Indiana
IHSAA boys track and field: Sectional results from Central Indiana
Indiana high school boys track and field sectionals got underway Thursday night. Here are the results for sectionals with Central Indiana teams competing.
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IHSAA boys track and field sectionals: Who to watch, which records could fall
IHSAA girls track and field: Sectional results from Central Indiana sites
AT PLAINFIELD
Team scores: 1. Brownsburg, 207; 2. Plainfield, 104; 3. Zionsville, 97; 4. Avon, 68; 5. Mooresville, 58; 6. Danville, 31; 7. Tri-West, 26; 8. Cascade, 15; 9. Southmont, 8; 10. Monrovia, 7; 11. Traders Point Christian, 3.
100 dash: 1. Dominic Calhoun, Brownsburg (10.80); 2. Deandre Cooper, Brownsburg (11.08); 3. Marcus Townsend, Avon (11.09)
200 dash: 1. Dominic Calhoun, Brownsburg (21.49); 2. Josh Handy, Brownsburg (21.83); 3. Nayyir Newash-Campbell, Plainfield (21.96)
400 dash: 1. Nayyir Newash-Campbell, Plainfield (46.67); 2. Cameron Mullens, Zionsville (49.42); 3. Scott Tienda, Brownsburg (49.48)
800 run: 1. Matthew Helton, Zionsville (1:55.67); 2. Ryan Handy, Zionsville (1:57.54); 3. Ian Baker, Brownsburg (1:58.38)
1600 run: 1. Ian Baker, Brownsburg (4:20.83); 2. Nate Burns, Mooresville (4:21.09); 3. Jack Turnbull, Zionsville (4:24.22)
3200 run: 1. Sherjeel Khan, Brownsburg (9:28.76); 2. Samuel Spees, Zionsville (9:33.97); 3. Jack Hearld, Danville (9:35.82)
110 hurdles: 1. Knox Willis, Zionsville (14.69); 2. Fredrick Hawthorne, Brownsburg (14.72); 3. Casey Rustman, Mooresville (14.78)
300 hurdles: 1. Alex Eyasu, Brownsburg (39.64); 2. Keyton Jones, Avon (40.83); 3. Casey Rustman, Mooresville (41.06)
4×100 relay: 1. Brownsburg (40.96); 2. Mooresville (42.28); 3. Plainfield (42.36)
4×400 relay: 1. Brownsburg (3:21.98); 2. Zionsville (3:22.22); 3. Plainfield (3:24.87)
4×800 relay: 1. Zionsville (7:54.50); 2. Brownsburg (7:55.34); 3. Avon (8:01.48)
Long jump: 1. Alex Eyasu, Brownsburg (21-7); 2. Logan Anderson, Tri-West (21-3); 3. Jake Robinson, Plainfield (20-9)
High jump: 1. Bode Gilkerson, Plainfield (7-0.25); 2. Xavier Sherrell, Avon (6-6); 3. Caden Collins, Danville (6-5)
Pole vault: 1. Jaylen Walcott, Brownsburg (14-6); 2. Chris Coyne, Brownsburg (13-9); 3. Ronnie Moore, Plainfield (13-9)
Shot put: 1. Bryce Patterson, Brownsburg (59-0); 2. Isaiah Smith, Brownsburg (58-5.5); 3. Luke Messinger, Danville (55-6.5)
Discus: 1. Isaac Masquelier, Plainfield (173-4); 2. Drew Crockett, Brownsburg (173-4); 3. Fin Essley, Zionsville (172-4)
AT DECATUR CENTRAL
Team scores: 1. Ben Davis, 148; 2. Pike, 127.5; 3. Perry Meridian, 121; 4. Southport, 116; 5. Decatur Central, 37.5; 6. Cardinal Ritter, 20; 7. Covenant Christian, 12; 8. Indiana Math & Science, 11.5; 9. Speedway, 9; 10. Crispus Attucks, 8.5; 11. Shortridge, 7; 12. International, 1; 12. Providence Cristo Rey, 1
100 dash: 1. Landon Eagan, Perry Meridian (11.01); 2. Isaiah Needam, Perry Meridian (11.16); 3. Devin Wilson, Southport (11.23)
200 dash: 1. Landon Eagan, Perry Meridian (22.16); 2. Nickens Lemba, Southport (22.24); 3. Juju Rodriguez, Pike (22.69)
