Delaware
Montana rolls over Delaware 49-19, will face Furman in FCS quarterfinal
MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) — Clifton McDowell threw two touchdown passes and ran for a score and Montana cruised past Delaware 49-19 in a snowy second-round matchup of the FCS Championship on Saturday night.
Montana (11-1) has won eight in a row and will host Furman (9-2) in the quarterfinals. The game is a rematch of the 2001 title game, won by the Grizzlies 13-6. The Paladins eliminated Chattanooga 26-7 in the second round. Delaware ends its season with a 9-4 record.
Montana took 7:30 off the clock on its first possession, capping a 16-play, 54-yard drive with Nico Ramos’ 43-yard field goal. Delaware went three-and-out on its first two possessions and the Grizzlies blocked and recovered the second punt at the Delaware 27-yard line. Xavier Harris scored on a first-down run and Montana took a 10-0 lead.
The Grizzlies led 16-0 nine seconds into the second quarter after Nick Ostmo scored on a 35-yard run and the two-point conversion failed. Delaware got on the scoreboard when Ryan O’Connor threw a 44-yard scoring strike to Chandler Harvin.
Ramos followed with a field goal, Clifton McDowell teamed up with Keelan White for a 55-yard touchdown and the Grizzlies recovered a botched punt in the end zone for a 28-6 advantage with 5:31 left. McDowell added a 20-yard touchdown run before O’Connor and Harvin hooked up for a 13-yard score and Montana led 35-12 at halftime.
Jaxon Lee returned a fumble 56 yards for a score, McDowell hit Evan Shafer for a 25-yard touchdown and the Grizzlies led 49-12 with 6:36 left in the third quarter and coasted to the victory.
McDowell completed 10 of 19 passes for 186 yards with one interception for Montana. White had four catches for 88 yards. Ostmo carried 10 times for 64 yards.
O’Connor totaled 197 yards on 17-of-36 passing with an interception for the Fightin’ Blue Hens. Harvin caught four passes for 76 yards.
__ More AP college football: https://apnews.com/hub/college-football and https://twitter.com/ap_top25. Sign up for the AP’s college football newsletter: https://tinyurl.com/mrxhe6f2
Delaware
Delaware Roundup (11/1/24): 43 (Really) Quick Reads
Delaware
Hodgson standout wins Week 8 Football Athlete of the Week, presented by Delaware Orthopaedic Specialists
Hodgson knocks off Class 3A No. 2 Appoquinimink
Hodgson led the entire second half.
Congratulations to Marlon Sparks of Hodgson, the Delaware Online Football Athlete of the Week for Week 8 of the season.
The senior caught four passes for 45 yards, including a leaping touchdown grab on fourth down, in a 21-7 upset of Appoquinimink.
Sparks won an online vote over four other nominees. Check out the Week 9 nominees on Monday on Delaware Online and vote for your favorite.
Voting is free and runs Monday through Thursday, with the weekly winner announced each Friday.
The weekly poll is presented by Delaware Orthopaedic Specialists.
Contact Brad Myers at bmyers@delawareonline. Follow on X: @BradMyersTNJ. Follow us on Instagram: @DEGameDay
Delaware
What to know: ACA open enrollment kicks off Nov. 1 in the Delaware Valley
Plan prices and cost saving options
The actual amount someone will pay for their monthly premium depends on if they are eligible for federal tax credits, which reduce monthly premium costs. They are calculated based on someone’s income and household size during the online enrollment process and are immediately applied to monthly premium charges after plans are selected and coverage begins in 2025.
Many people received boosted tax credit amounts during the COVID-19 pandemic when Congress passed additional funding for ACA financial assistance.
After tax credits were applied, the average monthly premium in Delaware for 2024 coverage was about $147, and about 17% of all enrollees paid $10 or less a month, according to state officials.
In Pennsylvania, about nine in 10 ACA enrollees qualify for these tax credits.
“Without the tax credits, without those financial savings, a lot of the health plans would cost $500 a month,” Trolley said. “And what we see many people pay is $10, $50, $100. It’s really significant savings.”
But as pandemic-era funding runs out, state insurance officials warn that this open enrollment period for coverage in 2025 could be the last year of those enhanced, boosted tax credits if Congress does not appropriate more money going forward, which means many people could see their premium costs rise significantly in 2026.
In addition to federal tax credits, people in New Jersey can also apply for a state subsidy called the New Jersey Health Plan Savings, which also reduces monthly premium costs for eligible residents.
Justin Zimmerman, the commissioner of the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance, said residents will also benefit from new state laws that cap some out-of-pocket prescription costs.
“All Get Covered New Jersey health plans will cap the out-of-pocket costs of insulin at $35 a month as well as cap out-of-pocket costs for EpiPens at $25 and asthma inhalers at $50 for a monthly supply,” Zimmerman said.
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