Indiana
Vote now: Who should be SBLive’s Indiana High School Athlete of the Week (Sept. 26-Oct. 1)?
Listed here are the candidates for SBLive’s Indiana Excessive College Athlete of the Week for Sept. 26-Oct. 1 as nominated by followers, readers and SBLive’s employees.
Learn via the nominees and forged your vote on the backside of the web page. Voting will conclude on Sunday at 11:59 p.m. and the winner shall be introduced the next week. If you want to appoint an athlete sooner or later, please e mail athleteoftheweek@scorebooklive.com.
THIS WEEK’S SBLIVE INDIANA ATHLETE OF THE WEEK NOMINEES:
Editor’s Word: Our Athlete of the Week function and corresponding ballot is meant to be enjoyable, and we don’t set limits on what number of occasions a fan can vote in the course of the competitors. Nevertheless, we don’t enable votes which might be generated by script, macro or different automated means. Athletes that obtain votes generated by script, macro or different automated means shall be disqualified.
Jaylen Alexander, Hamilton Southeastern soccer
The Royals working again netted 192 yards on 20 carries whereas scoring two of HSE’s first three touchdowns. His 47-yard run opened the scoring and his 2-yarder put the Royals on prime 21-0.
Addy Beery, Martinsville women soccer
The Artesians’ sophomore scored three objectives over two video games final week, and added an help. Two of her objectives got here in a 5-3 win over Monrovia.
Reece Bellin, Carmel soccer
The Greyhounds receiver completed with six catches for 138 yards and scored the successful landing in a battle of conventional 6A powers. Bellin opened the night time with a 73-yard rating and his 3-yard catch staked the Hounds to a 21-14 win over Ben Davis.
DeShawnDre Brown, Harrison soccer
A sophomore quarterback, Brown handed for 187 yards and three touchdowns and ran for 173 yards and two scores in his crew’s 42-7 win over Evansville Central.
Macy Bruton, Crawfordsville volleyball
The state’s chief in kills, Bruton recorded her 2,000th profession kill simply days after reaching the 1,000 digs milestone. Boasting double-digit kills in each match this season, she had 25 in a five-set loss to Danville final week, pushing her season kill tally to 519.
Ava Bunker, Columbus North women golf
The freshman dominated the competitors to turn out to be solely the second freshman in state historical past to win medalist honors at Indiana’s women golf state finals. Her nine-shot win at Prairie View Golf Course tied for the second-biggest margin of victory within the 50-year historical past of the state match. She carded a 3-under-par 69 on Friday, adopted by a 1-over-73 in Saturday’s ultimate spherical. Her ultimate card of 142 matched the most effective rating within the 9 years the finals have been performed at Prairie View.
Micah Coyle, Middle Grove soccer
Coyle ran for 148 yards on simply 12 carries and scored two of the Trojans’ first three touchdowns on scores from 25 and 64 yards, as top-ranked Middle Grove shutout Pike, 48-0.
Bodie Derrer, Hamilton Heights soccer
Derrer threw for 4 TDs and ran for an additional as Hamilton Heights blitzed Tipton, 42-7. Derrer’s 66-yard TD go opened the scoring and his 1-yard sneak gave the Huskies a 14-0 benefit. He accomplished 15 of 23 passes for 210 yards.
Amanda Evers, Zionsville volleyball
Evers paced the Eagles with 21 assists and 7 aces in a sweep of Ben Davis. She added 23 assists in a four-set loss to Brownsburg.
Naija Gadis, Brebeuf volleyball
The senior cleared 3,000 profession assists in the course of the Marion County quarterfinals, then helped rally her crew to a five-set win over Roncalli within the championship match.
Gabby Gilbert, Pike volleyball
In back-to-back matches towards Carmel and Southport, Gilbert scattered 5 aces, two blocks, 26 digs and 6 assists – on prime of 20 kills (.357 hitting pct) towards Carmel and one other 25 (.413) towards Southport.
Luke Hansen, Roncalli soccer
The state’s main ground-gainer went over 300 yards for the third time this season, ending with 316 yards on 37 carries. Hansen packaged landing runs of 58 and 73 yards round a pair of 1-yard scores to account for all 4 of the Royals’ scores.
Sam Holland, Noblesville boys soccer
Holland scored a number of objectives in consecutive video games final week, together with a two-goal, two-assist efficiency within the Millers’ 4-1 win over Franklin Central.
Ashley Kirkland, Citadel women golf
A sophomore, Kirkland posted the most effective second-round rating on the Indiana women golf finals with a 72. That sturdy second-day efficiency helped her end second total with a two-day rating of 151 and helped Citadel end tied for second within the crew standings.
