Indiana
How to watch Iowa vs Indiana today: Time, TV channel for Big Ten basketball game
Video: Owen Freeman on why a postgame video clip is motivating Iowa
Owen Freeman discusses a variety of topics ahead of Iowa’s matchup with Indiana.
Iowa basketball is ready to hit the court again in Big Ten Conference play.
The Hawkeyes (11-4, 2-2 Big Ten) remain at Carver-Hawkeye Arena on Saturday for a men’s matchup against Indiana. Head coach Fran McCaffery’s group is hoping to carry its momentum from last outing’s overtime win over Nebraska, 97-87, on Tuesday.
Here’s how to watch Iowa men’s basketball vs Indiana, including time, TV schedule and streaming information:
Watch Iowa vs. Indiana men’s basketball on FUBO
What channel is Iowa vs Indiana on today?
TV channel: FOX
Livestream: FUBO (free trial)
Iowa vs Indiana will be broadcast nationally on FOX. Streaming options for the game include FUBO, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
Can I watch Iowa vs Indiana for free on livestream?
The Iowa vs. Indiana game can be streamed on FUBO, which offers a free trial to new subscribers.
Iowa vs Indiana time today
- Date: Saturday, Jan. 1
- Start time: 7 p.m. CT
The Iowa vs Indiana game starts at 7 p.m. CT from Carver-Hawkeye Arena in Iowa City.
Iowa basketball schedule 2024-25
Record: 11-4 (2-2 Big Ten)
- Nov. 4: Texas A&M Commerce (W, 89-67)
- Nov. 7: Southern (W, 89-74)
- Nov. 12: South Dakota (W, 96-77)
- Nov. 15: Washington State (W, 76-66)
- Nov. 19: Rider University (W, 83-58)
- Nov. 22: Utah State (L, 77-69)
- Nov 26: USC Upstate (W, 110-77)
- Dec. 3: Northwestern (W, 80-79)
- Dec 7: @Michigan (L, 85-83)
- Dec. 12: Iowa State (L, 89-80)
- Dec. 15: University of New Orleans (W, 104-57)
- Dec. 21: University of Utah (W, 95-88)
- Dec. 30: University of New Hampshire (W, 112-70)
- Jan 3: at Wisconsin, (L, 116-85)
- Jan. 7: Nebraska, (W, 97-87)
- Jan. 11: Indiana, 7 p.m., FOX (Iowa City)*
- Jan. 14: at USC, 9:30 p.m., FS1 (Los Angeles, California)*
- Jan. 17: at UCLA, 8 p.m., FS1 (Los Angeles, California)*
- Jan 21: Minnesota, 8 p.m., BTN (Iowa City)*
- Jan. 24: Penn State, 8 p.m., FS1 (Iowa City)*
- Jan 27: at Ohio State, 7 p.m., FS1 (Columbus, Ohio)*
- Feb. 4: Purdue, 6 p.m., Peacock (Iowa City)*
- Feb 8: Wisconsin, noon, NBC (Iowa City)*
- Feb. 12: at Rutgers, 5:30 p.m., BTN (Piscataway, New Jersey)*
- Feb. 16: at Maryland, 4 p.m., FS1 (College Park, Maryland)*
- Feb. 19: Oregon, 7:30 p.m., BTN (Iowa City)*
- Feb. 22: Washington, 3 p.m., FS1 (Iowa City)*
- Feb. 25: at Illinois, 8 p.m., FS1 (Champaign, Illinois)*
- Feb: 28: at Northwestern, 8 p.m., FS1 (Evanston, Illinois)*
- March 6: Michigan State, 7 p.m., FS1 (Iowa City)*
- March 9: at Nebraska, 11:30 a.m., FOX (Lincoln, Nebraska)*
- March 12-16: Big Ten Tournament on (Indianapolis, Indiana)*
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Indiana
Indiana State Senate District 23 candidates discuss top voter issues
LAFAYETTE, IN — The Journal & Courier asked candidates in contested primary races to answer questions to help voters learn about them.
A complete list of Tippecanoe County candidates on the May 5 Primary Election ballot can be found online.
Indiana State Senate District 23
Incumbent State Sen. Spencer Deery faces a Republican primary challenge from Paula Copenhaver, a former Fountain County clerk and current Fountain County Republican Party chair.
Tell us about yourself.
Deery: Age: 43. Current occupation and any political experience: higher education administration, and I was elected to the state senate in 2022, the first and only office I have sought or held. City you live in: West Lafayette.
Copenhaver: Age: 53. Current occupation and any political experience: current governmental affairs director for the lieutenant governor’s office, Covington City Council member, Fountain County Republican Party chairman, and former Fountain County clerk.
What are the three biggest issues you’re hearing from constituents in this election cycle?
Deery: Affordability, Indiana’s independence, and education
Copenhaver: Property taxes, the cost of living and protecting conservative values are the top concerns I hear from Hoosiers every day. Families are being taxed out of the homes they worked hard to buy, and the state senate has failed to deliver meaningful property tax relief. At the same time, rising prices are making it harder to afford groceries, gas and everyday essentials. Hoosiers want leaders who will cut taxes, rein in government, and stand up for conservative principles. I’m running to make Indiana more affordable and put working families first.
How do you plan to address those issues if elected?
Deery: Affordability: You can’t stop inflation from a state senate seat, but we can do our part. Increasing the housing supply, reducing property taxes, following through on recent utility reforms, pursuing health-care reform, stabilizing gas taxes, and building up our child-care infrastructure all would help.
Indiana’s independence: Dark money groups in Washington, D.C., are trying to buy Indiana elections and to control our state. The Constitution gives sovereignty to Indiana in many areas, and we need leaders who will not be beholden to anyone other than their constituents — especially not to forces in D.C.
Education: Recruiting and retaining high-quality teachers will have the most impact. We do that by continuing to remove barriers to entry into the teaching profession, providing competitive compensation, and supporting those making a difference in the classroom.
Copenhaver: We have to get serious about cutting government spending. Wasteful spending and unfunded mandates are driving up costs for Hoosier families.
As state senator, I will fight to deliver real property tax relief, reduce the size and cost of government, and stop using taxpayer dollars to subsidize projects Hoosiers don’t support, like data centers, solar farms and carbon capture pipelines.
Indiana
Full-length Replay: Indiana | FOX Sports
Indiana
99th Fire Department Instructors Conference draws 38,000 firefighters to Indy
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Thousands of firefighters from around the world are in downtown Indianapolis for one of the world’s largest fire and rescue training events.
The 99th Fire Department Instructors Conference started Monday and runs through Saturday at Lucas Oil Stadium and the Indiana Convention Center.
This is the 32nd year the FDIC has been held in the Circle City, and over 38,000 firefighters are in town for the event.
The conference includes hands-on fire and EMS training scenarios, classroom sessions, workshops, guest speakers, and 900 exhibitors.
“We’re uniquely positioned where we do 138 hands-on training sessions. That means the students get on the buses, they go out to fire academies, they go out to structures through our network of 350+ instructors,” Chief David Rhodes, editor-in-chief of “Fire Engineering,” told News 8.
Rhodes says conventions like FDIC help take firefighters to the next level in training situations.
“They not only get to learn to do it, but they get to do it. Whether it’s going into a fire, whether it’s searching a building, or cutting someone out of a car.”
Click here to learn more about FDIC International.
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