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GREGORY ALAN BATES, 53, of Irwin (Svcs. 03/26/2019)

Obituaries

March 22nd, 2019 by Jim Field

GREGORY ALAN BATES, 53, of Irwin died Thursday, March 21st at home. Funeral services for GREGORY ALAN BATES will be held on Tuesday, March 26th at 1:30pm at Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan.

Visitation will be held on Monday, March 25th from 3:00pm-8:00pm at Pauley-Jones Funeral Home in Harlan with family greeting friends from 6:00pm-8:00pm that evening.

Burial will be in the Rose Hill Cemetery in Kirkman.

GREGORY ALAN BATES is survived by:

Mother: Jessie Mae (Caldwell) Bates of Irwin.

Daughter: Jessica (Mardy) (Bates) Anderson of Harlan.

Sister: Suzette (Jose) Bates-Leal of Harlan.

3 Grandchildren

CAM star Madison Gettler signs with Morningside

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

CAM star basketball forward Madison Gettler signed on Thursday to continue her academic and basketball career at Morningside College in Sioux City. Gettler is coming off a stellar senior season in which she led the Cougars to the State Basketball Tournament for the first time since 1997.

Gettler announced the signing on social media and said, “Excited to announce that I’m officially a Mustang! Can’t wait to continue my academic and athletic career at Morningside!!”

Gettler finished her CAM career with 1,480 points. She dropped in 467 points this season and averaged 19.5 per contest to lead the team.

Gettler will join a Mustangs team coached by Jamie Sale that went 19-13 during the 2018-19 season. Gettler will join a couple of other area athletes on the Mustangs roster with Exira-EHK alum Sophia Peppers and Harlan alum Jordyn Moser.

Gustafson named Finalist for Naismith Trophy

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa senior Megan Gustafson has been named one of four finalists for the 2019 Citizen Naismith Trophy, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Friday. The award recognizes the most outstanding women’s college basketball player.

Louisville’s Asia Durr, Oregon’s Sabrina Ionescu, and Notre Dame’s Arike Ogunbowale round out the four finalists.

Gustafson has led the Hawkeyes to a 26-6 overall record. Iowa captured its first Big Ten Tournament Title since 2001 on March 10 behind Gustafson’s 45 point and 10 rebound performance against top-seeded Maryland. The tournament title secured a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament for the Hawkeyes, marking Iowa’s highest seed since 1996.

The ESPNW Player of the Year ranks in the top-four nationally in eight categories. She leads the country in field goal percentage (69.6), points per game (28.0), total points (897), and field goals made (369), ranks second in double-doubles (30) and defensive rebounds per game (10), third in total rebounds (424), and fourth in rebounds per game (13.3).

A native of Port Wing, Wisconsin, Gustafson is the only Hawkeye in program history to win the Big Ten Conference’s Player of the Year award twice. She is the ninth two-time recipient in conference history.

Gustafson looks to become the first from the Big Ten to win the Naismith Trophy.

Beginning today, fans will have a chance to vote for their favorite finalist through April 3, by visiting naismithfanvote.com to cast their ballot. The fan vote will account for five percent of the overall vote. The 2019 Citizen Naismith Trophy for Women’s Player of the Year will be announced on April 6, and the winner will be honored at her school on a later date.

Gustafson and the No. 8/8 Hawkeyes open NCAA Tournament action today, hosting 15th-seeded Mercer at 1 p.m. (CT). The game will be broadcast locally on ESPN2 and streamed nationwide on WatchESPN.

ISU 11th, Degen and Colbray Quarterfinalists after day one in Pittsburgh

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

PITTSBURGH, Pa. – After one day of action at the 2019 NCAA Wrestling Championships, the Iowa State wrestling team (10-4, 6-2 Big 12) is in 11th place with 14.5 team points. Penn State paces the field with 32.5 team points.

Eighth-seeded Jarrett Degen and 10th-seeded Sam Colbray both went 2-0 on day one and have advanced to the quarterfinals at 149 and 184 pounds, respectively. The Cyclones brought nine wrestlers to Pittsburgh and all have advanced to day two of the NCAA Championships.

Championship Second Round
Jarrett Degen was locked in a barnburner with N.C. State’s No. 9 Justin Oliver with a spot in the quarterfinals on the line. The two were knotted at 8-8 late in the third before Degen used his patented unconventional offense to secure a late takedown and push his riding time to over a minute to take the match by 11-8 decision.

Sam Colbray was in complete control of his match against No. 26 Dakota Geer of Oklahoma State. Colbray notched three takedowns and rolled to a 7-4 decision and into the quarterfinals.

