Indiana
Top 25 Indiana high school football rankings (11/3/2024)
We have advanced to sectional championships in every classification, so titles will be online this week for every team in this week’s Top 25 Indiana High School Football Rankings. The marque match-up this will be the battle for the Class 6A, Section 6 championship between No. 2 Lawrence North and No. 7 Cathedral.
Top-ranked Crown Point will also face a tough challenge from No. 20 Penn in Class 6A, Section 1 and No. 12 Fort Wayne Carroll and No. 13 Fort Wayne Snider will tangle in Class 6A, Section 2.
Check out all of the changes in our latest Top 25 Indiana High School Football Rankings.
Previous rank: 1
Last week: def. Portage, 35-0, 6A Section 1 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 20 Penn, 6A Section 1 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 2
Last week: def. Lawrence Central, 40-9, Section 6 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 7 Cathedral, 6A Section 6 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 3
Last week: def. Harrison, 49-0, 6A Section 3 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Zionsville, 6A Section 3 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 4
Last week: def. Indiana Arsenal Tech, 39-0, 6A Section 7 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Perry Meridian, 6A Section 7 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 5
Last week: def. Fort Wayne North Side, 38-21, 5A Section 11 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Warsaw, 5A Section 11 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 6
Last week: def. Avon, 21-13, 6A Section 5 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Ben Davis, 6A Section 5 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 7
Last week: def. North Central, 36-0, 6A Section 6 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 2 Lawrence North, 6A Section 6 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 8
Last week: def. Hammond Central, 35-20, 5A Section 9 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Hammond Mortin, 5A Section 9 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 9
Last week: def. Yorktown, 41-7, 4A Section 21 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Pendleton Heights, 4A Section 21 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 10
Last week: def. South Bend Adams, 62-7, 5A Section 12 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Kokomo, 5A Section 12 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 11
Last week: def. Mooresville, 35-15, 4A Section 22 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. ? Roncallie, 4A Section 22 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 12
Last week: def. Fort Wayne Northrop, 48-18, 6A Section 2 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 13 Snider, 6A Section 2 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 13
Last week: def. No. 16 Elkhart, 14-7, 6A Section 2 Semifinals, Nov. 1
Next game: vs. No. 12 Fort Wayne Central, 6A Section 2 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 15
Last week: def. Southridge, 24-7, 3A Section 32 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Heritage Hills, 3A Section 32 Championship, Nov. 8
Previous rank: 17
Last week: def. Jeffersonville, 72-7, 6A Section 8 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 18 Franklin Central, 6A Section 8 Championship
Previous rank: 18
Last week: def. Anderson, 63-8, 5A Section 13 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Decatur Central, 5A Section 13 Championship
Previous rank: 19
Last week: def. Silver Creek, 49-13, 4A Section 23 Semifinals
Next week: vs. Greenwood, 4A Section 23 Championship
Previous rank: 20
Last week: def. then-No. 14 Columbus North, 21-17, 6A Section 8 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 15 Center Grove, 6A Section 8 Championship
Previous rank: 21
Last week: def. Homestead, 201-4, 6A Section 4 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 21 Fishers, 6A Section 4 Championship
Previous rank: 22
Last week: def. Lake Central, 35-7, 6A Section 1 Semifinals
Next game: vs. No. 1 Crown Point, 6A Section 1 Championship
Previous rank: 23
Last week: def. Noblesville, 31-21, 6A Section 4 Semifinals
Next game: vs. 19 Hamilton Southeaster, 6A Section 4 Championship
Previous rank: 25
Last week: def. Plymouth, 41-14, 4A Section 18 Semifinals
Next week: vs. Plymouth, 4A Section 18 Championship
Previous rank: Not ranked
Last week: def. then-No. 16 Elkhart, 14-7, 6A Section 2 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Carroll, 6A Section 2 Championship
Previous rank: Not ranked
Last week: def. Terre Haute North Vigo, 27-13, 5A Section 15 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Bloomington South, 5A Section 15 Championship
Previous rank: Not ranked
Last week: def. Hobart, 15-14, 4A Section 17 Semifinals
Next game: vs. Hanover Central, 4A Section 17 Championship
Indiana
Much of Indiana under winter storm watches for snow, sleet, freezing rain
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — A winter storm watch has been issued for much of central and southern Indiana from Saturday night into Monday night.
The bigger snowstorm will follow a smaller one expected to hit parts of Indiana on Thursday night and early Friday morning.
Here are details on the three separate winter storms watches, issued Thursday afternoon, that include Indiana.
Central Indiana
The National Weather Service at Indianapolis says to expect 6 inches of snow or more, with a potential accumulations of sleet and freezing rain around southern portions of central Indiana.
The storm was expected to bring slick and hazardous roadways, and snow on trees could bring down power lines.
