Indiana
Indiana Deaf’s football team is just 21 players strong. But its QB can sling it.
“It’s one of many best deaf colleges in America. It truly is. It’s a household right here.”
Within the storage that serves because the Indiana Deaf soccer locker room, coaches take turns speaking to the workforce’s 21 members. There aren’t any phrases at halftime of the homecoming sport, no sounds apart from an occasional shout or a bang on a locker. All of the noise comes from the adjoining locker room, the place the Mannequin Deaf workforce from Washington D.C. is reveling in its defensive efficiency within the first half of a 0-0 tie.
Every Indiana Deaf coach takes turns addressing the workforce. The athletic director and defensive coordinator, 31-year-old Peter Leccese, indicators rapidly and demonstratively. One other assistant, Paul Cuppy, together with his hat turned backwards, is equally emotional, eliciting a optimistic response from the workforce. After the six coaches end, it’s time for the workforce to stroll again by way of the ropes to the sector, strolling between alumni and elementary college students ready to slap arms.
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Indiana Deaf coach Michael Paulone pulls apart Jayden DeFalco.
This dialog is coach to quarterback. Paulone, 65, was as soon as a star quarterback himself. In 1977, the yr he graduated from Pennsylvania College for the Deaf, Paulone was chosen as a Deaf All-American soccer participant and named one of many prime 10 athletes of the yr in Philadelphia. His hometown, Parkside, Pa., even honored him with a “Mike Paulone Day.” He was the primary deaf participant to quarterback a listening to workforce within the Metropolis All-Star sport, which caught the eye of then-Philadelphia Eagles coach Dick Vermeil, who introduced Paulone again for a number of years to work Eagles coaching camp.
Paulone can sense DeFalco, a proficient junior, is placing an excessive amount of strain on himself. Mannequin Deaf had turned up the warmth within the first half. DeFalco was continually on the run, scrambling round like Fran Tarkenton and making an attempt to make issues occur. A few of his on-the-mark passes have been dropped. Within the darkness outdoors the locker room, Paulone inspired him to hit the brief passes and take what the protection provides him.
“He needs to be excellent,” Paulone stated. “He’s a perfectionist. We talked about how he must maintain shifting on after making a mistake. He has to have tunnel imaginative and prescient and maintain main his workforce.”
DeFalco, 16, listens intently to Paulone, then calmly leads his workforce down the sector on the primary drive of the second half for the sport’s first landing. It wasn’t at all times fairly. However DeFalco, enjoying with out his greatest receiver and shut pal Dylan Puent, who’s out for the season with an damage, goes 15-for-22 passing for 126 yards and a landing and shows his toughness with 15 carries for 40 yards and two fourth-quarter speeding touchdowns in an 18-6 victory.
“I simply should play my sport and keep optimistic,” DeFalco stated, echoing Paulone’s earlier message. “Despite the fact that I made errors, I’ve to maintain my head and maintain going. I can’t be obsessive about one play. That occurs.”
After his last landing run within the left nook of the top zone, DeFalco turns his eyes to the sky and celebrates as he was mobbed by his teammates. On homecoming, in entrance of yearly its largest crowd of the season, this consequence means a bit extra.
“It felt inspiring,” DeFalco stated of the gang. “I obtained goosebumps. It’s loopy seeing all of the followers on the market. It felt so good.”
***
Indiana College for the Deaf is among the smallest colleges within the Indiana Excessive College Athletic Affiliation. Of the 317 football-playing colleges, Indiana Deaf is No. 317 in enrollment with 94 college students. Merchants Level Christian, the next-smallest football-playing faculty, has 30 extra college students. The subsequent-smallest public faculty, Attica, is sort of twice as massive as Indiana Deaf with 170 college students.
However these are simply numbers. Indiana Deaf has a repute as probably the greatest deaf colleges within the nation. Paulone factors to an indication within the faculty’s library that shows the phrases “Belong, Excel, Thrive.” His sons, Gabriel and Dante, each performed soccer and have been standout athletes on the faculty.
“Truthfully I simply really feel blessed to have the ability to use my time right here on earth to assist pay it ahead by way of my experiences,” Paulone stated. “I would like all of them to be one of the best they are often. I taught a (bodily schooling) class so my job was to show the scholars to reinforce their expertise and introduce them to various things and completely different talents after which apply that to teaching them as effectively.”