No. 13 Austin Gomez was the aggressor in his match against No. 4 Micky Phillippi. In the third period, Gomez trailed 1-0 and elected to take neutral. Despite his persistent attack, Phillippi was only called for stalling once. As time expired, Gomez was in on a single leg, but ultimately fell to the Panther, 1-0.

At 197 pounds, No. 11 Christian Brunner got a first period takedown to jump out ahead of No. 6 Willie Miklus. The Boilermaker held on to that lead to push Miklus to the backside of the bracket, 6-2.

Consolation First Round
In session two, the Cyclones wrestling on the backside of the bracket combined to go 5-0 to all reach the second day of competition in Pittsburgh.

No. 23 Chase Straw put on display his toughness and grit on Thursday night. Straw trailed Princeton’s No. 26 Quincy Monday in the third period, 12-5. Straw then reversed Monday and earned a four-point near fall. Monday was dinged for stalling to tie the match at 12-12, sending it to sudden victory. After a scoreless first overtime stanza, the two went to tiebreaker one. Straw rode Monday for the first 30 seconds of TB-1 and then earned and escape to secure a 13-12 victory over the Tiger.

After dropping his first match of the day, No. 19 Alex Mackall bounced back. He surrendered the first takedown to No. 30 Bryce West, but he got to his feet, took the Huskie down and turned him to his back for a fall in 2:54.

No. 17 Ian Parker dominated in his first consolation match. He held an 11-0 lead with over three minutes of riding time before he cranked Rutgers’ No. 33 Peter Lipari for the fall in 5:35.

No. 21 Marcus Coleman made light work of No. 28 Jacob Oliver of Edinboro in the 174-pound consolations. He used three takedowns and over a minute of riding time to beat the Fighting Scott by 9-4 decision.

No. 25 Gannon Gremmel capped off the second session of day one for the Cyclones with a 7-4 victory over Standord’s No. 26 Haydn Maley. The redshirt sophomore tallied three takedowns in the victory.

Championship First Round
The Cyclones went 4-5 in the opening session of the NCAA Championships. Gomez, Degen, Colbray and Miklus all posted dominant victories to advance to the second round.

At 133 pounds, Gomez defeated No. 20 Brandon Paetzell of Lehigh by 11-0 major decision. Degen also scored bonus points for ISU, tacking on a 14-3 major decision against CSU-Bakersfield’s No. 25 Russell Rohlfing, 14-3.

Toward the end of the session, Colbray rolled through No. 23 Jackson Hemauer of Fresno State by 8-2 decision, and Miklus opened his final NCAA tournament with a 6-1 win against Navy’s No. 27 Josh Roetman.

AP source: Cards, Goldschmidt completing $130 million deal

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

A person familiar with the negotiations tells The Associated Press the St. Louis Cardinals and slugging first baseman Paul Goldschmidt are nearing completion of a $130 million, five-year deal that would make him the highest-paid player in club history. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because Goldschmidt must still pass a physical, which was expected to take place Friday. An announcement could come Saturday. The Athletic was first to report that a deal was close.

The Cardinals acquired the 31-year-old Goldschmidt in a trade with Arizona, a move that club president John Mozeliak hoped would put the club over the top. Goldschmidt had just one year left on his contract, though, and his new deal would keep him with St. Louis through 2024.

Mozeliak acknowledged to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that “we are working toward something,” but club officials otherwise declined to comment on Goldschmidt’s contract.

Iowa sends 7 to NCAA Quarterfinals

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

PITTSBURGH, Pennsylvania – Seven University of Iowa wrestlers advanced to the quarterfinals of the 2019 NCAA Championships following second-round wins Thursday night at PPG Paints Arena.

Spencer Lee, Kaleb Young, and Alex Marinelli all moved on with major decisions. Austin DeSanto, Max Murin, Pat Lugo, and Sam Stoll each won by decision.

The Hawkeyes’ seven quarterfinalists are more than any other team. Iowa is in third place with 24 points, 8.5 points behind Penn State.

“Session two is in the books. We have a lot of work to do,” said Iowa head coach Tom Brands. “Session three starts tomorrow and we have two guys on the backside who will have two matches. Seven guys will be in the quarters. We have to be strong. Close matches have to go our way.”

Murin and Stoll advanced following a pair of upsets on Day 1. Murin, the No. 22 seed at 141 and an NCAA first-timer, defeated No. 6 Michael Carr, 3-2. Stoll, the No. 28 seed at 285, is in the quarterfinals for the first time in his career following a 1-0 win over No. 12 Conan Jennings.

