Indiana
Indiana High School Sports Awards: Girls Tennis Watch List athletes
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The Indiana High School Sports Awards, presented by the Indiana Pacers, is proud to announce the Girls Tennis Watch List athletes. These athletes will be honored during the live show on April 23 at Clowes Memorial Hall at Butler University in Indianapolis.
The award is presented with the support of the Indianapolis Colts and the Kiwanis Club of Indianapolis.
During the live show, these nominees will be honored, along with the player of the year nominees and winners for fall and winter sports. Nominated athletes, and all spring watch list atheltes, who RSVP here will receive a free ticket to the event thanks to sponsors. Additional tickets may be purchased here.
Sign up to receive email updates about the show, or follow it on Facebook.
The Indiana High School Sports Awards show is part of the USA TODAY High School Sports Awards, the largest high school sports recognition program in the country.
Here are the Girls Tennis Watch List athletes:
Ashi Amalnathan, South Bend St. Joseph – SR
Anni Amalnathan, South Bend St. Joseph – JR
Elizabeth Banet, Floyd Central High School – SR
Molly Bellia, South Bend St. Joseph High School – SR
Mischa Briggs, Fishers High School – JR
Emma Gu, William Henry Harrison High School – JR
Isabelle May, Lawrence North High School – SR
Caroline Robinson, North Central High School – SR
Riley Trinkle, Providence High School – JR
Caitlin Van Winkle, Park Tudor School – SR
Rylie Wilkinson, Franklin Community High School – SO
Kathryn Wilson, Columbus North High School – SR
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Indiana
Bill tracker: Which bills are dead, advancing at halfway point of legislative session
How does a bill become law? See the path it takes in Indiana Statehouse
Follow IndyStar’s statehouse reporter Hayleigh Colombo as she shows the path a bill must travel to become law.
It’s the halfway point of Indiana’s 2025 legislative session.
That means hundreds of bills have already received approval from one chamber. There are also lots of dead bills that didn’t make it through the major deadlines this week.
When House and Senate lawmakers return from their session break on March 3, they will swap bills and consider more changes to proposed legislation before anything is sent to Gov. Mike Braun’s desk.
IndyStar is tracking the prominent bills that are moving through the legislative process and that would impact a wide variety of Hoosiers.
Here are some of the major bills that have advanced, and what happened to them last week.
Editor’s note: There will be no bill tracker next week due to a break for lawmakers before the second half of the session.
House Bill 1001: State budget
Lead author: Rep. Jeff Thompson, R-Lizton
What it does: This bill funds Indiana’s government, health care programs like Medicaid, public K-12 schools and colleges for the next two years. Republican proponents say it’s a “vanilla” budget that helps the state live within its fiscal means while funding key priorities such as removing the income cap for private school vouchers and a new workforce tax credit for employers. But Democratic opponents say the bill funds the wealthy at the expense of the poor, for example, by defunding the Dolly Parton Imagination Library program and failing to expand preschool.
Status: The bill passed the House by a 66-28 vote on Feb. 20 and now heads to the Senate.
Senate Bill 1: Property taxes
Lead author: Sen. Travis Holdman, R-Markle
What it does: The bill, which Gov. Mike Braun said he would not sign in its current form, aims to slow property tax increases by limiting how much local governments can raise their property tax rates and proposes limiting tax referendums to general elections. It would give first-time homebuyers a tax credit and enable more Hoosiers to take advantage of tax credits and deductions for disabled veterans and seniors. Finally, it allows counties to create programs to allow taxpayers to defer up to $500 of their property taxes annually.
Status: The Senate passed the bill on Feb. 17 by a vote of 37-10. It now heads to the House.
House Bill 1008: Illinois-Indiana boundary commission
Lead author: House Speaker Todd Huston, R-Fishers
What it does: The bill creates a bipartisan group that would explore how Illinois counties could effectively secede from their state and join Indiana by redrawing state lines.
Status: The bill passed the house by a 69-25 vote on Feb. 20 and now heads to the Senate.
Senate Bill 518: Sharing property tax dollars with charter schools
Lead author: Sen. Linda Rogers, R-Granger
What it does: The bill would require all traditional public-school districts, including Indianapolis Public Schools, to share property tax revenue with charter schools in their attendance boundaries, if 100 or more kids leave the traditional district for charter schools, starting in 2028.
Status: The bill passed out of the Senate by a 28-21 vote on Feb. 20 and now heads to the House.
House Bill 1041: Transgender athlete ban
Lead author: Rep. Michelle Davis, R-Whiteland
What it does: This is virtually the same bill lawmakers passed in 2022, which banned transgender girls from participating in girls’ K-12 sports. This year’s bill extends that ban to collegiate athletics.