400 dash: 1. Nickens Lemba, Southport (48.15); 2. Richard Dube, Perry Meridian (51.06); 3. Jeremiah Nuckols, Indiana Math & Science (51.45)
800 run: 1. David Adesanya, Ben Davis (1:58.24); 2. Xavier Cooper, Pike (1:58.44); 3. Aboubakar Ibrahim, Ben Davis (2:00.36)
1600 run: 1. Simon Bosslet, Pike (4:30.79); 2. Matthias Smith, Pike (4:32.26); 3. Victor Cuevas, Ben Davis (4:33.01)
3200 run: 1. Jude Hawkins, Pike (10:02.43); 1. Simon Bosslet, Pike (10:02.43); 3. Luke Haggerty, Perry Meridian (10:02.99)
110 hurdles: 1. David Carnell, Ben Davis (14.87); 2. Quinn Paige, Pike (15.05); 3. Sa’ien Wright, Perry Meridian (15.12)
300 hurdles: 1. Graham West, Ben Davis (39.54); 2. Emory McClellan, Southport (40.53); 3. Sa’ien Wright, Perry Meridian (41.18)
4×100 relay: 1. Pike (42.92); 2. Southport (43.24); 3. Ben Davis (43.70)
4×400 relay: 1. Southport (3:24.85); 2. Ben Davis (3:26.97); 3. Pike (3:30.46)
4×800 relay: 1. Ben Davis (8:21.90); 2. Pike (8:30.10); 3. Perry Meridian (8:34.21)
Long jump: 1. Tequan Taylor, Southport (21-5.75); 2. David Fairer, Ben Davis (20-1); 3. N’po Dodo, Decatur Central (19-11.25)
High jump: Bradley McCleerey, Ben Davis (6-1); 2. Braylon Koenig, Southport (6-0); 3. Elijah Dowd, Crispus Attucks (5-10)
Pole vault: 1. Keywuan Taylor, Perry Meridian (12-6); 2. Ricky Sanders, Southport (12-0); 3. Stokes Knight, Perry Meridian (11-0)
Shot put: 1. Nylan Brown, Ben Davis (56-2); 2. Armani Davis, Pike (54-0); 3. Halbert Aguirre, Decatur Central (53-5)
Discus: 1. Nick Brown, Pike (166-5); 2. Halbert Aguirre, Decatur Central (152-7); 3. Myles Edwards, Pike (141-11)
AT LAWRENCE CENTRAL
Team scores: 1. North Central, 149; 2. Lawrence Central, 115; 3. Bishop Chatard, 76; 4. Brebeuf Jesuit, 76; 5; Cathedral, 68; 6. Park Tudor, 53; 6. Heritage Christian, 53; 8. Herron, 10; 9. Tech, 9; 10. Riverside, 2; 10. Indiana Deaf, 2; 11. Purdue Poly, 1
100 dash: 1. Jasiah Rogers, Park Tudor (10.55); 2. Elijah Jackson, Lawrence Central (10.65); 3. Christian Woodson, North Central (10.86)
200 dash: 1. Christian Woodson, North Central (21.81); 2. Jasiah Rogers, Park Tudor (21.84); 3. Jonathan Harris, Park Tudor (22.80)
400 dash: 1. Dehnm Holt, North Central (50.08); 2. Amadeo Townsend, Lawrence Central (50.57); 3. Hayden Souza, Park Tudor (50.94)
800 run: 1. Nate Killeen, North Central (1:57.47); 2. Alec Hueftle, North Central (1:59.85); 3. Ezra Burrell, Brebeuf Jesuit (2:00.16)
1600 run: 1. Cameron Todd, Brebeuf Jesuit (4:13.03); 2. Adam Chaney, Lawrence Central (4:18.95); 3. Ezra Burrell, Brebeuf Jesuit (4:27.02)
3200 run: 1. Cameron Todd, Brebeuf Jesuit (9:22.04); 2. Matteo Rosio, Brebeuf Jesuit, 9:28.69; 3. Liam Eifert, Cathedral (9:42.57)
110 hurdles: 1. Michael Starks, Lawrence Central (15.63); 2. RJ Bradshaw, Bishop Chatard (15.63); 3. Jackson Harvey, Cathedral (16.30)
300 hurdles: 1. Antonio Smith, North Central (40.57); 2. Phoenix Boyer, Bishop Chatard (40.60); 3. Jackson Harvey, Cathedral (42.10)
4×100 relay: 1. Lawrence Central (42.08); 2. Cathedral (42.46); 3. Park Tudor (42.71)
4×400 relay: 1. Lawrence Central (3:21.90); 2. Bishop Chatard (3:22.90); 3. North Central (3:29.08)