“I didn’t even look at seeds,” Murin said. “One of my teammates told me about being the 22nd seed and I got excited. I told myself I’m going to be the dark horse of the tournament and it put a chip on my shoulder.”

Lee, the defending NCAA champion at 125 pounds and No. 3 seed in the tournament, outscored his opponents 28-1 on the opening day. Marinelli, the top seed at 165, moved on to the quarterfinals for the second straight year, winning Thursday night by 12-4 major decision.

Young, the No. 6 seed at 157, has outscored his opponents 30-3 in his first NCAA Championships.

“I feel loose and I’m getting scores in,” Young said.  “It’s good. I need to be relaxed.”

Lugo scored a takedown in the second sudden-victory period to advance a 4-2 winner. DeSanto scored five points in the third period to win 7-2 and advance to the quarterfinals for the second straight year.

The Hawkeyes were 16-2 overall on Day 1. Their two losses were both overtime decisions. Cash Wilcke lost, 6-4, at 184, and Jacob Warner fell, 4-2, at 197.

The championships continue Friday at 10 a.m. (CT). The championship round and consolation round will begin simultaneously on eight mats. ESPNU and WatchESPN are providing television and online coverage of Session III.

IOWA’S SECOND ROUND NCAA RESULTS

125 – #3 Spencer Lee (Iowa) major dec. #14 Sean Fausz (NCST), 12-3
133 – #7 Austin DeSanto (Iowa) dec. #10 Roman Bravo-Young (PSU), 7-2
141 – #22 Max Murin (Iowa) dec. #6 Michael Carr (ILL), 4-3
149 – #10 Pat Lugo (Iowa) dec. #26 Ryan Blees (VT), 4-2 SV1
157 – #6 Kaleb Young (Iowa) major dec. #11 Ke-Shawn Hayes (OSU), 14-2
165 – #1 Alex Marinelli (Iowa) major dec. #16 Thomas Bullard (NCST), 12-4
184 – #5 Max Dean (Cornell) dec. #12 Cash Wilcke (Iowa), 6-4 SV1
197 – #21 Thomas Lane (Cal-Poly) dec. #5 Jacob Warner (Iowa), 4-2 SV1
285 – #28 Sam Stoll (Iowa) dec. #12 Conan Jennings (NU), 1-0

QUARTERFINAL MATCHUPS

125 – #3 Spencer Lee (Iowa) vs. #6 Sean Russell (MINN)
133 – #7 Austin DeSanto (Iowa) vs. #2 Stephan Micic (MICH)
141 – #22 Max Murin (Iowa) dec. #3 Nick Lee (PSU)
149 – #10 Pat Lugo (Iowa) vs. #2 Micah Jordan (OSU)
157 – #6 Kaleb Young (Iowa) major dec. #3 Ryan Deakin (NU)
165 – #1 Alex Marinelli (Iowa) vs. #8 Mekhi Lewis (VT)
285 – #28 Sam Stoll (Iowa) dec. #4 Jordan Wood (LEHIGH)

CONSOLATION MATCHUPS

184 – #12 Cash Wilcke (Iowa) vs. #22 Mason Reinhardt (WISC)
197 – #5 Jacob Warner (Iowa) vs. #27 Joshua Roetman (NAVY)

Scholarships Available for Students Studying Healthcare

News

March 22nd, 2019 by Ric Hanson

Officials with the Cass County Health System say several scholarships are available to area students through CCHS and its affiliate organizations:

  • Cass County Health System offers a $1,000 scholarship to southwest Iowa students pursuing a four-year degree in a health-related career. Deadline is April 1, 2019.
  • Cass County Memorial Hospital Auxiliary provides grant-in-aid scholarships for students pursuing a health-related career. Deadline is April 1, 2019.
  • Cass County Health System Foundation is offering $10,000 in scholarships to students who are enrolled and have been accepted into a nursing or medical doctor educational program.

The scholarships were established by a bequest from Louie and Elsie Hansen. Deadline is April 1, 2019. Applications are available on the Cass County Health System website, www.casshealth.org, and can be turned in to the Human Resources Office or the guidance office at any Cass County high school by the respective deadlines listed above.

Tyler Cook named to NABC All-District Team

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

COLUMBUS, Ohio — University of Iowa junior Tyler Cook was named Thursday to the National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) All-District 7 Second Team.