Status: The bill passed the House on Feb. 18 by a vote of 71-25. It now heads to the Senate.
House Bill 1531: Immigration enforcement penalties
Lead author: Rep. JD Prescott, R-Union City
What it does: The bill gives the governor power to withhold funding from local governments if the attorney general determines the entity does not comply with federal immigration enforcement. It says federal immigration law can be enforced by local, state and federal officials. The bill also prohibits employers from knowingly hiring someone who is not legally allowed in the U.S.
Status: The bill passed the full House on Feb. 20 by a vote of 64-26.
House Bill 1006: Prosecutors
Lead author: Rep. Chris Jeter, R-Fishers
What it does: The bill establishes a fund to help counties pay their deputy prosecutors and creates a prosecutor review board to investigate complaints against prosecutors. If the board determines the prosecutor is “noncompliant,” their office would be denied funds available through the bill. Democrats see the measure as an attack on Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Mears.
Status: The bill passed the full House on Feb. 19 by a vote of 72-24. It now heads to the Senate.
Senate Bill 2: Medicaid eligibility
Lead author: Sen. Ryan Mishler, R-Mishawaka
What it does: The bill adds far more stringent and regular government reviews of the eligibility of Medicaid recipients and adds work requirements in order for someone to be eligible for the Healthy Indiana Plan, the state Medicaid expansion plan. In addition, if the federal government allows, it limits enrollment in the Healthy Indiana Plan.
Status: The Senate passed the bill on Feb. 18 by a vote of 40-9. It now heads to the House.
House Bill 1004: Price-controlling hospitals
Lead author: Rep. Martin Carbaugh, R-Fort Wayne
What it does: This is one of the key bills seeking to control health care costs in Indiana. This bill does it by penalizing hospitals with an excise tax if they charge facility fees higher than a certain benchmark. It also sets another price benchmark over which their nonprofit tax status could be revoked.
Status: Passed the House on Feb. 20 by a 68-26 vote and now heads to the Senate.
Senate Bill 516: IEDC transparency changes
Lead author: Sen. Brian Buchanan, R-Lebanon
What it does: The bill would require the Indiana Economic Development Corporation make mandatory notifications to local governments if the quasi-government agency seeks to purchase 100 acres or more in a community and provide annual reports on Innovation Development Districts, like the LEAP project in Boone County. Additionally, the bill creates a new entrepreneurship and innovation office and a new role of president of the IEDC.
Status: The bill unanimously passed the full Senate on Feb. 20. It now heads to the House.
Senate Bill 284: Shrinking early voting
Lead author: Sen. Gary Byrne, R-Byrneville
What it does: The bill would have shrunk Indiana’s period for early in-person voting from 28 days to 14 days. It died on Feb. 19 after Byrne said he did not have the support to advance the bill.
Status: Died in the Senate on Feb. 19 after the author did not open it for amendments by the deadline.
Senate Bill 201: Closing Indiana’s primaries
Lead author: Sen. Mike Gaskill, R-Pendleton
What it does: By requiring voters to register with a political party in order to vote in that party’s primary, this bill would have made Indiana a closed-primary state. It died on Feb. 19 after Gaskill said he did not have the support to advance the bill.
Status: Died in the Senate on Feb. 19 after the author did not open it for amendments by the deadline.
House Bill 1461: Road funding
Lead author: Rep. Jim Pressel, R-Rolling Prairie
What it does: The bill offers a platter of tools local governments could use to beef up their road budgets. Those tools initially included a tax on food deliveries and rideshares, and for Indianapolis, the ability to levy a property tax referendum, but these were later taken out. The bill also makes it easier for the state to establish more toll roads.
Status: The House passed the bill by a 72-21 vote on Feb. 20. It now heads to the Senate.
House Bill 1432: Online gambling
Lead author: Rep. Ethan Manning, R-Logansport
What it does: The bill would have allowed people to play online poker and other casino games virtually and allow the Hoosier Lottery to operate virtually as well.
Status: The bill died after not receiving a hearing in the House Ways and Means Committee before the Feb. 17 deadline.
Senate Bill 523: Chaplains in public schools
Lead author: Sen. Stacey Donato, R-Logansport
What it does: The bill would allow public schools to hire or bring in on a volunteer basis religious chaplains, with an eye toward alleviating the burden on school counselors.
Status: Passed the Senate on Feb. 11 by a 32-16 vote.
House Bill 1007: Small nuclear reactors
Lead author: Rep. Ed Soliday, R-Valparaiso
What it does: The bill provides a state tax credit for expenses incurred in manufacturing small modular nuclear reactors in Indiana. The bill could result in costs shifted to utility customers to pay back project expenses before construction starts.
