Pair of losses for Lions

On Feb. 21, the Rushville varsity boys basketball team lost at Hamilton Heights by a score of 63-43. Heights led 36-21 at halftime.

Dylan Thompson had 13 points, 9 rebounds and 2 blocks. Kameron Morton had 9 points and 4 rebounds. Quentin Cain had 8 points. Chase Woolf had 6 points, 8 rebounds and 2 assists. XxZavien Jenkins had 6 points. Adrian Apodaca had 1 free throw.

On Feb. 23, the JV and varsity teams played at North Decatur.

Varsity battled a good Charger team before falling 43-40 after spotting ND an 11-0 lead. Thompson had 17 points. Morton had 8. Woolf had 6. Kane Thompson had 5 and Cain 4. ND led slightly at every stop. Blake Spears had 20 points for the Chargers (6 3-pointers) and Lance Nobbe added 14.

The JV team ended its season with a double OT loss by a score of 61-51. Braydon Wilson had 19 points. Clayton Chase had 13. Apodaca had 10. Isaac Schelle added 5 and Jackson Owen and Zach Tressler 2 apiece.

Rushville’s sectional match with Franklin County Tuesday was too late for publication. A win for the 5-19 Lions would place them in Friday’s semifinal at Greensburg against the Batesville Bulldogs. That tip would be 6 p.m.

Lady Lions return to regional after 25 years

Dogs win finale, 7th straight

For the first time since early 2020, Batesville’s Bulldogs are the owners of a 7-game winning streak after finishing off Shelbyville at home Thursday, 55-49, despite being down 25-22 at halftime.

Junior Jack Grunkemeyer paced the Dogs with 16 points. Sam Johnson and Cade Kaiser added 11 each while Cole Pride posted 10. Gus Prickel scored 5 and Carson Laker 2. Ollie Sandman matched him for the Golden Bears while teammates Caden Claxton and Aidan Asher scored 15 and 11, respectively.

BHS (16-6) awaits the winner of Rushville-Franklin County at the Greensburg sectional this week. Tip is 6 p.m. Friday for the semifinal matchup.

Cats drilled by Carpenter and Co.

RICHMOND – The Richmond Red Devils – led by future Division I guard Mason Carpenter – lit the Tiernan Center nets on fire Thursday against visiting Franklin County, knocking down 11 3-pointers en route to a 67-34 runaway victory in the regular season finale for both sides.

A field goal to end the first half by Xander Rodriguez (Tanner Weartz assist) and a 3-point bucket by junior Eli Butt to start the second (Quinn Gillman ast.) had the guests thinking positively about a 25-16 deficit.

But the Devils began ripping threes left and right to build a 45-23 advantage at the end of the third and a running clock (61-26) by the 4:30 mark of the game. Carpenter, a sophomore, had 22 points (four 3s) before exiting early in the fourth.

Weartz and Jace Lee had interior answers for Carpenter’s two early bombs in the second half. With the score 31-20, Gunner Kovach hit his only basket of the game – a three – and sophomore Cedric Horton used a Euro step for two after an FC turnover. Out of a timeout, Carpenter drained another triple and junior Ryder Cate dropped in a left-hand layup to make it 41-20.

The 10-0 Red Devil run was stopped by a Butt trey (Gillman assist). With time running out in the third, Brady Morehead was called for a phantom foul on Kainin Turner’s 3-point attempt; Turner made 2 of 3 foul shots as the only player on the court.

Butt’s third 3-pointer (Rodriguez assist) stood as FC’s lone bucket as play moved deeper into the fourth and Richmond reeled off a 20-3 run. A pair of Devil reserves joined Turner in hitting a total of four 3-balls before Horton got loose for a thunderous slam to put the hosts up by 35. Butt added to his team-high 13 points and Landen Wuestefeld hit his second and third from long range (9 pts. on the night) before the final horn.

The Cats struggled against Richmond’s full-court pressure early on, committing two turnovers that helped RHS to a 6-0 lead. A Weartz free throw broke the ice for FC at 5:08. Carpenter then completed a traditional 3-point play to make it 9-1.

The Wildcat defense kept the Devils off the scoreboard for nearly six minutes as Morehead laid one in and Gillman hit from the arc (Lee assist); it was 9-6 after one period.

A couple minutes into the next frame, however, Richmond heated up with Carpenter’s banked three followed by Turner’s triple. Wuestefeld answered from the cheap seats and Butt scored off the backboard to cut the RHS lead to 17-11. The Red Devils scored the next eight points of the game as another Carpenter 3-point play preceded two goals by Cate; the second was a 2-hand slam with the lanky Cate finishing the bonus free throw.