Addison Knoblauch, Homestead women cross nation
The Homestead junior turned within the quickest Indiana time for a second-place end on the Nike XC City Twilight meet. Knoblauch’s personal-best time of 17:21.3 trailed Ciara O’Shea of Madison Central in Kentucky.
Kole Mathison, Carmel boys cross nation
Mathison, a senior, gained prime honors on the Nike XC City Twilight meet, Saturday in Terre Haute. Mathison’s 14:51.7 was inside three seconds after all report and practically 5 seconds forward of defending Midwest champion Andrew Hauser of Rock Bridge, Missouri, in second place. Mathison’s time was his better of this season, and the most effective within the state this season.
Clay McClelland, Charleston soccer
McClelland was 12-of-21 passing for 191 yards and two passing TDs in a 42-27 win over Corydon. He additionally carried 31 occasions for 229 yards and three extra scores. In all, he totaled 420 yards in whole offense.
Danny O’Neil, Cathedral soccer
The junior QB handed for 3 touchdowns and ran for 2 extra because the Irish put away visiting Cincinnati LaSalle, 37-6. O’Neil’s 47-yard strike to Javon Tibbs opened the scoring, and he scored twice on the bottom within the second quarter. O’Neil completed 21-of-28 passing for 217 yards.
Devan Roberts, Gibson Southern soccer
Roberts carried 11 occasions for 121 yards and 4 touchdowns to assist Gibson Southern stay unbeaten.
Kervens Saint-Paul, Speedway boys soccer
The Sparkplugs junior scored his fourth hat trick of the season whereas Speedway beat Monrovia, 4-2. He boasts 21 objectives and 5 assists getting into this week’s playoff spherical.
Claire Swathwood, Carmel women golf
The Greyhounds junior shot a 155 over two days to guide Carmel to a crew championship on the Indiana women golf state finals. Swathwood’s ultimate spherical of 70 minimize 5 strokes off her Friday spherical whereas adjusting to windy climate circumstances and end in sixth place total.
Grayson Thomas, New Palestine soccer
Thomas rushed for 138 yards on 14 carries and scored three touchdowns. Thomas raised his season speeding whole to 1,024 yards to turn out to be the primary Dragon at school historical past to eclipse 1,000 speeding yards in three totally different seasons.
Luke Valerio, Heritage Christian soccer
Valerio had 11 receptions for 152 yards and ran twice for 29 yards. Valerio’s 70-yard catch staked the Eagles to a 20-13 lead and he caught a two-point dialog late within the recreation for a 35-25 lead.
Trey Woods, NorthWood soccer
Woods scored each NorthWood touchdowns in a vital 14-6 win in a battle of unbeatens. Woods took a 45-yard landing go on the sport’s first sequence, and after the Cavemen pulled inside 7-6 and missed a two-point conversion, Woods took the following kickoff 75 yards for the one different rating of the sport.
Indiana
Five Key Matchups to Watch in Ohio State vs. Indiana
On paper, Ohio State has a clear talent advantage over Indiana. But that doesn’t mean the Hoosiers aren’t capable of beating the Buckeyes.
Indiana has performed well above its on-paper talent level all season, winning all of its first 10 games for the first 10-win season in school history. Yes, it’s true that Indiana hasn’t yet beaten a ranked opponent this season, but the Hoosiers have the third-highest average scoring margin in all of college football (25.2 points per game), rank second nationally in points scored per game (43.9) and third nationally in yards allowed per game (255.5).
That means Ohio State must be prepared for one of its biggest tests of the season in all phases of the game as it welcomes the fifth-ranked Hoosiers to Ohio Stadium for its third top-five matchup of the season on Saturday.
In particular, the following five positional matchups bear watching on Saturday. Which team wins the majority of these matchups will go a long way toward determining whether Indiana upsets the second-ranked Buckeyes or Ohio State hands the Hoosiers their first loss.
Ohio State Interior OL vs. Indiana DTs and LBs
Ohio State’s interior offensive line will be the position group under the microscope more than any other when Saturday’s game begins as the Buckeyes play their first game without star center Seth McLaughlin. Carson Hinzman will make his first start of the season at center with Austin Siereveld making his first start since non-conference play as he replaces Hinzman at left guard.
That makes all three positions along Ohio State’s interior offensive line a question mark entering this game as Tegra Tshabola has had plenty of ups and downs in his first season as the Buckeyes’ right guard. All of them have played enough that there’s reason for optimism they won’t be a complete liability, but the lack of the stabilizing veteran presence that McLaughlin provided is a cause for concern.