The watch says, “Persons should consider delaying all travel. If travel is absolutely necessary, drive with extreme caution. Consider taking a winter storm kit along with you, including such items as tire chains, booster cables, flashlight, shovel, blankets and extra clothing. Also take water, a first aid kit, and anything else that would help you survive in case you become stranded.”
Indiana counties in the watch issued from the Indianapolis weather service office are Bartholomew, Boone, Brown, Carroll, Clinton, Clay, Daviess, Decatur, Delaware, Fountain, Greene, Hamilton, Hancock, Hendricks, Henry, Howard, Jackson, Jennings, Johnson, Knox, Lawrence, Madison, Marion, Martin, Monroe, Montgomery, Morgan, Owen, Parke, Putnam, Randolph, Rush, Shelby, Sullivan, Tippecanoe, Tipton, Vermillion, and Vigo.
Southeastern Indiana
The National Weather Service at Louisville, Kentucky, says to expect a wintry mix of snow, sleet, and freezing rain from late Saturday night through Monday afternoon. Snow and sleet amounts of greater than 4 inches and significant ice accumulations of greater than a quarter of an inch are expected in the watch area that includes southern Indiana.
Indiana counties in the watch area from the Louisville weather office are Clark, Crawford, Dubois, Floyd, Jefferson, Harrison, Orange, Perry, Scott, Washington. The watch from the Louisville weather officer also extends into Kentucky.
Southwestern Indiana
The National Weather Service at Paducah, Kentucky, says heavy mixed precipitation is possible from late Saturday night into late Sunday night. Snow and sleet accumulations of 4 inches or more, and ice accumulations of one-quarter inch or more are possible.
Indiana counties in the watch area from the Paducah weather office are Gibson, Pike, Posey, Spencer, Vanderburgh, and Warrick. The watch also includes parts of Illinois and Kentucky.
Statement
“The Indianapolis Department of Public Works (Indy DPW) is prepared for the forecasted winter weather conditions, including a strong winter system this weekend. Starting tonight, Indy DPW will dispatch over 80 crew members to begin pre-treating roadways, bridges, and overpasses across Marion County for a snow event set to start later this evening. Indy DPW crews will operate on rotating 12-hour shifts throughout the snow event, which Indy DPW officials expect to bring up to an inch of snowfall with potential freezing overnight.
“‘Our crews are prepared to address the weather expected to impact our community this week and will continue to monitor and respond to any changes in the forecast’ said Indy DPW Interim Director Sam Beres. ‘In partnership with AFSCME Local 725, we will remain focused on addressing roadway conditions throughout the duration of the expected weather impacts. We remind residents to give our snowplow and salt truck drivers space to work safely.’
“Looking ahead to the weekend, several weather models show the potential for a strong winter system (Sunday AM through Monday AM) that is expected to impact several Midwestern states, including Indiana. While it is too soon to determine the exact track of the system and snowfall totals at this time, Indy DPW is preparing for the possibility of hazardous conditions and significant travel impacts.
“Indy DPW reminds drivers to follow best practices when traveling in winter weather including:
- Staying informed: Before leaving home, find out about the road conditions. Drivers need to know the weather and their limits. Follow the National Weather Service (NWS) and local media to help you stay on top of the latest conditions and forecasts.
- Time and space: Leave plenty of time to reach your destination safely. Remember to drive below the posted speed limit and leave plenty of room between cars and Indy DPW vehicles. Always watch out for pedestrians.
- Pack extra resources: Stock your vehicle with extra resources that may be useful. Some resources include water, blankets, chargers for devices, extra clothes, and salt.
“Indianapolis constituents can stay up to date on winter weather events online by following us on Twitter @IndySnowForce and @IndyDPW. The Indy Snow Force Viewer will also be activated for this winter weather event, identifying roads located along standard routes that have been recently plowed or treated with salt during a snow event.
“For more information, please visit the Indy DPW Snow Force webpage at: indy.gov/snow“
Indianapolis Department of Public Works
Indiana
Outgoing Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb looks back on eight years in office — and at what's next • Indiana Capital Chronicle
Looking back on two terms in office, outgoing Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb doesn’t have regrets — or at least not many.
The Republican statesman is just days away from bringing his eight years as governor to a close. He’ll officially hand the reins to Gov.-elect Mike Braun on January 13.
In a sit-down interview with the Indiana Capital Chronicle in December, Holcomb pointed to economic gains — like job and wage growth, and an influx of new business developments in the state — among his biggest wins.
His tenure as Indiana’s 51st head of state was most notably defined by the COVID-19 pandemic, however. Even so, Holcomb said he hopes to be revered as “more than just a COVID governor.”
