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Midwest Sports Headlines: 3/8/21

Sports

March 8th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Here is the latest Mid-America sports news from The Associated Press

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Luka Garza scored 21 points and had 16 rebounds as No. 5 Iowa defeated No. 25 Wisconsin 77-73. It was the 12th double-double of the season for Garza, who leads the Big Ten in scoring and is third in the nation. Iowa has won seven of eight and is 20-7 overall. The Hawkeyes will be the third seed in the Big Ten Tournament. Micah Potter shot 9 for 12 and scored 23 points for Wisconsin, which has lost five of six.

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Cameron Krutwig and Braden Norris scored 20 points apiece to help Loyola Chicago roll past Drake 75-65 in the Missouri Valley Conference championship game for a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Keith Clemons added 13 points for the Ramblers, who will be making their seventh NCAA Tournament appearance and first since the 2018 team reached the Final Four as a No. 11 seed. D.J. Wilkins and Tremell Murphy had 20 points each for Drake, which was making its first MVC final appearance since 2008.

EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) — Ryan Young’s putback with 2.7 seconds left gave Northwestern a 79-78 win over Nebraska in a regular-season finale. Pete Nance missed a running hook but Young was there to follow with the game-winner. Six Wildcats finished in double figures, led by Chase Audige with 14 points. Kobe Webster had 23 points and seven 3-pointers, both career highs, to lead the Cornhuskers. Both teams begin play in the Big Ten tournament on Wednesday in Indianapolis.

NEW YORK (AP) — Seton Hall forward Sandro Mamukelashvili and Villanova forward Jeremiah Robinson-Earl were unanimous selections to the All Big East Conference basketball team. The league announced the team Sunday based on a vote of the coaches. They were not allowed to vote for their own players. The other four first-team members are James Bouknight of Connecticut, Marcus Zegarowski of Creighton, Julian Champagnie of St. John’s, and Collin Gillespie of Villanova, which won the regular-season title. One of the six will be the conference’s player of the year. The award will be announced Wednesday along with coach of the year, freshman of the year and scholar-athlete. The league’s tournament is scheduled to start Wednesday at Madison Square Garden.

Legislative update from (R) Rep. Ray Sorensen

News

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

Iowa House District 20 Republican Representative Ray Sorensen, from Greenfield, reports “Funnel week” came to an end on Friday, and” now we work towards second funnel in a couple of weeks. Debate was very limited, only a couple of non-cons on Wednesday, as we concentrated on getting our committee work done during funnel.”

In his weekly newsletter, Sorensen said “Funnel week is a self-imposed deadline for each session that means all bills must be voted out of their Senate and House committees and sent to each full chamber. Bills that don’t make it out of committee are essentially dead, meaning us legislators won’t have an opportunity to vote on them. There are ways, though, that bills can come back from the “dead”, in the form of amendments and in standing apropos, etc.

Education committee lasted for seven hours on Wednesday, and here are a couple highlights. First, after working on a bipartisan compromise for the last couple of weeks, I was able to pass the Seizure Safe Schools bill. This bill would require training in recognition of the signs of seizure disorders and at least one employee to be trained in administering seizure medications. There are 40 different types of seizures and 1 in 10 Americans will experience a seizure in their lifetime. This is a bill that has successfully passed in five other states and is running in 20 others.

The Governor’s Education bill, SF 159, was broken up into a few different bills. First, HSB 243, the students first scholarships, or “vouchers”, didn’t have the support to move out of committee.

Next, HSB 242 The Charter Schools bill, passed out of committee. It allows for the creation of a public charter school through one of two models, a school board or founding group. Both approaches use the same rigorous application process and are accountable to the state board of education, making sure they adhere to public school guidelines. These schools would not be able to “pick the cream of the crop”, it would be first come-first serve basis. It passed, but there is work to be done to make sure we improve the community support and local accountability pieces, if that isn’t addressed, it may not make it off the floor.

The other piece of the Governor’s bill, HSB 240, increases the teacher tax deduction from $250 to $500 and also increases the education tax credit from 25% of the first $1000 to 25% of the first $2000 spent on education related expenses like tuition and textbooks. The mandate for a single statewide student information system was removed from this bill.

Another high-profile education bill, preventing the 1619 Project from being taught in history class, failed to gain support. The bill was a specific attempt to stop it from being taught it history class (as it is littered with historical errors and inaccuracies), but not entirely, a teacher would’ve been able to teach it in a literature or reading class.