The soccer workforce, lengthy a supply of delight on the faculty, is at the moment certain by three generations — Paulone, Leccese and DeFalco — with Italian heritage and East Coast backgrounds. Leccese, who jokes that Paulone is the “grandfather of the workforce,” grew up on Lengthy Island in New York and attended “mainstream” colleges by way of highschool. He went to Gallaudet College in Washington D.C., after highschool, the identical faculty Paulone gradated from and the place his son, Gabriel, was attending on the time.
Gallaudet, which was based in 1864, is the one faculty on this planet particularly designed to accommodate deaf and arduous of listening to college students. Leccese went there to play baseball, however joined the soccer workforce and performed cornerback on a workforce in 2013 that went 9-2 and have become the primary within the historical past of this system to succeed in the Division III playoffs.
“It was a terrific expertise,” Leccese stated. “I gained a variety of data about lifting weights and constructing a program, and I needed to be part of constructing a tradition like that and I began teaching. Shifting to Indiana was arduous — I miss the meals and tradition and folks of New York — however I obtained to know Michael, and I like the college itself. It’s one of many best deaf colleges in America. It truly is. It’s a household right here.”
That extends to DeFalco, who comes from a big household with eight youthful cousins who attend Indiana Deaf. Jayden got here to the college in first grade. His mom, who’s from Rochester, N.Y., moved her household to Indianapolis to observe her sister’s household. They’d been residing in Washington D.C. whereas his mom, Gina, accomplished her diploma at Gallaudet.
“I’m actually completely satisfied that my mother determined to carry me to ISD,” Jayden stated. “I really feel like I bleed black and orange now. I inform my deaf friends or anybody arduous of listening to that Indiana is the college to go to. It’s helped my life.”
Leccese first obtained to know DeFalco as his signal language trainer in elementary faculty. The dialog usually turned to soccer, basketball and different sports activities. At recess, Leccese would play all-time quarterback whereas DeFalco and a number of other of the gamers who at the moment make up the highschool workforce caught his passes. “It’s enjoyable to see that come full circle now,” Leccese stated.
DeFalco began enjoying sort out soccer in third grade and moved to quarterback in seventh grade. “That’s once I fell in love with the sport of soccer much more,” he stated. DeFalco began out enjoying in a listening to league, which had its frustrations.
“It was arduous as a result of I couldn’t talk with different gamers and I didn’t know what was happening,” he stated. “I’d have an interpreter typically, however it was nonetheless arduous to be concerned. They’d have dialogue and conversations on the sideline and I’d be the one one which appeared misplaced. It nonetheless labored, however it’s arduous once I face listening to colleges and I can’t actually converse with officers and different groups can.”
That’s, maybe, the largest frustration for all deaf coaches and gamers. In Saturday’s sport towards Mannequin Deaf, there have been a number of situations of the sport persevering with on after the whistle. The penalties piled up, particularly within the first half, and the frustration mounted. Interpreter Chazz Middlebrook relayed questions and considerations from the Indiana Deaf teaching workers to the officers.
“Listening to gamers and coaches are capable of talk and nonetheless maintain their distance,” Leccese stated. “How can we get their consideration? Now we have to come back on the sector and sometimes occasions that’s interpreted as hostile habits. It makes the officers resent us after we try to get a greater understanding of what’s mistaken. Generally I really feel like we don’t get honest remedy, however the officers are human.”
***
Paulone believes DeFalco can play faculty soccer. That may very well be at Gallaudet. However DeFalco needs to discover all of his choices.
May he play for a hearing-school workforce? Paulone believes he might.
“I consider in Jayden,” Paulone stated. “I consider he has the flexibility to play. In all probability not Division I, however perhaps a faculty like Marian College or Anderson College. I believe he might. We simply have to search out what’s snug for him to play at a excessive degree.”
Leccese factors out that is actually DeFalco’s sophomore yr, not less than from an expertise standpoint. His freshman yr was worn out by the COVID-19 pandemic. Leccese made the troublesome resolution to not play the season and as a substitute put collectively what basically amounted to an intramural flag soccer league.
DeFalco hit the bottom working as a sophomore, although. Taking part in towards Indiana Deaf’s regular schedule of out-of-state deaf colleges and smaller native applications, he handed for 1,039 yards and 13 TDs in eight video games in a 5-4 season. This yr, with the Orioles off to a 6-1 begin, DeFalco is finishing a surprising 75.7% of his passes for 1,466 yards and 22 TDs with simply three interceptions. He has additionally grow to be a menace on the bottom with 315 speeding yards and 9 TDs.
