Indiana
A look at the Missouri Valley Conference basketball race and Bradley’s place in it
The Bradley Braves begin the final stretch of the 2023-24 Missouri Valley Conference men’s basketball season with six games remaining — three at home and three on the road.
Bradley is 17-8 overall and 9-5 in the MVC, behind first-place Indiana State (22-3, 13-1) and second-place Drake (20-5, 11-3). The Braves are one game ahead of fourth-place Southern Illinois.
“We’ll be fighting for (a top-four) place every game now,” Bradley guard Duke Deen said Saturday after a 74-67 loss to Drake. “We could have created a little separation between the top 3 if we’d won it. Now we just gotta lock in every game.”
How good was Bradley in January? Really good according to this computer model
Bradley’s MVC schedule
The Braves close with home games against Illinois-Chicago, Illinois State and Southern Illinois, the latter a potential big game as the Salukis are now one game back of BU. The Braves also have road games with UNI, Missouri State and Drake, the latter 13-0 at home this season.
“You want to finish in the top 4, you want to get a bye at Arch Madness, that’s what I think everyone’s trying to do,” Bradley coach Brian Wardle said. “I think it will be hard to catch Indiana State with their schedule. But everyone is playing each other close right now, so anything can happen.
“We need to find a way to play defense for two halves, and play smarter. If we can do that and stay healthy, I love our chances come March.”
Bradley’s Malevy Leons agrees, saying the lessons learned from games like Drake will be beneficial come the MVC tournament, scheduled for March 7-10 in St. Louis. Bradley won Arch Madness in 2019 and 2020 and finished second last season.
“This is what we’re going to see in St. Louis, tough physical battles,” Leons said. “We got to learn from this and take it with us and make it fuel us and motivate us.”
MVC and the NCAA Tournament
The winner in St. Louis gets an automatic bid into the NCAA Tournament. Yet with Indiana State, Drake and Bradley in control of the top three spots in the Valley race, is there a chance the MVC could be a multi-bid league for the dance? MVC commissioner Jeff Jackson — who was in attendance Saturday for the nationally televised game between Drake and Bradley — thinks so, especially with how well Indiana State is playing right now.
“Yes,” Jackson said. “I think Indiana State has proven to be at a special level. Certainly, the team is NCAA tournament-worthy if it doesn’t win the MVC tournament in March.”
After Indiana State, Drake is the next likely candidate for any potential at-large berth in the NCAAs for the Valley, which last got multiple NCAA bids in 2021 when Loyola-Chicago and Drake made the field of 68. Before that, the MVC had a stretch of four multi-bid seasons in five years between 2012 and 2016.
“The standings are what they are. I just think the league is really good,” Drake coach Darian DeVries said. “We knew what this was going to be like. We have to treat every game like it’s the one we need for a conference title.”
Indiana State is No. 20th in the NCAA Evaluation Tool (NET) rankings, while Drake is 51st and Bradley 60th. The Sycamores are 1-3 against teams in the top 25 percent of the rankings (Quad 1) and a combined 11-0 against the next 50 percent (Quad 2 and Quad 3). Drake is 3-1 vs. Quad 1 and 2-1 vs. Quad 2, while Bradley is 1-2 vs. Quad 1 and 2-2 vs. Quad 2.
NET RANKINGS: How the NCAA ranks its college basketball teams
Indiana State also is among the teams receiving votes in The Associated Press and USA TODAY coaches polls. CBS Sports has the Sycamores at No. 19 in its most recent poll.
“I think people have no clue how good the Missouri Valley is or how good basketball is at this level,” Indiana State coach Josh Schertz said during the MVC coaches conference call on Feb. 5. “It’s just the way it works. So anytime you get recognition, it’s very much appreciated. Hopefully a credit not just to Indiana State but the Missouri Valley as a whole.
“It’s very much appreciated. The most important part of any story is how it ends. That’s all anybody remembers.”