4×800 relay: 1. Bishop Chatard (8:01.20); 2. Cathedral (8:07.90); 3. North Central (8:12.42)
Long jump: 1. Michael Starks, Lawrence Central (21-8); 2. Keaton Kuehr, Bishop Chatard (21-1.5); 3. Nakai Ford, North Central (20-7.75)
High jump: 1. Lee Martin, North Central (6-3); 2. Jay Hmurovich, Brebeuf Jesuit (6-2); 3. Jaiden Dresselhaus, Lawrence Central (6-2)
Pole vault: 1. Dylan Keller, Cathedral (13-0); 2. Conrad Gehlhausen, North Central (12-6); 3. Liell Lloyd-Hostetter, North Central (11-0)
Shot put: 1. Luke Himes, Heritage Christian (65-5); 2. Kaden Edwards, North Central (58-11); 3. I’Renn Johnson, Lawrence Central (55-6)
Discus: 1. Luke Himes, Heritage Christian (166-11); 2. Mataio Russell, Lawrence Central (143-7); 3. Kaden Edwards, North Central (139-8)
AT MT. VERNON
Team scores: 1. Mt. Vernon, 187; 2. Lawrence North, 139.5; 3. Pendleton Heights, 64; 4. Lapel, 58; 5. Eastern Hancock, 38; 6. Anderson, 36; 7. Blue River Valley, 24; 8. New Castle, 23; 9. Shenandoah, 19; 10. Liberty Christian, 16; 11. Knightstown, 11; 12. Anderson Prep, 5.5
100 dash: 1. Israel Jackson, Lawrence North (11.08); 2. Keagan Fitch, Shenandoah (11.27); 3. Greg Holmes, Lawrence North (11.54)
200 dash: 1. Wilbert Jones, Mt. Vernon (22.71); 2. Jerome Smith, Lawrence North (22.93); 3. Israel Jackson, Lawrence North (23.07)
400 dash: 1. Andres Langston, Mt. Vernon (48.93); 2. Tristan Powell, Lawrence North (50.55); 3. Sebastian Sprague, Mt. Vernon (50.84)
800 run: 1. Tristan Trevino, Mt. Vernon (1:55.55); 2. Nicholas Ostendorf, Lawrence North (1:57.00); 3. Ethan Powell, Lawrence North (1:57.22)
1600 run: 1. Nicholas Ostendorf, Lawrence North (4:24.98); 2. Noah Price, Liberty Cristian (4:30.45); 3. Ahmed Saleh, Mt. Vernon (4:32.73)
3200 run: 1. Cameron Smith, Lapel (9:48.31); 2. Andrew Blake, Pendleton Heights (9:50.69); 3. Benson Davis, Pendleton Heights (9:53.56)
110 hurdles: 1. George Burhenn, Mt. Vernon (14.82); 2. Andres Langston, Mt. Vernon (15.36); 3. Davion Chandler, Lawrence North (16.48)
300 hurdles: 1. George Burhenn, Mt. Vernon (38.94); 2. Damario Moore, Lawrence North (41.90); 3. Davion Chandler, Lawrence North (42.03)
4×100 relay: 1. Mt. Vernon (43.39); 2. Lawrence North (43.54); 3. Anderson (43.94)
4×400 relay: 1. Mt. Vernon (3:19.47); 2. Lawrence North (3:34.01); 3. Eastern Hancock (3:38.32)
4×800 relay: 1. Mt. Vernon (8:06.68); 2. Lawrence North (8:21.52); 3. Eastern Hancock (8:33.83)
Long jump: 1. Cameron Parsley, Mt. Vernon (21-8); 2. Mason Fields, Knightstown (21-1.25); 3. Blake Williams, Anderson (20-3.25)
High jump: 1. Andres Langston, Mt. Vernon (6-3); 2. Sawyer Ruminer, Mt. Vernon (6-0); 3. Brayden Swoveland, Blue River Valley (5-10)
Pole vault: 1. Brennan Labelle, Mt. Vernon (12-6); 2. Sawyer Ruminer, Mt. Vernon (12-0); 3. Jay Seeko, Pendleton Heights (10-6)
Shot put: 1. JJ Baxter, Lapel (47-10); 2. Nate Belvo, Lapel (45-4); 3. Trenton Allen, Lawrence North (44-5)
Discus: 1. Nate Belvo, Lapel (143-2); 2. Caleb Clapp, New Castle (138-7); 3. Dantu Gardner, Lawrence North (136-0)
AT WESTFIELD
Will be updated.