Gillman (3), Weartz (3), Lee (2), Morehead (2) and XRod (2) rounded out FC scoring. Turner put in 13 for RHS, Cate 9 and Horton 6.

FC (9-13) faces Rushville at the Greensburg sectional Tuesday. A win would place the Wildcats in Friday’s semifinal with Batesville, 6 p.m.

Connersville finishes 7-0 to win EIAC after a win over Lawrenceburg

The 3/A #7 Connersville Spartans locked up their third consecutive conference championship with a win over the Lawrenceburg Tigers on Saturday night. They jumped out to an early lead and held off a Comeback from the Tigers to pull off a 53-37 win.

Josh Williams started the game off putting the Spartans up 2-0. Lucas Barron connected not once, but twice on old fashioned three-point play’s and the Spartans were up 8-0 after three minutes played. Noah Knigga and Logan Rohrer each scored back-to-back for Lawrenceburg then buckets were traded by both squads. Williams scored back-to-back and it was 15-7 in Connersville’s favor. James Williams scored for CHS. Knigga scored for the Tigers and dropped in a free throw. Jo. Williams ended the frame scoring his ninth point and the Spartans led after the first quarter 19-10. Cooper Bobo scored his first points of the game from the free throw line to start the second quarter. Brayden Pearson dropped a three-pointer, and the Spartans were back up by 10-points. After two minutes of neither team scoring Braxton Myers added two-points for Connersville. Knigga was good for two more freebies for LHS and the score at the half was Connersville 24, Lawrenceburg 14.

The Tigers got two free throws from Sam Cornett to start the third quarter, Bobo hit from deep, and Lawrenceburg pulled it to within five-points. Bobo completed an old fashioned three-point play, and the score was 24-22 with Connersville up and six minutes to go in the third.  Barron hit a pair of free throws for the Spartans, Myers hit a shot near the rim, Barron scored to put the Spartans on top by eight-points. Rohrer and Ben Cornett scored for the Tigers, Ja. Williams scored on a put back for Connersville, then he added a free throw to put Connersville up 35-28 after three periods. Rohrer and Knigga got the Tigers five quick points to begin the final frame. The Williams brothers and Gavin Pearson scored for CHS, B. Cornett scored for the Tigers and the Spartans lead was cut to five-points again.  Myers completed an and one for Connersville, Ja. Williams scored, and Barron hit a three giving CHS a 12-point win and locking in their third straight EIAC championship.

The Spartans improve to 17-4 on the season and finished 7-0 in EIAC games. Lawrenceburg is now 17-6 on the year and finished with a record of 3-4 in EIAC games.  

              1            2            3            4            F

CHS       19          5            11          18          53

LHS        10          4            14          9            37

Unofficial Scoring

LHS– Rohrer 11, Knigga 10, Bobo 8, S. Cornett 4, B. Cornett 4

CHS– Barron 15, Jo. Williams 13, Ja. Williams 11, Myers 10, B. Pearson 3, G. Pearson 1

Pirates fend off Raiders for a win

Versailles- The Greensburg Pirates improved to 16-5 on the season with a road win over South Ripley on Saturday night. Ki Dyer scored on the Bucs first possession and Jack McKinsey followed that with a three-point basket. Dyer hit from the baseline and the Pirates were up 7-0 after starting the game going three of three shooting. They got one more basket while South Ripley went on a 7-0 run. Greensburg was scoreless until the end of the frame when Addison Barnes-Pettit sank a long ball at the buzzer to put GCHS up 12-7. South Ripley got the better of Greensburg but the Pirates in the second quarter, but the Bucs came back at the end of the frame with another buzzer beater, this time by Dyer. The Raiders held a one-point lead with the score 22-21 at the half. Dyer got Greensburg back on top midway through the third frame with a three-pointer. The Raider got back on top, but Abe Tebbe hit two long balls and Greensburg went up by seven with just one minute remaining in the quarter. South Ripley got another basket before the period ended and the Bucs led 38-33 after three quarters. The Pirates scored 15-points in the final quarter while holding the Raiders to 14 and securing a 53-47 win.

Unofficial Scoring-

Greensburg- Dyer 18, Barnes-Pettit 11, Tebbe 7, Jeter Edwards 7, McKinsey 5, Justin Adkins 3, Grainger Maxwell 2

Thompson walk-off defeats Twisters

OLDENBURG – Dylan Thompson was already having a game Saturday night at Oldenburg Academy but

Rushville’s 6’5” senior put the dot on the exclamation mark with a winning layup as time expired at

Hillenbrand Family Feldhaus.