“I hope people say that we were served at a point in time that — while the economy grew — we were able to invest and reinvest and modernize things that had been on the shelf … gathering dust, understandably, because we didn’t have the money … and we upgraded so many different facilities that will have a positive impact on people’s lives and give them more opportunities,” he said. “And then maybe even most importantly, that I was a person that respected everyone, whether I agreed with them or not, or they with me. And that I was kind, even during the most challenging times. That’s enough for me.”
Holcomb’s COVID-19 response
The Holcomb administration’s response to the global pandemic likely earned the governor the most criticism, much of which from conservatives who disapproved of Indiana’s statewide mask mandate and other COVID-19 restrictions that Holcomb imposed by executive order.
“You’re never going to please everyone, and you might not even please half of them. But what gave me confidence, actually strength, during it all, was that we were looking at all the information that we could get our hands on and were connected with communities in all 92 counties. We were connected to trade associations, to schools, to hospitals, to local health departments, to all kinds of entities that had an opinion,” Holcomb recalled.
“There was some disinformation and misinformation. And information was changing daily … and we were trying,” he continued. “What gave me strength and confidence is the administration was trying to do the right thing, regardless of the hit that I might take politically. … No matter how hard it is or unpopular it is, I have to do the right thing. I’ll defend it to the end.”
But if there is “one regret” Holcomb has, it came in May 2020, after a photo was posted on Facebook showing the governor posing at the Hobnob Corner Restaurant in Nashville, Indiana, with two other people — none of whom were wearing masks.
The photo was posted amid rising statewide tensions over Holcomb’s stay-at-home orders that caused many businesses to shut down.
“(The woman who wanted a photo) asked, ‘Could I get a picture with our faces?’ And it was so innocently asked, and I didn’t get COVID after it. So, it was almost like, ‘Well, why are you telling us to wear it?’ I get it,” Holcomb said. “I wish I wouldn’t have done that.”
Ire was also high among state legislators, some from within Holcomb’s own party.
Throughout the dog days of the pandemic, Holcomb said he “was in constant communication” with legislative leadership. Although the governor “was always asking” if lawmakers wanted to come back in session, “they never did.”
In 2021, lawmakers approved a measure that sought to give the Republican-dominated legislature the power to call themselves into special session after the governor has declared an emergency. Holcomb vetoed, claiming it went against the Indiana Constitution, but the General Assembly overrode his veto.
Ultimately, Holcomb prevailed before the Indiana Supreme Court. He called the debacle “an honest disagreement … that I didn’t lose any friendships over.”
“There were some disagreements among us. You had to make calls like, where does one’s individual liberty infringe on another person’s individual? Do you believe it’s airborne-transmitted? Some didn’t, I do. … And people were also angry that I was promoting getting vaccinated,” Holcomb said.
“With an issue like a global pandemic that was unlike in 1918, where information traveled faster than light and sound, and there were different motivations — you just had to try to do the right thing,” he added. “I know that sounds so cliche, but we tried to balance lives and livelihoods every single opportunity that confronted us.”
Still, Holcomb emphasized that there’s another, far more supportive “side of the conversation” surrounding his response pandemic.
“To this day, if we were to go to … an MCL or to Hardee’s or wherever, if you and I went in and we were standing there, inevitably, someone comes up to me and says, ‘Thanks for the way you handled COVID,’” the governor said.
“I’m almost amazed by — I shouldn’t be — but the lingering positive effect of how we got through it all. The attention has been on the loud, angry disagreers, on the people that protested with guns on their backs and dressed me up as Hitler out here. They wanted attention. They had their own motivation, and some of it was probably pure, and they were afraid of the government taking over their lives,” he continued. “I know this sounds thin-skinned of me, but we had a (gubernatorial) election after it (in 2020), and the one thing that kind of stifled some of the noise was the people spoke, and it riled up this silent majority that said, ‘Those people are being unfair, and I’m going to vote, and I’m going to cross over, and I’m going to express my support.’ And then they said, in a record number, ‘keep going.’”
Holcomb said he also wishes he could have done more to improve Indiana’s infant and maternal mortality rates. Despite significant focus, the state still ranks among the worst in the country for both metrics. The governor said the lack of progress is one of few shortfalls “that will haunt me.”
“We’re nowhere where I thought we could be after years. Not close. It’s not because we’re not trying. There’s a shortcoming somewhere, because other states are doing a better job than we are, and I don’t want to just blame the state — it takes two to tango,” Holcomb said. “We’ve got really good corporate partners, great stakeholders who are helping us, trying to provide the education to expecting or new mothers. But we just cannot figure it out.”
Holcomb cited resistance from the General Assembly as a major “inhibitor” to achieving better maternal health.
Lawmakers, he said, “just flat out thought” pregnancy accommodations for mothers, for example, amounted to “government intervention in the business workplace that was unnecessary.”
“I always thought it was a pro-growth culture that wasn’t anti-business, for sure,” Holcomb said. “It was the opposite to me.”