Team scores:
100 dash: 1. Christ Degni, Noblesville (11.09); 2. Mason Alexander, Hamilton Southeastern (11.13); 3. Trey Ries, Lebanon (11.29)
200 dash: 1. Christ Degni, Noblesville (22.15); 2. Camren Avant, Carmel (22.41); 3. Mason Alexander, Hamilton Southeastern (22.54)
400 dash: 1. Michael Griffith, Hamilton Southeastern (49.53); 2. Cole Taylor, Carmel (50.36); 3. Matt Dunlap, Guerin Catholic (50.40)
800 run: 1. Matthew Kim, Fishers (1:54.71); 2. Charlie Leedke, Carmel (1:55.22); 3. Colin Lakomek, Westfield (1:56.34)
1600 run: 1. Kole Mathison, Carmel (4:14.65); 2. Caden Click, Noblesville (4:16.47); 3. Jack Weber, Guerin Catholic (4:17.70)
3200 run: 1. Kole Mathison, Carmel (9:03.33); 2. Tony Provenzano, Carmel (9:05.07); 3. Sam Quagliaroli, Fishers (9:11.47)
110 hurdles: 1. Adom Quist, Carmel (14.57); 2. Tyler Tarter, Fishers (14.57); 3. Clayton Allen, Hamilton Southeastern (15.37)
300 hurdles: 1. Tyler Tarter, Fishers (38.11); 2. Adom Quist, Carmel (39.91); 3. Drew Willman, Carmel (39.97)
4×100 relay: 1. Noblesville (42.55); 2. Hamilton Southeastern (42.56); 3. Westfield (42.95)
4×400 relay: 1. Fishers (3:21.19); 2. Guerin Catholic (3:21.91); 3. Carmel (3:22.30)
4×800 relay: 1. Guerin Catholic (7:53.35); 2. Carmel (7:53.56); 3. Fishers (7:58.81)
Long jump: 1. Michael Griffith, Hamilton Southeastern (23-1.75); 2. JonAnthony Hall, Fishers (22-7); 3. Lamine Sall, Hamilton Southeastern (22-5)
High jump:
Pole vault:
Shot put: 1. Colin Wilson, Hamilton Heights (61-10); 2. Tom Ewing, Westfield (59-5); 3. Drew Franklin, Carmel (57-7.25)
Discus: 1. Drew Franklin, Carmel (188-5); 2. Tom Ewing, Westfield (176-3); 3. Colin Wilson (159-10)
AT COLUMBUS NORTH
Will be updated.
AT GREENFIELD-CENTRAL
Will be updated.
Indiana
Foster mom sentenced to prison time in 10-year-old NW Indiana boy's death
Note: The video in the player above is from a previous report.
The northwest Indiana woman who was charged in the death of her 10-year-old foster son was sentenced on Friday, according to authorities.
Jennifer Lee Wilson, 48, was sentenced to six years in the Indiana Department of Correction, with one year suspended to be served on probation, according to the Porter County Prosecutor’s Office.
Wilson was charged with reckless homicide in connection with the death of Dakota Levi Stevens, who died after experiencing a medical emergency in April, authorities said. Wilson was arrested by sheriff’s deputies approximately 25 miles away – more than two months later – after a license plate reader camera detected her vehicle.
