Indiana
NFL Draft: Interview with Indiana Defensive Lineman Ryder Anderson
NFL expertise is generational, and defensive lineman, Ryder Anderson, is one other prime instance of that expertise.
Anderson, a defensive lineman out of Indiana, brings numerous soccer expertise from two well-respected soccer applications. The Katy, TX native transferred from Ole Miss in January 2021. There, he had 99 tackles, 38 solos, six and a half sacks, one pressured fumble, one fumble restoration and one blocked punt.
In his 2021 season with Indiana, Anderson collected 48 tackles, 28 solos, three and a half sacks for 21 yards misplaced and one pressured fumble. He tallied career-highs with seven solos, two sacks and two and a half tackles for loss. He additionally tied the document for the team-high with eight tackles at No. 4 Penn State in October.
Anderson’s journey begins lengthy earlier than his time at each Ole Miss and Indiana, however his expertise in his early years propelled him to varsity success and an eventual spot within the late rounds of the NFL Draft.
Anderson started enjoying soccer at an early age, a no brainer as the sport runs in his DNA.
“I come from a soccer household, my older brother performs, my youthful brother performs.” Anderson stated.
Anderson performed 4 years at Ole Miss. He liked the transition from highschool to varsity, particularly enjoying within the SEC.
“It was all the time my dream to play within the SEC as a defensive lineman,” Anderson stated. In that whole soccer group, he famous that he obtained to play nice soccer and meet nice individuals.
In his final season, Anderson performed for Indiana.
“I used to be simply actually blessed to have the ability to match into two nice applications,” Anderson stated. “Except for school, after I performed my final sport, I mainly simply obtained proper to it.”
Anderson put his head down and set to work in preparation for the East-West Bowl in addition to his Professional Day. He continued to work out within the weight room and the sphere, staying targeted earlier than the draft.
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“t’s soccer, so you’ll be able to all the time carry on studying. It was an ideal alternative on the market for me.” Anderson stated. “I can solely actually converse for myself. I really feel like I do numerous additional work, I’ve all the time been that means, that’s what prepares me to be at my greatest in massive moments.”
Anderson’s work ethic can elude to the identical sort of early success he noticed in a few of final 12 months’s draft prospects.
“I feel it speaks volumes as to the preparation and the work that they put in.” He stated. “It exhibits that it may be carried out and so long as you simply put within the work and all the things falls in line, then you definitely get on that area as quickly as you’re prepared.”
Although Anderson had an ideal school profession inside two well-respected applications, he did have to beat adversity alongside the best way: COVID-19. Anderson touched on how united everybody was in making an attempt to get by the pandemic even when they may not bodily be collectively.
One other main change was that his soccer program obtained a brand new teaching employees at the moment so there was loads to be taught. One thing that helped was that he actually dialed into the psychological facet so they may come again collectively.
In that point, there was a giant transition from in-person, to on-line, again to in-person. Fortuitously for Anderson, it was not a lot of a tough transition.
“It was my fourth season of soccer,” Anderson stated. “It was simpler [for the older guys] than for among the youthful guys. These guys want extra bodily in-person reactions. It was a much bigger adjustment for among the youthful guys.”
Every part for Anderson finally led to this second, and he’s wanting ahead to that subsequent step in his profession – very like when his brother was drafted.
“All people’s excited, this has been a dream of mine for a extremely very long time. My older brother went by the method and he was capable of get drafted. He obtained drafted within the sixth spherical with the Bengals. That was actually enjoyable,” Anderson stated.
Anderson’s greatest recommendation for youthful gamers is to “hammer down someplace and provides it all the things you bought.”
“It might not occur as shortly as you need it to it might not come all initially,” Anderson stated. “Typically it’s a gradual grind. If you happen to simply persevere by among the hardships chances are you’ll face initially, it will possibly positively get higher later.”
Anderson will likely be following in his older brother’s footsteps in a couple of weeks, hopeful to make his personal begin within the NFL, come September.
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Indiana
Northwest Indiana officials divided on Biden's decision to block Nippon takeover of US Steel
GARY, Ind. (WLS) — Leaders in Northwest Indiana reacted Friday after President Joe Biden decided to block Japan’s Nippon Steel from acquiring U.S. Steel.
The U.S. Steel smokestacks along the lakefront are a prominent landmark for the city of Gary. The company, with its more than century-long history in Gary, is the city’s largest employer with nearly 5,000 jobs.
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Gary Mayor Eddie Melton has been a big supporter of the proposed $15 billion merger between U.S. Steel and Japan’s Nippon Steel.
“Gary has seen a significant downturn over the last 50 years,” Melton said. “As we are constantly rebuilding from within, we couldn’t risk losing one of our largest employers.”
The Gary mayor said during a visit last month, Nippon executives promised a $1 billion investment in the Gary plant, replacing the four blast furnaces over the next ten years. However, union leaders support President Biden’s decision to block the deal, citing concerns about the long term stability of the steel industry.