The damage to Puent is a giant loss, particularly on a short-handed workforce already. In 5 video games, the junior tight finish was simply DeFalco’s prime goal with 21 catches for 506 yards and 6 TDs.
“I grew up with Dylan,” DeFalco stated. “He taught me learn how to play soccer. I’d go to his home or he’d come to mine. That’s the place our chemistry comes from. Most of my passes go to him, however sadly he’s damage.”
Watching Indiana Deaf’s workforce it’s straightforward to know why the college is contemplating a transfer to eight-man soccer, which is in its pilot season in Indiana. Different deaf faculty applications have already made the transfer to eight-man or six-man soccer and Indiana Deaf has performed some eight-man this season.
“I’m proud that we’re the final 11-on-11 deaf faculty program within the nation,” Leccese stated. “However I’ve to step again as an AD and know that we don’t usually have the massive boys throughout the board on the road.”
However Indiana Deaf does have a quarterback. It could be a longshot, as DeFalco is aware of, for this system to make a run within the Class A match. They’ve by no means received a sectional, although the 2007 workforce went 9-3 and received two sectional video games earlier than falling to Cardinal Ritter 27-8 within the sectional championship.
If you find yourself outnumbered each sport, you tackle the spirit of an underdog. You possibly can dream large. DeFalco smiles when he indicators these goals.
“We wish a state championship so dangerous,” he stated. “That may be actually loopy. They’d most likely make a film out of it.”
Name Star reporter Kyle Neddenriep at (317) 444-6649.
Indiana
Indiana Suits Up and Dives In for Wednesday PM Lactate Set | PRACTICE + PANCAKES
On Wednesday afternoons, the Indiana Hoosier swim team puts on racing suits and goes off the blocks. This “Lactate workout” is meant to create and help the body practice dealing with lactic acid.
There were three different lactate groups today: Longer, middle, and sprint.
The sprint workout (which included US Olympian Matt King) was:
- 2×75 @ 10:00 (275+ cooldown)
- 2×50 @ 7:00 (200+ cooldown)
- 4×25 @ 3:00 (75 cooldown)
The middle workout (which included Olympians Josh Matheny, Tomer Frankel, and Rafael Miroslaw) was:
- 1×150 @ 10:00 (300+ cooldown)
- 1×75 @ 10:00 (275+ cooldown)
- 2×50 @ 7:00 (200+ cooldown)
- 4×25 @ 3:00 (75 cooldown)
The longer workout (which included US Olympian Anna Peplowski) was:
- 1×150 @ 10:00 (300+ cooldown)
- 2×75 @ 8:00 (225+ cooldown)
- 3×50 @ 6:00 (150+ cooldown)
Indiana
How To Watch Indiana Against Providence in Battle 4 Atlantis 7th-Place Game
PARADISE ISLAND, The Bahamas – Indiana and Providence have one last chance to salvage a win Friday in the Battle 4 Atlantis seventh-place game. The loser will head home as the member of the eight-team tournament to go winless in the three-game stretch.
Indiana entered the tournament with a 4-0 record and ranked No. 14 in the nation, but it suffered an 89-61 loss to Louisville Wednesday and an 89-73 loss to Gonzaga Thursday. Providence had a 5-0 record before losing 79-77 to Oklahoma and 69-58 to Davidson.
*** LIVE BLOG:Once the game starts, CLICK HERE to read our live blog written by Jack Ankony, including live updates, highlights and thoughts on the game.
Bart Torvik rankings
Projected score: Indiana 72, Providence 67. Torvik gives the Hoosiers a 68% chance of victory.
Indiana Hoosiers
Providence Friars
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Indiana
Gonzaga responds to loss with emphatic Thanksgiving Day win over Indiana: 3 takeaways
How does a team shake off its first loss of the season while facing a top-15 program that also has a lot to prove following its first defeat?
Ask Gonzaga men’s basketball head coach Mark Few — he and his coaching staff appeared to have all the answers to guide the Bulldogs to an 89-73 victory over No. 14 Indiana on Thursday to advance to the Battle 4 Atlantis fifth-place game.