A bigger test for them specifically might come next week when they faced Michigan’s elite defensive tackle tandem of Mason Graham and Kenneth Grant, but the Hoosiers’ interior defenders are plenty capable of challenging them, too. Kent State transfer defensive tackle CJ West has been one of the Big Ten’s best interior defensive linemen this season, recording 30 tackles with five tackles for loss and two sacks through 10 games, and he pairs with fellow starter James Carpenter and James Madison transfer Tyrique Tucker to give the Hoosiers a strong defensive tackle trio that’s combined for 61 quarterback pressures this season, per Pro Football Focus.
One of McLaughlin’s greatest strengths was his ability to get to the second level and make key blocks to spring Ohio State’s running backs up the middle, and Indiana has a quality linebacker group that will test the Buckeyes’ new-look middle of the offensive line in that regard, as well. Aiden Fisher is tied for second among all Big Ten defenders with 98 tackles this season while fellow starting linebacker Jailin Walker has also been productive, recording 59 tackles with four tackles for loss and six pass breakups.
Ohio State OTs vs. Indiana DE Mikail Kamara
Even without McLaughlin’s injury, Ohio State’s offensive line would have been one of the bigger question-mark positions entering this game because of the Hoosiers’ ability to bring pressure up front, especially off the edge.
Indiana leads the Big Ten with 31 sacks this season, and the biggest contributor to that total has been Mikail Kamara, who leads the conference with 9.5 quarterback takedowns. The 6-foot-1, 265-pound James Madison transfer leads the entire FBS with 53 quarterback pressures this season.
Donovan Jackson gave up two sacks to Penn State’s Abdul Carter in his first game at left tackle, and Kamara will be by far the best pass rusher he’s faced since. Right tackle Josh Fryar has been better in pass protection this year than he was last year, but pass blocking is still the weaker part of his game, so the Hoosiers will likely move Kamara around to test both tackles.
“He’s a very talented player,” Jackson said of Kamara. “He knows how to use his abilities well in terms of using hands, being able to turn the corner, which is the reason why his numbers are so good as it is now. So I know that as a unit, we all got our work cut out for us. This is a very talented team, very talented defensive front, and they’re all dialed into what they have to do. They rarely get out of gaps. So we just have to be dialed in on what we have to do to execute the game plan and do what we can to the best of our abilities.”
Ohio State CBs vs. Indiana WRs and Kurtis Rourke
On the other side of the ball, the key to the game for Ohio State could be whether Ohio State’s cornerbacks can keep Indiana’s wide receivers in check. Indiana’s passing offense has been one of the nation’s most effective this season, ranking third in the FBS with 9.9 yards per passing attempt, and the Hoosiers’ wideouts will be the best Ohio State has faced since Evan Stewart and Tez Johnson lit the Buckeyes up in a 341-yard passing day for Oregon.
None of Indiana’s individual receivers are quite as dynamic as Stewart, who had seven catches for 149 yards and a touchdown against Ohio State, but Elijah Sarratt has been one of the Big Ten’s most productive wideouts with 38 catches for 685 yards and six touchdowns. And the Buckeyes can’t key in on just slowing down Sarratt as the Hoosiers have five wide receivers who have all caught at least 24 passes for 289 yards this season.
Denzel Burke has a lot to prove this week after his nightmare of a game in Eugene while Davison Igbinosun has continued to struggle with penalties in his second year with the Buckeyes. They’re both projected to be higher NFL draft picks than any of Indiana’s wide receivers, so they should be capable of winning their matchups along with Jordan Hancock in the slot, but their inconsistency this season makes this matchup one to watch as Kurtis Rourke’s play all season has demonstrated he won’t be afraid to attack any weak spots he can find in the Buckeyes’ defense.
“He’s extremely efficient,” Ohio State defensive coordinator Jim Knowles said of Rourke. “Calm in the pocket and very efficient. Makes all the throws, gets rid of the ball quickly. In that type of offense, he’s very smart and figures out where the holes of the defense are and takes advantage.”
Ohio State WRs vs. Indiana DBs
While Ohio State’s cornerbacks will be put to the test by Indiana’s receivers, the Buckeyes’ biggest advantage over the Hoosiers may be the matchup between their wideouts and Indiana’s secondary.
Indiana’s passing defense has been good this season, ranking 21st in the FBS with only 183.3 passing yards allowed per game, but the Hoosiers haven’t faced any group of weapons like Ohio State’s trio of Jeremiah Smith, Emeka Egbuka and Carnell Tate. Maryland, the best passing offense Indiana has faced so far this season, threw for 289 yards and three touchdowns in a 42-28 loss to the Hoosiers.
