really took some time to get their feet under them before striking with an 8-0 scoring run to take a 16-12 lead over the Blue Knights.

The VU lead would grow to 23-18 before the Blue Knights answered back to take a 24-23 lead.

The lead changed hands eight times in the span of a few minutes of game clock before the Blazers truly separated themselves with a 9-0 scoring run late in the first half to take a 39-31 lead.

Olney would cut into the deficit before half but were unable to regain the lead as VU headed into the locker room leading 41-35 at the break.

The second half was again more of a back-and-forth battle, with VU using a string of trading two baskets for one to help grow the first double-digit lead of the game at 52-42 early in the second half.

VU would grow their lead to the largest margin of the game at 66-49 midway through the final half of play before the Blue Knights looked to battle back and get another late comeback.

Slowly Olney Central chipped away at the VU lead, cutting the deficit down to 10 at 75-65 and getting the VU lead back down to single digits at 78-70.

Olney Central would get within six points late in the game but were unable to fully erase the VU lead as Vincennes put the game away at the free throw line to pick up the 87-79 victory over the Blue Knights.

“We would have loved to have Coach Franklin here tonight obviously,” VU Assistant Men’s Basketball Coach Brian Davis said. “I thought the guys really battled hard and got the win. Coach Glash is a great coach and they have a very good team. They have beaten a lot of people and they are going to beat a lot of people. We’ve been to Hutch a number of times since I’ve been here and I think that’s they type of team that could get out there and do something.”

“Olney is a hard team to guard,” Davis added. “They are not really big, so their guards can all shoot. They are quick and they come at you for 40 minutes. But I thought our guys have been really locked in all week. We had a good gameplan coming into tonight and really competed for 40 minutes and were able to make enough plays to get it done.”

VU was led offensively by a pair of double-doubles from the guard position, first by freshman Lebron Thomas, who etched his name into the VU 30-point club with 31 points, 10 rebounds, four assists and three steals, setting career-highs in points and rebounds to earn his first collegiate double-double.

Sophomore Ryan Oliver (Antioch, Tenn.) was against all over the court Saturday night, ending his night with 10 points, 11 rebounds and three assists, recording his first collegiate double-double and setting a new career-high in rebounds as well.

Sophomore Kent King (Washington, D.C.) came off the bench to get the VU offense going early, scoring 12 of his 15 points in the first 20 minutes of action while also ending with five rebounds on the night.

Sophomore Victor Lado (Louisville, Ky.) played some big minutes off the bench to end his night with nine points and three rebounds, while freshman Damarien Yates (Somerville, Tenn.) ended with seven points and three rebounds.

The Trailblazers controlled the glass all game long, besting the Blue Knights in the rebounding margin 45-24 Saturday night.

Indiana Women’s Swimming and Diving Wins Big Ten Championship

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WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. – Indiana women’s swimming and diving won its seventh Big Ten Championship – first since 2019 – on Saturday (Feb. 24), outscoring runner-up and four-time defending champion Ohio State by one-half of a point.

TEAM SCORES
1. Indiana – 1,359

  1. Ohio State – 1,358.5
  2. Michigan – 1,207
  3. Wisconsin – 978
  4. Minnesota – 816
  5. Purdue – 572.5
  6. Northwestern – 463.5
  7. Nebraska – 409
  8. Penn State – 382
  9. Rutgers – 363.5
  10. Iowa – 303
  11. Illinois – 204