Indianapolis, IN
IHS kicks off race season by celebrating the history of the Indy 500
INDIANAPOLIS — The Indiana Historic Society is kicking off the month of Might by looking again.
IHS partnered with the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to host an occasion celebrating the historical past of the Indianapolis 500.
There have been a wide range of academic actions for households to participate in.
Company had been in a position to run toy vehicles on a mannequin observe made of various supplies. Every materials was what the Speedway observe was made out of at one level. The target was to see which supplies work greatest and the way it affected the vehicles.
There have been additionally actions geared particularly in direction of children.
They had been in a position to construct on high of vehicles with constructing blocks and ship them down the observe to see if they might make an aerodynamic automobile.
There was additionally a station that allowed company to construct their very own duplicate of the IMS Pagoda.
Attendees had been in a position to see artifacts from the IMS Museum, together with the famed Borg-Warner trophy, an unique brick from the speedway and a milk bottle signed by driver Ed Carpenter.
WRTV
Legendary broadcaster Paul Web page was there to speak about his guide, “Hi there, I’m Paul Web page: It’s Race Day in Indianapolis.”
WRTV
“At HIS, we name ourselves Indiana’s storytellers and as a storyteller, Paul Web page is without doubt one of the greatest,” Casey Terry, Supervisor of Engagement at HIS, stated.
The 107th Indianapolis 500 is scheduled for Sunday, Might 28.
For extra info on IHS, click on right here.

Indianapolis, IN
Marion County deputy sheriff arrested and fired for drunk driving

INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — David Hodges, a deputy sheriff at the Marion County Sheriff’s Office, was arrested Saturday for drunk driving.
The Marion County Sheriff’s Office said Sunday, that Hodges was arrested by the Lawrence Police Department March 22.
Hodges arrested and taken to jail for operating a vehicle while intoxicated with endangerment, reckless driving causing property damage, and operating a vehicle while intoxicated with a BAC above .08%.
MCSO said in the press release that Hodges has been terminated following the arrest.
Hodges’ initial hearing is set for April 7.
This is a developing story.
Indianapolis, IN
How to buy Tennessee Sweet 16 tickets, Tennessee Vols March Madness basketball tickets