Status: Passed the full House by a 67-25 vote on Feb. 13.
Senate Bill 4: Water pipeline oversight
Lead author: Sen. Eric Koch, R-Bedford
What it does: The bill prohibits the construction, operation, purchase, sale and lease of a long-haul water pipeline unless the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission signs off on it. However, the Citizens deal to provide water to the LEAP district in Lebanon is exempted from those rules.
Status: Passed the Senate unanimously on Feb. 4. It now heads to the House.
Senate Bill 13: Spinning
Lead author: Sen. Jim Tomes, R-Wadesville
What it does: The bill makes intentional and reckless skidding while driving, known as “spinning”, a Class B misdemeanor and increases the penalties further if the spinning endangers, injures or kills another person. If the bill becomes law, a person found spinning could have their vehicle seized in a civil forfeiture.
Status: Passed the Senate 48-1 on Feb. 3.
House Bill 1002: Education deregulation
Lead author: Rep. Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis
What it does: The bill aims to loosen restrictions for Indiana schools and education systems, including by nixing the education credential requirement for the Indiana secretary of education, changing the timing of when teachers are paid and removing certain training and professional development requirements.
Status: Passed the House by a 75-16 vote on Feb. 3. It now heads to the Senate.
Senate Bill 10: Student voter ID
Lead author: Sen. Blake Doriot, R- Goshen
What it does: The bill would ban college students from being able to use their student IDs as a form of acceptable voter identification at the ballot box.
Status: Passed the full Senate Feb. 4 by a 39-11 vote. It now heads to the House.
Senate Bill 235: Banning DEI
Lead authors: Sen. Tyler Johnson, R-Leo, Sen. Gary Byrne, R-Byrneville
What it does: This bill bans all state spending on diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives — from trainings to diverse hiring initiatives — at state agencies, educational institutions and health profession licensing boards.
Status: The contents of this bill were amended into a different bill, Senate Bill 289, on the Senate floor on Feb. 4. That bill then passed the Senate on Feb. 6 by a 34-13 vote.
House Bill 1393: Illegal immigration notices
Lead author: Rep. Garrett Bascom, R-Lawrenceburg
What it does: The bill requires law enforcement officers to report individuals to their county sheriff if the person is arrested for a felony or misdemeanor and the officer has probable cause to believe the person lacks permanent legal status. It then requires county sheriffs to report the person to proper authorities.
Status: Passed the House on Feb. 4 by a 67-26 vote.
Senate Bill 11: Social media for minors
Lead author: Sen. Mike Bohacek, R-Michiana Shores
What it does: The bill requires parental consent for social media use for people under age 16, and allows Indiana’s attorney general to sue social media operators that don’t comply.
Status: Passed by the full Senate by a 42-7 vote on Jan. 23. It now goes to the House for consideration.
Senate Bill 451: Income tax cut
Lead Author: Sen. Travis Holdman, R-Markle
What it does: The bill would further decrease Indiana’s individual income tax rate if state revenues grow by more than 3% compared to previous years.
Status: The bill unanimously passed the Senate on Jan. 28. It now heads to the House.
Senate Bill 143: Parental rights
Lead Author: Sen. Liz Brown, R-Fort Wayne
What it does: The bill restricts government entities, including school districts and the Indiana Department of Child Services, from intruding on parental rights or keeping information from parents, unless there is a compelling governmental interest.
Status: Passed the Senate by a 44-5 vote on Jan. 27. It now heads to the House.
Senate Bill 475: Physician noncompetes
Lead author: Sen. Justin Busch, R-Fort Wayne
What it does: Lawmakers tried in 2023 to outlaw noncompete agreements for Indiana doctors — contracts that prevent doctors from taking jobs at competing hospitals within a certain radius. The compromise that year was to only apply this to family doctors. This year, Senate Bill 475 attempts the ban for all physicians, again, hoping it will encourage competition and reduce prices in the health care market.
Status: Passed the Senate by a 47-2 vote on Jan. 28. The bill now heads to the House.
House Bill 1201: Chronic absenteeism
Lead author: Rep. Bob Behning, R-Indianapolis
What it does: The bill prohibits a public school from expelling or suspending a student because they are chronically absent or habitually truant and expands the number of days for a school to hold an attendance conference about a student’s absences from five days to 10. It also requires the Department of Education to establish best practices for student discipline on chronic absenteeism.
Status: Passed the House unanimously on Jan 30. A bill that similarly addresses absenteeism, Senate Bill 482, passed the Senate unanimously on Feb. 4.