Some of the bills voted out of committee in Information Technology this past week include: HSB 232 – Which is a bill that would empower the ICN to directly bill an entity receiving services through an authorized user for an authorized use. This creates a more efficient billing and billing resolution process for the ICN. HSB 212 – Clarifies that blockchain and smart contract technologies may be used in the state of Iowa for transactional relationships.

We finally came to a compromise with the Governor’s office on the policy piece of her Broadband Grant Program bill, HSB 133. The bill redefines Targeted service areas into tiers and required a project minimum speed of 100/100 with increased grant match percentages from 75% on down. The issue was, at 100/100, which is only fiber and this point, that digging fiber to every rural home (even with a 75% match) was still not very feasible. So as a compromise, we dropped the upload speed down to 20 for some of the Tier 1 projects to open it up to other technologies in hopes of reaching every last Iowan in need of a reliable broadband connection. I think this change, paired with an aggressive appropriation, could catapult us to the forefront of, not only an entirely connected state, but from an economic development stance this makes rural and small town Iowa a viable place to live and work.

This week, the Iowa Department of Public Health announced a new website – Vaccinate.Iowa.gov – to provide additional resources to eligible Iowans seeking the COVID-19 vaccine. This website provides information about vaccine providers based on your zip code, vaccine priority populations and eligibility, resources for Iowans age 65 and older, and answers to frequently asked questions. Iowa continues to vaccinate at record rates with 723,262 doses already being administered as of Wednesday. To put this in context, over the last year, 364,892 Iowans have tested positive for COVID.

Whether you live in a city or in God’s Country in rural Iowa, your right to keep and bear arms is essential and we remain committed to protecting it. The 2nd Amendment Omnibus bill will improve public safety, eliminate needless regulations, and reassure law abiding citizens that they do not need the government’s permission to practice their Constitutional right to keep and bear arms. A couple of important things to understand, this bill in no way eliminates the need for background checks. Under this bill, anyone looking to purchase a firearm of any kind from a licensed dealer would need to do one of two things, show a permit or pass a federal background check. For person-to-person the bill changes the punishment for selling a firearm to someone who shouldn’t have one from an aggravated misdemeanor to a Class D Felony.

I know the bottle bill will be of interest to many of you. It made it out of committee. This bill would allow the dealers of beverage containers to refuse to accept and refund containers if they contract with a redemption center to take the containers on their behalf. Allows a person to establish a redemption center without the approval of the DNR, as long as they submit notice and relevant information to be filed with the Department. I’m sure the debate is not over, as we all work to get the right thing done.”

Rep. Ray “Bubba” Sorensen & wife Maria.

And, in news of a more personal note, Rep. Sorensen said his family has a big announcement: “We are expecting our third child in August. Thanks for all the well-wishes, we are all very excited to meet our new little one.”

Loyola Chicago gets MVC crown over Drake, 7th NCAA berth

Sports

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

ST. LOUIS (AP) — Cameron Krutwig and Braden Norris scored 20 points apiece to help Loyola Chicago roll past Drake 75-65 in the Missouri Valley Conference championship game for a spot in the NCAA Tournament. Keith Clemons added 13 points for the Ramblers, who will be making their seventh NCAA Tournament appearance and first since the 2018 team reached the Final Four as a No. 11 seed.

Drake’s D.J. Wilkins (0) shoots over Loyola of Chicago’s Tate Hall during the first half of the championship game in the NCAA Missouri Valley Conference men’s basketball tournament Sunday, March 7, 2021, in St. Louis. (AP Photo/Jeff Roberson)

D.J. Wilkins and Tremell Murphy had 20 points each for Drake, which was making its first MVC final appearance since 2008.

 

Garza gets 21 points, No. 5 Iowa tops No. 25 Wisconsin 77-73

Sports

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP) — Luka Garza scored 21 points and had 16 rebounds as No. 5 Iowa defeated No. 25 Wisconsin 77-73. It was the 12th double-double of the season for Garza, who leads the Big Ten in scoring and is third in the nation. Iowa has won seven of eight and is 20-7 overall.

Iowa center Luka Garza reacts after making a basket during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Wisconsin, Sunday, March 7, 2021, in Iowa City, Iowa. (AP Photo/Charlie Neibergall)

The Hawkeyes will be the third seed in the Big Ten Tournament. Micah Potter shot 9 for 12 and scored 23 points for Wisconsin, which has lost five of six.