Cook, who was also tabbed to the USBWA All-District Team and a second-team all-conference by the Big Ten media honoree earlier this month, ranks third in the league in free throws attempted per game (6.16), sixth in rebounding (7.9), 11th in field goal percentage (.528), and 12th in scoring (14.9). Cook (6-foot-9, 250 pounds) is one of only nine players in program history to total more than 1,200 points and 600 rebounds. The native of St. Louis, Missouri, has posted a team-best six double-doubles this season and is one of 15 players in Iowa history to record at least 15 career double-doubles. He recorded at least 15 points and five rebounds over a 10-game span from Nov. 30 to Jan. 12, becoming the first Hawkeye to accomplish the feat since James Winters 25 years ago (1993-94). The junior forward was named to the 2K Empire Classic All-Tournament Team, averaging 17.5 points and nine rebounds in wins over Oregon and Connecticut at Madison Square Garden in New York City.

Joining Cook on the second team were Zavier Simpson (Michigan); Anthony Cowan (Maryland); Ignas Brazdeikis (Michigan); and Lamar Stevens (Penn State). First team honorees included Cassius Winston (Michigan State); Carsen Edwards (Purdue); Ethan Happ (Wisconsin); Bruno Fernando (Maryland); and Jordan Murphy (Minnesota).

Iowa (22-11) will open play in the NCAA Tournament on Friday against No. 22/24 Cincinnati (28-6). Game time is set for 11:15 a.m. (CT) at Nationwide Arena in Columbus, Ohio.

Shayok named NABC All-District

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

AMES, Iowa – Iowa State senior Marial Shayok has been named to the All-District 8 First Team by the National Association of Basketball Coaches.

Shayok leads Iowa State (23-11) and ranks second among Big 12 averaging 18.6 points per game. The Ottawa, Ontario native is shooting 49.4 percent from the field, 38.9 percent behind the arc and 88.3 percent at the free-throw line.

Shayok was recently named the Big 12 Tournament’s Most Outstanding Player after averaging 18.0 points in leading the Cyclones to their fourth conference tournament title in the last six seasons. He has also earned All-Big 12 First Team accolades and is a finalist for the Julius Erving Award.

Shayok and the Cyclones open NCAA Tournament play Friday at approximately 8:50 p.m. against Ohio State. The game will be televised on TBS.

District 8

First Team

Dedric Lawson, Kansas
Marial Shayok, Iowa State
Barry Brown, Kansas State
Jarrett Culver, Texas Tech
Makai Mason, Baylor

Second Team

Dean Wade, Kansas State
Alex Robinson, TCU
Kerwin Roach, Texas
Christian James, Oklahoma
Jaxson Hayes, Texas

Bluder Named Finalist for Naismith Coach of the Year

Sports

March 22nd, 2019 by admin

IOWA CITY, Iowa — University of Iowa head coach Lisa Bluder has been named one of four finalists for the 2019 Werner Ladder Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year, the Atlanta Tipoff Club announced Thursday.

North Carolina State’s Wes Moore, Baylor’s Kim Mulkey, and Mississippi State’s Vic Shaefer round out the four finalists.

Bluder has led the Hawkeyes to a 26-6 overall record. Iowa captured its first Big Ten Tournament Title since 2001 on March 10, and earned a No. 2 seed in the NCAA Tournament. It marks Iowa’s highest seed since 1996.

In 19 years at the helm, Bluder has led the Hawkeyes to 12, 20-win seasons. The Hawkeyes have won 20 or more games in 10 of the last 12 years.

Iowa is ranked No. 8 in both major polls, marking the highest ranking for the program since 1996. Iowa ranks in the top-10 nationally in five categories. The Hawkeyes lead the country in field goal percentage (51.9), rank second in assists per game (21.9), third in assists (702), fourth in assist/turnover ratio (1.61), and ninth in free throw percentage (77.7).

This year, Bluder has guided senior center Megan Gustafson to national prominence. The ESPNW Player of the Year ranks in the top-four nationally in eight categories.  She leads the country in field goal percentage (69.6), points per game (28.0), total points (897), and field goals made (369), ranks second in double-doubles (30) and defensive rebounds per game (10), third in total rebounds (424), and fourth in rebounds per game (13.3).

Bluder looks to become the second Hawkeye head coach to win the Werner Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year Award. C. Vivian Stringer won the award in 1993.

Beginning March 22, 2019, fans will be able to support their favorite finalist by visiting naismithfanvote.com until April 3, to cast their ballot. The fan vote will account for five percent of the overall final vote. The 2019 Werner Ladder Naismith Women’s College Coach of the Year will be announced on April 6, and the winner will be honored at their school at a later date.

The Hawkeyes open NCAA Tournament action Friday, hosting Mercer at 1 p.m. (CT) in Carver-Hawkeye Arena.