The Twisters had just tied the game at 46 following a steal by Henry Wanstrath and finish by Jacob Stenger. The Lions advanced the ball in a hurry as the clock ticked under five seconds; Thompson took

the entry pass on the right side and went up for the uncontested game winner. The 48-46 win stopped a

5-game skid by RCHS.

It was a credit to OA to force the late deadlock as the hosts were down six with three minutes remaining

after a Nick Jarman fielder. Oldenburg junior Conner Miles put in two free throws as he capped off a

game-best 23 points. The teams traded missed front ends of a 1-and-1 in the last minute before OA’s

Jacob Cornelius drove in for two; a timeout set up the exciting ending.

The game was a two-possession contest apart from Rushville’s solid stretch to start the second quarter.

Thompson hit two straight buckets and OA coach Michael Higdon called time at 16-9. Another

Thompson score made it 18-11 and Jarman’s transition hoop at 3:08 had the Lions briefly enjoying a 22-

14 lead.

Miles then dropped in a corner three and Lion coach Ryan Ehm signaled timeout. Stenger received a

technical foul around the half’s 2-minute mark but Rushville got just one point off the penalty. Miles hit

two at the stripe and runner in the paint to make it 23-21. Wanstrath and Jarman swapped 2-of-2 visits

at the 15-foot line and it was 25-23 at the break.

Thompson connected to open the second half but Miles tied it up with a pair of short makes. The guests’

Kameron Morton then splashed a three. The back-and-forth continued as Wanstrath scored off a Jacob

Hoff feed and Thompson delivered his second slam of the night; Hoff, the lone senior on OA’s senior

night, tied the game at 32 with a trey. The end of quarter three also had some flair. Morton passed to

Thompson for two with 7.2 seconds left and OA just missed a point-blank shot at the buzzer, keeping the

score at 36-33.

Jarman made it a 5-point game as the final frame unfolded. Morton later matched a Stenger triple with

the more traditional 3-point play. At 4:32, Hoff fouled out of his last home game and Jarman hit 1 of 2 to

send RCHS up 42-36. Cornelius and Miles baskets sandwiched a trip down the lane by the Lions’ Quentin

Cain.

Off an OA turnover, Thompson slammed home the game’s first field goal. Miles scored five straight to

give the Twisters their only lead of the match. Rushville wrangled the advantage with a 6-0 spurt. Four

points by Wanstrath helped OA cut it to one at the end of the first.

Thompson trailed only Miles with 20 points. Morton and Wanstrath scored 11 and 10, respectively. For

the Lions, Jarman added 9, Cain 5, Danny Corn 2 and Kane Thompson a free throw. Stenger had 5 and

Cornelius and Hoff 4 each for the cyclones.

OA (6-13) was at South Decatur Tuesday and finishes at Lawrenceburg Thursday. Rushville (5-17) is also

on the road those nights, heading for Hamilton Heights in Arcadia and down Hwy. 3 to North Decatur.

Bulldogs buzz by Yellow Jackets

Morristown has had some great success in boys hoops the last few years … but Friday night was not one of those. For a second straight year, the Yellow Jackets dropped a game to Batesville by a difference of more than 35 points. Result from Shelby County this year was 62-22.

The Bulldogs blanked MHS through the first eight minutes, going into the second quarter with a 17-0 lead. The Jackets then had their best offensive period of the night (10 pts.) but unfortunately for them, the Dogs did as well with a 27-spot. At the half, it was already 44-10 and a running clock soon followed.

Sophomore Cade Kaiser led seven Dogs in the scorebook with 16 tallies; Gus Prickel and Cole Pride each contributed a dozen. Sam Johnson put in 9, Brayden Maple 6, Conner Drake 4 and Jack Grunkemeyer 3. Johnson’s points all came from beyond the arc, with Prickel and Pride popping two long balls each. BHS was a perfect 7-of-7 from the foul line. Kaiser added 5 steals and Pride 5 rebounds.

BHS (15-6) has its home finale Thursday night against Shelbyville, seeking a seventh straight win.

Spartans one step closer to another title

BROOKVILLE – Franklin County fought tooth and nail with the favored Connersville Spartans Friday night at FC, but Kerry Brown’s squad posted a 29-16 advantage after halftime to pull themselves within shot of a third consecutive Eastern Indiana Athletic Conference championship.