“The president took action to block the deal so U.S. Steel remains a proud American company, American-owned, American-operated by American Union steel workers and the best in the world,” White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
Yesterday we had a potential deal in hand. Today we have nothing. So it’s uncertain what the future’s gonna be.
Northwest Indiana congressman Frank Mrvan also agrees, saying in a statement, “It is absolutely right to prevent a foreign company with proven trade abuses from controlling our domestic steel production.”
The companies, however, are vowing to fight the President’s decision, saying, “Blocking this transaction means denying billions of committed investment to extend the life of U.S. Steel’s aging facilities and putting thousands of good-paying, family-sustaining union jobs at risk. In short, we believe that President Biden has sacrificed the future of American steelworkers for his own political agenda.”
Gary’s mayor agrees.
“Yesterday we had a potential deal in hand. Today we have nothing,” Melton said. “So it’s uncertain what the future’s gonna be.”
A White House spokesperson said the president’s decision has nothing to do with Japan, a close ally of the United States.
In the meantime, a spokesperson for U.S. Steel says they do intend to pursue their legal options, but it’s unclear exactly what that means.
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Indiana
Obituary for Michael Kacprowicz at Divine Mercy Funeral Home
Indiana
What Mike Woodson Said After Indiana’s 84-74 Win Over Rutgers
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. – Indiana resumed Big Ten play with a step in the right direction, defeating Rutgers 84-74 Thursday night at Simon Skjodt Assembly Hall.
Coach Mike Woodson found contributions all over his roster, led by Myles Rice with 21 points. Oumar Ballo returned to action and scored 17 points, followed by Mackenzie Mgbako with 16, Trey Galloway with 11 and Luke Goode with nine. The Hoosiers improved to 11-3 overall and 2-1 in Big Ten play ahead of Sunday’s game against Penn State at the Palestra in Philadelphia, Penn.
Here’s the full transcript of Woodson’s postgame press conference.
On Oumar Ballo’s play…
Woodson: “I thought he played great. He’s a big part of our team winning tonight. He had 17 and three rebounds, a few blocked shots, plugged the hole up for us like he’s supposed to so I thought he played well.”
On his thoughts on Rutgers guard Ace Bailey, who scored 39 points…
Woodson: “He’s special. He’s a good player and he’s young. If he continues to work, he could be pretty special. I mean, we kind of threw a few things at him, but he made some tough shots tonight and that’s what great players do.”
On if Ballo coming off the bench was for disciplinary or injury-related reasons…
Woodson: “Let’s just talk about his 17 and 12. That’s what I like to focus in on. He came off the bench and he got 17 and 12 for us and two blocks, which is fantastic.”
On Malik Reneau leaving with an injury and how his team adapted…
Woodson: “Well, right now, we just got to evaluate him tomorrow. He couldn’t come back in the game and you know he’s a big piece to the puzzle. Going into this game, he was our leading scorer, so we’ll evaluate him tomorrow through our medical staff and see where he is and if he can’t play, it’s next man up. We just got to continue to go whoever is in uniform.”
On Indiana’s improved 3-point shooting…
Woodson: “Guys stepped up, they made ’em, which was kind of nice to see. That’s probably the most threes we’ve made this season so far and I just hope it continues to be a carryover because I thought in the Winthrop game we got some good looks, we just didn’t make them. Tonight, guys stepped up and they knocked them down which we’re going to need moving forward.”
On Indiana’s 34 second-chance points and 18 offensive rebounds…
Woodson: “Well, I think the fact that they played a lot of zones. It’s kind of hard to block out in zone situations. We were able to sneak guys in and get put-backs or kick it back out for threes. That’s just how it goes when you play zone. You gamble because you do have to rebound out of the zone in order to get down the floor and play offense and we were able to capitalize on it a little bit.”
On if Indiana did anything different in practice after making just one three in its last game…
Woodson: “No, like I told you guys, I mean, as a coach, every time they shoot it, I think it’s going in, especially if you got the right guy shooting it and we did in our last game. You had Gallo shooting some and Goode and Mac. They just didn’t knock them down and tonight they had some of those same looks and they put it in the hole which is kind of nice to see.”
On Anthony Leal’s defense against Ace Bailey and if he expected that matchup…
Woodson: “No, Anthony is one of our best defenders and when I got to go to someone off the bench to guard a key guy, because I thought in that one stretch right before the half, I think he only scored one point against Anthony. He had done all his damage early and… but again, he’s a hell of a player. He did a lot of good things for his ball club tonight.”
On if this game was Indiana’s best in terms of its depth top to bottom…
Woodson: “I think so but we got a long way to go. I got to help our bench more somehow. I just got to get them comfortable having fun and flying around and doing things on both ends of the floor that we’re supposed to do and we’re not there yet.”
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