Indiana
23 statewide awards handed out at Tuesday’s Indiana High School Sports Awards show
East Central High School’s Josh Ringer was named Boys Athlete of the Year and Hamilton Southeastern High School’s Lauren Harden was named Girls Athlete of the Year on Tuesday night at the Indiana High School Sports Awards, presented by the Indiana Pacers.
Hamilton Southeastern volleyball was the Girls Team of the Year Award while Fishers basketball won the Boys Team of the Year award at the event, which honored athletes, teams and coaches from the entire state. Indiana Fever star Aliyah Boston was the speaker at the event, which was produced with the support of the Indianapolis Colts, The Kiwanis Club of Indiana, USA Today Sports And Golfweek.
In all, 23 awards were handed out:
Coach of the Year: Dave Benter, Brownstown Central High School
Benter, in his 26th year at his alma mater, led top-ranked Brownstown Central to the Class 2A boys basketball state title, the school’s first. Benter’s son, Jack, was the Braves’ star player and helped Brownstown Central to a 28-4 record, including finishing the season on a 19-game win streak culminating with a 55-36 win over No. 2 Wapahani in the state final.
Courage Award: Breece Bass, Franklin Central High School
Breece has persevered through the tragic deaths of her brother Broderick and father Stephen, remaining focused on her personal aspirations and drawn inspiration from the sky-high standard she holds herself to. A three-sport athlete, she led Franklin Central soccer to its first sectional championship since 2018, qualified for state in wrestling and has her sights set on returning to the state track meet this spring. A Murray State soccer commit, Breece will be the first in her family to attend college.
Marion County High School Female Athlete Award presented by the Kiwanis Club of Indianapolis: Lila Mattick, Covenant Christian High School
According to her coach, Lila was the glue that held the Covenant Christian girls basketball team together this season. She is well known as a hard worker and hustler on the court, and a team leader who is constantly encouraging others. She has a 3.95 grade point average and constantly takes on many challenges outside sports, including intense year-round physical training for basketball. And she is cherished by her team for her habit of writing notes or creating cards of encouragement and leaving them around for the person to find. She was always the first person there to help teammates and opponents up from the floor after they fell and is described by her coach as “selfless and devoted, a woman of integrity, an encourager and an overall impressive person to be around.”
Boys Team of the Year (PRESENTED BY USA TODAY SPORTS): Fishers High School basketball
Despite losing one of the country’s top players prior to the season, Fishers finished 29-1, winning its first sectional, regional, semistate and state championships since the school opened in 2007. The Tigers were ranked No. 1 for much of the season and capped off the year with a 65-56 win over defending champion Ben Davis in the Class 4A state final.
Girls Team of the Year (PRESENTED BY USA TODAY SPORTS): Volleyball, Hamilton Southeastern High School
HSE volleyball has been simply dominant. The Royals repeated as Class 4A state champions and have won 67 straight matches. HSE finished this year’s title run 33-0 with a 95-5 set differential led by a seven-girl senior class with five Division I commits. Perfection was the expectation for HSE. And it still raised the bar.
School Spirit Award: Shortridge High School
Shortridge won this award based on a state-wide online vote. Shortridge won $1,000 for its athletic department.
Boys Athlete of the Year: Josh Ringer, East Central High School
Ringer led East Central to back-to-back Class 4A football state championships and finished his high school career with school records of 6,640 rushing yards and 118 total touchdowns. The Miami of Ohio recruit won IndyStar Mr. Football and was named Gatorade Player of the Year.
Girls Athlete of the Year: Lauren Harden, Hamilton Southeastern High School
Harden led the Royals to back-to-back state championships and a 67-match winning streak. The University of Florida recruit was named MaxPreps National Player of the Year. A multi-time All-American, Harden had more than 1,000 kills in her HSE career.
IndyStar Mr. Football (PRESENTED BY THE INDIANAPOLIS COLTS): Josh Ringer, East Central High School
The Miami (Ohio) recruit ran for nearly 3,000 yards as a senior and scored 60 total touchdowns in leading the Trojans to back-to-back Class 4A state championships. He owns school records for rushing yards and total touchdowns and is just the second player from East Central to win Mr. Football.
IndyStar Miss Basketball (PRESENTED BY THE INDIANA PACERS): Chloe Spreen, Bedford North Lawrence High School
Spreen played a starring role in BNL’s Class 4A state championship run as a junior last year. For her encore, the 5-10 Alabama commit carried the Stars to a 20-5 record and a13th consecutive sectional title. She averaged career-highs in points and rebounds and finished second on the school’s all-time scoring list with 1,869 points.