The foster mother stated that she laid on his midsection for several minutes during an incident earlier this year, according to court documents.
“Wilson stated that when she attempted to stop him from leaving, she does not know if she tackled Dakota or they fell to the ground however her intention was to hold him,” the court filing stated.
As she held Dakota down, Wilson stated she had one hand holding her phone and the other bracing her, authorities said. Wilson later asked Dakota “Are you faking?” rolled him over and it appeared his eyelids were pale, court documents stated.
Wilson then began CPR and called 911.
Officers made contact with a neighbor who stated that Dakota ran to her house approximately 30 minutes before emergency vehicles arrived. The neighbor stated Dakota asked her to adopt him because his parents hit him in the face and didn’t let him call his caseworker, officials said. The neighbor said she didn’t observe any signs Dakota was injured.
An autopsy revealed the cause of death as mechanical asphyxia and the manner of death as homicide. Dakota was 4 feet 10 inches tall and weighed 91 pounds, filings revealed. Wilson is 4 feet 11 inches tall and weighs 340 pounds, according to driver license records.
Indiana
A-to-F letter grades likely returning for Indiana schools – Inside INdiana Business
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Indiana schools will once again be assigned A-to-F letter grades, reinstating an accountability measure that has been paused since the 2020-21 school year.
On Wednesday, state education leaders provided an early look at a new system for evaluating how well schools educate students. However, it remains unclear when schools will begin receiving grades under the updated system.
The overhaul follows years of debate about the future of high school diplomas, addressing a literacy crisis among elementary students, and assessing the pandemic’s impact on student achievement.
Work on a new accountability system has been underway for some time. A 2023 law tasked the State Board of Education with updating the way it evaluates public and state-accredited nonpublic schools.
The board is still required to use the A-to-F grading scale but must align it with metrics in the Indiana Graduates Prepared to Succeed dashboard. The dashboard, launched more than two years ago, allows families to assess school quality.
Metrics include academic performance, such as third-grade reading proficiency, growth in math skills, and earning college credit.
State lawmakers could also push for further changes to the system during the legislative session, similar to recent discussions on high school diplomas.
New system this year
House Bill 1498, authored by Rep. Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis, would strip back some of the older accountability framework so that a new A-F rule can be built up by the board.
However, if passed, developing a new accountability system would be placed on a tight deadline: establishing a new model by the end of 2025.
The bill outlines specific guidelines for measuring school performance. The new system would:
- Prioritize students earning diploma seals,
- Be based on data from the GPS dashboard,
- Include proficiency rates from state assessments, and
- Feature a high school “on-track to graduate” indicator.
HB 1498 also calls for null letter grades to continue through the 2024-25 school year.
State Department of Education staff shared potential changes to the system during a presentation Wednesday.
“This framework is to initiate a much broader critical discussion, to take us from a recommended framework to a final model,” said Ron Sandlin, the education department’s deputy chief strategy officer.
The department has spent around 17 months talking with Hoosiers and developing their proposal, Sandlin said. Sandlin said the state cannot rely on older models to measure this next era of education.
In 2011 the A-F system was created to replace more descriptive ratings with letter grades. Then, in 2014, the system was updated to prioritize student’s academic progress.
Under the new proposed priorities, updated ratings would consider more than just academic performance and graduation rates.
For 10th-grade indicators, the system would expand beyond academics to include attendance, advanced coursework, and reduced chronic absenteeism. Schools would also be credited for students who score above 860 on the PSAT — a benchmark achieved by more than 90% of test-takers.
“At 10th grade, where are our students,” Sandlin said. “Is everyone on a path? Does everyone have a plan, and do we have the capacity to support that plan? And our accountability model will incentivize, encourage and celebrate those schools that are effectively doing that, as opposed to now waiting until the very end and saying, ‘Well, you got there or you didn’t’”.
The changes in accountability for high schools would be paired with the state’s diploma model, so success for seniors would be measured by completing a diploma seal, work-based learning experience or credential of value. Students would be on their chosen path for either an education, employment or enlistment seal.
Board members expressed support for the initial themes of the department’s plan. Scott Bess said the older system put a lot of weight on growth, which resulted in leaving students behind.