 

Iowa COVID-19 update, 10-a.m. Sunday 3/7/2021: 6 additional deaths, 418 addt’l. cases

News

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

The Iowa Department of Public Heath at 10-a.m., Sunday, reported on the Coronavirus dashboard, that an additional 418 positive COVID-19 test results were returned from the labs, for a pandemic total of 367,027. There were also six additional deaths reported, for a total of 5,558. Long-Term Care facility deaths account for 2,193 of the State’s total number of deaths.

The number of Long-Term Care facility COVID-19 Outbreaks are unchanged from Saturday, at 10. Hospitalization data show 167 Iowans are hospitalized with COVID, compared to 170 in the previous report. The number of COVID patients in an ICU is down to 35 from 38 previously. There were 31 patients admitted to hospitals over the 24-hour reporting period (compared to 33 previously), and six patients remain on a ventilator (four less than on Saturday).

Hospitals in Western & Southwest Iowa report: 18 people are hospitalized for COVID; eight are in an ICU, two patients with COVID symptoms were admitted over the past 24-hours, and one person remains on a ventilator. More than 263,782 Iowans are now fully vaccinated against COVID-19. Health department data shows 864,749 vaccine doses have been administered in Iowa.

Iowa’s 14-day positivity rate is 4.0%, while the seven-day rate is 3.9%.

In the KJAN listening area, here are the current number positive cases by County; The # of new cases since yesterday {+} – if any; and the total number of deaths in each county to date:

  • Cass, 1,366 cases; {+6}; 51 deaths
  • Adair, 928; {+2}; 30
  • Adams, 327 {+1}; 4
  • Audubon, 493 {+2}; 9
  • Guthrie, 1,173 {+0}; 28
  • Harrison County, 1,800; {+0}; 70
  • Madison County, 1,565; {+3}; 18
  • Mills County, 1,636; {+0}; 20
  • Montgomery, 1,044; {+2}; 36
  • Pottawattamie County, 10,881; {+30}; 146
  • Shelby County, 1,231; {+1}; 34
  • Union County,  1,271; {+3}; 31

Cass County Supervisors meeting set for Tuesday

News

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A regular, weekly meeting of the Cass County Board of Supervisors will take place in-person at the Courthouse in Atlantic, Tuesday, and can be viewed via Zoom, both beginning at 9-a.m. The Board has a light agenda, which includes a canvass of the March 2nd CAM School District Special Election to Adopt a Revenue Purpose Statement (RPS). Unofficial results show the measure passed last week by a vote of 170 Yes to 12 No. The Board will certify the election results Tuesday, making them official.

In other business, County Engineer Trent Wolken will provide the Supervisors with his weekly report on Secondary Roads Department activities and news.

14-year old from Essex pursued during a traffic stop in Fremont County

News

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

A traffic stop on an SUV in Fremont County at around 1:30-a.m. Sunday (today), resulted in a pursuit, a crash, and the arrest of a juvenile. The Fremont County Sheriff’s Office reports a deputy tried to stop a Ford Explorer for not having headlights on, as the vehicle was traveling south on Highway 59, near the Shenandoah Wal-Mart. The driver failed to stop, and led authorities on a pursuit that started eastbound on West Nishna Road in Shenandoah, at speeds of up to 100 mph.

The SUV went out of control near 200th Street and B Avenue. It rolled into the ditch and landed on its passenger side. The driver was identified as a 14-year old juvenile from Essex, who had taken his mother’s vehicle while she was sleeping. The unidentified juvenile was taken into custody and transported to the Juvenile Detention Center, in Council Bluffs.

Fremont County Deputies were assisted during the incident, by Shenandoah Police and Page County Sheriff’s Deputies.

Iowa women sweep Nebraska, Saturday

Sports

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

IOWA CITY, Iowa (via HawkeyeSports.com) — The University of Iowa women’s basketball team swept the season series over Nebraska, with an 83-75 victory in the regular-season finale Saturday night, inside Carver-Hawkeye Arena.  In a game that featured zero double-digit leads, 11 ties and 10 lead changes, Iowa was able to put Nebraska away in the fourth quarter. The dagger helped give Iowa its eighth win in the last 11 meetings against Nebraska. Caitlin Clark, te freshman from Des Moines, scored 19 of her game-high 35 points in the fourth quarter for her 11th 30-point game of the season to help Iowa get over the hump down the stretch. Clark missed only one shot in the final frame, going 4-of-5 from the field, 3-of-4 from the long distance, and 8-of-8 from the charity stripe.

