Indiana
Hempfield girls score signature win by avenging earlier loss to Indiana | Trib HSSN
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Friday, December 29, 2023 | 9:19 PM
Up nine and then down six in a game where no lead was safe, budding Hempfield relied on its defense and late-game aptitude to score arguably its best win of the season.
Using a lengthy second-half run to regain the lead, Hempfield pulled past Indiana, 50-42, on Friday night in the Latrobe girls basketball Christmas tournament.
The Spartans (7-2) won for the fifth time in six games while avenging a 49-38 loss to Indiana (7-2) just eight days earlier.
The Little Indians saw a seven-game winning streak end.
“It’s all about the little details,” Hempfield first-year coach Bob Madison said. “We did a good job with their pressure. Indiana, obviously, tried to create chaos. We did a nice job of staying strong.”
Hempfield, which beat one-loss Plum in the tournament opener, moved to 7-0 when it scores 50 or more points.
After Indiana took a 31-25 lead with 2 minutes, 42 seconds left in the third quarter, Hempfield pulled in a deep breath and didn’t exhale until it had a 10-point lead late in the fourth.
A 15-3 run over an eight-minute stretch allowed Hempfield to jump ahead 43-33. Senior Sarah Podkul, junior Alli Cervola and sophomore Maddy Pevarnik hit 3-pointers, Podkul scored on a drive and Cervola finished a fast break.
The shift in momentum forced Indiana to take rushed shots. The Little Indians went nearly two minutes without a field goal in the fourth.
“We had a calmness about us (in the fourth quarter),” said Podkul, the point guard. “We defended a lot better (than the previous Indiana game). This was a really important win.”
Podkul finished with a game-high 15 points, and 5-foot-11 sophomore forward Gabby Coccia added 11 points, eight rebounds and two blocks.
“I am so proud of Gabby,” Madison said. “She recently had a little rough patch. We had a one-on-one talk about it. The last two nights, she has been outstanding. She’s a sophomore. She was a JV kid last year.
“She and (junior) Mia Shipman really rebounded well. (Senior) Ashley Hosni made some key plays, too.”
Hempfield built a 13-6 lead after the first quarter, only to watch the Little Indians rally for a 22-19 halftime edge while holding Hempfield to six points in the second.
After a pair of ties early in the third, junior Emily Betsinger sparked the Little Indians to a 30-25 lead as she hit a 3 and then scored on a drive.
But Hempfield connected on four 3s in the third, including one with 1:05 left from Pevarnik (eight points) that gave Hempfield the lead back for good at 34-33.
Podkul helped keep the offense connected late. Her basket with about two minutes left made it 45-36.
“No questions asked,” Madison said. “With the game on the line, we want the ball in Sarah’s hands.”
Indiana finished 11 for 19 at the free-throw line, and Hempfield was 10 for 15.
Senior guard Bella Antonacci led Indiana with 11 points, and sophomore Laken Kugler added eight.
Asked if this was a signature win for Hempfield, Madison said, “It’s up there. I like that we won a game that wasn’t our style. We want to run.”
Bill Beckner Jr. is a Tribune-Review Staff Writer. You can contact Bill by email at bbeckner@triblive.com or via Twitter .
Tags: Hempfield, Indiana
Indiana
Delphi murders: Richard Allen sentenced to 130 years for killing Indiana teens
Richard Allen, the Indiana man convicted of killing two middle school girls in 2017, was sentenced to 130 years in prison on Friday, almost eight years after the children’s bodies were found near a hiking trail.
Allen, 52, was convicted of murder in November after a four-week trial in the deaths of Abigail Williams, 13, and Liberty German, 14, in Delphi.
The bodies of the girls, who were close friends, were found near a hiking trail on Feb. 14, 2017, but their killings went unsolved for years.
Allen received the maximum sentence. Judge Frances C. Gull told him it ranks “right up there with the most hideous crimes.”
“These families will deal with your carnage forever,” the judge said.
Indianapolis State Police arrested Allen in October 2022. He was charged with murder after what the state police superintendent called a “long-term and complex investigation.”
Prosecutors said that Allen encountered the girls on the Monon High Bridge Trail and that, armed with a gun, he forced them down a hill and cut their throats.
A jury convicted Allen on Nov. 11 of four counts of murder: one count each of felony murder and murder for each victim.
Allen had faced a potential sentence of 45 to 130 years in prison.
His attorneys say they plan to appeal. “Richard Allen maintains his innocence,” they wrote in a sentencing memo ahead of Friday’s sentencing.
The killings shook the small town of Delphi, a community of around 2,900 about 60 miles northwest of Indianapolis.
Liberty had recorded a man who prosecutors allege was Allen in cellphone video that day. Prosecutors also said that an unspent .40-caliber round that came from Allen’s gun was found at the scene and that a black 2016 Ford Focus was seen on security video nearby — and that Allen owned the only such car registered in Carroll County when the murders took place.
Defense attorneys argued no one identified Allen as the man in the video or seen by witnesses. They also argued no forensic or DNA evidence connected him to the killings.
Prosecutors played an alleged confession made last year in a recorded jail call to his wife. In it, he says: “I did it, I killed Abby. I killed Abby and Libby.”
His wife did not appear to believe him and said his medication must be messing with his mind.