IndyStar Mr. Basketball (PRESENTED BY THE INDIANA PACERS): Flory Bidunga, Kokomo High School
Bidunga earned a spot on the McDonald’s All American game and won the Gatorade Player of the Year for Indiana for a second consecutive season. The Kansas recruit averaged 19.0 points, 12.9 rebounds and 4.4 blocked shots per game to lead Kokomo to a Class 4A regional appearance this year. In three seasons at Kokomo, Bidunga finished with career totals of 1,609 points, 1,132 rebounds and 402 blocked shots while shooting 80.3% from the field. Kokomo reached the 4A state finals his junior year.
Girls Golfer of the Year (PRESENTED BY GOLFWEEK): Samantha Brown, Westfield High School
Brown completed her run to the individual state championship with an ultra-consistent, two-round total of 2-under-par — four shots better than a group of four golfers tying for the runner-up spot. The Purdue recruit finished the 36 holes with only two bogeys and was also named the IHSAA Mental Attitude Award winner.
Boys Cross Country Runner of the Year: Cameron Todd, Brebeuf Jesuit Preparatory
A Notre Dame recruit, Todd won the boys individual championship, posting the seventh-best time in state history, and fastest since 2011. At the Foot Locker national championship in San Diego, he finished eighth (the top Midwest finisher).
Boys Soccer Player of the Year: Cole Thompson, Noblesville High School
Voted player of the year by the Indiana High School Soccer Coaches Association, Thompson allowed just 12 goals in 21 games played this past season. He recorded 10 shutouts and stopped nearly half the penalty kicks he faced, which included three straight PK victories to reach the state finals. “We have Cole Thompson. Best keeper in the nation,” one teammate said.
Boys Tennis Player of the Year: Alex Antonopoulos, North Central High School
The individual boys state champion, Antonopoulos picked up North Central’s lone point in a 4-1 quarterfinal loss to eventual state champion Carmel, winning his No. 1 singles match 6-1, 6-2. A Western Michigan recruit, he finished his senior season 22-0 and won the individual singles state final with a 6-2, 6-1 win over Columbus North’s Hank Lin.
Girls Cross Country Runner of the Year: Libby Dowty, Indian Creek High School
The Indian Creek sophomore led most of the IHSAA state finals, until she was passed with 400 meters left, but Dowty regained the lead and in the final 200 meters and went on to become the first Indian Creek girl to win a cross-country state title with a time of 17 minutes, 6.7 seconds. She won a sectional title by more than 30 seconds and a regional title by more than 20 seconds. Dowty finished third at the Foot Locker Midwest Regional and was named Gatorade Indiana Cross Country runner of the year.
Girls Soccer Player of the Year: Hailey Wade, Hamilton Southeastern High School
Named 2023 Player of the Year by the Indiana High School Soccer Coaches Association, Wade allowed just seven goals this season with nine shutouts, helping lead the Royals to a Hoosier Crossroads Conference title. Over her career, the Valparaiso commit had more shutouts than goals allowed.
Girls Volleyball Player of the Year: Lauren Harden, Hamilton Southeastern High School
Just the second player in program history to clear 1,000 career digs, Harden also set HSE’s all-time kills record on her way to helping the Royals become the fourth undefeated Class 4A state champion in state history. The Florida-bound standout closed out her career with 13 kills in the state final vs. Castle.
Boys Swimming & Diving Athlete of the Year: Matthew Klinge, William Henry Harrison High School
Klinge won a third straight state title in the 50 freestyle and repeated as state champion in the 100 butterfly. He was just .07 seconds off the state record in the 50 freestyle, set by NCAA champion and Olympian Drew Kibler. An Ohio State recruit, Klinge will attempt to qualify for the U.S. Olympic Swim Trials, hosted this summer at Lucas Oil Stadium.
Girls Swimming & Diving Athlete of the Year: Alex Shackell, Carmel High School
Shackell posted four first-place finishes in helping the Greyhounds extend their national record to a 38th straight state team title. She broke her own state record in the 100 butterfly, won the 100 backstroke and was part of two winning relay teams. In December’s East Junior Nationals, the California commit finished first in seven events and featured times that bettered high school state records in six.
Boys Wrestler of the Year: Jake Hockaday, Brownsburg High School
Hockaday finished the season with a 37-2 record and the state title at 132 pounds. He helped guide Brownsburg to its first team title since 2017. An Oklahoma commit, Hockaday has won individual state titles in each of his three seasons so far and is ranked among the top recruits in the 2025 class.
Girls Gymnast of the Year: Elly Kiran, Crown Point High School
The all-around individual state champion, Kiran placed first in the vault and floor exercise and placed second in the uneven bars and balance beam, helping Crown Point to a second team state title in three years. Kiran was also named the Mildred M. Ball Mental Attitude Award winner at the state meet.
Girls Swimming & Diving Athlete of the Year: Alex Shackell, Carmel High School
Shackell posted four first-place finishes in helping the Greyhounds extend their national record to a 38th straight state team title. She broke her own state record in the 100 butterfly, won the 100 backstroke and was part of two winning relay teams. In December’s East Junior Nationals, the California commit finished first in seven events and featured times that bettered high school state records in six.