Clark scored her 601st point of the season 3:08 into the game, becoming the fifth Hawkeye to record 600 points in a single season. She joins Hawkeye greats Megan Gustafson, Cindy Haugejorde, Michelle Edwards, and Franthea Price. Clark now has 631 points on the season. Sophomore Gabbie Marshall was a spark on both ends for the Hawkeyes, scoring 14 points on 4-of-5 shooting from behind the arc and swiping three steals on defense. Sophomore McKenna Warncok was the third Hawkeye in double figures with 12 points. Redshirt sophomore Kate Martin scored seven points, grabbed a career-high eight rebounds, and dished out a game-high five assists.

Redshirt senior Alexis Sevillian and senior Zion Sanders were honored after tonight’s game. The two were Iowa’s captains this season. Sevillian, a Goodrich, Michigan native, has appeared in 111 games, with 65 starts in her Hawkeye career, averaging 5.9 points per game on 34.6 percent 3-point shooting. Sanders, an Evansville, Indiana, native appeared in 61 games in her Hawkeye career and was a leader on and off the court.

Iowa earned the six seed in the Big Ten Tournament and will face 11th-seeded Purdue on Wednesday, March 10. The game will tipoff 25 minutes after the conclusion of the previous game between Penn State and Michigan State that begins at 5:30 p.m. (CT). The game will be televised on FS2.

No. 3 N. Iowa wins defensive slugfest against Illinois St.

Sports

March 7th, 2021 by Ric Hanson

CEDAR FALLS, Iowa (AP) — Tyler Hoosman ran for 63 yards and his 13-yard touchdown run with 3:24 left helped seal No. 3-ranked Northern Iowa’s 20-10 win over 15th-ranked Illinois State. The Panthers’ four-play, 24-yard drive was set up when Jared Brinkman recovered a fumble forced by teammate Spencer Cuvelier on a sack of Illinois State quarterback Bryce Jefferson. In what was a defensive scrum throughout, both defensive units tended get the better of each others offenses than the other way around. Under pressure throughout, Jefferson finished 13-for-27 passing for 69 yards and ran for 60 yards on 14 carries.

 

2021 Boys Hawkeye Ten Basketball Honors

Sports

March 6th, 2021 by admin

2021 HAWKEYE 10 ALL CONFERENCE BOYS BASKETBALL TEAMS

STUDENT NAME HIGH SCHOOL GRADE POSITION

1ST TEAM
1 Skyler Handlos ** Atlantic Sr. G
2 Michael Shull ** Clarinda Sr. G
3 Colby Burg ** Creston Sr. G
4 Braiden Heiden ** Denison-Schleswig Sr. G
5 Ryan Blum ** Glenwood Sr. F
6 Connor Frame ** Harlan Jr. G/F
7 Wyatt Hatcher ** Lewis Central Jr F
8 Sam Rallis ** St. Albert Sr. F

2ND TEAM
1 Dayton Templeton Atlantic Jr. G
2 Drew Brown Clarinda Jr. F
3 Kaden Briggs Creston Sr. F
4 Caden Johnson Glenwood So. G
5 Bradley Curren Harlan So. G
6 John Mayhall Kuemper Catholic Sr. G
7 Max DeVries Red Oak Fr. G
8 Carter White St. Albert Jr. G

HONORABLE MENTION
1 Grant Sturm Atlantic Sr. G
2 Grant Jobe Clarinda Jr. F
3 Brance Baker Creston Sr. G
4 Cael Kralik Creston Sr. G
5 Evan Turin Denison-Schleswig Sr. F
6 Ben Hughes Glenwood Sr. G
7 Michael Erlmeier Harlan Sr. G
8 Mitchell Badding Kuemper Catholic Sr. G
9 JC Dermody Lewis Central Jr. G
10 Baylor Bergren Red Oak Jr. G
11 Braden Knight Shenandoah Sr. G
12 Cy Patterson St. Albert Sr. G
** Notes unanimous selection for 1st team – Selections are listed alphabetically by school name