The Zags (5-1) didn’t waste any time putting their overtime defeat to West Virginia behind them, as they jumped out to an 8-0 lead over the Hoosiers (4-2) in the first couple of minutes before taking a double-digit lead into halftime. Oumar Ballo kept Indiana in the fight early on to make it a 1-point game nearing the 9-minute mark in the first half, yet despite the former Zag’s efforts, Gonzaga capitalized on second-chance opportunities and transition points to go on a 21-2 scoring run, highlighted by an alley-oop dunk from Khalif Battle. The sixth-year guard led his team with 16 points and grabbed five rebounds, while five of his teammates scored in double figures, thanks in large part to Ryan Nembhard’s 13 assists.
With the win, Gonzaga will play the winner of Providence/Davidson in the fifth place on Friday at 5:30 p.m. PST/8:30 p.m. EST.
Here are three takeaways from the victory.
BULLDOGS IMPOSE THEIR WILL DOWN LOW
Braden Huff noted the Bulldogs didn’t have much of a presence in the paint in their loss to the Mountaineers. The Zags went a season-worst 19-of-44 (43.2%) from inside the arc and never established themselves on the low block, instead settling for 3-pointers when their first action didn’t lead to a score from 5 feet out.
Ballo and 6-foot-9 forward Mackenzie Mgbako posed a different kind of challenge, though, despite a hot start from Ballo, who scored 17 of his team’s first 31 points, Gonzaga’s bigs controlled the interior and the boards in totality. The Zags outrebounded the Hoosiers, 42-27, and outscored their opposition, 23-4, in second-chance points.
“Our bigs did a good job,” Few said after the game. “That’s the first team we played that’s kind of like us — likes to throw the ball inside a lot, really ducks in and really puts a lot of foul pressure on you. We were in massive foul trouble in the first half. Got in even more trouble in the second half. But they kept playing. They kept repeating and moving them in and out of there, and they were able to stay in the game.”
Ballo gave the Hoosiers a much-needed spark after they fell into an 8-0 hole. The 7-foot-tall, 237-pound redshirt senior nailed a few right-handed hook shots to put his team in position to compete with the No. 3-ranked team in the country. Ballo led all scorers with 25 points.
“Clearly he’s gotten a lot better,” Few said of Ballo. “I mean that was what six years ago [when Ballo arrived to Gonzaga as a freshman]? He’s older, he’s gotten in great shape. I’m happy for him. That right-handed hook was going tonight but we were OK with that. We just didn’t want him to get a whole lot of stuff between us and the basket.”
Michael Ajayi had his best game as a Zag, recording 15 points and nine rebounds on 5-of-9 from the field, while Ike finished with 14 points and seven rebounds. Ben Gregg added 13 points off the bench and held down the center spot while Ike and Huff had to sit on the bench due to foul trouble in the second half.
AN EMPHATIC RESPONSE
Gonzaga’s players looked ready to flush away the dramatic loss to WVU the moment they stepped off the floor Wednesday. Having a short memory is somewhat necessary when playing three games in as many days, regardless of the final score. Safe to say the Bulldogs embraced that mentality heading into Thursday’s consolation game.
“There’s a lot you say in a 24-hour period like that,” Few said in regard to how he addressed his team in wake of their loss to WVU. “We talked about how in a game like the other night, comes down to one or two possessions, we’ve got to be able to execute, especially on defense. I didn’t feel like we played very good ‘D’ last night.”
The Zags flipped the script on that end of the floor against the Hoosiers. While Ballo was rolling down low, his teammates weren’t creating much on offense from the perimeter. Indiana’s starting backcourt of Myles Rice and Kanaan Carlyle combined for 12 points on 4-of-14 from the field. Malik Reneau, who led the way with 21 points against the Cardinals, put up a goose egg in the first half before ending the night with a quiet six points in 24 minutes of action.
ONTO PROVIDENCE/DAVIDSON
The Zags can enjoy the rest of their Thanksgiving holiday while they await their opponent for tomorrow’s fifth-place game at 5:30 p.m. PST. Gonzaga will face the winner of Providence (5-1) vs. Davidson (4-1) to conclude its trip in The Bahamas.
The Friars nearly completed a wild comeback against Oklahoma in the final minutes of their quarterfinal matchup on Wednesday. The Sooners led by nine points with 44 seconds left but missed free throws and a traveling violation made it a 2-point game in the final seconds. Wesley Cardet Jr. had 17 points, Jayden Pierre and Bensley Joseph 16 each and Corey Floyd Jr. put up 13 for Providence.
The Wildcats got blown out, 104-71, by No. 24 Arizona on Wednesday. Connor Kochera tallied 20 points and Bobby Durbin nailed five 3s for Davidson, which went 38% from the field.
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