Indiana
Mother and boyfriend accused in death of 4-year-old boy found in closet
This story contains descriptions of distressing circumstances involving children.
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) – A mother and her boyfriend were accused of causing the death of a 4-year-old-boy found dead in a basement closet on Monday.
Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department arrested Angel Lovely, 37, and Nicholas Bergdoll, 36, on preliminary charges of neglect of a dependent causing death. The Marion County Prosecutor’s Office by Friday had not filed formal charges.
A sibling found the 4-year-old dead on Monday, according to investigators. Lovely and Bergdoll were in the home at the time but told police they were asleep when he died.
Born premature with cerebral palsy, the 4-year old couldn’t walk, was nonverbal, and ate through a feeding tube. Lovely claimed she would rarely put the child in the closet, only “when he won’t stop screaming” or when she “needed a break.”
But when investigators interviewed Lovely’s three other children, they said that the boy “stays in the closet all day,” and that “mom locks him in the closet” and “does not pay attention to him.”
An exact cause of death hasn’t been determined, but the child was found with blood in his mouth. Lovely said he’d been aspirating.
One of Lovely’s children told investigators they heard the 4-year-old gagging but didn’t say anything because it wasn’t unusual.
A neighbor living on Monticello Drive, Michelle Johnson, told News 8, “It’s horrible. It breaks my heart.”
Johnson had seen the other children outside the home but never knew there was a boy in a wheelchair living there. She said if she suspected they were being neglected, she would have called police or the Indiana Department of Child Services.
“We’re supposed to be a village and raise kids together,” Johnson said. “That’s really heartbreaking.”
Bergdoll told police, according to the investigators’ report, that he didn’t agree with putting the child in the closet: “I am not going to tell her how to f****** raise her kids.”
“I’m sickened,” IMPD Public Information Officer Tommy Thompson told News 8 in an interview.
“Think about putting yourself in that situation. Every day, do you want to be in a closet? Locked up, no light?”
Court records show the Department of Child Services had removed the boy from Lovely’s care because of medical neglect, but she regained custody last year against DCS recommendations.
Thompson, the neighbor, hopes the tragedy can be an opportunity for others to speak up when they see a child who can’t speak up for themselves. “Maybe you’ve got to make that tough phone call. Reach out. The city has resources.”
Johnson wishes she would have known what was happening so she could have said something. “Children don’t have a voice and we’re supposed to be their voice.”
Help is available for victims of domestic violence, child abuse, and sexual assault. Below is a list of suggested resources, both national and local:
Indiana
Police arrest suspect in Westfield homicide
WESTFIELD, Ind. (WISH) — Police have arrested someone in connection to a homicide earlier this month in the Hamilton County city.
In a Friday night social media post, the Westfield Police Department announced the arrest but gave no details, including who was arrested or what preliminary charges the person may face.
“Due to the active nature of this case, limited details are available for release at this time,” the post said.
As WISHTV.com previously reported, James “Matt” Lushin, 47, was found dead shortly after 7:25 p.m. March 12 with trauma at his home in the 3900 block of Westfield Road, also known as State Road 32.
Social media posts from the scene showed police tape and emergency vehicles at a red brick house between Shady Nook Road and Gray Road.
Lushin’s obituary said the Kokomo native was a key partner with the real estate investment company, FLF Property. The obituary also said, “Matt was also a respected and accomplished member of the international poker community. He traveled the world competing in tournaments and built an impressive and successful career.”
Police have previously said the death was believed to be isolated, posing no ongoing threat.
Officials have not released a specific cause or manner of death.
Indiana
Retro Indy: Five years ago Covid confined March Madness to Indiana
Just three days before Selection Sunday in March of 2020, the NCAA announced that March Madness, like so many other events that spring, would be cancelled due to the new virus upending life. The decision marked the first time in tournament history that the final weeks of the college basketball season would not be played, squashing Atlanta’s plans to host the Final Four.
When the following year rolled around, the NCAA decided that March Madness would not succumb to the virus once more.