No. 2 Tennessee is back in the Sweet 16.
The Volunteers defeated No. 7 UCLA 67-58 on Friday, advancing to the Midwest Regional Semifinals.
The Vols were once again led by senior Chaz Lanier. After scoring 29 points in the Round of 64, Lanier had 20 points on Saturday and broke the school record for most three pointers made in a season.
Tennessee advanced to the Sweet 16 where they will take on the winner of the upcoming matchup on Sunday between No. 3 Kentucky and No. 6 Illinois.
Here’s everything you need to know in order to buy Tennessee men’s March Madness Sweet 16 tickets.
Shop Tennessee March Madness tickets
Tennessee Sweet 16 location
The Vols are headed to Indianapolis for the Midwest Regional. The games will be played at Lucas Oil Stadium.
Tennessee Sweet 16 tickets
Tennessee tickets for the Sweet 16 are already on sale. As of publication, the cheapest available ticket to Friday’s game costs $206.
Shop Tennessee Sweet 16 tickets
Tennessee Sweet 16 game date, time
The Midwest Regional’s Sweet 16 and Elite Eight games will take place in Indianapolis. The Sweet 16 is scheduled to be played on Friday, March 28 and the Eite Eight game is scheduled to take place on Sunday, March 30. Game times will be announced closer to the conclusion of the Round of 32.
Tennessee Midwest Regional Sweet 16 tickets
The Midwest Regional Sweet 16 and Elite 8 tickets are on sale now. An All-Sessions pass for Indianapolis grants access to both Sweet 16 games and the Elite 8 game. At the time of publication, the cheapest All Sessions Pass costs $409.
Shop Indianapolis All-Sessions Pass
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Indianapolis, IN
Purdue's sweet, fabulous return to Indianapolis
Purdue’s sweet, fabulous return to Indianapolis
“It’s none of that,” Fletcher Loyer tells me after the game.
The question I’m asking, the thing I’m trying to figure out, still, about the make up of this team is if March vindication is still Purdue’s ethos. So the question is if getting back to the Sweet 16, if it’s like making a basket after scoring 21 points, if it’s a prove it point for Purdue.
Loyer’s answer is a simple one. Purdue doesn’t plan to prove itself by getting to the Sweet 16. Purdue plans to prove what it is by winning the Sweet 16 and then the next round, and the one after that, and that final one for good measure.
The one and only stage of college basketball that this set of Purdue players hasn’t won at.
It’s clear Purdue wants more and is playing well enough to have it after two convincing wins in the first two rounds of the NCAA Tournament.
Purdue’s preparation and offense set them up for success, two points of ‘fabulous’ from Painter
Purdue had less than 48 hours to prepare for a McNeese defense that held #5 seed Clemson to just 13 first half turnovers.
That was enough time for Purdue’s offensive coordinator, and former point guard, PJ Thompson, to build a game plan that used McNeese’s aggressiveness against itself.
The way I know this is it had head coach Matt Painter breaking out his favorite compliment.
“PJ did a fabulous job getting us prepared,” Painter said after the 76-62 Purdue win.
“I thought from watching them on film, they’ve unbelievable at what they do,” Thomspon told me after the game. “Interchangeable pieces, fly around, ultra-competitive, ultra tough, but what we noticed is a lot of people that play them – they struggle with movement. We tried to be deceptive. Being actors, not standing and watching, filling behind the ball, being available, and as Trey is posting, we have movement. Pinning guys in, and it’s really hard to take away both. Trey doesn’t have the size that we’ve had with the monsters in the past, but he’s unbelievable at using his body and he’s a load down there. When we moved the ball and made simple decisions, we made a lot of quality shots.”
It worked from the jump. On the first play, Purdue’s off ball movement moved any help inside and Fletcher Loyer was able to find Trey Kaufman-Renn half-fronted in the post. Kaufman-Renn caught the entry pass, turned, and had an open lane to go up and dunk.
On the next play, Kaufman-Renn found Loyer who moved to the right wing after Kaufman-Renn got into the paint. Loyer drained the open three-pointer.
A similar flurry of ball movement, repositioning, and patience led to one of the closing shots of the game that Painter pointed out after as the good things that came from Purdue’s game plan when CJ Cox hit his second three-pointer of the game that halted a micro-McNeese run.
Painter’s second fabulous
“Fabulous play,” Painter said after the game.
The play, a combined effort steal that saw Myles Colvin deflect a dribble, hit it again, and then Matt Painter’s star point guard, Braden Smith, sell out his entire body and somehow get a hand on the ball, knocking it backwards right into the waiting hands of Colvin who raced down court and drew a transition foul and two free throws.
“Just giving multiple effort, just making that play,” Painter said after the game about one of the defining plays of the game. “When he first did it, it almost looked like one of those fake hustle plays. Some guy’s diving, he has no chance to get to the ball and he makes the play. It was right in front of me. It’s coming right at me, it was like, that was my first instinct, like he can’t get there. And he obviously did. To have the intelligence and the toughness to make the play and save it towards his goal.”
The assist part of the play was a happy accident. After the game, Smith told me that he just knew the clock was going down and at worst, knocking it back wouldn’t reset the clock and force McNeese into a hurried shot or 30 second violation.
Instead, Smith’s deflection went rigth towards his teammate as Smith’s body spilled onto the floor right in front of his bench.
It was one of six steals as a team for Purdue whose
If Purdue’s trip in Providence has proven anything, it’s that when Purdue’s preparation meets execution and effort, Purdue’s play is fabulous and they’re going to be a hard out in the Sweet 16 no matter who they face between Houston and Gonzaga.
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