Contact IndyStar state government and politics reporter Brittany Carloni at brittany.carloni@indystar.com. Follow her on Twitter/X @CarloniBrittany.
Contact senior government accountability reporter Hayleigh Colombo at hcolombo@indystar.com or follow her on X at @hayleighcolombo.
Contact IndyStar state government and politics reporter Kayla Dwyer at kdwyer@indystar.com or follow her on Twitter @kayla_dwyer17.
Indiana
LA Clippers vs Indiana Pacers Injury Report
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After an incredibly disappointing loss against the Milwaukee Bucks on Thursday night, the LA Clippers are continuing their road trip on Sunday afternoon against the Indiana Pacers.
Sunday’s game will be the second and final meeting of the regular season between the two teams. The Pacers were able to get the best of the Clippers in Los Angeles earlier in February, beating the Clippers by a final score of 119-112. James Harden and Norman Powell scored 22 points apiece, but Pascal Siakam helped propel the Pacer with his 33 points and 11 rebounds.
The Clippers have six players listed on their injury report: Kawhi Leonard, Norman Powell, Cam Christie, Trentyn Flowers, Kai Jones, and Jordan Miller.
Kawhi Leonard has been listed as QUESTIONABLE with left foot soreness.
Norman Powell is listed as QUESTIONABLE with left knee soreness.
Cam Christie is out on a G League assignment, Trentyn Flowers is out on his two-way contract, Kai Jones, and Jordan Miller are also out due to their two-way contracts.
The Pacers have five players listed on their injury report: Isaiah Jackson, James Johnson, RayJ Dennis, Enrique Freeman, and Quenton Jackson.
Isaiah Jackson is out with a right Achilles tendon tear, James Johnson is out with an illness, RayJ Dennis is out due to his two-way G League contract, Enrique Freeman, and Quenton Jackson are also out due to their two-way contracts. Tyrese Haliburton and Pascal Siakam are both listed as available.
The Los Angeles Clippers and Indiana Pacers will face off Sunday at 5:00 p.m. EST.
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Indiana
IHSAA girls basketball semistate scores: Which Central Indiana teams will play for spot at state
IHSAA girls semistate: Lawrence North advances to semistate final, defeats Gibson Southern 69-46
Lawrence North advances to semistate final by defeating Gibson Southern 69-46.
Below are schedules, scores and pairings for the 2024-25 Indiana girls high school basketball semistate tournaments.
The early games are in the books. Later tonight, we have semistate finals to see which teams advance to next week’s state championship games at Gainbridge Fieldhouse.
Semistate coverage
The Scorers Table
The Scorers Table is a podcast covering all things Indiana girls high school basketball, hosted by IndyStar high school sports Insider Brian Haenchen, 2010 Indiana Miss Basketball and former Purdue standout Courtney (Moses) Delks and longtime coach Danny Riego.
We will be LIVE 10 a.m. EST Sunday on YouTube.com/@IndyStarHank.
HIT REFRESH FOR UPDATES.
Class 4A
Frankfort
Hamilton Southeastern 57, Valparaiso 39
Warsaw 66, McCutcheon 48
Championship: Hamilton Southeastern vs. Warsaw, 7:30 p.m.
Southport
Pike 46, Bloomington South 43
Lawrence North 69, Gibson Southern 46
Championship: Pike vs. Lawrence North, 8 p.m.
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IHSAA girls semistate: Pike advances to semistate final, defeats Bloomington South 46-43
Pike advances to semistate final by defeating Bloomington South 46-43.
Class 3A
Huntington North
Norwell 74, Delta 44
Columbia City 59, Highland 29
Championship: Norwell vs. Columbia City, 8 p.m.
New Albany
G1: Roncalli 72, Cathedral 54
Greensburg 83, Evansville Central 71
Championship: Roncalli vs. Greensburg, 8 p.m.
Class 2A
Logansport
Eastside 58, Whitko 45
Rensselaer Central 61, Sheridan 36
Championship: Eastside vs. Rensselaer Central, 8 p.m.
Jasper
G1: South Knox 77, Parke Heritage 40
Heritage Christian 51, Brownstown Central 43
Championship: South Knox vs. Heritage Christian, 8 p.m.
Class A
LaPorte
Lafayette Central Catholic 47, Elkhart Christian 36
Marquette Catholic 56, North Miami 31
Championship: Lafayette Central Catholic vs. Marquette Catholic, 8:30 p.m.
Shelbyville
Borden 64, South Decatur 26
Northeast Dubois 46, Anderson Prep 24
Championship: Borden vs. Northeast Dubois, 8 p.m.
Follow Brian Haenchen on Twitter at @Brian_Haenchen.
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