Girls Wrestler of the Year: Julianna Ocampo, New Haven High School
Ocampo won the girls state title at 110 pounds in January, finishing with a 22-1 record. A month later, she made history becoming the first girls wrestler to medal at the boys state finals. In her third career state finals appearance, Ocampo placed sixth at 106 pounds.
For spring sports, watch list athletes were recognized at the show. The Indystar will announce Player of the Year winners in those sports later in the school Year. Also, athletes who won Athlete of the Week awards during the school year were recognized at the show.
The Indiana High School Sports Awards show is part of the USA TODAY High School Sports Awards, the largest high school sports recognition program in the country.
Indiana
Indiana Fever 109 – New York Liberty 91: Final score, results, recap, box score, stats – Yahoo Sports
It’s been almost 10 months since Caitlin Clark last suited up for the Indiana Fever. Clark made her long-awaited return Saturday against the New York Liberty in both teams’ first preseason games of the year, with the Fever notching a 109-91 win. The 2024 rookie of the year played just 13 games during her sophomore season as she navigated injuries before officially being shut down in September. As Clark enters her third season in the WNBA, the anticipation might rival that of her rookie year, con
Indiana
Caitlin Clark returns to the court for the Indiana Fever after 9 months out – WTOP News
NEW YORK (AP) — Caitlin Clark was excited to get back on the court Saturday and play in a WNBA…
NEW YORK (AP) — Caitlin Clark was excited to get back on the court Saturday and play in a WNBA game, even if it was just the preseason.
Indiana’s star played in her first game for the Fever in nine months after injuries derailed her second season, limiting her to 13 games.
“This isn’t a real game, I understand that, but that’s how we treat it like a real game,” Clark said before the Fever faced the New York Liberty. “I think anytime you get to put on your uniform and lace up your shoes you don’t take that for granted, especially after coming off last year when I didn’t get to do that very much.”
Clark said she had some nerves and only expected to play about 20-25 minutes.
“Get out there, run around, you know, it’s going to be a little sloppy for both teams,” she said. “That’s kind of what preseason games are.”
Fever coach Stephanie White noticed a difference in Clark this preseason as opposed to her first two in the league.
“I think that’s the thing, watching her play with joy,” White said. “In practice her energy is different, carrying herself in a different way.”
This wasn’t Clark’s first basketball game since suffering a season-ending injury last July. She played for USA Basketball in a World Cup qualifying tournament last month and earned Most Valuable Player honors.
“She was itchy and antsy before training camp started,” said White, who coached her in USA Basketball as well. “Glad she had those games with USA Basketball and came into training camp having played. Now it’s fine tuning.”
While Clark played, a few of the Fever’s others didn’t. Aliyah Boston was out while still recovering from a lower-leg injury. Lexie Hull is also working her way through a hamstring issue.
White said both would have played if it was a regular-season game.
The Fever were also without Ty Harris (knee) and Damiris Dantas, who is not with the team yet.
New York was missing Rebecca Allen, Marine Fauthoux and Satou Sabally, who were out to build their fitness up. Sabally was the biggest offseason acquisition by the Liberty, signing as a free agent.
Leonie Fiebich, Raquel Carrera, Pauline Astier and Ugonne Onyiah weren’t with the Liberty yet as they were finishing up their overseas commitments.
___
AP WNBA: https://apnews.com/hub/wnba-basketball
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Indiana
Bill Schneider Jr., longtime Indianapolis councilor, dies at 92
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — One of the first Republicans elected to the Indianapolis City-County Council following the implementation of Unigov, Bill Schneider Jr. died Wednesday, a funeral home said in an announcement issued Friday night. He was 92.
Schneider in 1965 founded Mister Ice of Indianapolis, which continues to sell, lease and service ice machines and refrigeration units for restaurants, hotels, and health care facilities from a facility off Hague Road at East 88th Street.
He served as a Marion County commissioner from 1968 to 1971, and represented the north side of Indianapolis as a City-County councilor from 1971 to 1999. The Indiana legislature in 1970 created Unigov to consolidate the city and county governments. During his time in public office, Schneider may have been best known for his consistent “no” votes on tax increases. When Schneider left office in 1999, his son was elected to succeed him, and Scott Schneider served eight years.
William George Schneider was born Feb. 21, 1934, in Falmouth, an unincorporated, east-central Indiana community that straddles the border of Fayette and Rush counties.
He is survived by his wife of 70 years, Patricia Schneider; four children, 12 grandchildren, and 12 great-grandchildren.
Visitation will be from 4-8 p.m. Wednesday at Flanner Buchanan funeral home, 1306 Broad Ripple Ave., and 10-11 a.m. Thursday at Christ the King Catholic Church, 5884 Crittenden Ave. A Mass of Christian Burial will follow Thursday’s visitation at the church.
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