A 30-26 game late in the third quarter after the hosts’ Quinn Gillman swished a three, CHS answered with a Gavin Pearson triple and outscored FC 13-6 in the final eight minutes to win 46-32. An 11-2 stretch to begin the fourth was particularly painful for Mark Foster’s Wildcats. Braxton Myers finished an impressive up-and-under basket off a lob from Josh Williams to open the frame. After a brief scoring lull, FC senior Brady Morehead got to the rack for two. But the next nine points belonged to the Spartans. Lucas Barron put in a second-chance effort and at 3:53, Myers found Williams spotting up from the corner for three more. A minute later, Myers completed a reverse layup and followed that with a pair of free throws. By the time the Cats’ Eli Butt
banged one in off the glass, FC trailed by 14 with just 1:07 left as a timeout was called.
The Wildcat gymnasium – filled to the rafters on both sides – was raucous as the game got underway and the hometown fans did most of the cheering through the first quarter and change. A 10-2 lead tends to have that effect. Senior Tanner Weartz had a 3-point bucket in the opening minute of action and a blocked shot at the other end. Classmate Jace Lee owned the next couple offensive sets, getting to the hoop twice for field goals and a 7-0 Wildcat lead. Connersville’s first taste of the net came at 2:30 when Williams used the backboard for a pair. FC came up with a couple more defensive stops aided by pilfers; one came with 12 seconds left, but the subsequent shot was off and CHS missed a three attempt and tip try as time expired. Another Morehead steal led to FC points early in the second period. Lee passed to a waiting Gillman in the corner, who finished the assist with a three-ball. As they’d do later in the evening, the Spartans closed the half out strong. A Williams jumper with 6:53 on the clock triggered a 15-6 CHS run. Butt had short answers for Williams’ makes – the 2 and a 3 from the top of the key – to keep FC up 14-7 as Brown stopped play with 4:19 remaining. The Spartans’ first non-Williams points came as Myers’ offensive game picked up; the senior scored quickly out of the timeout before picking FC’s pocket and driving in for two more. Foster called time at 3:48 as Connersville had crept to within three. Myers scored again and two foul shots for Barron gave CHS its first lead of the game at 15-14. Weartz hit a pair from the line to switch the lead, but Myers did the same to give the guests a 17-16 advantage that held until the intermission. CHS led from that point on.
Pearson’s three on the second half’s first possession was answered by Lee’s inside bucket. Williams’ dipsy-doo made it a 22-18 game and four points by Barron set the spread at eight points. Butt tripled at 5:08, only to have Barron and Myers push the lead to nine. A teardrop by Gillman preceded a Wildcat timeout with the score 30-23.

Myers led all scorers with 16 as Williams and Barron netted 12 apiece. Butt paced the home side with 9,
Gillman and Lee adding 8 each. Pearson had 6, Weartz 5 and Morehead 2.

FC (9-12, 2-5) will wrap up its regular season Thursday at Richmond’s Tiernan Center.


FC repeated as fundraising champion in the Beat Cancer in 4 Quarters competition between the schools,
raising a record amount of over $13,000.