With a vaccine only on the horizon and hundreds of Americans still dying each day, the organization announced in November of 2020 that while the tournament would go on, it would certainly not be business as usual. All 67 games, NCAA officials said, would be held in one location. Central Indiana was the first choice as Indianapolis had been on tap to host the Final Four April 3-5.
The plan, said NCAA senior vice president of basketball Dan Gavitt in a November 2020 IndyStar article was to present “a safe, responsible and fantastic March Madness tournament unlike any other we’ve experienced.”
In January the NCAA made it official: All games would be played in and around Indianapolis in a modified version of a bubble.
Holding the tournament in one place just made sense, NCAA officials told IndyStar. Unlike in a typical year when a winning team would travel multiple times before the championship, this system would minimize travel, which could inadvertently expose players and coaches to the virus.
Two months later when the tournament kicked off on March 18, 55 of the 67 games were scheduled to be played in Indianapolis venues, such as Gainbridge (then Bankers Life) Fieldhouse, Lucas Oil Stadium, Indiana Farmers Coliseum and Butler’s Hinkle Fieldhouse. Purdue’s Mackey Arena and IU’s Assembly Hall also hosted games.
While the first Covid vaccine had arrived a few months earlier, few people outside of first responders and the most vulnerable had been immunized, so in an effort to avoid large crowds, the Indianapolis sites all capped tickets at 25% capacity. That meant only 17,500 people could attend games at the largest venue, Lucas Oil Stadium. The college arenas allowed far smaller audiences, with IU limiting attendance to 500 people.
A week before the tournament began Marion County Public Health Department officials and Mayor Joe Hogsett asked attendees to make smart public health choices, such as social distancing and obeying the face masks mandate. Referees donned masks as much as possible as did coaches and players on the bench.
The NCAA regularly tested athletes, administering 28,311 tests Covid tests during the tournament, 15 of which came back positive.
Post-mortems after the tournament asked whether the NCAA had made the right call. Two high profile deaths occurred in the aftermath of the tournament — one a University of Alabama superfan who had traveled to Indy for the games and the other a St. Elmo bartender. But proving a direct link between their deaths and the tournament would prove impossible, and some public health experts said the NCAA had done everything it could to protect athletes and fans short of canceling the event.
A study conducted by IU, Regenstrief researchers and others that appeared in August 2021 in the Journal of the American Medical Association found that while mask wearing had theoretically been compulsory, about a quarter of attendees at the games were either not wearing masks or doing so inappropriately. Still, in an IndyStar article about the study Indiana Sports Corps president Ryan Vaughn termed the event “a resounding success.”
The following year, with a vaccine widely available and far fewer daily deaths from the virus, the tournament returned to a typical schedule, concluding in New Orleans’ Ceasars Superdome. More than 69,00 fans attended the final games, according to the NCAA. Local authorities had lifted the mask requirement by this point.
“Last year was about survival. Just having championships in any way, single site, keep everybody safe and be successful,” Gavitt said in an NCAA news release in late April 2022. “I think this year was about advancing.”
-
Detroit, MI1 week agoDrummer Brian Pastoria, longtime Detroit music advocate, dies at 68
-
Movie Reviews1 week ago‘Youth’ Twitter review: Ken Karunaas impresses audiences; Suraj Venjaramoodu adds charm; music wins praise | – The Times of India
-
Sports7 days agoIOC addresses execution of 19-year-old Iranian wrestler Saleh Mohammadi
-
New Mexico6 days agoClovis shooting leaves one dead, four injured
-
Business1 week agoDisney’s new CEO says his focus is on storytelling and creativity
-
Tennessee5 days agoTennessee Police Investigating Alleged Assault Involving ‘Reacher’ Star Alan Ritchson
-
Technology6 days agoYouTube job scam text: How to spot it fast
-
Texas1 week agoHow to buy Houston vs. Texas A&M 2026 March Madness tickets