James Madison transfer D’Angelo Ponds has been excellent as Indiana’s top cornerback this season, holding opponents to only 25 catches for 196 yards and one touchdown on 45 targets (per PFF) with two interceptions and six pass breakups, but he’ll give up significant size to OSU’s receivers at only 5-foot-9 and 170 pounds. That said, he does have the advantage of familiarity with Smith as he was Smith’s high school teammate at Chaminade-Madonna.
D’Angelo Ponds (5) will likely spend most of Saturday’s game covering his former high school teammate, Jeremiah Smith. (Photo: Jacob Musselman – Imagn Images)
Indiana’s run defense has been dominant this season, holding opponents to only 72.2 rushing yards per game, so Ohio State is going to need to be able to make plays in the downfield passing game to open up running lanes. There’s reason to believe the Buckeyes should be well-equipped to do so with their receiving talent, though the ability of Ohio State’s aforementioned offensive line to hold up in pass protection as well as Will Howard’s consistency throwing deep will be factors in whether the Buckeyes can exploit their talent advantage on the perimeter.
Indiana OTs vs. Ohio State DEs
If Ohio State could pick one player from Indiana’s roster to add to its roster right now, it would probably pick Indiana left tackle Carter Smith – who the Buckeyes very likely could have gotten as a recruit if they had offered him out of nearby Olentangy Liberty High School. Instead, the three-star prospect has developed into one of the Big Ten’s best offensive tackles in Bloomington, teaming with Wisconsin transfer right tackle Trey Wedig to give the Hoosiers an excellent tandem on the edge.
For Ohio State to slow down Indiana’s passing attack, it won’t just be about the aforementioned cornerback winning their one-on-one matchups; the Buckeyes also need their pass rush to be much better than it was against Oregon, where Ohio State recorded zero sacks. Ohio State’s pass rush has been better since then, but it’s typically been big games where the Buckeyes have struggled to generate pressure in recent years, and Smith and Wedig will be the best offensive tackle tandem they’ve faced since the trip to Eugene.
Jack Sawyer enters this game on a wave of momentum, having recorded 12 tackles with nine quarterback pressures, a forced fumble and a fumble return for a touchdown in Ohio State’s last two games, while JT Tuimoloau has six tackles for loss in the Buckeyes’ last five games. It would go a long way for Ohio State’s efforts to slow down the Hoosiers’ offense if they can continue to wreak havoc off the edge; if they have a quiet game like they did against the Ducks, Ohio State will be at risk of suffering another loss.
Indiana
Obituary for Donald Dempsey Ratliff Jr. at Yeager Funeral Home
Indiana
Recap: Stanford WBB falls to Indiana on the road
On Sunday, Stanford women’s basketball fell to Indiana on the road by a final score of 79-66. Indiana senior guard Chloe Moore-McNeil led the way for the Hoosiers with 21 points while junior guard Shay Ciezki (19 points) and guard Yarden Garzon (18 points) also scored in double figures. Stanford sophomore forward Nunu Agara was the top performer for the Cardinal with 15 points. Indiana improves to 2-2 overall while Stanford falls to 4-1.
BOX SCORE: Stanford at Indiana-Sunday, November 17th
Indiana would lead 24-22 at the end of the 1st quarter. Moore-McNeil was leading the way for the Hoosiers with 10 points. Agara was keeping the Cardinal in it with eight points and two assists.
At halftime, Indiana would lead 42-31. The Hoosiers outscored the Cardinal 18-9 in the 2nd quarter. Moore-McNeil was up to 12 points for the Hoosiers while Garzon had 10 points and five rebounds. Agara was doing her part for the Cardinal with 11 points. She needed more help.
At the end of the 3rd quarter, Indiana led 61-44. Moore-McNeil was up to 19 points for the Hoosiers. Agara had 15 points for the Cardinal, but nobody else was in double figures. It had been a rough outing for the rest of the Cardinal.
In the end, Indiana would win by a final score of 79-66. Stanford tried to close the gap a bit in the 4th quarter, but they were down by too much in the 3rd to mount any sort of real comeback.
For Stanford, this is a bit of disappointing outcome, but what softens it a bit for them is this happened on the road against an Indiana team that started off the season ranked. I think the most disappointing aspect of this for Stanford is the way they lost. They never were in this game as they shot 2-11 from 3-point range while getting outrebounded 35-32.
Up next for Stanford is a home game against Morgan State on Friday at 7:00 PM PT on ACCNX. Stanford will be heavily favored in that one and look to get back in the win column with ease.
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Email: slamdunk406@yahoo.com
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