AquaTrojans host 2023 sectional, Ketchem to state

ST. LEON – After years of traveling to Columbus North for the swimming and diving sectional, teams in
the Eastern Indiana Athletic Conference visited a more familiar site Saturday as East Central was host to
the 2023 boys tournament. The EC Natatorium was loud as swimmers and divers tried to advance past
the finals to the state tourney.
Home fans had a hero to cheer on as junior Ayden Ketchem outpaced Bloomington South’s Lukas Paegle
to the wall in the 50-yard freestyle final (21.6 to 22.01), sending Ketchem on to the IUPUI Natatorium
next weekend for the state finals.
EC’s 200 free relay team finished runner-up to Bloomington North by fractions, swimming 1:26.8 to BN’s
1:26.12. Ketchem battled the Cougars’ Benjamin Buehler to the wall on the anchor leg. Other Trojans on
the squad were Kyle Goodwin, Kaden Cummins and Henry Strotman.
The same schools were 1, 2 in the day’s final event – the 400 free relay. This time, the Cougs were able
to put some distance between themselves and second-place EC. James Stewart finished up for
Bloomington, touching in 3:10.59, while Ketchem, Dillon Rullman, Cummins and Strotman combined for
a 3:13.95 finish.
Strotman was third in the 100 free sprint, landing in 48.68. Goodwin, a freshman, took third in the 100
butterfly (52.72). Cummins placed fourth in the 200 free, touching in 1:49.07, and Strotman was fourth
in the 50 free (22.17). Goodwin was good for fourth in the 100 backstroke (55.96), followed closely by
Ketchem in fifth (56.25). Cummins took fifth in the 100 free (49.22).
Batesville’s best showing came in the 100 free as senior William Johnson placed fourth in a time of
49.08. In the 200 free relay, Bulldogs Matthew Tekulve, Ciaran Tyrer, Emi Lopez and Johnson swam
1:34.97 to place fifth. Johnson finished sixth in the 50 free (22.6).
In the opening event, EC’s team of Goodwin, Francis Strotman, Michael Doll and Connor Murray were
fifth in the 200 medley relay (1:41.12) with Batesville just behind them (Johnson, Tyrer, Lopez, Tekulve;
1:43.99).
Greensburg’s Pirates took sixth in the 400 free relay as Christopher Mains, Alexander Walden, Tristen
Hostetler and Jacob Hawkins touched in 3:28.28. Hawkins, Mains, Hostetler and Matthew Reynolds
were sixth in the 200 free (1:35.01). Mains, Reynolds, Walden and Hawkins swam 7 th in the 200 medley
(1:44.37). Walden placed 7 th in the 100 fly (56.45).
Oldenburg Academy’s Santiago Schutte was the 8 th -place finisher in the 200 individual medley, the
sophomore touching in 2:06.81. Other EC placements were F. Strotman 7 th in 100 breaststroke (1:02.51)
and Rullman 7 th in 200 free (1:51.72).
Lawrenceburg’s top placement came in the 200 free relay, the team of Luke Thornton, Brendan Lowe,
Jack Vowell and Cameron Boyce finishing in 1:44.48. Same could be said for South Dearborn as Jason
Hail, Brady Chambers, Garrett Collins and Ariyawuth Worakulpisuth swam 10 th in the race (1:54.32).
EC had three in the diving finals, with freshman Nicholas Hutchinson ending in fifth (305.8 pts.), Kane
Rosfeld in seventh (248.4) and Matthew Small eighth (232.2).


Connersville swims at New Palestine

Spartan speedster Owen Baker just missed out on a trip to state when he placed runner-up in the 50
free and third in 100 free at the New Pal sectional finals Saturday. Baker was edged in the 50 sprint by
Mt. Vernon’s Brady Gray (21.18 to 22.22) and Gray won again in the 100 (47.1) as Baker’s 49.53 was
good for bronze.

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Pirates Battle in Nail Biter, Owls get last hoot

Last Tuesday the Greensburg Pirates traveled to Seymour to take on the Owls and lost with a score of 60-55. Seymour’s Lloyd E. Scott Gym is ranked the second largest in the state to New Castle’s, whose can fit about 200 more people.

In the first quarter the Pirates got off to a super slow start. Ki Dyer scored a 3-pointer with just 3 minutes remaining in the quarter. Dyer also got 2 free throws. Dyer, once again leading the team’s offense, scored a 3-pointer and Bradley Lutz had 2 free throws which put the Pirates in an 11-10 lead.

Seymour once again started the next quarter off, but Dyer again battled back and scored a 2-pointer making the score 13-13. Dyer also scored a 3-pointer. Lutz scored a 2-point goal and got fouled so he got a free throw attempt but missed. Addison Barnes-Pettit had 2 free throws which put the Pirates in the lead. Lutz scored a 3-pointer which put the Pirates up by four going into the half.

In the third quarter Seymour had 2 free throws to get things rolling. Seymour’s offense was great, but the Pirates were slow on both ends of offense and defense. But eventually Barnes-Pettit scored a 2-pointer to get things going. Dyer also had a 2 and 3. Lutz added a basket. This put the score at 41-30 Seymour.

In the fourth quarter Grainger Maxwell got things going scoring a 2-pointer; this led to Jeter Edwards having a free throw and a bucket. Dyer got four free throws off a technical foul. After this, he scored a 3- pointer. Edwards had 2 free throws and Dyer got yet another 3-pointer. Jack McKinsey scored a free throw and Dyer had another 3-pointer. McKinsey followed this up by having a 3-pointer of his own.

The Pirates fought hard in this back-and-forth game but in the end, they lost by just five points.

Dyer led all scorers with 31 points with the Owls’ Jaylan Johnson posting 24. Lutz added 9, McKinsey 6, Edwards 5, Maxwell and Barnes-Pettit 2 each.

The Bucs (15-5) are at South Ripley Saturday evening.

Eastern Indiana Athletic Conference News

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