“If you could get a kid to achieve and grow, you could get 125 points for that student, which means you didn’t have to worry about this other kid over here who’s only going to get 50 points,” Bess said. “Put those two together and it’s still a good grade, right? And so you can see people leaving groups of students behind, because from an accountability system, it didn’t matter.”
Board member B.J. Watts said the system should be kept simple and “a tool for getting better”.
“Are the students in our buildings getting better while they’re there,” Watt said.
The board plans to continue discussions in the coming months, engaging with Hoosier families and educators. The department will also seek public feedback throughout the process before finalizing the system.
The A-to-F accountability system was initially designed to force failing schools to improve. If a school received failing grades for too many consecutive years, the state could sever it from the district and appoint a new manager. In 2011, four schools in Indianapolis and one in Gary were taken over.
However, the years-long intervention was widely seen as a failure by local communities and some lawmakers.
In 2021, a state law ended the state takeover of underperforming public schools.
Rachel Fradette is the WFYI Statehouse education reporter. Contact Rachel at rfradette@wfyi.org.
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Indiana
Illinois Basketball Report Card: Grades at Indiana (Game 17)
The beats went on for No. 19 Illinois against Indiana on Tuesday in Bloomington – a 94-69 hammering, to be specific – as guard Kasparas Jakucionis returned to the lineup and, along with him, the Illini’s briefly lost mojo. No one could be certain what team would show up to take on the Hoosiers before the opening tip, and by halftime it was clear that it was the Big Ten favorites.
The leap from excellence to sustained greatness is a chasm that would make Evel Knievel balk, but the Illini (13-4, 5-2 Big Ten) seem to have the springs to make it happen. Let’s take a quick look at the individual performances that lifted Illinois – for one game, at least – head and shoulders over its border rival.
After the USC loss, coach Brad Underwood admitted Ivisic need to not only play more minutes but be more involved. Check and check. Against Indiana, Ivisic was an all-around force (17 points, 11 rebounds and four assists), posting a plus-27 plus-minus in his 25 minutes and setting a tone that all future Illini opponents would do well to heed.
Returning from a two-game injury absence, Jakucionis didn’t skip a single beat. He had 19 points (including three three-pointers), four assists and three rebounds in the first half, leading Illinois to a 60-32 halftime lead. What came after (foul trouble and minimal production) hardly mattered. The damage – at his hands – had already been done.
It’s hard to overstate Boswell’s value to the Illini. He can switch effortlessly between the 1 and 2, whether from game to game or moment to moment, providing playmaking, shooting and penetration on one end while terrorizing opposing ball-handlers on the other. His game-high 22 points, seven rebounds and lockdown D against Indiana were the proof.
Gibbs-Lawhorn has carved out a wonderful niche for himself, attacking the rim in transition, sinking big shots in the halfcourt and providing atomic energy off the bench. He had 12 points (two threes) and a couple rebounds against the Hoosiers, posting a plus-17 plus-minus in 16 minutes of floor time.
Johnson had only five points against Indiana, but he hit all of his free throws (3-for-3) and plucked 10 rebounds – four of them from the offensive glass – in 18 minutes. As usual, he did exactly what the Illini need him to do (which is plenty) and took almost nothing else off the table. It’s uncanny, really.
Humrichous came down off his two-game scoring cloud, but his seven points (3-for-6 field-goal shooting), five rebounds and defense-stretching presence were just fine on an evening when several teammates were cooking. They can’t all be 20-point bangers.
Against Indiana, Riley went without a three for the third time in four games – and still acquitted himself nicely. His plus-24 plus-minus in 10 minutes was a bit of a mirage, but he played within himself on both ends (five points, two rebounds and two assists) and appears to be adjusting with each game.
White focused on creating in the paint against the Hoosiers, which didn’t go so well (2-for-9 shooting). in this instance. No worries. It’s rare when White doesn’t make something happen offensively, and he was again a reliable contributor on the boards (six rebounds).
There isn’t a lot of in between with Davis, a shooting specialist who can be targeted on defense. He missed all four of his shots from the floor against IU, but he did add a couple rebounds (one offensive) and an assist.
3 Takeaways From Illinois’ Basketball’s Win Over Indiana
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