A former prison psychologist also testified that Allen confessed to her that he killed the girls, and prosecutors said he confessed to other prison staff members.
Allen’s defense attorney, Brad Rozzi, has attributed the confessions to a mental health crisis. Allen was being held in a maximum-security prison while he awaited trial. Defense attorneys have also argued he was kept in solitary confinement without due process.
Defense attorneys also wrote in a sentencing memorandum that Allen has a long history of mental health illness and that he had been treated for major depressive disorder and anxiety disorder throughout his life.
Allen, who was a CVS clerk at the time of the killings, was not a suspect until a file clerk organizing thousands of tips discovered a mislabeled “lead sheet” in September 2022.
The document, which had incorrectly been marked “clear,” showed that Allen reached out to investigators days after the killings and said he had been at the same location as the girls on the day they disappeared.
Defense attorneys have said that Allen often walked on that trail and that he voluntarily went to police because he wanted to help in any way he could.
This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.
Indiana
Bold Predictions for Notre Dame vs. Indiana College Football Playoff Clash
The wait is finally over as Notre Dame Stadium is just hours away from rocking as the Fighting Irish are set to host the Indiana Hoosiers in the College Football Playoff.
It’s the first game in the expanded playoff era and is of course the first playoff game to take place on a college campus at the FBS level.
Suffice to say, Notre Dame and the entire South Bend area is going to be rocking.
But what happens in the game Friday night? Can Notre Dame secure its biggest postseason win in more than a generation and advance to the Sugar Bowl to take on Georgia?
Below is how the Notre Dame on Sports Illustrated staff sees this one shaking out.
Notre Dame vs. Indiana Predictions: Nathan Erbach
The snow has already come down on South Bend and we’re unsure if it’ll be around for kickoff but a little wind almost certainly will. Notre Dame has better talent across the board and is built to better operate in these conditions. On to the Sugar Bowl we go.
Game Prediction: Notre Dame 34, Indiana 17
Bold prediction: Indiana hasn’t allowed a team to rush for more than 4.2 yards per carry on them all season and that was Charlotte in a blowout victory. They also haven’t allowed more than 137 yards on the ground. Notre Dame blows both of those out of the water.
Notre Dame vs. Indiana Predictions: Jeff Feyerer
First, Indiana. If Notre Dame controls the tempo and can run the ball, the game is theirs. The Hoosiers front seven is tough, but I’m still taking the Notre Dame offensive line. While Jeremiyah Love is the presumptive star, I think Jadarian Price and Mitchell Evans carry the offense in this game as Indiana tries to key on Love.
Game Prediction: Notre Dame 28, Indiana 16
Bold Prediction: Al Golden sends pressure after Kurtis Rourke in a way that hasn’t been done this season and Rourke looks pedestrian at best in the Irish victory.
Notre Dame vs. Indiana Predictions: Mason Plummer
Notre Dame has the better athletes at nearly every position and it shows in front of a raucous Irish crowd.
Game Prediction: Notre Dame 35, Indiana 17
Bold Prediction: Love and Price combine for 150 yards on the ground as the Irish gash Indiana from start to finish with a late touchdown drive to seal it.
Notre Dame vs. Indiana Predictions: John Kennedy
It wouldn’t surprise me at all early on in this ballgame if there’s a “feeling out” period between these two teams where each sees if they can run the ball north/south on the other. While I predict some frustrating stalemates early on, eventually Jeremiyah Love, JD Price, and Riley Leonard will all break for big plays in the run game as the Irish seize control. Defensively, Notre Dame will take control of the line of scrimmage as the game moves along and the Irish will wear Indiana down and suffocate them. Bring on Georgia.
Game Prediction: Notre Dame 31, Indiana 20
Bold Prediction: Youngster Leonard Moore jumps a flare pass in the flat and takes it home for six
Notre Dame vs. Indiana Predictions: Nick Shepkowski
Notre Dame certainly hasn’t played the run as well as the pass in 2024 but will be on high alert to defend it Friday night. Howard Cross makes a massive impact as Notre Dame controls the defensive line of scrimmage all night long. After a slow start offensively for the Irish, the wheels really get turning in the second half and are primed for a trip to New Orleans.
Game Prediction: Notre Dame 27, Indiana 13
Bold Prediction: Indiana has run for 2,083 yards on the year and averaged 4.8 yards per carry to date. The Hoosiers won’t average 2.5 per attempt on Friday night.
Indiana
Delivery driver reported missing in Decatur found dead in her vehicle in Indiana
A driver who makes nationwide deliveries and was reported missing last month to Decatur police was found dead inside her vehicle Thursday in Indiana, authorities said.
Foul play is not suspected in the death of Ann Theresa Kipp, a 62-year-old subcontracted driver for RXO who had a Decatur mailing address but did not live in the north Alabama city, Decatur police said Thursday.
Kipp was reported missing to Decatur police on Nov. 3.
She made a delivery in Corinth, Mississippi on Oct. 10 before calling her employer Oct. 16 to request time off because she was not feeling well.
Kipp was in Louisville, Kentucky when she made that call.
On Oct. 20, her employer tried contacting her but the effort was unsuccessful. Her employer told authorities Kipp was in Scottsburg, Indiana at the time.
On Thursday, police officers with the Indianapolis Police Department found Kipp dead inside her vehicle.
Indianapolis police are taking over the investigation into Kipp’s death.
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