Trials — and triumphs
Holcomb had a breadth of political experience — but not governing experience — when he assumed office in January 2017.
Before he was governor, Holcomb was an advisor to both then-Gov. Mitch Daniels and former U.S. Sen. Dan Coats. He additionally worked for Congressman John Hostettler and as a state chairman of the Indiana Republican Party.
Holcomb’s gubernatorial campaign lasted just 106 days, after former Gov. Mike Pence was tapped as would-be President Donald Trump’s vice president in 2016.
Indiana Gov. Eric Holcomb’s portrait tells his story from inside — and outside — his office
His biggest surprise over the last eight years has been “the amount of turnover” in government, media, the judiciary, and other public sectors.
Holcomb said the lack of “consistency and continuity” causes Hoosiers — “real people” — to be less connected to elected officials and others whose decisions have “impact.”
“It’s the amount of change, not just technology, and how it’s impacting and forcing change on how to govern, or how to cover those governing. The turnover … and how that translates to the average citizen who doesn’t read (the news), or see every press release I put out, or is just earning a living and trying to get by, or recover from an addiction, or fill in the blank,” he said. “There is a need for all of us, including me, to be a better storyteller about why we do what we do, and not just assume.”
The governor said his greatest accomplishment — aside from economic development wins — was “not taking the bait” and “staying focused on the job” despite “a lot of upheaval, and a lot of transition, and a lot of new faces, and new motivations, and new competition.”
“People want you to think about running for this. Say you ought to do that. You ought to come out and address the protesters — whatever it is to get my attention diverted from the job that I have,” Holcomb said. “I’m not trying to pat myself on the back, but that takes discipline, and a really good team that also stays focused on the job that they have.”
Looking ahead
As the transition of power nears, Holcomb said he has a list of recommendations to hand off to his successor. Included are “a number of” capital investment deals he’ll advise Braun to chase, along with possible actions for improving maternal and infant health.
Above anything else, Holcomb said Indiana’s next governor should expect “to be learning — and learning a lot every day.”
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“It’s one thing to be convicted, and to have your opinions, and have a good plan, and execute and implement and tweak it, and pivot and scramble, or whatever. It’s another thing to just understand that this is the first time any of us ever had the job. It’s different from every other job. And I’m not saying it’s harder. I’m just saying it’s a different job, and you have to be aware that you’re going to be learning,” Holcomb said. “And I would say to remain humble, in the sense that you’re going to be learning every day about things, and it’s necessary then to stay in contact with people … in every county, okay, and different associations, and all these tentacles that you have.”
What comes next for the departing state leader is still to be decided, but he and First Lady Janet Holcomb — who will move just northwest of Indianapolis after leaving the governor’s residence — plan to lay low and “travel a little less,” for now.
“We’ve had a busy few months, and just kind of want to exhale, and spend some time with family, initially, and friends that just always seem to kind of take the hit,” he said. “But I won’t go stir crazy. I mean, I’ll get busy after a few months, doing something.”
It’s also the more mundane aspects of day-to-day lift that Holcomb said he’s looking forward to most, like “mowing the lawn with my headphones.”
“I would love to be able to go to CVS or Walgreens and buy Q-tips without having to be followed … or without addressing the decision that I just made the other day,” Holcomb said, chuckling. “Or maybe when I go out to eat — and I’m sure my mouth is open when I’m chewing — and I can see (someone coming up to me) out of the corner out of my eye. It’s just the anonymity that you had prior will be nice, or not having law enforcement so close every minute of the day.”
And as for another go at elected office?
“Not right now,” Holcomb said of any possible future political aspirations. “I’ve not devoted one second to that, and in fact, I need a break.”
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Indiana
Stolen vehicle pursuit ends in police vehicle damage, suspect's arrest
HOBART, Ind. (WISH) — A police chase left two vehicles damaged and a 30-year-old SUV theft suspect in custody.
Lake County Sheriff Oscar Martinez Jr. said in a social media post that a Lake County police officer’s traffic stop of a stolen Honda Pilot SUV about 3:30 p.m. Wednesday began the chase. A license plate reader had flagged the stolen SUV near 61st Avenue and Marcella Boulevard in Hobart.
The sheriff said the SUV driver backed into the police officer’s patrol vehicle and began to flee on 61st Avenue heading toward I-65. Other police units joined in the pursuit on northbound I-65.
“The fleeing driver hit a patrol vehicle attempting to stop him a second time and eventually exited onto eastbound Ridge Road,” the sheriff wrote in the a Wednesday night post. “Another officer performed a precision immobilization technique to stop the SUV. It struck a parked pickup truck and finally stopped.”
No one was hurt.
The sheriff’s post did not name the 30-year-old who was apprehended, who could faces charges of auto theft, fleeing law enforcement, battery with a deadly weapon, and reckless driving, the sheriff says.
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